Site icon Lawful Legal

Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. (1954) 

LEGAL ARTICLE 

Title of the case…………Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. (1954) 

Name of the court………Supreme Court of India 

Year of the case…………1954 

Name of the Judge who has delivered the judgement…….Hon’ble judges, Mukherjea BK, Bose ,Vivian, Bhagawati , Natwarlal H. 

Legal Provisions- 

Indian Contract Act : section 56 

Principal part of the judgement- 

Indian courts may consider English laws as persuasive but not binding. 

Frustration occurs when the foundation of the contract is fundamentally disturbed. 

Section 56 adopts a practical view of ‘impossibility,’ including instances where performance becomes impractical due to unforeseen events. 

 ABSTRACT

The Supreme Court of India expounded on the concept of frustration in Indian contract law through this momentous case. The main point of contention was the property transaction and the unanticipated events that affected the land’s physical characteristics. The court stressed that an interpretation that is practical rather than literal is required for interpreting Section 56 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872, which deals with impossibility. It clearly shown that Indian law is regulated by its statutes and that, notwithstanding the potential persuasiveness of English legal concepts, they are not superseded by the unambiguous requirements of Indian law.

Background: 

The respondent, Mugneeram Bangur & Co., possessed a sizable plot of land in Calcutta that they planned to develop for residential use. The appellant, Satyabrata Ghose, succeeded Bejoy Krishna Roy, one of the purchasers with whom the corporation had an arrangement. 

It was decided that the land would be transferred upon the conclusion of specific developments in exchange for a minor earnest money payment. However, the land was taken over by the military during World War II, which prompted the business to treat the contract as null and void and offer to either repay the earnest money or pick up where it left off. 

Rejecting these possibilities, the appellant demanded that the original contract be fulfilled.

Brief facts  

Issue Identified 

Arguments and Analysis: 

In the history of the Indian Contract statute, 1872, Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur and Company and Ors was a pivotal case, especially with regard to section 56 of the aforementioned statute and the notion of frustration or force majeure. The case study that has been discussed in this project was conducted using three predetermined research questions. The court in this case dismissed the first of them, which concerned whether the word “impossible” in section 56’s second paragraph can only refer to physical impossibility. It stated that the paragraph’s terminology is fairly broad and that even though the accompanying pictures aren’t very cheery, they can’t be deemed to contradict the enactment’s fundamental terms.

The word “impossible” was not intended to imply physical or literal impossibility in this context. A promise made by a promisor is unlikely to be fulfilled if an unfavorable event or change in circumstances completely upends the basis upon which the parties based their agreement. Although an act may not be technically impossible, it may be impracticable unless it serves the object and purpose that the parties intended.

As for the second question that related to if English law of frustration can be applied in India, the court clarified that the principles of contract frustration in English law, as stated in the High Court’s ruling, were not applicable to the statutory provisions of the Indian Contract Act, according to the 

Supreme Court and that they only carry a persuasive value. 

Regarding the analysis of our final and last research question in this commentary, which asks whether the sale agreement between the defendant’s business and the plaintiff’s predecessor is dissolved due to frustration, the court reached a different conclusion, holding that the government’s requisitioning orders did not disrupt the fundamental basis of the contract because these were ordinary events during a war, and that since the defendant had not set a deadline for finishing the construction work, there could not have been an ongoing delay impeding the contract’s progress.

In this decision, the Supreme Court defined “impossible” differently, holding that a performance need not be physically or literally impossible in order to qualify as such. The performance will be deemed impossible even if the event upends the fundamental elements of the contract, making its goal or intention worthless. The court in the aforementioned case, however, held—contrary to the reasoning—that this criterion of impossibility will not apply, and the appeal was granted.

One more clarification was given by the court on the application of English rule of frustration in India. According to the Supreme Court, the concepts of contract frustration in English law, as articulated in the High Court’s decision, were not applicable to the statutory provisions of the Indian Contract Act. 

This ruling established the standard of impossibility of performance, and it still has consequences today in that a breach will still be deemed to have occurred even if the pandemic’s effects allow for some form of contract performance even though the parties are unable to accomplish the agreement’s goals. For instance, while the salesman is able to knock on doors, performing under a lockdown with restricted movement is not problematic in a door-to-door sales service contract. He is a door-to-door salesman, thus it is doubtful that people will interact with him in order to avoid contracting COVID-19. The court will decide that the contract has been frustrated in these situations.

Conclusion: 

The Supreme Court gave a clear ruling on the Indian Contract Law notion of frustration in Satyabrata Ghose v. Mugneeram Bangur & Co. It proved that Indian law is guided by its legislation, even though English legal ideas have some persuasive power. 

The ruling shaped subsequent interpretations and applications of Section 56 of the Indian Contract Act by highlighting the sanctity of contracts and the circumstances under which a contract can be deemed frustrated.

FAQ

  1. What is doctrine of frustration?

It states that a contract becomes void when unforeseen events occur after its formation, rendering it impossible to fulfill, no party is considered at fault and the contract is automatically terminated.

  1. What are the key elements of frustration?

Unforeseen events, radical change in circumstances, impossibility to perform

Exit mobile version