12 December 1974
Supreme Court
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FIRM OF PRATAPCHAND NOPAJI Vs FIRM OF KOTRIKE VENKATTA SETTY & SONS ETC.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 2382 of 1968


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PETITIONER: FIRM OF PRATAPCHAND NOPAJI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: FIRM OF KOTRIKE VENKATTA SETTY & SONS ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/12/1974

BENCH: BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH BENCH: BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH KRISHNAIYER, V.R. GOSWAMI, P.K.

CITATION:  1975 AIR 1223            1975 SCR  (3)   1  1975 SCC  (2) 208

ACT: Indian  Contract  Act (9 of 1872) Section 23, 222  and  224- Scope of-collateral agreement, when illegal.

HEADNOTE: The  appellant firm sued for amounts as due to indemnify  it under  S.  222  of  the Contract Act,  on  the  strength  of payments said to have been made by the firm to third parties on  behalf  of  the respondents who  were  alleged  to  have directed  the appellant to enter into  ’Badla’  transactions for them. These transactions are contracts for  speculation in  rise  and  fall  of price of  groundnut  and  oil  seeds purchased only notionally without any intention to  actually deliver them to the purchasers.  In such a transaction,  the purchaser is not at all expected to make a demand for actual delivery of goods ostensibly sold. Confirming the judgment of the High Court, held that, having regard  to  the objects ’of the prohibition imposed  by  the Central  Government on forward contracts on groundnut  seeds and  oil-seeds  in the interest of general public,  so  that supply at reasonable rates of those essential commodities is not jeopardised; the absolute terms of the prohibition;  the penalties  imposed  for its infringement;  and  the  careful manner  in which only those contracts which are for  actual. delivery  and  supply to bona fide purchasers  are  excluded from  the  prohibition;,  the contracts  were  tainted  with unlawfulness  of their object and are forbidden by law,  and hence are struck by the provisions of s. 23 of the  Contract Act. [19B-D; 20 D-E] (1)  If  an  agreement is merely collateral  to  another  or constitutes  an  aid facilitating the carrying  out  of  the object of the other agreement which, though void, is not  in itself  prohibited  within  meaning  of s.  23,  it  may  be enforced as    a  collateral  agreement.  If, on  the  other hand, it is part of a mechanism meant to defeat what the law has  actually prohibited, the courts will not countenance  a claim based upon the agreement, because, it will be  tainted with an illegality of the object sought to be achieved which is hit by the section.  The object of an agreement cannot be said  to  be  forbidden  or  unlawful  merely  because   the agreement results in what is known as a ’void contract’.   A

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void  agreement  when coupled with other facts,  may  become part of transaction which creates legal rights, but this  is no so if the object is prohibited or ’mal in se’. [12D-G] (2)  The  question  whether  the parties  through  whom  the appellant actually alleged carrying out the contracts set up between himself and defendants, could themselves be regarded as  Principals  or  agents of the appellants,  will  be  im- material  if  the objects of the contracts are found  to  be tained with the kind of illegality which is struck by s.  23 of  the  Contract  Act.   Again,  the  mere  fact  that  the contracts  were  entered  into at Kurnool in  the  State  of Andhra  Pradesh  would  also  not  make  any  difference  in principle  if the object of the contracts which were  to  be carried  out at Bombay were of such a kind as to be  hit  by the section. [13A-C] (3)  The contracts between the appellant and the respondents are  not  wagering contracts, though each  Party  knew  that their object was to indulge in speculation. [10C-D] Bhagwandas Parasram v. Burjori Ruttomji Bomanji 45 I.A.  29, 33, referred to. (4)  But,  the forward contracts violated the provisions  of two  Orders  issued  under s. 2(2)  of  the  Bombay  Forward Contracts Control Act, 1947. [16A-B] 2L379Sup.CT/75 2 (5)  Moreover,  s. 17 of the Essential  Supplies  (Temporary Powers)  Act,  1946, kept alive the provisions of  the  Oil- seeds  (Forward  Contracts Prohibition)  Order,  1943.   The Central Act is enacted for the control of production, supply and  distribution of essential commodities and  covers  food stuffs, Under s. 2(c) of the Act food stuffs include  edible oil-seeds  and oils, and s. 7(2) makes the contravention  of any  Order under s. 3, relating to food stuffs a  crime  and punishable with imprisonment. [16E; 17A-D] (6)  The Central Government has issued a notification  under s, 5 of the Oil-seeds (Forward Contracts Prohibition)  Order but  the  two  conditions imposed  for  excluding  contracts relating  the groundnuts are not satisfied in  the  ,present case,  They  are  (a) the contracts must be  in  respect  of specified  qualities or types, and (b) must be for  specific deliveries  aid  are not transferable to 3rd  parties.   The word  ’and’ cannot be read as ’or’ and both conditions  must be satisfied. The contracts, in the instant case, set up  by the  appellant, were not and could not have been for  actual delivery because they were only ’Badla’ transactions. If the contracts  were not for genuine or actual delivery but  only for  speculation on differences in prices the condition  for the  exclusion  of  the contracts from the  Purview  of  the control   Order,   which  contemplates   actually   intended delivery,would  not  be  satisfied.   The  contracts   were, therefore, prohibited under the provisions of the  Essential Supplies  Act,  1946 read with Central Order  of  1943,  and hence the contracts were not merely void but illegal in  the sense that their objects are forbidden. [18F-19B] (7)  A claim for indemnification under s. 222, Contract Act, is  only  maintainable  if  the acts,  which  the  agent  is employed  to do, are lawful.  Agreements to commit  criminal acts are expressly and specifically excluded by s. 224  from the  scope of any right to an indemnity.  The provisions  of the  Order of 1943 are applicable throughout India  are  not confined  to forward contracts entered into or meant  to  be carried  out  in  any particular part  of  India  and  their violation is a crime, The objects of the contracts set up by the appellants cannot be carried out by merely entering into them outside Bombay or engaging third parties as  sub-agents

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or in any other capacity to execute them. [20C-D] (8)  The  High  Court  rightly  relied  on  those  decisions holding agreements ,collateral to prohibited contracts to be also  unenforceable,  because, the taint  attaches  to  them which  makes  them  also contrary to  public  policy.   Such ;agreements  fall  within the class of  cases  mentioned  in Gherulal  Parakh  v.  Merhadeodas Maiya &  Ors.  [1959]  (2) Suppl.  S.C.R. 406, where harmful results of permitting  the contracts,  in terms of injury to the public at  large,  are evident and indisputable. [19G-H]                          ARGUMENTS: For  the  Appellants:  (1) The only  contested  point  which survives  in  the  appeal is whether  the  plaintiffs  acted lawfully when they-entered into contracts with the firms  of P.W. 2 and P.W. 3 on behalf of the defendants. (2)  In  considering the above question it is  important  to notice that the ,firms of P.W. 2 and P.W. 3 were  themselves the   commission   agents  of  the   plaintiffs   in   these transactions. The findings of both the lower courts are  (a) that  the  plaintiffs  were the  commission  agents  of  the defendants for the said transaction; (b) that the plaintiffs acting as principals (i.e. without disclosing their position as  agents of the defendants) employed the firms of  P.W.  2 and   P.W.  3  as  commission  agents  to  carry   out   the transactions  and (c) the firms of P.W. 2 and P.W. 3  acting as  principals entered into the transactions with the  firms of P.W. 1. (3)  These being the relevant facts, the question is whether the  contracts  between the plaintiffs on the one  hand  and firms  of  P.W. 2 and P.W. 3 on the other were  unlawful  by virtue of (a) Bombay Act III of 1865, (b) the Bombay Forward Contracts  Control Act. being Act LXIV of 1947 and  (c)  the Oil ’Seeds (Forward Contract Prohibition) Order, 1943. 3 (4)  The contracts between the plaintiffs and firms of  P.W. 2 and P.W. 3 were not unlawful under the 1865 Bombay Act for the following reasons :- (a)  The  plaintiffs did not enter into any  agreements  "by way  of wager" (in the words of section _30 of the  Contract Act) with the firms of P.W. 2 and P.W. 3 as they had nothing to  gain  or  to lose by the _rise or fall  of  the  forward market  rates  of oil seeds.  A wagering  contract  requires that  the  gain of one party to the contract should  be  the loss  of the other party thereto (vide 45 I-A, 29;  39  Bom. L.R.  1083;  1879  Q.B.D.  685;  Pollock  &  Mulla’s  Indian Contract and Specific Relief Acts, page 313; Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edition Vol. 1 para 809).  By the same test, the  principal contracts between the firms of P.W.  2-3  and the  firm of P.W. I were also not wagering  contracts.   The fact   is  that  the  defendants  indulged  in   speculative transactions through the agency of the plaintiffs, but it is well  settled  that  speculative  transactions  do  not   by themselves result in wagering agreements.  The courts  below erroneously  held, merely from the fact that  no  deliveries were  given or taken, that the transactions were by  way  of wager.   The  lower courts failed to realise that  when  one party  to  the  transactions (defendants in  this  case)  is interested in speculating on market fluctuations, he cancels One  contract by a cross contract, with the result  that  no delivery  takes place, although both the contracts  are  for delivery,  Since there were no wagers in the  present  case, the Bombay 1865 Act has no application. (b)  The  1865  Bombay  Act does not  contain  any  punitive provision.   It  merely declares certain  agreements  to  be void.  Even supposing the agreements between the  plaintiffs

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and the firms of P.W. 2-3 were for wager (which they clearly were  not),  they would merely be void and not  unlawful  by virtue of the Bombay Act.  Even in that case_ the plaintiffs as  agents  are  entitled to recover  their  dues  from  the defendants,  as  held  by this  Hon’ble  Court  in  Gherumal Parakh’s  case  [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R.  406.   Obviously  the Bombay  1865 Act was not operative in the region  where  the contracts between the Plaintiffs and defendants took place, (5)  The  contracts between the plaintiffs and the firms  of P.W.  2-3  were  not  unlawful  under  the  Bombay   Forward Contracts  Control  Act No. LXIV of 1947 for  the  following reasons :- (a)  Even the principal contracts between the firms of  P.W. 2-3  and the firm of P.W. 1 were not unlawful under s. 8  of the Act.  The contracts did not violate clause 1(a) of s.  8 of the said Act, because the defendants failed to point  out any bye-law of the Bombay Oil Seeds Exchange Ltd. which ren- dered  agreements  made in  contravention  thereof  unlawful (vide 59 Bom, L.R. 4). The agreement also did not contravene clause  1  (b)  of s. 8 since one  of  contracting  parties, namely  the  firm of P.W. 1 was a member of the  Bombay  Oil Seeds  Exchange Ltd. (vide page 32 line 21 and page 55  line 26.) (b)  In any case, the transactions between the plaintiffs on the  one hand, and the firms of P.W. 2-3 on the other,  were as between principal and agent, and since these transactions did  not  Come under the definition of  forward  contracts, they were not affected by the provisions of the ’1947 Bombay Act. (6)  The  transactions between the plaintiffs and the  firms of  P.W. 2-3 were not unlawful under the Oil Seeds  (Forward Contract Prohibition) Order. 1943 read with the Notification issued  thereunder  (page  285 of the paper  book)  for  the following reasons :- (a)  The  contracts  between the firms of P.W. 2-3  and  the firm of P.W. 1 Were "forward contracts" as defined by clause 2(ii)  of  the  1943 Order, but  not  the  agency  contracts between the plaintiffs on the one band and the firm, of P.W. 2-3 on the other.  These latter contracts were therefore not affected  by  the  1943 order and  were  not  unlawful.   As deposed  to  by the plaintiffs’ Partner P.W. 4  (Paper  book page  83 line 11), the plaintiffs had never authorised  the firms of P.W. 2-3 to enter with any illegal contracts.  The Badla transactions, which the plaintiffs had authorised  the firms of P.W. 2-3 to 4 enter  into,  could  have been brought  about  by  P.W.  2-3 without   infringing  the  conditions  laid  down   in   the Notifications   issued  under  the  1943  Order.   The   two conditions  in  the Notifications were  that  the  contracts should  be  for specific delivery and  that  the  deliveries thereunder  should  not be transferable  to  third  parties. There  is nothing in the nature of Badla transactions  which requires  that they should not be for specific  delivery  or that  the  deliveries  thereunder  should  be  transferable. Since it was open to the firms of P.W. 2-3 to carry out  the instructions  of the plaintiffs in a lawful manner, the  act of  the plaintiffs in entering into the contracts  with  the firms  of  P.W.  2-3 was not an "unlawful  Act"  within  the meaning of s. 222 of the Contract Act and the plaintiffs are therefore entitled to be indemnified by the defendants. (b)  The  High Court was, with respect, wrong  in  differing from  the trial court which held that the contracts  between the  firms  of  P.W. 2-3 and the firm of  P.W.  I  were  for specific  delivery.  In the case of Badla transactions,  the

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mere fact that no deliveries actually take place should  not lead  to  the  inference that the  contracts  were  not  for specific  delivery.   Both  the  cross  contracts  in  Badla transactions  are  for specific delivery,  but  no  delivery takes Place because the later contract cancels the effect of the earlier one.  This is clear from the evidence of P.W.  2 from  ’pages  39 to 43, were the witness  gives  details  of specific delivery contracts for the purchase of 400 tons  of groundnut  of  a particular date (vaida),  subsequent  cross contracts for the sale of 400 tons of groundnut of the  same vaida, and contemporaneous contracts for the purchase of 400 tons  of  groundnut  of  the  next  vaida.   Each  of  these contracts  were  for  specific  delivery.   On  the’   other question of transferability, however, both the courts below, have  held that the deliveries under these  contracts,  were not  made  nontransferable.  To that  extent  the  contracts between the firms of P.W. 2-3 and P.W. 1 may come under  the mischief  of the 1943 Order.  It was, however, open  to  the firms  of  P.W.  2-3 to carry out the  instructions  of  the plaintiffs in a lawful manner. (c)  Having entered into lawful contracts with the firms  of P.W.  2 and 3, the plaintiffs were justified in  paying  the losses  incurred in these transactions.  It was no  part  of the  duty  of the plaintiffs to go to Bombay  and  find  out whether  there was any lacuna in the contracts  between  the firms of P.W. 2-3 and the firm of P.W. 1 so as to enable the plaintiffs to avoid paying the dues of the firms of P.W. 2-3 (vide  Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Edn.  Vol.   1  paras 808 and 809; also s. 223 Contract Act.) (d)  S.  224 of the Contract Act has no application  to  the facts  of the present case, because the plaintiffs  did  not commit any criminal act in entering into contracts with  the firms of P.W. 2-3 while carrying out the instructions of the defendants. (e) After the issue of the notifications on 31st May,  1943, the  provisions of the 1943 Order were no more  prohibitory. The provisions were only regulatory. For the Respondents 1.   Concurrent Findings of the Courts Below 1.1. There are concurrent findings of the High Court and the trial court, holding     inter alia, (a)  that the suit contracts between the plaintiffs and  the defendants would defeat  the   provisions  of  law  or   are prohibited by law and would thus become unenforceable  under s. 23 of the Indian Contract Act; (b)  that  the suit contracts are in the nature of  wagering contracts and are not capable of enforcement; (c)  hat the plaintiffs are not entitled to  indemnification from the defendants under s. 222 of the Contract Act. 5 2.   S. 23 of the Contract Act 2.1. The  suit agreements fall within the ambit of s. 23  of the  Contract Act in that they are (a) forbidden by law  and (b) if permitted they would defeat the provisions of law. 2.2. The   suit   contracts  have  as  their   ’object’   or ’consideration’ (mentioned in s. 23 of the Contract Act) the doing  of  something which is forbidden  under  the  Central Order of 1943 or under the relevant Bombay Act of 1947. 2.3. No question of extra-territoriality of the Bombay  Acts would  arise  in view of the fact that although  the  Bombay Acts  would  apply only to Bombay State,  nevertheless,  the Agreements  between the parties was with the sole object  of breaking    the    said   law.    The,,    terms    ’object’ ’consideration’,   ’forbidden  by  law’  and   ’defeat   the provisions of any law’, under s. 23 of the Contract Act on a

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true  and proper construction operate in respect of any  law and there is no requirement in the said section that such  a law must be enforced at the place where such an agreement to break  the  said  law was entered into.   It  is  enough  to attract  the  provisions  of s. 23  that  the  Agreement  is entered  into with the object of defeating a law and  it  is not an additional requirement that such law which is  sought to  be defeated should be in force at the spot or the  place where  the  agreement  is entered  into.   If  the  contrary interpretation urged by the plaintiffs is accepted, it would lead to a perpetuation of a device to defeat the  provisions of  law.  To take an instance, supposing there is a  law  of prohibition of intoxicating liquor in force in Delhi, and if two people want to enter into an agreement to break that law against  manufacturing and selling such liquor and make  the agreement  enforceable,  all that they need do  is  to  step across the border into Haryana little beyond Palam  Airport, enter  into an agreement and cross back to Delhi  and  still make  an agreement enforceable in the Haryana Courts.   Such an interpretation would not be in consonance with the  tenor of s. 23 of the Contract Act. 2.4. Even  if the suit agreement between the plaintiffs  and defendants were independent agreements, they would be hit by s. 23.  As a matter of fact, the said agreement between  the plaintiffs and P.Ws. 2, 3 and 4, in Bombay and only in  that sense  have  been termed collateral  and  such  ’collateral’ agreements would equally come within the ambit of s. 23. 2.5. The  illegality  of the agreement would also  arise  by being  devoid of any consideration on law since P.W.  4  was under no lawful obligation to Pay the moneys to P.W. 2 and 3 in respect of the said agreement nor were P.W. 2 and 3 under a legal obligation to pay moneys to P.W. 1. 3.   Forward Contract Prohibited by law, : 3.1. The suit transancts, as concurrently held by the Courts below,  are  forward contracts, prohibited  by  the  Central Order  of 1943 and the Bombay Act of 1947.  Both the  Courts below have also found that transacts are not exempted  under the  notifications of exemption since the transactions  were admittedly  of  transferable nature (as admitted by  P.W.  1 himself). 3.2. In  finding the legality of the suit transants and  the plea  of exemption in respect of them. what is  relevant  is whether  the  transactions generally are  transferable  (as. admitted by P.W. 1) and not whether each transaction was  in fact transferred or not. 4.   Indemnification under v. 222 of Contract Act: 4.1. The suit agreements are in the nature of an  employment of  the plaintiffs by the defendants and of P.W. 2 and 3  by P.W.  1 and to do acts which are criminal according  to  the concerned laws in view of the fact that such offences render the concerned person liable to fine or improsnment.  By rea- 6 sons  of S. 222 of the Contract Act, the defendants are  not liable  in  law  to indemnify  the  plaintiffs  against  the consequences  of  the said criminal acts for  violating  the concerned laws. 4.2. S. 222 of the Contract Act requires that the defendants should indemnify P.W. 4 only if the said P.W. 4 was bound to make  payment for the illegal agreements to P.W.s. 2 and  3. P.W.  4 was not so bound and therefore the  defendants  were not  liable  to  indemnify P.W. 4. Since  the  agreement  of agency  was  null  and void, unlawful and  illegal  and  was further devoid of consideration, it cannot form a legal  and valid basis for the indemnification claim. 4.3. The  agreement  of  agency  in  this  case  cannot   be

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disassociated  from the consideration or the object  of  the agreement within the meaning of S. 23 of the Contract Act in deciding  whether the said agreement of agency is  null  and void, unlawful and illegal. 4.4. The  agreements for the sale and purchase of oil  seeds in Bombay are in fact between the defendants (represented by P.W. 4) and P.Ws. 2 and 3. The transactions between P.Ws.  2 and  3  on  the  one hand and P.W. 1 on  the  other  do  not militate against the fact of the illegal agreements  between P.W.  4 on one side and P.Ws. 2 and 3 on the  other,  acting towards  each  other as principals on either side.   P.W.  4 paid  P.Ws. 2 and 3 on the basis that P.Ws. 2 and 3 are  the principals with whom he was dealing as a principal  himself, that P.Ws. 2 and 3 and P.W. 4 himself were commission agents does not affect this fact.  This fact of their having  acted as  principals  is a finding on an issue given by  the  High Court and the trial court. 4.5. If  P.W. 2 and 3 were not the principal Parties to  the illegal agreements P.W. 4 had no justification at all to pay them  in  respect  of  the  said  agreements  and  to  claim indemnification from the defendants under S. 222. 4.6. There   is   no  implication   of   extra   territorial jurisdiction  in  either the Bombay legislature  or  in  the Bombay  Courts involved in the plea of the defendants.   The agreements  between the defendants (acting through  P.W.  4) and  P.Ws. 2 and 3 (or even P.W. 4) are agreements to  which the  Bombay  Law applies and the  lawful  enforceability  of which  agreement  in the Bombay State  must  be  established before P.W. 4 can call upon the defendants to indemnify  him for payments made in the Bombay state in respect of the said agreements.   The payments are even otherwise invalid  under the  laws  relating  to sale and purchase of  oil  seeds  in India. 5.   Wagering Contracts : 5.1. The four sets of agreements (a) between P.W. 4 and  PW. 2,  (b)  between P.W. 4 and P.W. 3. (c) between P.W.  2  and P.W.  1 and (d) between P.W. 3 and P.W. 1 for  the  purchase and  sale  of groundnut and castor seed  were  contracts  as between  principal  and Principal and amounted  to  wagering contracts  prohibited and rendered null and ’void,  unlawful and illegal by Bombay Act III of 1865. 5.2. The law in Bombay State relating to wagers and the  law in India relating to prohibition of sale and purchase of oil seeds  cannot be circumvented by the agreements referred  to in paragraphs above being made between agents of  principals and  instead of principals themselves.  Qui facit per  alium facit  per  se.  A person might not do by means  of  another what he is prohibited from doing himself. 5.3. A  wagering  contract does not cease to be one  by  the intervention of commission agents. or by a principal or  his agent  entering into such a contract with another  agent  or that agent’s principal. 5.4. The decision in [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 406 and [1955]  1 S.C.R. 439 do not apply to this case because firstly they do not deal with prohibited 7 forward  contracts in Bombay or elsewhere and secondly  they do not involve violation of the law of wagering contracts to the State of Bombay under Bombay Act III of 1965. 5.5. It is to be further noticed that the suit  transactions do not conform to the requirements of bye law 123  concerned because there were neither no contracts notes at all or in a few cases (in which there were contract notes) they were not in conformity with the prescribed forms. 5.6. The   duty  of  courts  in  Kurnool  to   prevent   the

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circumvention  and  violation of Bombay law cannot  be  less than the duty of British courts to prevent circumvention and violation  of foreign law when the foreign law is no  repug- nant  to  British  law and when the  foreign  country  is  a friendly country. 6.   ’Badla’ Transactions : 6.1.  ’Badla’  automatically involves two  or  more  forward contracts.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos.  2382  to 2384 of 1968. Appeals  by special leave from the judgment &  decree  dated the 27th September, 1967 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in A. No. 4-6,/ 1962 M.   C. Chagla, V. M. Tarkunde, H. K. Puri and K. K.  Mohan, for the appellant. (In all the appeals) B.   V.  Subramanian,  A. V. Rangam and A.  Subhashini,  for respondent  Nos.  2  &  3 (In  C.A.  No.  2382/68)  and  for respondent nos.  1 & 5. (In C.A. No. 2384/68) The Judgment of the Court was delivered by BEG, J.-The three consolidated appeals before us by grant of special leave are directed against a common judgment of  the High  Court  of  Andhra Pradesh, by  which  the  plaintiff’s appeals  in  three  suits,  filed  on  similar  facts,  were dismissed.   They  can  be decided by us  or.  the  question whether the contracts set up by the plaintiff-appellant were struck by the provisions of Section 23 of the Contract Act. The section reads as follows :               "23.   The  consideration  or  object  of   an               agreement is lawful. unless-it is forbidden by               law; or               is  of  such a nature that, if  permitted,  it               would defeat the provisions of any law; or               is fraudulent; or               involves  or implies injury to the  person  or               property of another; or               the Court regards it as immoral, or opposed to               public policy.               In  each of these cases, the consideration  or               object of an agreement is said to be unlawful.               Every,  agreement  of  which  the  object   or               consideration is unlawful, is void". 8 The appellant, Firm of Pratapchand Nopaji, is the plaintiff. in all the three suits, but the defendants of each suit, the respondents before us, are different.  The plaintiff claimed Rs. 78,201.15 ans. in ,,original suit No. 106 of. 1954,  Rs. 13,978.4  ans.  in  original suit No. 107 of  1954  and  Rs. 91,697.4  ans. in original suit No. 114 of 1954, as  amounts due  to indemnify him under section 222 of the Contract  Act on  the strength of payments said to have been made  by  the plaintiff  to third parties on behalf of the defendants  who are  alleged  to have directed the plaintiff to  enter  into "badla" transactions for them.  Three other suits,  claiming amounts  alleged  to have been borrowed, also filed  by  the same plaintiff, were tried together with these three  suits; but,  we are not concerned here with the other  three  suits from the dismissal of which no appeal was preferred. The character of the contract set up in each case is brought out  by  paragraph 3 of the original suit No.  106  of  1954 where the plaintiff said :

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             "The  defendants  are big merchants  and  have               been carrying on trade outside Dhone, even in               places  like  Bombay.  They wanted to  do  the               business  of purchasing and selling  groundnut               seeds  and oil seeds in Bombay market and  for               this   purpose  engaged  the   plaintiffs   as               commission  agents  to  contact  with   Bombay               Commission  Agents,  who  were  entering  into               contracts  with  customers for  purchasing  or               selling groundnut seeds and castor oil  seeds,               according  to  the orders  of  the  defendants               which  the plaintiffs were,  communicating  to               them.   The Bombay commission agents  used  to               give intimation to the plaintiffs of the  fact               of  having executed the orders (the  contracts               of  sale or purchase) and the terms, the  rate               etc.,  of the contracts.  The plaintiffs  were               immediately, communicating the information  to               the defendants.  The business was according to               the  custom prevailing in the, Bombay  market,               viz. the custom of Badla.  The defendants  not               only agreed in general to abide by the  custom               of Badla, but specifically consented to  every               such Badla.  At the request of the  defendants               the transactions were settled after undergoing               a   few   badlas.    Such   settlements   were               beneficial to the defendants as the market was               falling  and  delay would have  meant  greater               loss  when the market was falling  the  Bombay               agents  were pressing for cash  settlement  on               pain  of  declaring them as  defaulters  which               will result in a disability to do any  further               business.   The defendants knew this state  of               affairs  and they realised that  a  settlement               was  the only course beneficial to  them.   So               they  specifically  told the  plaintiffs  that               they   must   at  any  cost   preserve   their               reputation  in  the  Bombay  market  and  with               plaintiffs.   The defendants hence  agreed  to               pay  the  amount and on their request  and  on               their  behalf the plaintiffs paid all  amounts               due to the Bombay Commission Agents  according               to  the Patties sent by the Bombay  Agents  in               respect  of the transactions relating  to  the               defendants.  The defendants also agreed-to pay               to the plaintiffs interest on the               9               amounts  so  advanced by the  ’plaintiffs  for               payment  to  the Bombay agents.   The  Bombay,               Commission  agents  ’were  sending  parties-of               ’transactions  to the plaintiffs.  As  already               stated, at the request of the defendants, the               plaintiffs’  paid  all such losses  and  other               charges  according  to  the  patties  sent  by               Bombay Commission agents on the promise of the               defendants  to repay all such amounts  to  the               plaintiffs with interest.  The extracts of the               accounts  filed  with  this  plaint  show  the               transactions  and  the  amounts  paid  by  the               plaintiffs at the request of and on behalf  of               the defendants". The  plaintiff’s  case was that the authority to  engage  in Badla transactions on forward contracts, which are contracts for the delivery of specified goods on future dates, implied what  is known as "continuation" or "carrying over"  in  the

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terminology  of the Stock Exchange.  The meaning of  such  a transaction is given, in Halsbury’s Laws of England-3rd Edn. Vol. 36 at p. 547 (para 842) as follows               "If a purchaser of securities during a dealing               period does not wish to complete his  purchase               during the next following settlement period he               may arrange to resell for the current  account               the securities which he has agreed to buy  for               that  account,  and to purchase  for  the  new               account.   Conversely, a seller of  securities               during  a dealing period who does not wish  to               deliver  during the next following  settlement               period  may  arrange  to  repurchase  for  the               current  account the securities which  he  has               agreed  to  sell,  and to  sell  for  the  new               account.   Such an arrangement is known  as  a               continuation or carrying over". This is explained further and distinguished from a loan  (at page 548para 845) :               "Continuation or carrying-over is in form  and               in  law a sale and repurchase, or  a  purchase               and  resale, as the case may be.  It is a  new               contract, and not merely getting further  time               for, the performance of the old contract.               A  continuation being a contract of  sale  and               repurchase and not a loan, the original seller               becomes  again  the,  absolute  owner  of  the               securities  carried over, and is not bound  to               redeliver  the  identical.securities  but   an               equal  amount  of  similar  securities.    If,               therefore, he sells the securities taken in by               him and makes a profit thereon, he may  retain               it  to  his own use.  In the case of  a  loan,               however,  if the lender sells  the  securities               deposited,  the borrower may charge  him  with               the price obtained for them if he finds it  to               his interest to do so".               Under   the  Defence  of  India   Rules,   the               definition of Badla provides that it "includes               a  contango and a backwardation and any  other               arrangement whereby the performance of any               10               obligation  under a contract to take  or  give               delivery  of  securities within  a  stipulated               period  is  postponed to some future  date  in               consideration  of  the payment or  receipt  of               interest or other charges". "Carrying-over or "continuation" is also given as one of the meanings  of  the  term "contango"  or  "back-wardation"  in Halsbury’s Laws of England-3rd Edn.  Vol. 36 at p. 548.   If we substitute "goods", in respect of which forward contracts are  made, for "securities", we get the exact nature of  the transactions set up by the plaintiff in each case.  They are nothing  short of contracts or speculation in rise and  fall of  prices  of goods purchased only notionally  without  any intention  to actually deliver them to the  purchasers.   In such  a transaction, a purchaser is not at all  expected  to make a demand for actual delivery of goods ostensibly sold. We  :find  considerable force in the  plaintiffs  contention that   at  least  contracts  between  the   plaintiffs   and defendants were not wagering contracts although we think, in agreement  with  the High Court, that each party  knew  that their  object was to indulge in speculation.  In  Bhagwandas Parasram  (A  firm) v. Burjori  Ruttomji  Bomanji,(1)  after examining  the  facts of a case in which a  firm  of  "pucca

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adatias"  was  authorised.  by  a  defendant  intending   to speculate in differences, to sell and then to resell for the purpose  of  making  profits,  it was  found  that,  as  the plaintiff  could  not  be said to  either  lose  or  benefit correspondingly from variations in price, there could be  no agreement in the nature of a wager between the principal and the   agent  whatever  may  have  been  intentions  of   the principal.  It wag held that, in a wagering contract,  there has to be mutuality in the sense that the gain of one party would  be  the  loss of the other on the  happening  of  the uncertain event which is the subject matter of a wager.   It was pointed out there (at p.33) :               "Speculation  does not necessarily  involve  a               contract  by way of wager, and  to  constitute               such a contract a common intention to wager is               essential.    No  such  intention   has   been               proved’. We,  therefore, accept the contention of the appellant  that there was no wagering contract between the plaintiff and any of the defendants The  next question we may consider is whether the  contracts set  up  could  be said to  be  collateral  contracts  quite unaffected  by  the objects or intentions of  defendants  in entering into these contracts which involved making of other contracts  which  may or may not be wagering  contracts  but were  not  "prohibited".  Strong reliance  was  placed  upon Gherulal  Parakh  v. Mahadeodas Maiya & Ors.,(2)  where  the object  of  a  contract or partnership  was  to  enter  into forward  contracts for the purchase and sale of wheat so  as to  speculate in rise and fall of price of wheat in  future. The  object of the partnership was held to be  not  illegal, within  the  meaning  of section 23  of  the  Contract  Act, although (1) 45 I.A. p. 29 @ 33. (2) [1959] 2 supp.  S.C.R. 406, 431. 11 the  business for which the partnership was formed was  held to involve wagering.  The position was thus summarised there (at p. 431)               "The aforesaid discussion yields the following               results  (1)Under the common Law of England  a               contract of wager is valid and therefore  both               the primary contract as well as the collateral               agreement in respect thereof are  enforceable;               (2)  after  the enactment of the  Gaming  Act,               1845, a wager is made void but not illegal  in               the  sense  of  being forbidden  by  law,  and               thereafter  a  primary agreement of  wager  is               void    but   a   collateral   agreement    is               enforceable;  (3) there was a conflict on  the               question  whether the second part of  s.18  of               the  Gaming Act, 1845, would cover a case  for               ’,lie  recovery  of money  or  valuable  thing               alleged  to  be  won upon any  wager  under  a               substituted contract between the same  parties               : the House of Lords in Hill’s case (1921) (2)               K.B. 351) had finally resolved the conflict by               holding that such a claim was not  sustainable               whether   it  was  made  under  the   original               contract of wager between the parties or under               a  substituted  agreement  between  them;  (4)               under  the  Gaming Act, 1892, in view  of  its               wide   and  comprehensive  phraseology,   even               collateral  contracts,  including  partnership               agreements, are not enforceable; (53) s. 30 of

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             the  Indian  Contract Act is  based  upon  the               provisions  of s. 18 of the Gaming Act,  1845,               and. though a wager is void and unenforceable,               it  is not forbidden by law and therefore  the               object  of  a  collateral  agreement  is   not               unlawful  under s.23 of the Contract Act;  and               (6) partnership being an agreement Within  the               meaning of s.23 of the Indian Contract Act, it               is  not  unlawful, though its.  object  is  to               carry    on   wagering   transactions.     We,               therefore,  hold that in the present case  the               partnership is not unlawful within the meaning               of s. 23(A) of the Contract Act.               Re.  (ii) Public Policy : The learned  Counsel               for the appellant contends that the concept of               public  policy is very comprehensive and  that               in India, particularly after independence, its               content  should be measured having  regard  to               political,  social and economic policies of  a               welfare  State,  and the  traditions  of  this               ancient  country reflected in Srutis,  Smritis               and   Nibandas.   Before  adverting   to   the               argument  of the learned Counsel, it would  be               convenient  at  the outset  to  ascertain  the               meaning  of this concept and to note  how  the               Courts in England and India have applied it to               different situations.  Cheshire and Fifoot  in               their  book  on "Law of Contract",  3rd  Edn.,               observe at page 280 thus :               The  public interests which it is designed  to               protect     are    so    comprehensive     and               heterogeneous,  and  opinions as  to  what  is               injurious  must of necessity vary  so  greatly               with the social and moral convictions, and  at               times  even  with  the  political  views,   of               different judges, that it forms a  treacherous               and     unstable     ground     for      legal               decision......... These questions               12               have agitated the Courts in the past, but  the               present  state of the law would appear  to  be               reasonably  clear.   Two observations  may  be               made with some degree of assurance.               First, although the rules already  established               by  precedent must be moulded to fit  the  new               conditions  of  a  clanging world,  it  is  no               longer  legitimate for the Courts to invent  a               new  head  of public policy.  A judge  is  not               free  to speculate upon what, in his  opinion,               is for the good of the community.  He must  be               content to apply, either directly or by way of               analogy, the principles laid down in  previous               decisions,  He must expound, not expand,  this               particular branch (if the law.               Secondly,  even  though the  contract  is  one               which  prima  facie  falls under  one  of  the               recognized heads of public policy, it will not               be held illegal, unless its harmful  qualities               are indisputable.  The doctrine, as Lord Atkin               remarked  in  a leading case, should  only  be               invoked  in clear cases in which the  harm  to               the public is substantially incontestable, and               does   not  depend  upon   the   idiosyncratic               inferences  of i few judicial  minds......  In               popular language...... the contract should  be

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             given the benefit of the doubt." If   an  agreement  is  merely  collateral  to  another   or constitutes  an  aid facilitating the carrying  out  of  the object of the other agreement which, though void, is not  in itself  prohibited, within the meaning of section 23 of  the Contract Act, it may be enforced as a collateral  agreement. If,  on the other hand, it is part of a mechanism  meant  to defeat  what  the, law has actually prohibited,  the  Courts will  not  countenance  a claim  based  upon  the  agreement because it will be tainted with an illegality of the  object sought  to  be achieved which is hit by section  23  of  the Contract Act.  It is well established that the ,object of an agreement cannot be said to be forbidden or unlawful  merely because  the agreement results in what is known as  a  "void contract".  A void agreement, when coupled with other facts, may become part of a transaction which creates legal rights, but  this is not so if the object is prohibited or "mala  in se".   Therefore, the real question before us is : Does  the agreement between the parties in each case, which was to  be carried out in Bombay, so connected with the execution of an object prohibited by either a law applicable in Bombay or  a law more widely applicable so as to be hit by Section 23  of the Contract Act? A  question which has been raised before us is  whether  the plaintiff,  who entered into contracts with  third  parties, who  appeared  as witnesses in the cases now before  us,  so that these third parties made the purchases and  settlements in Bombay, the payments for which are the subject matter  of suits,  was dealing with them as a principal  to  principal. The  High Court had found that the relationship between  the plaintiff and the third parties he employed to conclude  the transactions  was  that of a principal  to  principal.   The question whether the 13 parties   through  whom  the,  plaintiff  actually   alleged carrying  out of the contract set up between. the  plaintiff and   the  defendants  could  themselves  be   regarded   as principals  or agents of the plaintiffs-.will  become  quite immaterial  if the objects of the contracts are found to  be tained  with the kind of illegality which is struck by  Sec. 23  of  the  Contract Act.  Again, the mere  fact  that  the contracts  between  the plaintiff and  the  defendants  were entered into at Kurnool in the State of Andhra Pradesh would also not make any difference in principle if the objects  of the contracts which were to be carried out at Bombay were of such  a  kind  as to be hit by Sec. 23  of  the  Act.   The, principle  which would apply, if the objects are  struck  by Sec. 23 of the Contract Act, is embodied in the maxim : "Qui facit per alium facit per se" (What one does though  another is done by oneself).  To put it in another form, that  which cannot  be  done  directly may not  be  done  indirectly  by engaging  another  outside the prohibited area  to  (lo  the illegal  act within the prohibited area.  It  is  immaterial whether,  for  the doing of such an illegal act,  the  agent employed  is  given  the wider powers or  authority  of  the "pucca  adatia",  or,  as the High Court  had  held,  he  is clothed  with  the powers of an  ordinary  commission  agent only. In view of the opinion already expressed by us, that, at any rate,  the initial contracts between, the plaintiff and  the defendants  were not really wagering contracts, we need  not deal with the provisions of the Bombay Act No. 3 of 1865 for Avoiding  Wages  which are declared void by Sec. 30  of  the Indian  Contract  Act.   We  will,  however,  consider   the applicability of the provisions of Bombay Forward  Contracts

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Control Act, No. 64 of 1947 (hereinafter referred to as  the ’Bombay  Act’)  and  of  the)  Oilseeds  (Forward   Contract Prohibition)  Order, 1943, (hereinafter referred to  as  the Control  Order), which was kept alive by the  provisions  of Sec.  17 of the Essential Supplies (Temporary  Powers)  Act, 1946 (hereinafter referred to as ’the Central Act’). Sec. 2, sub s. (3.) lays down               "Contract" means a contract entered into, made               or to be performed in whole or in part in  any               notified area relating to the sale or purchase               of any goods to which this Act applies :               Provided that the Provincial Government may by               notification  in the Official  Gazette  direct               any  contract  or  class of  contracts  to  be               excluded  from  the provisions  of  this  Act,               subject  to such conditions as the  Provincial               Government may deem fit to impose"-,               Sec. 2, sub-s. (3) lays down:               " ’Forward Contract’ means a contract for  the               delivery  of goods at a future date and  which               is not ready delivery contract:"               Sec. 2, Sub. s. (4) enacts               "’Goods’  means any kind of  movable  property               and  includes securities but does not  include               money or actionable claims;"               Sec. 2, sub. s. (7) reads               14               "  Option in goods’ means a contract for  +.he               purchase or sale of a right to buy, or a right               to  sell, or a right to buy or sell  goods  in               future  and includes a gully, a teji, a  mandi               or a tejimandi in goods;"               Sec. 2, sub.s. (9) says               "Ready  delivery  contract  means  a  contract               which  provides  for delivery and  payment  of               price either immediately or within such number               of days not exceeding seven after the date  of               the contract and under such conditions as  the               Gazette, specify in this behalf in respect  of               any particular goods";               Sec. 2, sub. s. (1) provides               "’Recognised association’ means an association               which is for the time being recognised by  the               Provincial  Government as provided in  Section               3"; The recognition of associations is governed by Sec. 3 of the Act,  and  Sec.  6,  sub. s.(1) gives  the  power  to  every recognised  association to "subject to the sanction  of  the Provincial Government, make and, from time to time, add  to, vary  or rescind bye-law for the regulation and  control  of forward  contracts in goods for which such  association  has been recognised". Sec.  6, sub. s.(2)(f) refers specifically to the  power  of the   recognised  Association  to  lay  down,  "the   terms, conditions and incidents of contracts and the forms of  such contracts  as are in writing"; and, Sec. 6, sub.s.  (2)  (g) covers :               "regulating   the   entering   into,   making,               performance,  rescission  and  termination  of               contracts,    including   contracts    between               members, or between a commission agent and his               constituent  or  between  a  broker  and   his               constituent   or  between  a   jatthawala   or               muccadum  and  his constituent  or  between  a               member  of the recognised association,  and  a

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             person   who   is  not  a  member,   and   the               consequences  of insolvency on the part  of  a               seller   or   buyer   or   intermediary,   the               consequences  of  a breach or  omission  by  a               seller  or  buyer and  the  responsibility  of               commission  agents, muccadums and brokers  not               parties to such contracts"; Section  6, sub. s. (2) (i) indicates that "the  method  and procedure  for settlement of claims and  disputes  including settlement by arbitrations"; :Section 6, sub. s. (3) says :               "The    bye-laws   may   provide   that    the               contravention of any of the bye-laws shall-               (i)   make  a contract which is entered  into,               made  or is to be performed otherwise than  in               accordance, with the bye-laws void or illegal;               (ii)  render- the member liable to  explusion,               suspension,   fine   or   other   non-monetary               penalty".                15               Sec.  8  of  the Bombay  Act  deals  with  the               illegality   of   the   contracts   and    its               consequencies as follows               "(1)  Every forward contract for the  sale  or               purchase  of,  or  relating  to,  any   goods,               specified  in  the  notification  under   sub-               section  (3)  of section I  which  is  entered               into, made or to be performed in any  notified               area  shall  be illegal if it is  not  entered               into, made or to be performed-               (a)   in  accordance with such  by-laws,  made               ’under section 6 or 7 relating to the entering               into, making or performance of such contracts,               as may be specified in the bye-laws, or               (b) (i)    between  members  of  a  recognised               association,               (ii)  through   a  member  of   a   recognised               association, or               (iii) with   a   member   of   a    recognised               association,  provided  that such  member  has               previously  secured the written  authority  or               consent, which shall be in writing if the bye-               laws so provide, of the persons entering  into               or  making the contract, and no claim  of  any               description in respect of such contract  shall               be entertained in any civil. court.               (2)   Any person entering into or making  such               illegal  contract  shall  on  conviction,   be               punishable with imprisonment for a term  which               may extend to six months or with fine or  with               both".               Section 9 of the Bombay Act lays down :               "(1)  Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               this  Act  or in any other law  for  the  time               being in force on a notification being  issued               by  the Provincial Government in the  Official               Gazette,  options or such kinds of options  in               such goods and in the whole of the Province of               Bombay   or  such  part  thereof  as  may   be               specified   in  the  notification   shall   be               illegal.               (2)   Any person entering into any option made               illegal   under  sub-section  (1)  shall,   on               conviction,  be punishable  with  imprisonment               which may extend to six months or with fine or               with both".

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The  Andhra  Pradesh High Court had reached  the  conclusion that  it  was not necessary to decide the  question  whether provisions  of  Sec.  8 clause 1 (a)  had  been  contravened probably because no bye-law made under Section 6 or 7 of the Bombay Act had- been placed before it.  No such bye-law  has been  pointed  out  to  us.  We are,  therefore,  not  in  a position to hold that there has been an infringement of  any bye-law.   The High Court had, however, held that there  had been  a  contravention  of Sec. 8(1)(b) of  the  Bombay  Act inasmuch   as  only  one  of  the  third  parties,   namely, Shivdanmal  Agarwal  &  Co., whose  partner  Ganga  Ram  was examined as P.W.1, was shown to be 16 a member of a recognised association.  We do not consider it necessary to decide this question either as it appears to us that  the Andhra Pradesh High Court was,correct  in  holding that the forward contracts under consideration violated  the provisions of the two orders set out below (1) No. 7561/33-D(4), which reads               "In  exercise of the powers conferred  by  the               proviso  to  clause (2) of section  2  of  the               Bombay  Forward  Contracts Control  Act,  1947               (Bom.  LXIV of 1947), the Government of Bombay               is  pleased  to  direct  that  the   following               contracts   shall   be   excluded   from   the               provisions of the said Act namely               Forward contract for specific delivery of  any               variety  of oil seeds for specified price  the               delivery  order, railway receipts or  bill  of               lading  against which are not  transferred  to               the third parties, made or entered into before               the  19th December, 1950, and  outstanding  on               that date".               No. 7561/33-D(2) which says               "In  exercise of the powers conferred by  sub-               section (1) of Section 9 of the Bombay Forward               Contracts  Control  Act, 1947 (Bom.   LXIV  of               1947)  the Government of Bombay is pleased  to               direct  that all options in all  varieties  of               oil seeds shall be illegal in Greater Bombay". Moreover, as regards oil seeds, we find that the Central Act enacted   for  the  control  of  production,   supply,   and distribution of essential commodities, covers  "food-stuffs" which, under Sec. 2(c), "include edible oilseeds and  oils". Section  3 (2) (c) to (g) of the Central Act authorises  the Central Government to pass orders for the purposes given  as follows :               (c)   for controlling the prices at which  any               essential commodity may be bought or sold;               (d)   for  regulating by licences, permits  or               otherwise     the     storage,      transport,               distribution,  disposal, acquisition,  use  or               consumption of any essential commodity;               (e)   for  prohibiting  the  withholding  from               sale  of  any essential  commodity  ordinarily                             kept for sale;               (f)   for  requiring any person holding  stock               of an essential commodity to sell the  whole               or  a  specified  part of the  stock  at  such               prices and to such persons or class of persons               or in such circumstances, as may be  specified               in the order;               (g)   for regulating or prohibiting any  class               of   commercial  or   financial   transactions               relating  to  foodstuffs or  cotton  textiles,

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             which, in the opinion of the authority  making               the order are, or if unregulated are likely to               be, detrimental, to public interest;"               17               Section 7(2) of the Central Act provides that               "If  any person contravenes any  order  under,               Section 3 relating to foodstuffs.....               (a)   he shall be punishable with imprisonment               for a term which may extend to three years and               shall  also  be  liable to  fine,  unless  for               reasons to be recorded the court is of opinion               that  a  sentence of fine only will  meet  the               ends of justice; and               (b)   any  property  in respect of  which  the               order  has  been  contravened  or  such   part               thereof as to the court may seem fit shall  be               forfeited to the Government........ As already indicated, Sec. 17 of the Central Act keeps alive the  provisions of Oil-seeds (Forward Contract  Prohibition) Order, 1943.  The provisions of this Control Order appear to us  to  be  so important for the decision  of  the  question before us that we reproduce it below in toto.     It runs as follows :               "1.  This  order may be  called  the  Oilseeds               (Forward Contracts Prohibition) Order, 1943.               (2)   It  extends  to  the  whole  of  British               India.               (3)   It shall come into force at once.               2.    In this order....               (i)   "contract" means a contract made, or  to               be  performed in whole or in part  in  British               India  relating  to the sale  or  purchase  of               oilseeds,               (ii)  "forward contract" means a contract  for               the delivery of oilseeds at some future date;               (iii) "oilseeds" means any of the oilseeds for               the  time being specified in the first  column               of the schedule to this Order;               (iv)  ’specified  date’  in  relation  to  any               ’oilseeds  means  the date  specified  against               those  oilseeds  in the second column  of  the               schedule to this Order. 3.   No person shall after the specified date for any  class of  oilseeds,  enter  into any forward contract  in  any  of those, oilseeds. 4.   Notwithstanding any.custom, usage or practice,’ of  the trade, or the terms of any contract or any regulation of and association relating to any contract.... (1)  every  forward  contract  in  any  class  of   oilseeds outstanding  at the close of business on the specified  date shall be deemed to be closed out at such rate as the Central Government  may by notification in the Official Gazette  fix in  this  behalf,  and  different rates  may  be  fixed  for different classes of contracts; -L379 Sup.  CI/75 18 (2)  all  differences arising out of any contract so  deemed to  be closed out shall be payable on the basis of the  rate fixed as aforesaid and the seller shall not be found to give and the buyer shall not be bound to take delivery;  (3) payment of all differences legally due from a member of an  association  to another member of  such  association  in respect of any forward contract closed out under this clause shall  be made to the clearing house of the association  and for  the purposes of calculating such differences  the  rate

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fixed  by the Central Government under sub-clause (1)  shall be deemed to be the settlement rate fixed by the association under its bye-laws or other regulations which shall, for the relevant  purpose,  continue to have effect subject  to  the provisions of this Order. (5)  The  Central  Government may, by  Notification  in  the Official Gazette, exclude any contract or class of contracts from  the provisions of this Order. (Noti.  No. P  and  S.C, 75(1)/43, dated 31st May, 1943)." A  Notification was issued on 31-5-1943 under Sec. 5 of  the above  mentioned Order, the relevant part of which reads  as follows:               "I  Forward Contracts for groundnut,  linseed,               mustard   seed,  rapeseed  or   toriaseed   of               specified qualities or types and for  specific               delivery   at   a  specified   price....   not               transferable  to  third parties  are  excluded               from- the provisions of this Order (Noti.  No.               P & S.C. 75 (2)/43, dated 31st May, 1943)               11.   No P.& S.C. 75 (A) 1/43 -In exercise of               the  powers  conferred  by  clause  5  of,  the               Oilseeds   (Forward   contracts   Prohibition)               Order, 1943, the Central Government is pleased               to  exclude the following class  of  contracts               from   the  provisions  of  the  said   Order,               namely:-               "Forward  contracts  for castor  seed,  cotton               seed  or sesamum (tit or jinjil)  or  specific               qualities  or types and for specific  delivery               orders,  railway receipts or bills  of  lading               against  which contracts are not  transferable               to, third parties." Learned  Counsel  for  the  appellant  contended  that   the Contracts under consideration for groundnut seeds and castor seeds  are excluded under the above  mentioned  notification because  they  satisfy, in each case, the first of  the  two alternative  conditions of exclusion.  These conditions  for contracts  for sale of ground-nut seeds are : (1) they  must relate  to  specified  qualities  or.  types  for   specific deliveries at a specified price; and, (2) they should not be transferable  to third parties.  Excluded forward  contracts for  castor  seeds  must  (a) be  in  respect  of  specified qualities or types; and (b) be for specific delivery orders, railway  receipts, or bills of lading against which are  not transferable to third parties.  The Trial Court had accepted the  contention  that  it  is enough that  one  of  the  two conditions are satisfied and bad read the word ’and’ in  the above  mentioned  notification  is  the  equivalent  of  the disjunctive 19 ’or’.   The  contention of the respondents,  that  the  High Court rightly, held that the word "and’ cannot be  converted into an "or" and that both the conditions must,be satisfied for  an  exemption,  appears  to us  to  be  correct.   We,, therefore,  hold  that  the  contracts  under  consideration before  us  were  prohibited under  the  provisions  of  the Essential Supplies Act read with the Central Order of  1943. They  were  not shown to be covered by  the  conditions  for their exemption from prohibition. Having  regard to the objects of the prohibition imposed  by the Central Government on forward contracts on,  inter-alia, ground-nut  seeds  and  oil-seeds, in the  interest  of  the general  public, so that the supply at reasonable prices  of commodities  essential to the life and well being of  masses of the people is not jeopardized, the absolute terms of  the

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prohibition,the penalties imposed for its infringement,  and the  careful  manner  in  which  only  those  contracts  are excluded from the prohibition which are for actual  delivery and  supply to bang fide purchasers, we agree with the  High Court  that  the contracts under consideration  are  tainted with  an unlawfulness of their object and are  forbidden  by law. The High Court had given very good reasons for accepting the view   of   the  Trial  Court  that  the   contracts   under consideration could not possibly be for actual delivery,  It observed  that the total quantity of groundnut  seeds  alone shown  to  have been originally purchased on behalf  of  the defendants  was  950  tons which  would  have  required  two special  goods  trains  to transport  them  from  Bombay  to Kurnool,  where  such a huge quantity  of  ground-nut  seeds could not possibly be required.  Indeed, Kurnool itself  has so much of groundnut seeds that, far from importing any,  it exports them.  The plaintiff did not specifically set up any case  of contracts for actually intended delivery.   On  the other  hand, contracts set-up were for  Badla  transactions, which  are not, as we have already indicated, understood  to be contracts for actual delivery.  To assume in intention to demand actual deliveries from the mere form of the contracts would be to believe, very naively, that they were  contracts for  the proverbial carrying of coals to Newcastle.  If,  as both  the Trial Court and the High Court have rightly  held, the  contracts were not for genuine or actual  delivery  but only for speculation on differences in price, even the first condition  for  exclusion  of these  transactions  from  the purview  of the control order, which  contemplates  actually intended  delivery, would not be satisfied.  Hence, we  have no  doubt  in our minds that the contracts were  not  merely void  but  illegal  in  the sense  that  their  objects  are forbidden. We  think that the High.  Court correctly distinguished  and refused to apply authorities recognising  the enforceability of agreements collateral to what are merely void Agreements. It rightly relied on decisions holding agreements collateral to  prohibited contracts also to be unenforcible  because  a taint  attaches  to them which makes them also  contrary  to public  policy.   Such agreements fall within the  class  of cases  mentioned  in Gherulal Parakh’s  case  (supra)  where harmful  results  of permitting the contracts, in  terms  of injury to the public at large, are evident and indisputable. 20 In  Shivnarayan Kabra v. The State of Madras(1), this  Court dealing with the objects of similar legislation contained in the  Forward Contract (Regulation) Act, 1952, said  at  page 144:-               "...the  Act was passed in order in  order  to               put a stop undesirable forms of speculation in               forward  trading and to correct the abuses  of               certain’ forms of forward trading in the wider               interests of the community and, in particular,               the  interests  of  the  consumers  for   whom               adequate  safeguards were essential.   In  our               opinion,  speculative  contracts of  the  type               covered  in  the  present  case  are  included               within purview of the Act". The result is that we think that he objects of contracts set up by the plaintiff cannot be carried out by merely entering into  them outside Bombay or engaging third parties as  sub- agents,  or,  in any other capacity, to execute  them.   The provisions  of the Control Order are  applicable  throughout India and are not confined to forward contracts entered into

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or meant to be carried out in any particular part of  India. Their  violation  is  a  criminal  offence.   A  claim   for indemnification,  under  Sec.  222  Contract  Act,  is  only maintainable if the acts, which the agent is employed to do, are   lawful.   Agreements  to  commit  criminal  acts   are expressly  and specifically excluded, by Section 224 of  the Contract  Act, from the scope of any right to an  indemnity. These  appeals  are, therefore, liable to  be  dismissed  on merits,  but,  inasmuch  as  both  sides  to  the   unlawful agreements  are in "pari delicto", we set aside the  decrees for  costs  awarded to the defendants and  direct  that  the parties will bear their own costs throughout.  Subject  to this  modification of decrees for costs we dismiss in  three appeals before us. V.P.S.                              Appeals dismissed. 21