Contract and Its Elements
Contract and Its Elements
Contract:
Section 2 (h) of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 defines a contract as an
agreement enforceable by law. In other words, an agreement which can be
enforced in a court of law is known as a contract. According to Salmond, a
contract is an agreement creating and defining obligations between the parties.
1. An agreement, and
2. Legal obligation.
This means that the agreement must give rise to legal obligation. It is clear from
the above discussion that. All contracts are agreements but all agreements are
not contracts. All agreements are not contracts. An agreement may or may not
create a legal obligation. If no legal binding is intended, a contract does not
arise.
Example
1. X agrees to sell his car to Y for Rs. 80,000. It is an agreement which is legally
enforceable, and in case of any breach of promise, the other party will be at liberty
to file a suit to recover, the damages.
2. X agrees to come to the house of Y for a tea party at Y’s request, there is an
agreement, but it cannot be termed as a contract but it does not attract any legal
enforce ability.
Thus, all contracts are agreements but all agreements are not contracts. Only
that agreement which is enforceable by law is a contract, and that which is not
enforceable by law cannot be a contract.
Not only this it should be lawful also, i.e., it should not be forbidden bylaw,
should not be fraudulent, or immoral or opposed to any public policy. It may be
past, present or future.
Free consent: The contract must have been made with the free consent of the
parties. Consent implies agreeing upon the same thing in the same sense and
consent is said to be free if it is not induced by coercion, undue influence, fraud,
misrepresentation or mistake.
If the consent is obtained by any of the above four factors except mistake, the
agreement is voidable at the option of the party whose consent is not free. The
party can either reject the contract or accept it. If the agreement is induced by
mutual mistake, the agreement is void.
Lawful object: The object of the agreement should be lawful and not one of
which the law disapproves. The object would be unlawful if it is forbidden by
law, is fraudulent, or causes injury to the person or property of another, or is
immoral or opposed to any public policy.
Not expressly declared void agreement: The agreements must not have been
expressly declared to be void by any law. There are certain agreements which
have been expressly declared void by the Indian Contract Act like agreements
in restraint of marriage, trade or legal proceedings, and agreements with
uncertain meaning. In such cases even if the agreement possesses all the
elements of a valid agreement, it will not be enforceable by law.