Introduction
A contract places a legal obligation upon the contracting parties to perform their mutual promises, and it carries on until the discharge or termination of the contract. The most natural and usual mode of discharging a contract is to perform it. A person who performs a contract in accordance with its terms is discharged from any further obligations. As a rule, such performance entitles him to receive the other party’s performance.
Exact and complete performance by both the parties puts an end to the contract. In expecting exact performance, the courts mean that, performance must match contractual obligations. In requiring a contract to be complete, the law is merely saying that any work undertaken must be carried out to the end of the obligations.
A contract should be performed at the time specified and at the place agreed upon. When this has been accomplished, the parties are discharged automatically and the contract is discharged eventually. There are, however, many other ways in which a discharge may be brought about. For example, it may result from an excuse for non-performance. In certain cases attempted performance may also operate as a substitute for actual performance, and can result in complete discharge of the contract.
What is Performance of Contract?
The term ‘Performance of contract‘ means that both, the promisor, and the promisee have fulfilled their respective obligations, which the contract placed upon them. For instance, A visits a stationery shop to buy a calculator. The shopkeeper delivers the calculator and A pays the price. The contract is said to have been discharged by mutual performance.
Section 27 of Indian contract Act says that
"The parties to a contract must either perform, or offer to perform, their respective promises, unless such performance is dispensed with or excused under the provisions of this Act, or any other law."
Promises bind the representatives of the promisor in case of the death of the latter before performance, unless a contrary intention appears in the contract.
Thus, it is the primary duty of each contracting party to either perform or offer to perform its promise. For performance to be effective, the courts expect it to be exact and complete, i.e., the same must match the contractual obligations. However, where under the provisions of the Contract Act or any other law, the performance can be dispensed with or excused, a party is absolved from such a responsibility.
Example
A promises to deliver goods to B on a certain day on payment of Rs 1,000. Aexpires before the contracted date. A‘s representatives are bound to deliver the goods to B, and B is bound to pay Rs 1,000 to A‘s representatives.
Types of Performance
Performance, as an action of the performing may be actual or attempted.
Actual Performance
When a promisor to a contract has fulfilled his obligation in accordance with the terms of the contract, the promise is said to have been actually performed. Actual performance gives a discharge to the contract and the liability of the promisor ceases to exist. For example, A agrees to deliver10 bags of cement at B’s factory and B promises to pay the price on delivery. A delivers the cement on the due date and B makes the payment. This is actual performance.
Actual performance can further be subdivided into substantial performance, and partial Performance
Substantial Performance
This is where the work agreed upon is almost finished. The court then orders that the money must be paid, but deducts the amount needed to correct minor existing defect. Substantial performance is applicable only if the contract is not an entire contract and is severable. The rationale behind creating the doctrine of substantial performance is to avoid the possibility of one party evading his liabilities by claiming that the contract has not been completely performed. However, what is deemed to be substantial performance is a question of fact to be decided in both the case. It will largely depend on what remains undone and its value in comparison to the contract as a whole.
Partial Performance
This is where one of the parties has performed the contract, but not completely, and the other side has shown willingness to accept the part performed. Partial performance may occur where there is shortfall on delivery of goods or where a service is not fully carried out.
There is a thin line of difference between substantial and partial performance. The two following points would help in distinguishing the two types of performance.
Partial performance must be accepted by the other party. In other words, the party who is at the receiving end of the partial performance has a genuine choice whether to accept or reject. Substantial performance, on the other hand, is legally enforceable against the other party.
Payment is made on a different basis from that for substantial performance. It is made on quantum meruit, which literally means as much as is deserved. So, for example, if half of the work has been completed, half of the negotiated money would be payable. In case of substantial performance, the party that has performed can recover the amount appropriate to what has been done under the contract, provided that the contract is not an entire contract. The price is thus, often payable in such circumstances, and the sum deducted represents the cost of repairing defective workmanship.
Attempted Performance
When the performance has become due, it is sometimes sufficient if the promisor offers to perform his obligation under the contract. This offer is known as attempted performance or more commonly as tender. Thus, tender is an offer of performance, which of course, complies with the terms of the contract. If goods are tendered by the seller but refused by the buyer, the seller is discharged from further liability, given that the goods are in accordance with the contract as to quantity and quality, and he may sue the buyer for.breach of contract if he so desires. The rationale being that when a person offers to perform, he is ready, willing and capable to perform. Accordingly, a tender of performance may operate as a substitute for actual performance, and can effect a complete discharge.
In this regard, Section 38 of Indian Contract Act says:
‘Where a promisor has made an offer of performance to the promisee, and the offer has not been accepted, the promisor is not responsible for non-performance, nor does he thereby lose his rights under the contract. For example, A contracts to deliver to B, 100 tons of basmati rice at his warehouse, on 6 December 2015. A takes the goods to B‘s place on the due date during business hours, but B, without assigning any good reason, refuses to take the delivery. Here, A has performed what he was required to perform under the contract. It is a case of attempted performance and A is not responsible for non-performance of B, nor does he thereby lose his rights under the contract.’
Capacity to Contract
According to Business law, an individual must be competent to enter into a contract.
As per Section 11 of the Contract Act, the following individual is competent to enter into a contract:-
Let us understand each in detail:-
1. Contract with Minor
The law protects the minors against their own inexperience and the possible improper designs of those who are experienced. The Contract Act states that, only a person who is major can enter into contract. As per Section 3 of the Indian Majority act, 1875, a minor is a person who is under 18 years of age. An agreement with minor is void and cannot be ratified by him/her until he/she attains majority. However, a minor can be promise or beneficiary under a contract and can enter into special types of contracts for necessaries of life.
Example
The case of Mohiri Bibi vs. Dharmdas Ghose
A minor mortgaged his house in favour of moneylender to secure a loan of Rs 20,000 of which the minor was paid Rs 8000.later; the minor sued the moneylender for setting aside the mortgage on the pretext that he was under age. The mortgage was deemed void and cancelled. The moneylender’s contention that the minor should repay the amount was not accepted
2. Soundness of Mind
As per section12 of the Contract Act, An individual is of sound mind to make a contract if the individual is capable of understanding the terms of the contract at the time of its creation and is capable of making rational judgements in his/her interests. As per the Act, Lunatics i.e. person deranged because of the personal trauma, individuals who have completely lost their mental capacity and drunken/intoxicatedpersons who comes under influence of any such substances are of unsound mind and do not have capacity to enter into any contract. While a Lunatic and drunken individual may have lucid intervals but an idiot is such an individual who does not possess any soundness of mind and all contracts with such persons are void. Lunatics and Drunker individuals can enter into contract only at the period of their lucidity but not otherwise.
Example
Williams is drunk and he visits a broker for having a house on rent. They fixed the price at Rs 15,000 to be payable each month and one month deposit. He contract will be void because he is in drunken state and not in any capacity to enter into a valid contract. After he comes in lucid state the following day, then he can enter into the same contract.
3. Individuals disqualified by law
As per the contract Act, the following are said to disqualify from entering into any contract:-
(a). Alien Enemy- Any Individual is not a citizen of India is termed to be Alien and cannot enter into any contract.
(b). Foreign Sovereign
(c). Corporations- Any company is a different entity (artificial person) created by law. To enter into any contract it can enter via its board of directors.
(d). Convicts-Individual are sentence by the law for imprisonment cannot enter into any contract as per the Act during the imprisonment period. He can enter into contract once his punishment completes with the sentence expiration.
(e). Insolvents- Insolvents cannot enter into contract until the court passes an order for Discharge.
(f). Pardanashin Women
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