The document discusses two cases related to contracts. The first case discusses a contract that was performed before a new law was passed, making the rates in the contract illegal retrospectively. The court ruled that the doctrine of frustration exempted the party from future obligations but they had to pay dues incurred before the law. The second case discusses a contract made on behalf of a railway administration where the defense of a section was not raised during the original case. The section also did not make such contracts void but voidable, and the contracts were capable of ratification by one party accepting goods from the other.
The document discusses two cases related to contracts. The first case discusses a contract that was performed before a new law was passed, making the rates in the contract illegal retrospectively. The court ruled that the doctrine of frustration exempted the party from future obligations but they had to pay dues incurred before the law. The second case discusses a contract made on behalf of a railway administration where the defense of a section was not raised during the original case. The section also did not make such contracts void but voidable, and the contracts were capable of ratification by one party accepting goods from the other.
The document discusses two cases related to contracts. The first case discusses a contract that was performed before a new law was passed, making the rates in the contract illegal retrospectively. The court ruled that the doctrine of frustration exempted the party from future obligations but they had to pay dues incurred before the law. The second case discusses a contract made on behalf of a railway administration where the defense of a section was not raised during the original case. The section also did not make such contracts void but voidable, and the contracts were capable of ratification by one party accepting goods from the other.
The document discusses two cases related to contracts. The first case discusses a contract that was performed before a new law was passed, making the rates in the contract illegal retrospectively. The court ruled that the doctrine of frustration exempted the party from future obligations but they had to pay dues incurred before the law. The second case discusses a contract made on behalf of a railway administration where the defense of a section was not raised during the original case. The section also did not make such contracts void but voidable, and the contracts were capable of ratification by one party accepting goods from the other.
Counter Frustration: At the time of performance of the
contract the rates were not illegal under Indian law. After the contract was completed the law was passed. According to the laws under the doctrine of frustration “R is exempt from any future obligations” but he must pay for the dues that were incurred before the law was passed. Contracts gave P very wide discretion to deliver the goods at any station. P had option to deliver goods at stations other than those lying within the jurisdiction. If the law, subsequently enacted, does not affect the contracts and the contracts could be legally performed despite the change in law, S.56 of ICA is not attracted, and there is, strictly speaking no frustration of the contracts. Unless the subsequent change in law rendered the entire contract illegal, the question of frustration does not arise at all. In short, the control orders did not apply to contracts made before the law was passed.
2. Counter Authority: Defence of Section 175(3)[6] was not
available to R because this point was not raised. Also this section did not govern contracts made on behalf of the railway administration and in any case S175(3) rendered the contracts not void but voidable and were therefore capable of ratification. R ratified the contracts by accepting the goods tendered by P and paid for them.(Basically ordhek order niye etar ratification kore felse)