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Showing posts with label legal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legal. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Govt can frame guidelines for DPCs: CAT

New Delhi, Oct 28 (PTI) The Central Administrative Tribunal (CAT) has held that government can frame guidelines for departmental promotion committees (DPCs) and judiciary will not question its validity so long as it provides level playing field for all candidates.

"The government has a right to frame the guidelines for the DPCs and there cannot be any judicial interference in such case, unless the same are perverse or are drafted to favour a class of candidates," CAT Vice Chairman L K Joshi and Member Meera Chhibber said.

The tribunal passed the order on a plea of a Delhi police sub-inspector, challenging the promotions made on the basis of 2008 circular which issued guidelines for the DPC to promote eligible police personnel.

The sub-inspector, Ram Niwas, contended that DPC should have followed 2005 guidelines for promotions and not the 2008 guidelines which was issued after creation of vacancies.

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Laws relating to Arbitration & Conciliation (both Domestic & International)

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996 is the prime legislation relating to domestic arbitration, international commercial arbitration and enforcement of foreign arbitral awards and also to define the law relating to conciliation and for matters connected therewith or incidental thereto. It repealed the three statutory provisions for arbitration:- (i) the Arbitration Act, 1940; (ii) the Arbitration (Protocol and Convention) Act, 1937; and (iii) the Foreign Awards (Recognition and Enforcement) Act, 1961.

Domestic Arbitration is defined as an alternative dispute resolution mechanism in which the parties get their disputes settled through the intervention of a third person and without having recourse to the court of law. It is a mode in which the dispute is referred to a nominated person who decides the issue in a quasi-judicial manner after hearing both sides. Generally, the disputing parties refer their case to an arbitral tribunal and the decision arrived at by the tribunal is known as an 'award'.

While, the term 'international commercial arbitration' means "an arbitration relating to disputes arising out of legal relationships, whether contractual or not, considered as commercial under the law in India and where at least one of the parties is:- (i) an individual who is a national of, or habitually resident in, any country other than India; or (ii) a body corporate which is incorporated in any country other than India; or (iii) a company or an association or a body of individuals whose central management and control is exercised in any country other than India; or (iv) the Government of a foreign country".

The major provisions relating to Arbitration in the Act are:-

* The parties to a present dispute may make an agreement called as the 'arbitration agreement' that instead of going to the court, they shall refer the dispute to arbitration. The parties to the agreement may refer to arbitration, a dispute:-

o Which has arisen or which may arise between them,
o In respect of a defined legal relationship, whether contractual or not.

Thus, all matters of civil nature whether they relate to present or future disputes may form the subject matter of reference. Even disputes such as infringement of intellectual property rights shall also be covered.
* Although no formal document is prescribed, an arbitration agreement/clause must be in writing. If the arbitration agreement/clause is contained in a document, the document must be signed by the concerned parties. Besides, the agreement may be established by:- (i) an exchange of letters, telex, telegram or other means of telecommunications; or (ii) an exchange of statements of claims and defence in which the agreement is alleged by one party and is not denied by the other.
* The disputes that cannot be referred to arbitration are:-
o Insolvency proceedings.
o Lunancy proceedings.
o Proceedings for appointment of a guardian to a minor.
o Question of genuineness or otherwise of a will or matter relating to issue of a probate.
o Matter of criminal nature.
o Matters concerning public charitable trusts.
o Disputes arising from and founded on an illegal contract.
* The agreement mandatorily requires the appointment of an arbitrator. An arbitrator is a person appointed, with or without mutual consent of the contending parties, for the purpose of investigation and settlement of a difference or dispute referred to him. The arbitral tribunal may be constituted by one or more arbitrators. The parties are free to fix the number of arbitrators by agreement. Accordingly, the reference may be made either to a single arbitrator or a panel of odd number (i.e. 3,5,7 etc) of arbitrators. If there is no agreement, the reference shall be made to a sole arbitrator.
* Unless otherwise agreed by the parties, an arbitrator may be of any nationality. In case of an international commercial arbitration, where the parties belong to different nationalities, the Chief Justice of india may appoint an arbitrator of a nationality other than that of the parties.
* The parties are free to agree on a procedure for appointing the arbitrator or arbitrators. If there is such an agreement, the appointment has to be made in accordance with it. The agreement may provide for the number of arbitrators, qualifications of arbitrator, procedure of appointment, procedure of challenging the appointment, termination of appointment, procedure to be followed by arbitrators, place of arbitration, language, etc.
* The duties of the Arbitral Tribunal are:- (i) to act independently and impartially and treat the parties equally; (ii) to give each party full opportunity to present his case.
* The parties may agree on the procedure to be followed by the arbitral tribunal in conducting its proceedings. In the absence of such agreement, the arbitral tribunal may conduct the proceedings in the manner it considers appropriate and shall be empowered to determine the admissibility, relevance, materiality and weight of any evidence. The tribunal shall decide whether to hold oral hearings for presentation of evidence or for oral argument, or whether to conduct the proceedings on the basis of documents and other materials.
* An arbitral award shall be made in writing and shall be signed by the members of the arbitral tribunal. The award shall state its date and place of arbitration. The arbitral award shall state the reasons upon which it is based, unless the parties have agreed that no reasons are to be given or in case of award on a settlement between the parties. A signed copy of the award shall be delivered to each party.
* An arbitral award is itself enforceable as a decree of the court, normally after three months from the date on which it was received by the parties, provided no application for setting aside the award is made or if it is made the same has been rejected. The arbitral award shall be final and binding on the parties and persons claiming under them respectively.
* The arbitral proceedings shall be terminated when:-
o The final arbitral award is made,
o The claimant withdraws his claim, and the respondent does not object to it,
o The parties agree on the termination,
o The continuation of proceedings has for any other reason become unnecessary or impossible.

The Arbitration and Conciliation Act provides statutory recognition to conciliation as a distinct mode of dispute settlement. Conciliation is defined as the process of amicable settlement of disputes by the parties with the assistance of a conciliator. It differs from arbitration in the sense that in arbitration the award is the decision of the third party or the arbitral tribunal, while in the case of conciliation the decision is of the parties which is arrived at with the mediation of the conciliator.

The major provisions relating to Conciliation in the Act are:-

* A party initiating the conciliation shall send a written notice to the other party, briefly identifying the subject of the dispute and inviting it for conciliation. The conciliation proceedings shall commence on acceptance of invitation by the other party. If the party initiating conciliation does not receive a reply within 30 days from the date the invitation was sent or within the specified period, it may opt to treat this as a rejection and inform the same to the other party. If it rejects the invitation, there can be no conciliation proceeding.
* Unless otherwise agreed there shall be one conciliator. The parties may however, agree that there shall be two or three conciliators, who shall act jointly. The sole conciliator shall be appointed by mutual consent of the parties. In case of two conciliators, each party may appoint one conciliator. In case of three conciliators, each party may appoint one conciliator and the third conciliator may be appointed by mutual agreement of the parties who shall act as the presiding conciliator. However, the parties may agree that a conciliator shall be appointed or recommended by an institution or a person.
* Each party shall submit to the conciliator a brief written statement describing the general nature of the dispute and the points at issue. A copy of the same shall be sent to the other party. The conciliator may require of each party to send a detailed statement supported by documents and other evidence, a copy whereof shall be sent to the other party also. Any factual information concerning the dispute received by the conciliator from a party, shall be disclosed to the other party to allow it an opportunity to present any explanation, except however, when a party gives any information subject to a condition that should be kept confidential.
* The parties involved shall co-operate with the conciliator in good faith, comply with requests for submitting written materials, providing evidence and attending meetings. A party may submit to the conciliator suggestions for the settlement of the dispute.
* The functions of a Conciliator are:-
o To assist the parties in an independent and impartial manner, to reach an amicable settlement of their dispute.
o To be guided by principles of objectivity, fairness and justice.
o To give consideration to rights and obligations of the parties, trade usages, circumstances surrounding the dispute and any previous business practice between the parties.
o To conduct the conciliation proceedings in an appropriate manner, taking into account the circumstances of the case and wishes of the parties.
o To make proposals for a settlement of the dispute.
o Not to act as an arbitrator or as a representative of a party in any arbitral or judicial proceeding in respect of the same dispute, unless otherwise agreed by the parties.
o Not to act as a witness in any arbitral or judicial proceedings.
* If it appears to the conciliator that a settlement is possible, he shall formulate the terms of a possible settlement and submit them to the parties for their observations. The conciliator shall then reformulate the possible settlement in the light of observations received from the parties. If the parties reach on a settlement, they may draw up and sign a written settlement agreement with the assistance of the conciliator. The conciliator shall authenticate the settlement agreement and furnish a copy thereof to each of the parties. The settlement agreement shall be final and binding on the parties and shall have the same effect as of an arbitral award.
* The conciliation proceedings shall be terminated when:-
o A settlement agreement is signed by the parties,
o A written declaration is made by the conciliators after consultation with the parties, that further efforts at conciliation are no longer justified,
o A written declaration is made by the conciliator, after the deposits required in relation to costs of the proceedings are not received from the parties, that the proceedings are terminated,
o A written declaration is made by the parties to the conciliator, that the conciliation proceedings are terminated,
o A written declaration is sent by a party to the other party and the conciliator, that the conciliation proceedings are terminated.

'Foreign Award' has been defined to mean "an award on differences between persons arising out of legal relationships, whether contractual or not and considered as commercial under the law in force in India, and made in pursuance of an agreement in writing for arbitration to be governed either by the New York Convention or by the Geneva Convention, in the territory of a notified foreign State". Some of the provisions of the Act relating to foreign award are:-

* Where a commercial dispute covered by an arbitration agreement to which either of the Convention apply, arises before a judicial authority in India, it shall at the request of the party be referred to arbitration.
* The party applying for the enforcement of a foreign award shall produce the original award or a duly authenticated copy thereof, the original arbitration agreement or a certified copy thereof, and evidence to prove that the award is a foreign award.
* If the court is satisfied that the foreign award is enforceable, the award shall be deemed to be a decree of the court. An appeal shall lie against the order of the court refusing to refer the parties to arbitration or refusing to enforce a foreign award.
* Any foreign award which is enforceable under the Act, shall be binding and may be relied upon by the parties by way of defence, set off or otherwise in any legal proceedings in India.

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Liquidated Damages - Applicability and Enforceablity

Liquidated Damages - Applicability and Enforceablity

P. C. Markanda*

INTRODUCTION

In all building and engineering contracts, it is invariably provided that the subject work shall be completed within the stated time. In order to ensure that the objective is achieved, the parties agree between themselves that a certain percentage of the amount of the whole work shall be completed at different defined stages. It is also provided that default in achieving the target by the contractor at any of the defined stages would attract action by the employer in terms of the liquidated damages clause contained in the contract.

The contracts generally provide that the contractor at 1/4 th, 1/2 and 3/4th stages of the work shall achieve defined progress. If at one-fourth stage, the contractor fails to give progress as agreed, the employer can levy liquidated damages, after observing the requisite formalities, or can, alternatively, call upon the contractor to make up the progress in a period to be given in the notice, failing which a right can be reserved by the employer to levy liquidated damages. Similar action can be initiated after the expiry of half or three-fourth of the stipulated period.

The purpose of inserting liquidated damages clause is only to ensure that the contractor shall execute the work with due diligence and in a workmanlike manner and strive to complete the whole work as given in the contract within the stipulated time. It must be remembered that the stipulation with regard to liquidated damages is not at all aimed to provide revenue to the employer. It is thus, desirable that recourse to imposition of liquidated damages should be taken only in extreme cases. It must be understood that by realising the amount of liquidated damages, the employer is not only reducing the working capacity of the contractor but is also running the risk of bringing the work to a complete halt. Many legal and financial complications can and do arise consequently. There may be an injunction from the Courts restraining the employer from proceeding with the work further pending' decision of the case. In addition, the risk of additional financial burden due to efflux of time has also to be borne in mind by the employer.

In many cases the time fixed by the contract ceases to be applicable on account of some act or default of the employer or his architect or engineer. A provision is, therefore, generally inserted in order to avoid such acts or defaults destroying the right to liquidated damages, by which the architect or engineer is empowered to grant an extension of time on the happening of certain specified events, and the contractor is bound, when such an extension of time has been properly granted to complete within the extended time. This has the effect of substituting for the time fixed by the contract a new date from which the liquidated damages are to run. Such a new date can only be substituted for the original time, under such a power, where the extension is given under the circumstances and on the happening of the events expressly provided by the contract. (1)

MERE USE OF WORDS "LIQUIDATED DAMAGES" AND "PENALTY"' IN A CLAUSE NOT TO BE DECISIVE

The question that arises is as to what is meant by liquidated damages, and secondly, whether or not the stipulation in the contract is in fact for penalty or liquidated damages. Under Common Law, a genuine pre-estimate of damages by mutual agreement was regarded as a stipulation for liquidated damages, a stipulation in contract in ierrorem is a penalty and the Court refuses to enforce it, awarding to the aggrieved party only reasonable compensation

The use of the term penalty or liquidated damages by itself is not decisive, even what is described as liquidated damages could turn out to be penalty on the face of given case. The essence of penalty is a sum paid as in terroem while the essence of liquidated damages is a genuine covenanted pre-estimate of damages. A penal stipulation cannot be enforced. Liquidated damages must be the result of a genuine pre-estimate of damages and they do not include a sum fixed in terrorem. The question Is one of construction of a contract to be judged as at the tim c it was made, and mere description as penalty or liquidated damages though relevant is not binding.

The Indian Legislature has sought to cut across the web of rules and presumptions under the EngIish Common Law by enacting a uniform principle applicable to all stipulations naming amounts to be paid in case of breach, and stipulations by way of penalty. (3)

Sometimes it becomes difficult to make out whether the sum named in a clause is a penalty or liquidated damages. In such a case, the Court must take into consideration the intention of the parties, as evidenced by their language and the circumstances of the case. (4)

Mere use of the word "penalty" in a liquidated damages clause would not make the stipulation penal. If the sum named is not in terrorem it would be regarded as liquidated damages despite the fact that it had been given the name "penalty" in the contract.

Where in a contract for electric lighting installation it was provided that the work should be "completed in all respects on or before 26 November, 1898, subject to a penalty of 15 pounds per day, and the Plant by 10 December, subject to a penalty of 3 pounds per day the work remains unfinished to the satisfaction of the authorities or the Engineer, it was held that although the word penalty was used, the amounts accrued owing to the default of the contractor were, in fact, liquidated damages. (5)

On the other hand, if the sum named in the agreement is its lerrorem but has been stipulated to be liquidated damages in the contract, it will not be given effect to by the Courts since, in fact, it is in the nature of penalty.

Where the employer determined the contract on account of alleged breaches by the contractor, and clause 30 of the contract provided that in the event ofthe determination for breach, "all implements of the contractor used in the carrying out of the contract and all materials provided by him.... shall become the sole and absolute property of the employer and shall be considered as unaseertained damages for breach of contract", it was held that the clause was a penalty clause and not a liquidated damages clause.(6)

DISTINCTION BETWEEN LIQUIDATED DAMAGES AND PENALTY

Sometimes there is a very thin line dividing provisions relating to liquidated damages and penalt,.. A distinction as to whether the stipulation is one by way of liquidated damages or penalty has been summed up by the House of Lords in Dunlop Pnumatic. Tyre Co. Ltd. Vs New Garage and Molor Company Ltd. (7) as follows:

    A. The parties who use the expression `penalty' or liquidated `damages' may prima facie mean what they say, yet the expressions are not conclusive.

    B. The essence of a penalty is a payment of money in terrorem of an offending party; the essence of liquidated damages is a genuine pre-estimate of damayes.

    C. The question whether a sum is a penalty or liquidated damages is a matter of construction of the particular contract, to be judged at the time of its and not at the time of its breach.

    D. To assist in this task of construction, various tests have been suggested, which if applicable to the case under construction may prove helpful or even conclusive. Some such tests are -

      i) the sum stipulated shall be a penalty if it is extravagant and unconscionable in amount in comparison with greatest loss that could conceivably be proved to follow from breach.

      ii) it would be a penalty if breach consists only in not paying sum of money and sum stipulated is greater than sum which ought to have been paid;

      iii) presumption (but no more) that it is a penalty when single sum made payable by way of compensation, or occurrence of one or more or all of such events, which may occasion serious damage or trifling damage, on the other hand; and

      iv) no obstacle to sum stipulated being a genuine pre-estimate of damage that consequences of breach are such as to make precise pre-estimation almost impossible. On the contrary, that is the situation when probably the pre-estimated damage was true bargain between parties.

A building contract contained a proviso that in case the contract should not in all things be duly performed by the contractors they should pay 1000 pounds as liquidated damages. Held, this was a penalty and not liquidated damages. (8)

If in making a provision for breach of contract, the promisee stipulates that the promisor on the breach only, shall pay such compensation as the Court would deem reasonable in the circumstances of the case, then there is no penalty and the stipulation is not penal. But, if on the other hand, the Court, after a proper consideration of the facts of the case, come to the conclusion that the stipulation was put in not by way of reasonable compensation to the promisee but in order that by reason of its burdensome or oppressive character it may operate i . Pi terrorem over the promisor so as to drive him to fulfill the contract, then such a stipulation is by way of penalty. (9)

The parties to a contract may at the time of entering into it provide, that in case of breach the party in default is to pay to the other a sum certain provided in, or ascertainable from, the contract. This sum may be either liquidated damages, in which case it is not to be interfered with by the Court, or a penalty, which covers the loss if proved but does not assess it. If it is a sum which can be regarded as a genuine pre-estimate by the parties of the loss which they contemplated would flow from the breach, it is liquidated damages. If, on the other hand, the sum does not attempt to assess the loss, but is imposed as security for the due performance of the contract, it is a penalty. Liquidated damages, therefore, are pactional damages agreed to between the parties. Therefore, the essence of a penalty is a payment of money stipulated as in terrorem of the offending party; the essence of liquidated damages is a genuine covenanted, pre-estimate of damage. (10)

WHEN LIQUIDATED DAMAGES TREATED AS COMPENSATION FOR DELAY

In certain cases, the Courts have treated the liquidated damages as compensation for delay caused by the contractor in completing the work. By way of illustration, reference may be made to the two cases which are as under:

(A) The erectors of a silk reducing plant covenanted to pay 20 pounds a week- for every week exceeding eighteen weeks occupied in the erection of the plant. The, period was greatly exceeded, and the silk company contended that this sum was a penalty and that they were entitled to much larger sum as unliquidated damages. Held, the sum of 20 pounds a week was intended by the parties to be the agreed measure of damages as the erectors had declined to be responsible for delay and the sum was provided in place of no compensation and was not a pre-estimate of actual damages, but was an agreed amount to go towards compensation for delay.(11)

(B) Where a contractor entered into a contract with the Government for supply of materials before a specified date for the repair and construction of roads and the parties were aware that the construction work was a matter of extreme urgency and was to be completed with the help of materials to be supplied by the contractor before the specified date, otherwise the construction work would be held up and the Government would suffer loss and damages and also the parties knew before hand that if the contract would not be performed to its completion, it would not be possible for the Government to lead evidence of actual loss and accordingly they assessed such loss on the basis of certain percentage of value of contract and where there was sufficient evidence to prove inlegal injury suffered by the Government by reason of the breach of the contract and also to show that if any other contractor had been employed at that stage, the Government would have suffered certain loss and damage thereby the amount assessed and mentioned in the contract cannot be said to have been assessed by way of penalty but was a genuine pre-estimate of the loss which was to be suffered by the Government in case of failure on the part of the contractor to deliver the materials before the due date mentioned in the contract. Hence, the amount mentioned in the contract would be payable as liquidated damages. (12)

DAMAGES NOT PAYABLE WHEN LIQUIDATED DAMAGES LEVIED

The parties when entering into a contract presuppose that the employer shall not commit any breach of conditions of contract and shall under all circumstances give effect to the stipulations contained in the contract. This is probably the only reason why the contract does not provide a yardstick for measuring damages which the contractor suffers like the manner it is so provided in case of liquidated damages. Thus, the only remedy available to the contractor in case of breach of contract by the employer is to submit his claim for damages to the arbitrator if the contract provides for arbitration in case of disputes between the parties but if there be no arbitration clause, then to file a civil suit. The question whether the employer in addition to the amount stated in the liquidated damages clause, is entitled to damages has been answered in Sir Chunilal V. Mehta and Sons Ltd. Vs Century Spinning and Manufacturing Co. Lid. (13) in the following terms:

"Where the parties name in a contract reduced to writing a sum of money to be paid as liquidated damages they must be deemed to exclude the right to claim an unascertained sum of money as damages. The right to claim liquidated damages is enforceable under section 74 of the Contract Act and where such a right is found to exist no question of ascertaining damages really arises. Where the parties have deliberately specified the amount of liquidated damages there can be no presumption that they at the same time intended to allow the party who has suffered by the breach to give a go by to the sum specified and claim instead a sum of money which was not ascertainable or ascertainable at the date of the breach."

The effect of section 74 of the Indian Contract Act is that a party cannot get the full amount mentioned in the contract as a matter of absolute right or as a matter of course. But if the party proves that he has suffered damage to the extent of the full amount or that the Court considers, even without any proof that the full amount is a reasonable compensation which can be awarded under the circumstances, the Court can award the full amount. One thing is however certain, that.the party is entitled to get some amount, not exceeding the sum named, which the Court considers as reasonable compensation, whether any actual loss or damage is proved to have been suffered by him. (14)

SITUATIONS WHERE LIQUIDATED DAMAGES CANNOT BE REALISED

Realisation of liquidated damges from the contractor is not a matter of course There may be circumstances when the employer loses the right to recover the same from the contractor.

Liquidated damages cease to be payable where the employer has waived the right to insist upon them. e.g. where he has failed to deduct or retain them in cases where it is imperative on his part under the contract to do so.(15)

Where the liquidated damages are stipulated for at so much per day or per week. there must be a definite date from which they are to run. If no such date is fixed by the contract, or if by the operation of intervening circumstances the date fixed by the contract has ceased to be operative and there is no provision in the contract by which another date can be substituted, all rights to recover the sum stipulated for as liquidated damages have gone.(16)

A contractor was delayed and failed to complete the contract on time, partly because of his fault and partly because the employer was late in the delivery of certain fixtures in the building. The employer sued the contractor under a liquidated damages clause for a per diem payment of each day's work overdue. Held, the failure of the employer to deliver precluded him from relying on the penalty clause, notwithstanding that the contractor may have been overdue in any event, in the absence of evidence that the contract could have been completed in time by a special effort on the part of the contractor.(17)

When the contractor had not finished the work by the date fixed in the agreement and the State allowed him to continue and complete it and final bill was prepared without imposing any penalty in terms of contract soon after the contractor's failure to complete by fixed date or rescinding the contract or getting work completed by other contractor, the State was not entitled to compensation as it must be deemed to have waived its right to fix it and recover the same from the contractor.(18)

When a clause in the agreement provides that compensation shall be deducted from time to time as the delay would occur during the progress of the work, non-levy of the same by the Chief Engineer would amount to waiver of his right to fix the compensation and to recover the same from the contractor.(19)

There are many ways in which completion of the works within the contract time may be prevented by the act or default of the employer, as, for instance, by ordering extras.' by not providing the site at the appropriate time; by failure to supply drawings when required by the contractor, or by failing to supply materials which the employer has agreed to provide. Where the effect of extras being ordered by the employer is to cause delay to the contractor, it is clear that, in the absence of special stipulations in the contract, the date fixed for completion is made inapplicable and the contractor is relieved from his liability to pay liquidated damages for delay.(20)

Where a clause in a contract provided for imposition of penalty if work was not done with due diligence, and the delay occurred due to failure of the department in supplying the stipulated material in time which had been duly intimated from time to time, and even the request of the contractor for grant of extension of time had not been rejected by the department, it was held that imposition of penalty. for delay. cannot be justified.(21)

LIQUIDATED DAMAGES RECOVERABLE ONLY WHEN LEGAL INJURY SUFFERED

The question whether the employer can recover the amount specified in the contract by way of iquidated damages without proving that there had been "legal injury" has been answered in some decided case. In Fateh Chand Vs Balkishan Das (22), the Supreme Court of India has held that Section 74 of the Indian Contract Act undoubtedly says that the aggrieved party is entitled to receive compensation from the party who has broken the contract, whether or not actual damage or loss is proved to have been caused by the breach. Thereby it merely dispenses with proof of "actual loss or damage". however it does not justify the award of compensation when in consequence of the breach no legal injury at all has resulted, because compensation for breach of contract can be awarded to make good loss or damage which naturally arose in the usual course of things. or which the parties knew when they made the contract, to be likely to result from the breach.

Section 74 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872 does not dispense with the basic condition of the breach resulting in any loss or damae which can be called "legal injury". The party complaining of breach of contract and claiming compensation is entitled to succeed only on proof of "legal injury" having been sustained on account of such breach. The words in Section 74 "whether or not actual damage Or loss is proved to have been caused thereby" have been employed to underscore the departure deliberately made by the Indian Legislature from the complicated principles of English Common Law and also to emphasize that reasonable compensation can be granted even in a case where extent of actual loss or damage is incapable of proof or not proved. Thus, Section 74 deliberately states that what is to be awarded is a reasonable compensation. In a case where the party complaining has not suftered legal injury in the sense of sustaining loss or damage, there is nothing to compensate him, for there is nothing to recompensate, satisfy or make amends. Therefore, he will not be entitled to compensation.(23)

Where the Chief Engineer has very categorically stated that on account of the delay on the part of the contractor in completing the work, there occasioned, in fact, no loss to the Government. compensation cannot be granted by the Courts even if a sum is named in the contract as payable in the event of breach of contract.(24)

In Michel Habib Raji Ayoub Vs Sheikh Suleman EI Taji Forouqui (25), it was observed as under:

"Agreed liquidated damages, if to be enforced must be the result of a genuine pre-estimate of damages' to use the illuminating phrase of LORD DUNREDIN. They do not include a sum fixed in terrorem covering breaches of contract of many varying degrees of importance the possible damages from which bear no relation to the fixed sum, which obviously have at no time been estimated by the contracting parties. It seems right therefore to conclude that now when the code is applied to contracts `damages' will be taken to mean actual damages, and the article will only apply to an agreement which represent a genuine pre-estimate of damages'. Where there is such an agreed sum `no more and no less' can be awarded. But if the Court applying well-known rules has to conclude that the sum agreed was a penalty, whatever it may be called in the agreement, then the penal stipulation shall not be enforced."

SECURITY DEPOSIT CANNOT BE FORFEITED WHEN LIQUIDATED DAMAGES LEVIED

The question whether security deposit of the contractor can also be forfeited when the employer has already exercised its right of recovering liquidated damages has been answered by the Courts in India. Some of the cases relating to this aspect of the matter are as under:

Where on failure of contractor to complete the work within time, the Government in accordance with conditions of contract debited the contractor with actual cost which was spent in getting unfinished work done and forfeited the security amount also, it was held that as the Government did not suffer any damage in consequence of default, it was not entitled to forfeit security deposit inasmuch as forfeiture of security deposit, would amount to imposition of penalty.(26)

The party to the contact taking a security deposit from the other party to ensure due performance of the contract is not entitled to forfeit the security deposit on the ground of default, when no loss is caused to him in consequence of such default.(27)

When in a works contract, the contractor undertook to complete the work within 3 months and on default to forgo the deposit and the building having been completed late without any loss to the department, it was held that the department could not forfeit the deposit and at best could claim reasonable compensation.(28)

A provision in the contract between the contractor and the government cast a duty on the contractor to finish the work within the specified time and if he failed to do so, the Divisional Engineer was given a discretion to cancel the contract and employee some other person to execute the remaining portion thereof The Division Engineer could also recover from the contractor any extra cost that such proceeding might entail or he might allow the contractor to complete the work chasing for each day for the work unfinished by him a penalty. The contractor not having completed the work within the stipulated time, the Government cancelled the contract. The government did not give the work to any other person nor did it allow the contractor to complete it. No notice was given to the contractor before the cancellation of the contract. The government, however, forfeited the earnest money and the security deposit which were deposited by the contractor, on the condition that the amount would be returned to the contractor upon completion of the work It was held that thought the government was entitled to cancel the contract, it had not followed the formalities laid down in the stipulations of the contract and therefore would not be entittled to forefeit the earnest moneyh and further security deposit (29).

Where in a contract between the State government and the contractor. power had been conferred upon the Executive Engineer to grant extension from time to time and for levying and recovering penalty/compensation from the contractor at specified rates for the unfinished work after expiry of the fixed date, it was held that on rescission of, such contract by Government without fixing any further period was illegal and State Government committed a breach of contract and consequently the security deposit of the contractor could not be forfeited.(30)

To justify forfeiture of advance deposit being part of price as "earnest", the terms of contract should be sufficiently explicit and made known to the party making the deposit. Thus, where the contents of the reply submitted by the receiver in the Court were not sutricient to hold that 1/4 th advance deposit of bid money was by way of earnest and as a guarantee for fulfillment of other terms of the contract so as to justify its forfeiture on the alleged breach on the part of the highest bidder, then in the absence of proof of any loss to the auctioning authority the advance deposited by the auction-purchaser could not be forfeited by the receiver as "eamest".(31)

CONCLUSION

Invocation of liquidated damages clause should be taken recourse to by the employer only in such cases where there can be no two opinions that the contractor does not have the capacity to do the work- nor he will be able to complete the work within a reasonable time after the time stated in the contract expires. Any action taken in a hurry would land the employer in problem. Some amount of restraint in proceeding against the contractor must be exercised. The contractor may have genuine problems which he could not have foreseen with reasonable diligence at the time of entering into contract. If the employer takes into consideration the fact that it does not pay the contractor to delay execution of work, then he has to investigate as to why delay is occurring. The employer must endevour to find solutions rather that saying that it is not his headache, since the aimed objective of the employer is to get the work completed rather than enter into any legal or financial complications.
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