09 May 1963
Supreme Court
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UNION OF INDIA Vs MADDALA THATHIAH

Case number: Appeal (civil) 53 of 1961


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PETITIONER: UNION OF INDIA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MADDALA THATHIAH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/05/1963

BENCH: DAYAL, RAGHUBAR BENCH: DAYAL, RAGHUBAR SUBBARAO, K. MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1724            1964 SCR  (3) 774

ACT: Contract-Construction--Agreement     for      supply-Tender- Acceptance  Formal  order  for  supply-Stipulation  in   the contract  for  cancellation at any stage-If  effective  even after formal order for supply had been made.

HEADNOTE: The  General  Manager of a Railway invited tenders  for  the supply  of jaggery to the railway grain shops.  Paragraph  2 of  the tender set out the quantity required  and  described dates of delivery.  There was a note in that para that  "the Administration reserved the right to cancel the contract  at any stage during the tenure of the contract without  calling up the outstanding on the unexpired portion of the contract. "  Under para 8 the successful tenderer was required to  pay security deposit towards proper fulfillment of the contract. Paragraph  9 stated that a formal order for supply would  be placed after the security deposit referred to in para 8  was made.  The respondent submitted his tender for the supply of 14000  maunds as mentioned in the tender, and by the  letter dated January 29, 1948, the Deputy General Manager  accepted the  tender stating that the official order would be  placed on the respondent on receipt of the remittance of  security. In  his letter dated February 16, 1948, the  Deputy  General Manager  reiterated the acceptance of the tender subject  to the  respondents’  acceptance of the  terms  and  conditions printed  on  the reverse of that letter,  under  which  3500 maunds each were to be delivered on March 1,  775 March  22, April 5 and April 21, 1948 respectively.  At  the end of the terms and conditions was a note that the adminis- tration  reserved  the right to cancel the contract  at  any stage during the tenure of the contract without calling upon the  outstanding on the unexpired portion of  the  contract. By  his  letter  dated March 8,  1948,  the  Deputy  General Manager informed the respondent that the balance quantity of jaggery outstanding on date against the order dated February 16,  1948, be treated as cancelled and the contract  closed. In the suit instituted by the respondent for the recovery of damages  resulting  from breach of contract,  the  appellant relied,  by  way  of  defence, on  the  stipulation  in  the

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contract  that the appellant was at livery to terminate  the contract at any stage. Held  that,  on the true construction of the  contract,  the condition  mentioned in the note 2 of the tender or  in  the letter  dated February 16, 1948 referred to a right  in  the appellant to cancel the agreement for such supply of jaggery about  which no formal order had been passed by  the  Deputy General  Manager  with the respondent and did not  apply  to such supplies of jaggery about which a formal order had been placed specifying definite amount of jaggery to be  supplied and  the  definite  date or definite short  period  for  its actual delivery.  Once the order was placed for such  supply on  such  dates, that order amounted to a  binding  contract making  it incumbent on the respondent to supply jaggery  in accordance  with the terms of the order and also  making  it incumbent  on  the  Deputy General  Manager  to  accept  the jaggery delivered in pursuance of that order. Chatturbhuj Vithaldas Jasani v. Moneshwar Parashram,  [1954] S.C.R. 817, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 53 of 1961. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and decree  dated August  9, 1956 of the Madras High Court in O.S. Appeal  No. 64 of 1952. H.   N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, K. L. Gosain and P. D. Xenon, for the appellant. A.  V.  Viswanatha  Sastri  and M. S.  K.  Sastri,  for  the respondent. 776 1963.  May 9. The judgment of the Court was delivered by RAGHUBAR  DAYAL J.-The facts giving rise to this appeal,  by special leave, are these : The  Dominion  of  India, as the owner  of  the  Madras  and Southern  Mahratta  Railway,  represented  by  the   General Manager  of that railway, invited tenders for the supply  of jaggery   to  the  railway  grain  shops.   The   respondent submitted  his  tender  for the supply  of  14,000  imperial maunds  of  cane jaggery during the months of  February  and March 1948.  The tender form contained a note in paragraph 2 which was meant for the quantity required and the  described dates of delivery.  This note was :               "This  Administration  reserves the  right  to               cancel  the contract at any stage  during  the               tenure of the contract without calling up  the               outstandings  on the unexpired portion of  the               contract." The  Deputy General Manager of the Railways, by  his  letter dated  January 29, 1948, accepted this tender.   The  letter asked  the  respondent  to remit a  sum  of  Rs.  7,900/-for security  and  said  that  on  receipt  of  the  remittance, official order would be placed with the respondent.  In  his letter  dated February 16, 1948, the Deputy General  Manager reiterated  the  acceptance  of the tender  subject  to  the respondent’s acceptance of the terms and conditions  printed on the reverse of that letter.  Among these terms, the terms of  delivery  stated  : Programme of delivery  to  be  3,600 maunds  on March 1, 1948 ; 3,500 maunds on March  22,  1948; 3,500 on April 5, 1948; and 3,500 maunds on April 21,  1948. At  the end of the terms and conditions was a note that  the administration reserved the right to cancel the contract  at any stage during the tenure of the  777

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contract   without  calling  up  the  outstandings  on   the unexpired  portion  of  the  contract.   The  date  for  the delivery of the four installments were slightly changed by a subsequent letter dated February 28, 1948. By  his  letter  dated March 8,  1948,  the  Deputy  General Manager informed the respondent that the balance quantity of jaggery outstanding on date against the order dated February 16,  1948, be treated as cancelled and the contract  closed. The  protests  of  the respondent were of no  avail  as  the railway   administration   took  its   stand   against   the stipulation  that  the right to cancel the contract  at  any stage  was  reserved  to  it.   Ultimately,  the  respondent instituted   the  suit  against  the  Union  of  India   for recovering  damages resulting from breach of contract.   The trial  Court  dismissed the suit holding  that  the  railway administration could cancel the contract without giving  any reason  whenever it liked, without making itself  liable  to pay  any  damages.   The High Court  held  that  the  clause reserving the right in the appellant to cancel the  contract was  void and in view of the trial Court having not  decided the  issue  about damages, remanded the  suit  for  disposal after  dealing with that matter.  It is against this  decree that the Union of India has filed this appeal after  obtain- ing special leave. The  contentions raised for the appellant are two.   One  is that on a proper construction of the terms of the  contract, the  appellant  had  agreed to but  only  such  quantity  of jaggery  as  it  might require, up to a  maximum  of  14,000 maunds and therefore there was no enforceable obligation  to purchase the entire quantity.  The other contention is  that the  respondent had expressly agreed to the impugned  clause and that therefore the appellant was at liberty to terminate the  contract at any stage of the duration of  the  contract with  respect to the outstanding obligations under it.   The stipulation is valid and binding 778 on  the  parties  and  it amounted to  a  provision  in  the contract itself for its discharge or determination.  On  the other  hand  it  is contended for the  respondent  that  the contract was a complete contract of the supply of a definite quantity  of  jaggery  viz., 14,000  maunds,  on  the  dates mentioned  in  the order dated February 16, 1948,  to  start with,   and  ultimately  on  the  dates  mentioned  in   the subsequent   letter   dated  February  28,  and   that   the stipulation  relied  on was repugnant to the  contract  and, even if valid, the appellant could rescind the contract only for good and reasonable ground and not arbitrarily. To decide the contentions raised it is necessary to construe the  true nature of the contract between the  parties  which has   given  rise  to  these  proceedings.    The   relevant conditions of tender are described in paragraphs 2, 8 and  9 and are set out below :               "2.  Quantity required and described dates  of               delivery.-14,000   imperial  maunds  of   cane               jaggery are required for the months of  Decem-               ber 1947 and January 1948 and should be  deli-               vered  in equal lots of 1,750 imperial  maunds               each  commencing from 10th December  1947  and               completed on 31st January 1948.               Note : This Administration reserves the  right               to cancel the contract at any stage during the               tenure of the contract without calling up  the               outstandings  on the unexpired portion of  the               contract.               8.    Security  deposit.-Five percent  of  the

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             tender  value will be required to be  paid  by               the  successful tenderer as  security  deposit               towards  proper  fulfilment of  the  contract.               This  amount  will carry  no  interest.   This               should  be  paid in cash in  addition  to  the               earnest  money already paid to  the  Paymaster               and Cashier of this Rail-way,                779               Madras,  and  his  official  receipt  obtained               therefor.   Cheques  and drafts  will  not  be               accepted  in payment of security deposit.   In               the  case  of  contracts  or  the  supply   of               gingelly  oil,  the security deposit  will  be               arranged only after 90 days have elapsed  from               the date of the last supply against the order.               9.    Placing  of  order.-A formal  order  for               supply  will  be  placed  on  the   successful               tenderer   only  on  the   undersigned   being               furnished  with  the  receipt  issued  by  the               Paymaster and Cashier of this Railway for  the               security deposit referred to in paragraph 8." Paragraph 12 provides for the rejection of supplies if  they be  of  unacceptable  quality.   Paragraph  13  deals   with penalties and reads thus :               "13.    Penalties.-When   supplies   arc   not               effected  on  the dates as laid  down  in  the               Official Order or when acceptable  replacement               of the whole or part of any consignment  which               is rejected in accordance with paragraph 12 is               not  made  within  the  time  prescribed   the               administration will take penal action  against               the  supplier in one or more of the  following               ways               (a)   Purchase in the open market at the  risk               and expenses of the supplier goods of  quality               contracted for, to the extent due ;               (b)   Cancel any outstandings on the  contract               and ;               (c)   Forfeit the security deposit." The  respondent  made  an  offer  to  supply  the  necessary quantity  of  jaggery during the period it  was  wanted  and expressed its readiness to abide by 780 the terms and conditions of the tender.  He agreed to supply the  jaggery  at  the rate mentioned in  his  letter.   This tender  was accepted by the letter dated January  29,  1948. So  far,  the offer of a supply of a  definite  quantity  of jaggery during a specified period at a certain rate and  the acceptance  of the offer would constitute an agreement,  but would  fall short of amounting to a legal contract  inasmuch as  the date of delivery of the jaggery was  not  specified. Only  the  period was mentioned.  The agreement  arrived  at therefore could be said, as urged for the appellant, to be a contract in a popular sense with respect to the terms  which would   govern  the  order  for  supply  of  jaggery.    The acceptance  of the tender did not amount to the  placing  of the order for any definite quantity of jaggery on a definite date. Paragraph 9 of the tender referred to the placing of a formal order for the supply of jaggery, after the respondent had  not  only made a security deposit as  required  by  the provisions  of paragraph 8 but had also furnished a  receipt issued for that deposit to the Deputy General Manager, Grain Shops.  So construed, the note in paragraph 2 of the  tender would refer to cancel this agreement, loosely called a  con- tract,  at  any stage during the tenure  of  that  agreement

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without calling up the outstandings on the unexpired portion of the contract. The various expressions used in this note point to the  same conclusion.    The  expression  ’tenure  of  the   contract’ contemplates the contract being of a continuing nature.   It is only a contract with a sort of a tenure.  The contract is to be cancelled at any stage during such a tenure, that  is, it  could  be  cancelled  during  the  period  between   the acceptance  of the tender and March 31, 1948, the last  date for  the  delivery of the jaggery under the  contract.   The note further provided that as a result of the  cancellation, the  appellant  will  not call up the  outstandings  on  the unexpired portion of the contract.  This 781 expression  can  only mean "without ordering the  supply  of jaggery  which  was  to be delivered  within  the  remaining period  of  the contract", that is, the period  between  the date of cancellation and March 31, 1948. Paragraph  13  dealing with penalties  draws  a  distinction between outstandings on the contract and the purchase of the goods  to  the extent not supplied by the  respondent.   The provision  about  penalty  comes  into  operation  when  the supplies  are  not effected on the dates laid  down  in  the official order, or when acceptable replacement of the  whole or  part  of any consignment which is rejected is  not  made within  the time prescribed.  Clause (a) of para 13  contem- plates penal action by purchasing in the open market at  the risk  and  expenses of the supplier, goods  of  the  quality contracted for to the extent due, either due to the  failure to supply or due to failure to replace rejected goods  which had been supplied in compliance of an order.  Clause (b)  of para  13 contemplates a further penal action in the form  of cancellation  of any outstandings on the contract.   Such  a cancellation  could only be of the balance of  the  supplies agreed  upon but not yet supplied.  If this  expression  was meant to cover the goods for which order had been placed but whose  date  of  delivery  had  not  arrived,  a   different expressing would have been more appropriately used. The appellant’s letter dated,January 29, 1948 which conveyed the  acceptance  of the tender, directed the  respondent  to remit a certain sum for the security deposit and stated that on  receipt of advice of remittance official order would  be placed.   This  is the order contemplated by para 9  of  the tender. By  his letter dated February 16, 1948, the  Deputy  General Manager  repeated  in  paragraph 1 of the  letter  that  the tender dated January 27, 1948, 782 was accepted for the supply of jaggery, only subject to  the respondent’s acceptance of the terms and conditions  printed on  the  reverse.   The tender had  already  been  accepted. There  was  no  occasion  to  reopen  the  question  of  the acceptance of the tender or to reinform the respondent about the  acceptance  of  the  tender  or  to  obtain  a  second, acceptance of the respondent to the terms and conditions  of the tender.  No occasion could have arisen for imposing  any fresh conditions for the acceptance of the tender which  had been accepted earlier. Paragraph  2  of the letter contains a  definite  order  for dispatching  and  delivering  of  the  consignment  to   the Assistant  Controller of Grain Shops.  The details given  in the  letter provided for the entire supply of 14,000  maunds to  be  in  four equal instalments, each  instalment  to  be delivered on a particular date.  The only other condition or term in this letter is

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             "This  administration  reserves the  right  to               cancel  the contract at any stage  during  the               tenure of the contract without calling up  the               outstandings  on the unexpired portion of  the               contract." This  is identical in terms with the note in paragraph 2  of the  tender and can bear the same construction with  respect to  that  portion of the goods to be supplied for  which  no formal order had been placed.  If this note had a particular reference  to  the cancellation of the orders, if  that  was possible in law, its language would have been different.  It would have referred to the right to cancel the orders  about the  delivery  of the consignments and would  have  provided that  the orders for such supplies which were to be made  on dates  subsequent  to the date of cancellation  would  stand cancelled  or that the appellant would not be bound to  take delivery of such  783 consignments which were to be delivered on dates  subsequent to the cancellation of the orders.  There is nothing in this letter  that  the  formal order placed is  subject  to  this condition.   The  condition governed the acceptance  of  the tender according to the content of para 1 of this letter. It appears that the order has been placed on a printed  form which  could be used also for placing an order for  delivery of  part of the commodity which the tenderer has  agreed  to supply.   That  seems to be the reason why  that  particular recital appears in the letter.  It cannot possibly have  any bearing  on  a  case  like the  present  where  the  railway administration has definitely placed an order for the supply of  the entire quantity of the commodity for which a  tender had been called. In  this  connection  we may refer to the  language  of  the letter  of the Deputy General Manager dated March  8,  1948, which informed the respondent about the cancellation of  the contract.   The letter states that the balance  quantity  of jaggery  outstanding on date against the above order,  i.e., the  order dated February 16, 1948, is treated as  cancelled and  the contract closed.  This letter itself draws  a  dis- tinction  between the order and the contract.  The  contract has a reference to the agreement consisting of the offer  of supply of jaggery and acceptance of the offer by the  Deputy General Manager. We are therefore of the view that the condition mentioned in the  note  to para 2 of the tender or in  the  letter  dated February  16,  1948, refers to a right in the  appellant  to cancel the agreement for such supply of jaggery about  which no  formal  order  had been placed  by  the  Deputy  General Manager  with  the  respondent.and does not  apply  to  such supplies  of  jaggery about which a formal  order  had  been placed specifying definite amount of jaggery to be 784 supplied and the definite date or definite short period  for its  actual  delivery.  Once the order is  placed  for  such supply  on  such  dates., that order amounts  to  a  binding contract  making  it incumbent on the respondent  to  supply jaggery  in accordance with the terms of the order and  also making it incumbent on the Deputy General Manager to  accept the jaggery delivered in pursuance of that order. We  may refer to what was said by this Court in  Chatturbhuj Vithaldas  Jasani v. Moreshwar Parashram (1), in  connection with   an  arrangement  arrived  at  between   the   Central Government and a firm of bidi manufacturers, Moolji Sickka & Company.   The arrangement under which the firm was to  sell and  the  Government was to buy from the firm from  time  to

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time two brands of bidis manufactured by it.  The contention raised  before the Court was that this arrangement  amounted to a contract for the supply of goods within the meaning  of that section.  The contract was said to be embodied in  four letters.  This Court said :               "But  except for this the letters  merely  set               out the terms on which the parties were  ready               to  do  business with each other if  and  when               orders  were placed and executed.  As soon  as               an  order was placed and accepted  a  contract               arose.   It  is true this  contract  would  be               governed  by the term set out in  the  letters               but  until  an order was placed  and  accepted               there was no contract."               Reference may also be made to what is said  in               ’Law  of Contract’, by Cheshire & Fifoot  (5th               Edition) at p. 36.               "There is no doubt, of course, that the tender               is  an  offer.   The  question,  however,   is               whether its acceptance’ by the corporation  is               an  acceptance  in the legal sense  so  as  to               produce a               (2)   [1954] S.C.R. 817.                785               binding  contract.  This can be answered  only               by  examining  the language  of  the  original               invitation to tender.  There are at least  two               possible  cases.  First, the  corporation  may               have stated that it will definitely require  a               specified  quantity of goods, no more  and  no               less,  as, for instance, where  it  advertises               for  1,000 tons of coal to be supplied  during               the period January 1st to December 31st.  Here               the   "acceptance’   of  the  tender   is   an               acceptance in the legal sense, and it  creates               an   obligation.   The  trader  is  bound   to               deliver,  the corporation is bound to  accept,               1,000  tons, and the fact that delivery is  to               be  by instalments as and when  demanded  does               not disturb, the existence of the obligation." On  the  basis  of this note, the  acceptance  of  the  res- pondent’s  tender  by the Deputy General  Manager  may  even amount to a contract in the strict sense of the term, but we do  not consider it in that sense in view of the  provisions of  paragraphs 8 and 9 of the tender requiring a deposit  of security and the placing of the formal order. The other case illustrated by Cheshire and Fifoot is :               "Secondly, the corporation advertises that  it               may   require   articles   of   a    specified               description  up to a maximum amount,  as,  for               instance,  where  it invites tenders  for  the               supply  during  the coming year  of  coal  not               exceeding 1,000 tons altogether, deliveries to               be  made if and when demanded, the  effect  of               the  so-called  acceptance’ of the  tender  is               very  different.  The trader has made what               is called a standing offer.  Until  revocation               he stands ready and willing to deliver coal up               to  1,000  tons at the agreed price  when  the               corporation  from  time  to  time  demands   a               precise quantity.  The                                    786               ’acceptance’ of the tender, however, does  not               convert the offer into a binding contract, for               a contract of sale implies that the buyer  has

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             agreed  to accept the goods.  In  the  present               case  the corporation has not agreed  to  take               1,000  tons, or indeed any quantity  of  coal.               It has merely stated that it may require  sup.               plies up to a maximum limit."               "In this latter case the standing offer may be               revoked  at any time provided that it has  not               been  accepted in the legal sense; and  accep-               tance  in the legal sense is complete as  soon               as  a requisition for a definite  quantity  of               goods  is  made.   Each  requisition  by   the               offeree  is  an individual act  of  acceptance               which creates a separate contract." We construe the contract between the parties in the  instant case to be of the second type.- The note below para 2 of the tender  form,  reserving a right to  cancel  an  outstanding contract is then consistent with the nature of the agreement between  the  parties  as  a result  of  the  offer  of  the respondent  accepted by the appellant and a similar note  in the  formal order dated February 16, 1948, had no  reference to   the  actual  orders  but  could  refer  only  to   such contemplated supplies of goods for which no orders had  been placed, In  view of the construction we have placed on the  contract between the parties it is not necessary to decide the  other contention  urged for the appellant that the stipulation  in the  not amounted to a term in the contract itself  for  the discharge  of  the  contract  and  therefore  was  valid,  a contention to which the reply of the respondent is that  any such  term in a contract which destroys the contract  itself according to the earlier terms is void as in that case there would  be nothing in the alleged contract which  would  have been binding on the appellant. -  787 We  are  of  opinion that the order of  the  High  Court  is correct and therefore dismiss the appeal with costs. Appeal dismissed.