30 August 1965
Supreme Court
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BHAGWANDAS GOVERDHANDAS KEDIA Vs M/S. GIRDHARILAL PARSHOTTAMDAS AND CO. ANDOTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 948 of 1964


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PETITIONER: BHAGWANDAS GOVERDHANDAS KEDIA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: M/S.  GIRDHARILAL PARSHOTTAMDAS AND CO.  ANDOTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 30/08/1965

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. WANCHOO, K.N. HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:  1966 AIR  543            1966 SCR  (1) 656

ACT: Indian  Contract  Act,  1872,  ss.  2,  3,  4-Contract  when complete-Offer   and  Acceptance   by   telephone-Acceptance complete where spoken or where heard ?

HEADNOTE: The respondents entered into a contract with the  appellants by  longdistance  telephone.  The offer was  spoken  by  the respondent at Ahmedabad and the acceptance was spoken by the appellants  at  Khamgaon.   Alleging  breach  of  the   said contract  the respondents Mod a suit at Ahmedabad.   On  the issue  of jurisdiction raised by the appellants,  the  trial court found that the Ahmedabad Court had jurisdiction to try the suit.  The High Court rejected the appellant’s  revision petition  in limine whereupon by special leave, he  came  to this Court. HELD  :  (i) Making of an offer at a place  which  has  been accepted elsewhere does not form part of the cause of action in  a suit for damage-, for breach of contract.   Ordinarily it  is  the  acceptance  of offer  and  intimation  of  that acceptance which result in a contract.  The intimation  must be  by same external manifestation which the law regards  as sufficient. [660 C-E] Baroda  Oil Cakes Traders v. Purshattam Naravandas and  Anr. I.L.R.  [1954]  Bom. 1137 and Sepulechre  Brothers  v.  Sait Khushal  Das  Jagjivan Das Mehta, I.L.R.  [1942]  Mad.  243, referred to. (ii) On  the general rule that a contract is concluded  when an  offer  is accepted and acceptance is  intimated  to  the offerer,  is  engrafted  an exception based  on  grounds  of convenience which has the merit not of logic or principle in support,  but of long acceptance by judicial decision.   The exception may be summarised as follows : When by  agreement, course of contract or usage of trade, acceptance by post  or telegram  is  authorised,  the bargain  is  struck  and  the contract  is  complete  when the acceptance is  put  into  a course  of transmission the offeree by posting a  letter  or dispatching a telegram. [662 G-H] (iii)     The  rule  that applies to acceptance by  post  of telegram  does  not  however  apply  to  contracts  made  by telephone.  The rule which applies to contracts by telephone

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is  the ordinary rule which regards a contract  as  complete only when acceptance is intimated to the purchaser.  In  the case of a telephonic conversation in a sense the parties are in  the presence of each other, each party is able  to  hear the   voice  of  the  other.   ’Mere  is  an   instantaneous communication  of speech intimating offer  and  -acceptance, rejection and counter-offer.  Intervention of an  electrical impulse which results in the instantaneous communication  of messages  from a distance does not alter the nature  of  the conversation so as to make it analogous to that of an  offer and acceptance through post or by Telegram. [664 A-B] It  is  true that the Posts and  Telegraphs  Department  has general   control  over  communication  by   telephone   and especially over long distance Telephones, but that is not  a ground for assuming that the analogy of a 657 contract  made  by  post will govern  this  mode  of  making contracts.   In  the  case  of  correspondence  by  post  or telegraphic  communication,  a third agency  intervenes  and without  the  effective intervention of that  third  agency, letters or messages cannot be transmitted.  In the case of a conversation  by telephone, once connection  is  established there  is  in the normal course no further  intervention  of another   agency.   Parties  holding  conversation  on   the telephone  are  unable  to see each  other;  they  are  also physically  separated in space, but they are in the  hearing of  each other by the aid of a mechanical contrivance  which makes  the voice of one heard by the  other  instantaneously and  communication does not depend on external agency.  [664 D-E] Emtores Ltd. v. Miles Far Eastern Corp. [1955] 2 Q.B.D.  327 relied on. (iv) In  the  administration  of the law  of  contracts  the courts  in India have generally been guided by the rules  of English   common  law  applicable  to  contracts,  when   no statutory provision to the contrary is in force.  The courts in the former Presidency towns by the terms of their respec- tive letters patents, and the courts outside the  Presidency towns by Bengal Regulation III of 1793, Madras Regulation 11 of  1802  and Bombay Regulation IV of 1837, and  by  diverse Civil  Courts Acts were enjoined in cases where no  specific rule  existed  to act according to ’law and equity’  in  the case  of  chartered High Courts and elsewhere  according  to ’justice, equity and good conscience’ which expressions have been  consistently interpreted to mean the rules of  English common  law,  so far as they are applicable  to  the  Indian Society and circumstances. [664 G-H] (v)  The  draftsmen  of  the Indian  Contract  Act  did  not envisage  use  of the telephone as a means  of  conversation between  parties  separated  in space  and  could  not  have intended  to make any rule in that behalf.  The trial  Court wag right in the view which it took that a part of the cause of  action arose within the jurisdiction of the  City  Civil Court  Ahmedabad,  where  acceptance  was  communicated   by telephone to the plaintiffs. [666 D-F] Per  Hidayatullah, J. (dissenting) (i) In the  Entores  case Lord  Denning  no  doubt  held  that  acceptance  given   by telephone was governed by the principles applicable to  oral acceptance  where the parties were in the presence  of  each other and that the analogy of letters sent by post could not be applied.  But the Court of Appeal was not called upon  to construe a written law which brings in the inflexibility  of its own language.  It was not required to construe the words found  in  s.  4 of the Indian Contract  Act,  namely,  "The communication  of an acceptance is complete as  against  the

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proposer when it is put in a course of transmission to  him, so as to be out of the power of the acceptor." [667 C-F] Entores Ltd. v. Miles Far East Corporation. [1955] 2  Q.B.D. 327, distinguished. (ii) The  law under consideration was framed at a time  when telephone,  wireless,  Telstar  and  Early  Bird  were   not contemplated.  If time has marched and inventions have  made it  easy to communicate instantaneously over  long  distance and the language of our law does not fit the new  conditions it can be modified to reject the old principles.  But it  is not  possible  to go against the language  by  accepting  an interpretation given without considering the language of our Act. [681 H] (iii)     The  language of s. 4 of the Indian Contract  Act, covers a case of communication over the telephone.  Our  Act does not provide separately for post, telegraph,  telephone, or  wireless.   Some of these were unknown in  1872  and  no attempt has been made to modify the law. it may be  presumed that the language has been considered adequate to, 658 cover  cases of these new inventions.  It is possible  today not only to speak on the telephone but to record the  spoken words  on a tape and it is easy to prove that  a  particular conversation  took  place.  Telephones now  have  television added  to them.  The rule about lost letters  of  acceptance was  made out of expediency ’because it was easier  in  com- mercial  circles to prove the dispatch of letters  but  very difficult  to disprove a statement that the letter  was  not received.  If the rule suggested on behalf of the plaintiffs is  accepted  it would put a very powerful  defence  in  the hands of the proposer if his denial that he heard the speech could take awry the implications of our law that  acceptance is complete -as soon as it is put in course of  transmission to the proposer. [681 D-G] (iv) Where  the  acceptance  on telephone is  not  heard  on account  of  mechanical defects there may be  difficulty  in determining  whether at all a contract results.   But  where the speech is fully heard and understood there is It  bindin contract,  and in such a case the only question is  -.is  to the  place  where  the contract can be said  to  have  taken peace. [678 G-H] (v)  In  the  present  case both  sides  admitted  that  the acceptance  was clearly heard -,it Ahmedabad.  The  acceptor was  in  a  position to say that the  communication  of  the acceptance  in so far as he was concerned was complete  when he (the acceptor) put his acceptance in transmission to  him (the proposer) as to be out of his (the acceptor’.,,,) power of  recall  in terms of s. 4 of the Contract  Act.   It  was obvious  that the word of acceptance was spoken at  Khamgaon and  the moment the acceptor spoke his acceptance he put  it in course of transmission lo the proposer beyond his recall. He  could not revoke acceptance thereafter.  It may be  that the  gap  of  time was so short that one can  say  that  the speech  was heard instantaneously, but if we are to put  new inventions into the frame of our statutory law we are  bound to say that the acceptor by speaking into the telephone  put his  acceptance  in  the resource  of  transmission  to  the proposer. [680 E-H] The   contract  was  therefore  made  at  Khamaon  and   not Ahmedabad, Case-law considered.

JUDGMENT:

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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 948 of 1964. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated July  24, 1964 of the Gujarat High Court in  Civil  Revision Application No. 543 of 1964. A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, Bishan Narain, S. Murthy and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellant. G.   B.  Pai,  J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur  and  Ravinder Narain, for the respondents. The Judgment of Wanchoo and Shah, JJ. was delivered by Shah, J. Hidayatullah, J. delivered a dissenting Opinion. Shah,   J.  Messrs  Girdharilal  Parshottamdas  &   Company- hereinafter  called "the plaintiffs"-commenced an action  in the City Civil Court at Ahmedabad against the Kedia  Ginning Factory  Oil  Mills  of  Khamgaon-hereinafter  called   "the defendants" for 659 a  decree for Rs. 31,150/- on the plea that  the  defendants had failed to supply cotton seed cake which they had  agreed to  supply  under  an  oral contract  dated  July  22,  1959 negotiated  between  the  parties by  conversation  on  long distance telephone.  The plaintiffs submitted that the cause of  action  for  the suit arose at  Ahmedabad,  because  the defendants had offered to sell cotton seed cake which  offer was  accepted  by  the plaintiffs  at  Ahmedabad,  and  also because  the  defendants were under the  contract  bound  to supply  the goods at Ahmedabad, and the defendants  were  to receive  payment for the goods through a Bank at  Ahmedabad. The  defendants  contended  that the  plaintiffs  had  by  a message communicated by telephone offered to purchase cotton seed cake. and they (the defendants) had accepted the  offer at  Khamgaon, that under the contract delivery of the  goods contracted  for was to be made at Khanigaon. price was  also to  be  paid at Khamgaon and that no part of  the  cause  of action  for  the  suit had  arisen  within  the  territorial jurisdiction of the City Civil Court Ahemedabad. On the issue of jurisdiction, the Trial Court found that the plaintiffs  had  made  an  offer  from  Ahemedabad  by  long distance  telephone to the defendants to purchase the  goods and that the defendants had accepted the offer at  Khamgaon, that  the goods were under the contract to be  delivered  at Khamgaon  and that payment was also to be made at  Khamgaon. The contract was in the view of the Court to be performed at Khamgaon,  and because of the offer made from Ahemedabad  to purchase goods the Court at Ahemedabad could not be invested with jurisdiction to entertain the suit.  But the Court held that  when a contract is made by conversation on  telephone, the  place  where acceptance of offer is  intimated  to  the offeror,  is  the  place where the  contract  is  made,  and therefore  the Civil Court at Ahmedabad had jurisdiction  to try   the  suit.   A  revision  application   filed   by-the defendants against the order, directing the suit to  proceed on  the merits, was rejected in limine by the High Court  of Gujarat.   Against the order of the High Court  of  Gujarat, this appeal has been -preferred with special leave. The  defendants  contend that in the case of a  contract  by conversation  on  telephone, the place where  the  offer  is accepted is the -place where the contract is made, and  that Court   alone  has  jurisdiction  within   the   territorial jurisdiction  of  which  the  offer  is  accepted  and   the acceptance  is spoken into the telephone instrument.  It  is submitted  that the rule which determines the place where  a contract  is made is determined by ss. 3 & 4 of  the  Indian Contract Act. and applies uniformly whatever may be the mode 660 employed  for  putting  the  acceptance  into  a  course  of

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transmission,  and that the decisions of the Courts  in  the United   Kingdom,  dependent  not  upon  express   statutory provisions  but  upon the somewhat elastic rules  of  common law,  have  no bearing in determining  this  question.   The plaintiffs on the other hand contend that making of an offer is  a part of the cause of action in a suit for damages  for breach  of contract, and the suit lies in the  court  within the  jurisdiction  of which the offeror has made  the  offer which   on   acceptance  has  resulted  into   a   contract. Alternatively, they contend that intimation of acceptance of the  offer being essential to the formation of  a  contract, the  contract takes place where such intimation is  received by  the  offeror.   The  first  contention  raised  by   the plaintiff  is  without substance.  Making of an offer  at  a place  which has been accepted elsewhere does not form  part of  the cause of action in a suit for damages for breach  of contract.   Ordinarily  it is the acceptance  of  offer  and intimation  of that acceptance which result in  a  contract. By  intimating  an offer, when the parties are  not  in  the presence  of each other, the offeror is deemed to be  making the  offer continuously till the offer reaches the  offeree. The offeror thereby merely intimates his intention to  enter into  a  contract on the terms of the offer.   ’Me’  offeror cannot impose upon the offeree an obligation to accept,  nor proclaim  that  silence  of  the  offeree  shall  be  deemed consent.   A contract being the result of an offer  made  by one  party and acceptance of that very offer by  the  other, acceptance of the offer and intimation of acceptance by some external  manifestation which the law regards as  sufficient is necessary. By a long and uniform course of decisions the rule is  well- settled  that mere making of an offer does not form part  of the cause of action for damages for breach of contract which has  resulted from acceptance of the offer: see  Baroda  Oil Cakes  Traders v. Purshottam Narayandas Bagulia and  Anr(1). The view to the contrary expressed by a single Judge of  the Madras High Court in Sepulchre Brothers v. Sait Khushal  Das Jagjivan Das Mehta ( 2 ) cannot be accepted as correct. The  principal contention raised by the defendants raises  a problem  of some complexity which must be approached in  the light  of  the  relevant principles of the  common  law  and statutory  provisions  contained  in the  Contract  Act.   A contract  unlike a tort is not unilateral.  If there  be  no "meeting  of  minds" no contract may result.   There  should therefore be an offer by one party, express or implied,  and acceptance of that offer by the (1) I.L.R. [1954] Bom. 1137. (2) I.L.R. [1942] Mad. 243. 661 other  in the same sense in which it was made by the  other. But an agreement does not result from a mere state of mind : intent to accept an offer or even a mental resolve to accept an  offer does not give rise to a contract.  There  must  be intent  to  accept and some external manifestation  of  that intent by speech, writing or other act, and acceptance  must be--communicated  to the offeror, unless he has waived  such intimation,  or  the  course  of  negotiations  implies   an agreement to the contrary. The  Contract  Act does not expressly deal  with  the  place where  a contract is made.  Sections 3 & 4 of  the  Contract Act  deal with the communication, acceptance and  revocation of  proposals.   By s. 3 the communication  of  a  proposal, acceptance  of a proposal, and revocation of a proposal  and acceptance,  respectively, are deemed to be made by any  act or  omission of the party proposing, accepting or  revoking,

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by which he intends to communicate such proposal, acceptance or revocation, or which has the effect of communicating  it. Section 4 provides :               "The  communication of a proposal is  complete               when  it comes to the knowledge of the  person               to whom it is made.               The   communication   of  an   acceptance   is               complete,-               as  against the proposer, when it is put in  a               course of transmission to him, so as to be out               of the power of the acceptor;               as against the acceptor, when it comes to  the               knowledge of the proposer.               The communication of a revocation is complete-               as against the person who makes it, when it is               put  into  a  course of  transmission  to  the               person to whom it is made, so as to be out  of               the power of the person who makes it;               as against the person to whom it is made, when               it comes to his knowledge." In  terms  s. 4 deals not with the place  where  a  contract takes  place, but with the completion of communication of  a proposal,  acceptance  and revocation.  In  determining  the place  where  a  contract takes  place,  the  interpretation clauses  in s. 2 which largely incorporate  the  substantive law  of  contract  must be taken  into  account.   A  person signifying to another his willingness to or to abstain  from doing anything, with a view to obtaining 66 2 the  assent of that other to such act or abstinence is  said to  make a proposal : cl. (a). When the person to  whom  the proposal is made signifies his assent thereto, the  proposal is said to be accepted. A proposal when accepted, becomes  a promise:  cl.  (b),  and  every promise  and  every  set  of promises,  forming  the consideration for each other  is  an agreement:  cl. (e).  An agreement enforceable at law  is  a contract:  cl.  (k).   By  the second clause  of  s.  4  the communication  of an acceptance is complete as  against  the proposer, when it is put in a course of transmission to him, so a,, to be out of the power of the acceptor.  This implies that where communication of an acceptance is made and it  is put  in  a  course  if transmission  to  the  proposer,  the acceptance is complete as against the proposer : as  against the  acceptor,  it  becomes complete when it  comes  to  the knowledge  of the proposer.  In the matter of  communication of revocation it is provided that as against the person  who makes the revocation it becomes complete when it is put into a  course of transmission to the person to whom it is  made, so as to be out of the power of the person who makes it, and as  against the person to whom it is made when it  comes  to his knowledge.  But s. 4 does not imply that the contract is made  qua the proposer at one place and qua the acceptor  at another place.  The contract becomes complete as soon as the acceptance  is  made by the acceptor  and  unless  otherwise agreed expressly or by necessary implication by the adoption of  a special method of intimation, when the  acceptance  of offer is intimated to the offeror. Acceptance and intimation of acceptance of offer are  there- fore both necessary to result in a binding contract.  In the case  of a contract which consists of mutual  promises,  the offeror  must  receive  intimation  that  the  offeree   has accepted  his  offer and has signified  his  willingness  to perform  his promise.  When parties are in the  presence  of each  other, the method of communication will,  depend  upon the nature of the offer and the circumstances in which it is

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made.   When  an  offer is orally made,  acceptance  may  be expected  to  be made by an oral reply, but even  a  nod  or other   act  which  indubitably  intimates  acceptance   may suffice.   If the offeror receives no such intimation.  even if the offeree has resolved to accept the offer, a  contract may not result.  But on this rule is engrafted an  exception based  on grounds of convenience which has the merit not  of logic  or  principle in support, but of long  acceptance  by judicial decisions.  If the parties are not in the  presence of each other, and the offeror has not prescribed a mode  of communication  of acceptance, insistence upon  communication of acceptance of the offer by the offeree would be found 663 to  be  inconvenient, when the contract is made  by  letters sent by post.  In Adams v. Lindsell(1) it was ruled as early as in 1818 by the Court of King’s Bench in England that  the contract   was  complete  as  soon  as  it  was   put   into transmission.   In  Adams’s case(1) the defendants  wrote  a letter to the plaintiff offering to sell a quantity of  wool and requiring an answer by post.  The plaintiff accepted the offer and posted a letter of acceptance, which was delivered to  the defendants nearly a week after they had  made  their offer.   The  defendants however sold the goods to  a  third party, after the letter of acceptance was posted but  before it was received by the defendants.  The defendants were held liable  in damages.  The Court in that case is  reported  to have  observed  that "if the defendants were  not  bound  by their offer when accepted by the plaintiffs till the  answer was received, they the plaintiffs ought not to be bound till after they had received the notification that the defendants had  received  their answer and assented to it.  And  so  it might  go  on  ad infinitum.  The rule  Adam’s  case(1)  was approved  by  the  House of Lords in Dunlop  and  others  v. Vincent  Higgins  and  others(1).  The  rule  was  based  on commercial  expediency,  or what Cheshire  calls  "empirical grounds".   It  makes  a large inroad upon  the  concept  of consensus,  "a  meeting  of minds" which  is  the  basis  of formation  of  a contract.  It would be  futile  however  to enter upon an academic discussion, whether the exception  is justifiable  in strict theory, and acceptable in  principle. The exception has long been recognised in the United Kingdom and  in other countries where the law of contracts is  based on  the  common law of England.  Authorities in  India  also exhibit a fairly uniform trend that in case of  negotiations by  post  the contract is complete when  acceptance  of  the offer is put into a course of transmission to the offeror  : see  Baroda  Oil  Cakes Traders’  case(1)  and  cases  cited therein.  A similar rule has been adopted when the offer and acceptance  are by telegrams.  The exception to the  general rule requiring intimation of acceptance may be summarised as follows.  When by agreement, course of conduct, or usage  of trade,  acceptance  by post or telegram is  authorised,  the bargain  is  struck and the contract  is  complete-when  the acceptance  is  put  into a course of  transmission  by  the offeree by posting a letter or dispatching a telegram. The  defendants  contend that the same rule applies  in  the case  of contracts made by conversation on  telephone.   The plaintiffs (1) 1 B. & Ald. 681. (2) 1  H.L.C. 381. (3) I.L.R. [1954] Bom. 1137. p/65.14 6 64 contend  that the rule which applies to those  contracts  is the ordinary rule which regards a contract as complete  only

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when  acceptance is intimated to the proposer.  In the  case of a telephonic conversation, in a sense the parties are  in the presence of each other : each party is able to hear  the voice of the other.  There is instantaneous communication of speech   intimating  offer  and  acceptance,  rejection   or counter-offer.  Intervention of an electrical impulse  which results in the instantaneous communication of messages  from a distance does not alter the nature of the conversation  so as  to make it analogous to that of an offer and  acceptance through post or by telegraph. It  is  true  that the Posts  &  Telegraphs  Department  has general   control  over  communication  by   telephone   and especially  long  distance  telephones, but that  is  not  a ground  for assuming that the analogy of a contract made  by post will govern this mode of making contracts.  In the case of  correspondence by post or telegraphic  communication,  a third   agency   intervenes  and   without   the   effective intervention  of  that  third agency,  letters  or  messages cannot  be  transmitted.  In the case of a  conversation  by telephone, once a connection is established there is in  the normal  course  no further intervention of  another  agency. Parties holding conversation on the telephone are unable  to see  each  other  : they are also  physically  separated  in space, but they are in the hearing of each other by the  aid of  a  mechanical contrivance which makes the voice  of  one heard  by the other instantaneously, and communication  does not depend upon an external agency. In the administration of the law of contracts, the Courts in India have generally been guided by the rules of the English common  law  applicable  to contracts,  where  no  statutory provision  to the contrary is in force.  The Courts  in  the former  Presidency  towns by the terms of  their  respective letters patents, and the courts outside the Presidency towns by  Bengal Regulation III of 1793, Madras Regulation  II  of 1802  and  Bombay Regulation TV of 1827 and by  the  diverse Civil  Courts Act were enjoined in cases where  no  specific rule existed to act according to "law or equity" in the case of  chartered  High  Courts and  else,  where  according  to justice,  equity and good conscience-which expressions  have been  consistently interpreted to mean the rule, of  English common  law,  so far as they are applicable  to  the  Indian society and circumstances. 665 In  England the Court of Appeal has decided in Entores  Ltd. v.   Miles Far East Corporation(1) that:               "where  a  contract is made  by  instantaneous               communication, e.g. by telephone, the contract               is  complete  only  when  the  acceptance   is               received  by the offeror, since  generally  an               acceptance must be notified to the offeror  to               make a binding contract;" In  Entores Ltd’s case(") the plaintiff made an  offer  from London  by Telex to the agents in Holland of  the  defendant Corporation,  whose headquarters were in New York,  for  the purchase  of certain goods, and the offer was accepted by  a communication  received on the plaintiff’s Telex machine  in London.   On  the  allegation that breach  of  contract  was committed by the defendant Corporation, the plaintiff sought leave to serve notice of a writ on the defendant Corporation in  New York claiming damages for breach of  contract.   The defendant  Corporation contended that the contract was  made in  Holland.   Denning L. J., who  delivered  the  principal judcment of the Court observed at p. 332               "When  a contract is made by post it is  clear               law  throughout the common law countries  that

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             the  acceptance  is complete as  soon  as  the               letter  is put into the post box, and that  is               the  place  where the contract is  made.   But               there is no clear rule about contracts made by               telephone  or  by  Telex.   Communications  by               these  means are virtually  instantaneous  and               stand on a different footing.", and  after  examining the negotiations made  in  a  contract arrived  at by telephonic conversation in different  stages, Denning  L.  J., observed that in the case of  a  telephonic conservation  the contract is only complete when the  answer accepting the offer was made and that the same rule  applies in  the  case of a contract by communication by  Telex.   He recorded his conclusion as, follows :               "that    the    rule    about    instantaneous               communications   between   the   parties    is               different  from the rule about the post.   The               contract is only complete when the  acceptance               is received by the offeror : and the  contract               is  made at the place where the acceptance  is               received." It  appears that in a large majority of  European  countries the rule based on the theory of consensus ad idem, is that a contract (1)  [1955] 2 Q.B.D. 327. 666 takes   place   where  the  acceptance  of  the   offer   is communicated  to  the offeror, and no  distinction  is  made between contracts made by post or telegraph and by telephone or  Telex.  In decisions, of the State Courts in the  United States,  conflicting  views  have been  expressed,  but  the generally  accepted  view is that by "the technical  law  of contracts  the  contract is made in the district  where  the acceptance is spoken".  This is based on what is called "the deeply rooted principle of common law that where the parties impliedly  or  expressly authorise a particular  channel  of communication,  acceptance  is effective when and  where  it enters  that  channel of communication." In the  text  books there  is no reference to any decision of the Supreme  Court of  the United States of America on this question :  America Jurisprudence,  2nd  Edn.,  Vol.  17, Art.  54  p.  392  and Williston on Contracts, 3rd Edn.  Vol.  1 p. 271. Obviously  the draftsman of the Indian Contract Act did  not envisage  use  of  the  telephone as  a  means  of  personal conversation  between parties separated in space, and  could not  have  :intended to make any rule in that  behalf.   The question then is -whether the ordinary rule which regards  a contract  as  completed ,only when acceptance  is  intimated should  apply, or whether the exception engrafted  upon  the rule  in  respect of offers and acceptances by post  and  by telegrams  is  to  be accepted.  If regard  be  had  to  the essential  nature of conversation by telephone, it would  be reasonable to hold that the parties being in a sense in  the presence  of each other, and negotiations are  concluded  by instantaneous  communication  of  speech,  communication  of acceptance is a necessary part of the formation of contract, and  the  exception  to  the  rule  imposed  on  grounds  of commercial expediency is inapplicable The trial Court was therefore right in the view which it has taken  that a part of the cause of action arose  within  the jurisdiction  ,of  the City Civil  Court,  Ahmedabad,  where acceptance was ,communicated by telephone to the plaintiffs. The appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs. Hidayatullah,  J. Where and when is the communication of  an acceptance  complete  under the Indian  Contract  Act,  when

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parties complete their contract by long distance telephone ? On  the answer to this question depends the jurisdiction  of the  court  trying the suit giving rise to this  appeal.   A contract  was  made  ,on  the  telephone  and  the  proposer complains  of  its breach by the acceptor.   We  are  hardly concerned with the terms of the 667 contract and they need not be mentioned.  At the time of the telephonic conversation the proposers who are plaintiffs  in the  suit  (respondents  here) were  at  Ahmedabad  and  the acceptor,  who  is the defendant (appellant  here),  was  at Khamgaon  in  Vidarbha.   The  plaintiffs’  suit  has   been instituted at Ahmedabad.  If the acceptance was complete and contract  was  made  when  the  appellant  spoke  into   the telephone  at  Khamgaon,  the Ahamedabad  court  would  lack jurisdiction  to  try  the suit.  It would,  of  course,  be otherwise  if  the  acceptance  was  complete  only  on  the reception of the speech at Ahmedabad and that was the  place where the contract was made. The rules to apply in our country are statutory but the Con- tract Act was drafted in England and the English Common  law permeates  it;  however,  it  is  obvious  that  every   new development of the Common law in England may not necessarily fit  into the scheme and the words of our statute.   If  the language  of  our enactment creates a  non-possumus  adamant rule, which cannot be made to yield to any new theories held in foreign courts our clear duty will be to read the statute naturally and to follow it.  The Court of Appeal in  England in Entores Ltd. v. Miles Far East Corporation(1) held that a contract  made  by  telephone is  complete  only  where  the acceptance  is  heard by the proposer  (offeror  in  English Common law) because generally an acceptance must be notified to the proposer to make a binding contract and the  contract emerges  at the place where the acceptance is  received  and not at the place where it is spoken into the telephone.   In so  deciding,  the Court of Appeal did not  apply  the  rule obtaining  in  respect  of contracts  by  correspondence  or telegrams, namely, that acceptance is complete as soon as  a letter of acceptance is put into the post box or a  telegram is  handed in for dispatch, and the place of  acceptance  is also  the place where the contract is made.  On reading  the reasons given in support of the decision and comparing  them with the language of the Indian Contract Act I am  convinced that  the Indian Contract Act does not admit  our  accepting the view of the Court of Appeal. Sir  William Anson compared the proposal (offer  in  English Common law) to a train of gun-powder and the acceptance to a lighted  match.   This picturesque  description  shows  that acceptance is the critical fact, even if it may not  explain the  reason underlying it.  It is, therefore,  necessary  to see why the rule about acceptance by post or by telegram was treated  as  a departure from he general rule  of  law  that acceptance must be communicated (1)  [1955] 2 Q.B.D. 327. 668 The rule about acceptance by post or telegram is adopted  in all  countries in which the English Common law influence  is felt  and  in many others and, as will be shown  later,  the Indian  Contract Act gives statutory approval to  it.   That rule  is  that  a  contract is complete  when  a  letter  of acceptance,  properly addressed and stamped is posted,  even if  the  letter  does not reach the  destination  or  having reached it is not read by the proposer.  The same  principle applies  to telegrams.  See Cowan v. O ’Conner(1),  Tinn  v. Hoffman & Co.(1). The first question is whether the  general

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rule  or the special rule applies to contracts made  on  the telephone  and  the second what is the  position  under  the Indian  Contract Act.  The answer to the first  question  is that there is difference of opinion in the countries of  the world  on  that  point and to the  second  that  the  Indian Contract Act does not warrant the acceptance of the decision in  the Entores case(1).  To explain the true position, as  I understand it, I may start from the beginning. A  contract  is an agreement enforceable by law and  is  the result  of a proposal and acceptance of the  proposal.   The proposal  when  accepted becomes a promise.  Now it  may  be conceded,  that, as Bowen L. J. said in Carlill v.  Carbolic Smoke Ball Co.(1)                "........as  an  ordinary  rule  of  law   an               acceptance  of  an  offer  made  ought  to  be               notified to the person who makes an offer,  in               order that the two minds may come together". or, as Anson puts it, acceptance means in general a communi- cated  acceptance.  This is the English Common law rule  and is  also accepted in the United States, Germany and  France. The communication must be to the proposer himself unless  he expressly  or  impliedly  provides  that  someone  else  may receive  it.  According to our law also (s. 7) in  order  to convert  a  proposal into a promise the acceptance  must  be absolute and unqualified and in the manner prescribed or  in some  usual and reasonable manner.  The intention to  accept must  be  expressed  by some act or omission  of  the  party accepting.  It must not be a mental acceptance proportion in mention retentum-though sometimes silence may be treated  as acceptance.   Section  3  of  our Act  says  that  the  com- munication  of acceptance is deemed to be made by an act  or omission  of  the party by which he intends  to  communicate such acceptance or which has the effect of communicating it. (1)  [1888] 20 Q.B.D. 640. (3)  [1955] 2 Q.B.D. 327. (2)  (1873) 29 L.T. 271, 274, 278. (4)  (1893)1 Q.B.D. 256 at 269.                             669 The difficulty arises because proposals and acceptances  may be  in praesentes or inter absentes and it is  obvious  that the  rules must vary.  In acceptance by word of mouth,  when parties are face to face, the rule gives hardly any trouble. The  acceptance  may  be by  speech,  or  sign  sufficiently expressive  and  clear  to  form  a  communication  of   the intention to accept.  The acceptance takes effect  instantly and the contract is made at the same time and place.  In the case of acceptance inter absentes the communication must  be obviously  by some agency.  Where the proposer prescribes  a mode  of  acceptance that mode must be followed.   In  other cases  a usual and reasonable manner must be adopted  unless the  proposer  waives  notification.   Cases  in  the   last category  are  offers of reward for some  service  (such  as finding a lost purse or a stray dog (Williams v. Carwardine) (1) or fulfilling some condition, such as trying a  medicine (Carlill v. Carbolic Smoke gall Co.-supra). The offer  being to the whole world, the acceptance need not be notified  and the contract is made when he condition is fulfilled. Then come cases of acceptance by post, telegraph, telephone, wireless and so on.  In cases of contracts by correspondence or  telegram,  a different rule prevails and  acceptance  is complete  as soon as a letter of acceptance is posted  or  a telegram is handed on for dispatch.  One way to describe  it is that acceptance is complete as soon as the acceptor  puts his acceptance in the course of transmission to the proposer so as to be beyond his power to recall.  Acceptance by  post

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or telegram is considered a usual mode of communication  and it  certainly  is the most often allowed.  But  letters  get lost  or miscarried and telegrams get grabled.  What  should happen if the letter got lost in the post or the telegraphic message  got mutilated or miscarried ? It was held as  early as  1813  in  Adams  v. Lindsell(1)  that  even  in  such  a contingency acceptance must be taken to be complete as  soon as  the letter is posted and not when it is  delivered.   It was observed :               "For if the defendant were not bound by  their               offer when accepted by the plaintiffs till the               answer was received, then the plaintiffs ought               not  to be bound till after they had  received               the  notification  that  the  defendants   had               received their answer and assented to it;  and               so it might go on ad infinitum". of course, if it is contemplated that the acceptance will be by post, what more can the acceptor do than post the  letter ? The (1) 4 B &A 621. (2) [1813] 106 E.R. 250. 670 above  question  was asked by Lord Cottenham  in  Dunlop  v. Higgins(1) and the Lord Chancellor also asked the question : How  can  he be responsible for that over which  he  had  no control ?" Dunlop  v. Higgins(1) is the leading case in English  Common law  and  it  was  decided prior to  1872  when  the  Indian Contract Act was enacted.  Till 1872 there was only one case in which a contrary view was expressed (British and American Telegraph Co. v. Columbus)(1) but it was disapproved in  the following  year in Harris’ case(3) and the later cases  have always taken a different view to that in Colson’s case.   In Henthorn  v.  Fraser (4) , Lord  Hescehell  considered  that Colson’s  case must be considered to be overruled.   Earlier in  1879  4  Ex.  D. 216 (Household Fire  Insurance  Co.  v. Grant)  Bramwell  L.J.  was assailed by  doubts  which  were answered by Thesiger L.J. in the same case :               "A  contract complete on the acceptance of  an               offer being posted but liable to being put  an               end  to by any accident in the post, would  be               more mischievous than a contract only  binding               on  the parties upon the  acceptance  actually               reaching the offeror.  There is no doubt  that               the  implication  of  a  complete,  final  and               absolutely  binding contract being  formed  as               soon  as the acceptance of an offer is  posted               may  in some cases lead to hardship but it  is               difficult to adjust conflicting rights between               innocent parties.  An offeror, if he  chooses,               may always make the formation of the  contract               which  he  proposes, dependent on  the  actual               communication  to himself of  the  acceptance.               If he trusts to the post, and if no answer  is               received, he can make enquiries of the  person               to  whom the offer was addressed..........  On               the other hand if the contract is not  finally               concluded   except   in  the  event   of   the               acceptance actually reaching the offeror,  the               door  would be opened to the  perpetration  of               fraud;  besides  there would  be  considerable               delay  in  commercial  transactions;  for  the               acceptor  would  never  be  entirely  safe  in               acting  upon  his  acceptance  until  he   had               received notice that his letter of  acceptance

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             has reached its destination."                 2,2               (1)   (1948) 9 E.R. 805.               (3)   (1872) L.J.C. 625.               (2)   (1871) 6 Ex. 108.               (4)   (1892) 2 Ch. 27.               671               It  is hardly necessary to multiply  examples.               It  is  sufficient  to  point  out  that  Lord               Denning  (then  Lord Justice) in  the  Entores               case also observes :               "When  a contract is made by post it is  clear               law  throughout the Common law countries  that               the  acceptance  is complete as  soon  as  the               letter  is put into the post box, and that  is               where the contract is made." Although  Lord Romilly M.R. in Hebbs’ case(1) said that  the post  office was the "common agent" of both parties, in  the application of this special rule the post office is  treated as the agent of the proposer conveying his proposal and also as  his agent for receiving the acceptance.  The  principles which  underline the exceptional rule in English Common  law are:               (i)   the  post  office is the  agent  of  the               offeror  to  deliver  the offer  and  also  to               receive the acceptance;               (ii)  no contract by post will be possible, as               notification will have to follow  notification               to  make  certain that each  letter  was  duly               delivered;               (iii) satisfactory  evidence  of  posting  the               letter is generally available;               (iv)  if the offeror denies the receipt of the               letter it would be very difficult to  disprove               his negative; and               (v)   the  carrier  of the letter is  a  third               person over whom the acceptor has no control. It  may  be mentioned that the law in the United  States  is also  the same.  In the American Restatement (Contract  :  _ 74)  it is stated that a contract is made at the  time  when and the placewhere the last act necessary for its  formation is  performed.   In the Volume on Conflict of  laws,  _  326 reads :               "When  an offer for a bilaterial  contract  is               made  in one state and an acceptance  is  sent               from  another state to the first state  in  an               authorized manner the place of contracting  is               as follows :-               (a)   if the acceptance is sent by an agent of               the acceptor, the place of contracting is  the               state where the agent delivers it;               (1)   (1857) L.R. 4 Eq. 9,12.               672               (b)   if  the acceptance is sent by any  other               means,  the place of contracting is the  state               from which the acceptance is sent."               Comment on these clauses is               "(a) When acceptance is authorized to be  sent               by mail, the place of contracting is where the               acceptance is mailed.               (b)   When  an  acceptance is to  be  sent  by               telegraph,  the place of contracting is  where               the  message of acceptance is received by  the               telegraph company for transmission." Professor  Winfield  (writing in 1939) said that  this  rule

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prevailed in Canada, South Africa, New South Wales.  Dealing with  the European countries he said that three systems  are followed  : (1) -the system of Information under  which  the offeror  must  be notified and the contract is  formed  only when the offeror is so informed.  This prevailed in Belgium, Italy,  Spain,  Roumania,  Bulgaria and  Portugal;  (2)  The system  of declaration, under which the contract  is  formed from the moment when the recipient of the offer declares his acceptance, even without the knowledge of the offeror.  This system is divided into three theories :               "(i) theory of declaration stricto sensu, that               is to say, declaration alone is sufficient;               (ii)  theory  of expedition, that is  to  say,               the  sending  of  the acceptance  by  post  is               enough though not a bare declaration;               (iii) theory of reception that is to say,  the               reaching of the letter is the decisive  factor               whether the letter is read or  not. The  theory  of  reception as stated  here  is  accepted  in Germany  Austria, Czechoslovakia, Sweden,  Norway,  Denmark, Poland and the U.S.S.R. Prof.  Winfield however, concludes :               "But  the  greater majority of  states  accept               either the theory of declaration stricto sensu               or  the  theory  of  expedition.   Among  many               others  Dr.  de Visscher (in  his  article  in               Revue   de  Droit  International  (1938)   "Du               moments de lieu de formation yes contracts par               correspondence en adroit international prive")               mentions  Brazil,  Egypt,  Spain   (Commercial               Code),    Japan,    Morocco,    Mexico........               France.......... in               673               1932.......... decided in favour of expedition               theory." (3)  The mixed or Electric system : In this the contract  is formed  when the acceptance is received but it relates  back to the time when the acceptance was sent. We  now come to the question of telephone.  Prof.   Winfield expressed the opinion that the rule which has been  accepted for  letters  and  telegrams  should  not  be  extended   to communications by telephone.  He favoured the application of the  general rule that an acceptance must  be  communicated. He asked a question if the line is in such bad working order that  the  offeror hears nothing and if the parties  get  in touch  again  and  the  offer  is  cancelled  before  it  is accepted, will there be a contract?  He answered :               "It   is   submitted   that   there   is    no               communication  until the reply actually  comes               to the knowledge of the offeror.  In the               first  place, the telephone is much more  like               conversation face to face than an exchange  of               letters ............ the risk of mistake  over               the telephone is so great compared to  written               communications  that businessmen would  demand               or  expect a written confirmation of  what  is               said over the telephone."               In  this  opinion  Professor  Winfield   found               support in the American Restatement  (Contract               : _ 65)               "Acceptance given by telephone is governed  by               the  principles applicable to oral  acceptance               where the parties are in the presence of  each               other;"               but he conceded that the decided cases in  the               United States are to the contrary.   Williston

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             (Contracts)  at p. 238 gives all of them.   In               the  decided  cases the analogy  of  post  and               telegraph is accepted for telephones and it is               observed :               "The  point decided by these cases related  to               the  place  of  a  contract  rather  than  its               existence,  but  the decision that  the  place               where the acceptor speaks is the place of  the               contract  necessarily involves the  conclusion               that  it is the speaking of the acceptor,  not               the hearing of the offeror which completes the               contract."  (See Traders G. Co. v.  Arnold  P.               Gin Co.-Tex Civ.  App. 225 S.W. 2d. 1011). No doubt the decided cases are of the State courts but it is hardly  of be expected that a decision on such a point  from the Supreme 67 4 Court  of the United States would be easily available.   The Swiss  Federal  Code of obligations, it  may  be  mentioned, provides  (Art.  4) "Contracts concluded  by  telephone  are regarded  as made between parties present if they  or  their agents have been personally in communication." Williston whose revised edition (1939) was available to  Dr. Winfield,  observed  that a contract by  telegram  suggested analogies  to  a contract by correspondence but  a  contract over the telephone was more analogous to parties  addressing each other in praesentes and observed :               "A  contract  by telephone presents  quite  as               great  an analogy to a contract made when  the               parties  are orally addressing one another  in               each  other’s  presence.   It  has  not   been               suggested that in the latter case the  offeror               takes  the  risk  of  hearing  an   acceptance               addressed  to  him.   The  contrary  has  been               held..........  If then it is  essential  that               the offeror shall hear what is said to him, or               at  least  be  guilty of  some  fault  in  not               hearing,  the time and place of the  formation               of  the  contract is not when  and  where  the               offeror speaks, but when and where the offeror               hears  or ought to hear and it is to be  hoped               that  the principles applicable  to  contracts               between parties in the presence of each  other               will be applied to negotiations by telephone."               The Entores case fulfilled the hope  expressed               by Williston and Professor Winfield.  Before I               deal  with that case I may point out  that  in               Canada  in  Carrow  Towing Co. v.  The  Ed  My               Williams(1),               it   was  held,  as  the  headnote   correctly               summarizes :               "Where  a  contract is proposed  and  accepted               over  the  telephone,  the  place  where   the               acceptance  takes place constitutes the  place               where  the contract is made.  Acceptance  over               the telephone is of the same effect as if  the               person  accepting it had done so by posting  a               letter, or by sending off a telegram from that               place."               Similarly,  in  the Restatement  (Conflict  of               Laws)  the  comment  in   326,  partly  quoted               before, is :               (c)   when  an  acceptance is to be  given  by               telephone,  the place of contracting is  where               the acceptor speaks his acceptance;

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             (1)   46 D.L.R. 506.               67 5               (d)   when it is by word of mouth between  two               persons standing on opposite sides of a  state               boundary  line,  the place of  contracting  is               where the acceptor speaks at the time he makes               his acceptance.               (e)   This  rule  does not apply to  an  offer               which    requires   for   acceptance    actual               communication  of consent to the offeror.   In               that  case, the place of contracting is  where               the acceptance is received in accordance  with               the offer.                64 in the Volume on Contract says               "An acceptance may be transmitted by any means               which  the offeror has authorized the  offeree               to  use and, if so transmitted,  is  operative               and completes the contract as soon as put  out               of the offeree’s possession, without regard to               whether  it ever reached the  offeror,  unless               the   offer  otherwise  provides."   (Emphasis               supplied).               It  may  be mentioned that in an  old  English               case (Newcomb v. De Roos) (1) HUI J. observed:               "Suppose  the two parties stood  on  different               sides  of the boundary line of the district  :               and that the order was then verbally given and               accepted.   The contract would be made in  the               district in which the order was accepted." This  case was expressly dissented from in the Entores  case to  which  I  now proceed.  I have  quoted  at  length  from Professor  Winfield, Williston and the American  Restatement because  they lie beneath the reasons given by the Court  of Appeal. The  question in the Entores case(1) was whether  under  the Rules of the Supreme Court the action was brought to enforce a  contract or to recover damages or other relief for or  in respect  of  the  breach  of  a  contract  made  within  the jurisdiction  of the Court (or.  11 r. 1).  As the  contract consisted  of  an offer and its acceptance both by  a  telex machine,  the proposer being in London and the  acceptor  in Amsterdam, the question was whether the contract was made at the  place where the acceptor tapped out the message on  his machine  or  at  the  place  where  the  receiving   machine reproduced the message in London.  If it was in (1)  (1859) 2 B & E 271. (2) [1955] 2 Q.B.D. 327. 676 London  a  writ of Summons could issue, if in  Amsterdam  no writ  was possible.  Donovan J. held that the  contract  was made  in London.  The Court of Appeal approved the  decision and  discussed  the question of contracts  by  telephone  in detail and saw no difference in principle between the  telex printer  and  the  telephone and applied to  both  the  rule applicable   to   contracts   made   by   word   of   mouth. Unfortunately no leave to appeal to the House of Lords could be given as the matter arose in an interlocutory proceeding. The  leading  judgment  in the case was  delivered  by  Lord Denning  (then  Lord Justice) with whom Lord  Birkett  (then Lord  Justice) and Lord Parker (then Lord  Justice)  agreed. Lord Birkett gives no reason beyond saying that the ordinary rule of law that an acceptance must be communicated  applies to telephonic acceptance and not the special rule applicable to  acceptance  by  post or  telegraph.   Lord  Parker  also emphasizes the ordinary rule observing that as that rule  is

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designed  for the benefit of the offeror, he may  waive  it, and  points  out that the rule about acceptance by  post  or telegraph  is  adopted  on the  ground  of  expediency.   He observes  that if the rule is recognized that  telephone  or telex  telecommunications  (which are  received  instantane- ously) become operative though not heard or received,  there will  remain  no  room  for  the  general  proposition  that acceptance   must  be  communicated.   He  illustrates   the similarity  by comparing an acceptance spoken so  softly  as not  to  be heard by the offeror when parties  are  face  to face,  with a telephone conversation in which the  telephone goes dead before the conversation is over. Lord  Denning  begins by distinguishing  contracts  made  by telephone or telex from contracts made by post or  telegraph on  the  ground  that in the  former  the  communication  is instantaneous  like  the communication of an  acceptance  by word  of mouth when parties are face to face.   He  observes that in verbal contracts, there is no contract if the speech is  not  heard and gives the example of  speech  drowned  in noise  from an aircraft.  The acceptance, he points out,  in such cases must be repeated again so as to be heard and then only  there  is a contract.  Lord Denning  sees  nothing  to distinguish  contracts  made on the telephone or  the  telex from  those made by word of mouth and observes that  if  the line  goes  dead or the speech is indistinct  or  the  telex machine fails at the receiving end, there can be no contract till the acceptance is properly repeated and received at the offeror’s end.  But he adds something which is so  important that I prefer to quote his own words 67 7               "  In all the instances I have taken  so  far,               the  man who sends the message  of  acceptance               knows that it has not been received or he  has               reason  to  know it.  So he  must  repeat  it.               But,  suppose that he does not know  that  his               message  did not get home.  He thinks it  has.               This  may  happen  if  the  listener  on   the               telephone   does  not  catch  the   words   of               acceptance, but nevertheless does not  trouble               to ask for them to be repeated : or the ink on               the  teleprinter fails at the  receiving  end,               but the clerk does not ask for the message  to               be  repeated  : so that the man who  sends  an               acceptance   reasonably  believes   that   his               message  has  been received.  The  offeror  in               such  circumstances is clearly bound,  because               he  will be estopped from saying that  he  did               not receive the message of     acceptance.  It               is his own fault that he did not get it.   But               if  there should be a case where  the  offeror               without    any  fault  on his  part  does  not               receive the message  of   acceptance-yet   the               sender  of it reasonably believes it  has  got               home when it has not-then I think there is  no               contract." (Emphasis supplied) Lord  Denning  thus  holds  that  a  contract  made  on  the telephone  may be complete even when the acceptance  is  not received  by the proposer.  With respect I would  point  out that  Lord Denning does not say where the contract would  be complete  in  such  a  case.  If nothing  is  heard  at  the receiving end how can it be said that the general rule about a   communicated   acceptance  applies  ?    There   is   no communication at all.  How can it be said that the  contract was  complete at the acceptor’s end when he heard nothing  ?

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If  A says to B, "Telephone your acceptance to me"  and  the acceptance  is  not  effective unless A has  heard  it,  the contract is not formed till A hears it.  If A is estopped by reason  of his not asking for the reply to be repeated,  the making  of the contract involves a fiction that A has  heard the acceptance.  This fiction rests on the rule of  estopped that  A’s  conduct  induced a wrong belief  in  B.  But  the question is why should the contract be held to be  concluded where  A was and not on the analogy of letter  and  telegram where B accepted the offer ? Why, in such a case, not  apply the expedition theory ? Even  in the case of the post the rule is one of  assumption of  a  fact and little logic is involved.  We say  that  the proposal  was received and accepted at the  acceptor’s  end. of  course, we could have said with as much  apparent  logic that the proposal was made 678 and  accepted at the proposer’s end.  It is simpler  to  put the  acceptor  to the proof that he put  his  acceptance  in effective  course of transmission, than to  investigate  the denial  of  the proposer.  Again, what would happen  if  the proposer  says  that he heard differently and  the  acceptor proves what he said having recorded it on a tape at his  end ?  Would  what  the proposer heard be  the  contract  if  it differs from what the acceptor said ? Telegrams get  garbled in  transmission but if the proposer asks for a telegram  in reply  he  bears the consequences.  As Ashurst  J.  said  in Lickbarrow v. Mason(1) "Whenever one of two innocent parties must suffer by the act of  a third, he who has enabled such person to occasion  the loss must sustain it." Other  difficulties may arise.  A contract may be  legal  in one  ,state and illegal in another.  Williston  reports  one such case (Mullinix v. Hubbard) (1) in which the legality of a bargain dealing in cotton futures was held to be  governed by  New York law when orders were telephoned from  Arakansas where  such  dealings were illegal, to New York  city  where they  were legal.  What happens when the  acceptor  mistakes the identity of the proposer ? One such case (Tideman &  Co. v.  McDonalo) (3 ) has led to much institutional  discussion (See  39  Hary.  L. R. 388 :and (1926) 4 Tex  L.  Rev.  252) quoted by Williston. It  will  be seen from the above discussion that  there  are four  -classes of cases which may occur when  contracts  are made by telephone : (1) where the acceptance is fully  heard and  understood; (2) where the telephone fails as a  machine and the proposer does not hear the acceptor and the acceptor knows  that  his acceptance has not  been  transmitted;  (3) where  owing  to  some  fault  at  the  proposer’s  end  the acceptance  is  not  heard by him and he does  not  ask  the acceptor to repeat his acceptance and the acceptor  believes that the acceptance has been communicated; and (4) where the acceptance has not been heard by the proposer and he informs the acceptor about this and asks him to repeat his words.  I shall take them one by one. Where  the speech is fully heard and understood there  is  a binding contract and in such a case the only question is  as to the place where the contract can be said to be completed. Ours  is that kind of a case.  When the communication  fails and  the  -acceptance is not heard, and the  acceptor  knows about it, there (1) (1787) 102 E.R. 1192.                 (2) G.F. (2nd) 109 C.C.A. 8. (3)  275 S.W. 70 (Tex Civ.  App.) 6 7 9

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is   no  contract  between  the  parties  at   all   because communication   means  an  effective  communication   or   a communication  reasonable in the circumstances, Parties  are not  ad  idem at all.  If a man shouts his  acceptance  from such a long distance that it cannot possibly be heard by the proposer  he  cannot claim that he accepted  the  offer  and communicated it to the proposer as required by s. 3 oil  our Contract Act.  In the third case, the acceptor transmits his acceptance but the same does not reach the, proposer and the proposer  does not ask the acceptor to repeat  his  message. According  to Lord Denning the proposer is bound because  of his  default.   As there is no reception at  the  proposer’s end,  logically the contract must be held to be complete  at the proposer’s end.  Bringing in considerations of  estopped do not solve the problem for us.  Under the terms of s. 3 of our  Act  such communication is good  because  the  acceptor intends  to communicate his acceptance and follows  a  usual and reasonable manner and puts his acceptance in the  course of  transmission to the proposer.  He does not know that  it has not reached.  The contract then results in much the same way  as in the case of acceptance by letter when the  letter is  lost  and in the place where the acceptance was  put  in course of transmission.  In the fourth case if the  acceptor is told by the offeror that his speech cannot be heard there will be no contract because communication must be  effective communication and the act of acceptor has not the effect  of communication  it  -and  he  cannot  claim  that  he   acted reasonably. We  are  really not concerned with the case of  a  defective machine  because  the facts here are that the  contract  was made  with  the machine working perfectly  between  the  two parties.  As it is the proposer who is claimigi that the was complete hi.-, end, s. 4 of our Act must be read because  it creates   t  special  rule.   It  is  "a   rather   peculiar modification  of the rule applicable to acceptance  by  post under  the English Comnion  law Fortunately the  language of s. 4 covers acceptance telephone wireless etc.  The  section may be quoted at this stage               "4. Communication when complete.               The  communication of a proposal  is  complete               when  it comes to ,he knowledge of the  person               to whom it is made.               The   communication   of  an   acceptance   is               complete,.               against  the  proposer. when it is  put  in  a               course of transmission to him, so as to be out               of the power of the acceptor;               sup/65 15               68 0               as against the acceptor, when it comes to  the               knowledge of the proposer. It  will  be seen that the communication of  a  proposal  is complete  when  it comes to the knowledge of the  person  to whom  it  is  made  but  a  different  rule  is  made  about acceptance.   Communication of an acceptance is complete  in two  ways-(1)  against the proposer when it is  put  in  the course  of transmission to him so as to be out of the  Power of  the  acceptor; and (2) as against the acceptor  when  it comes  to  the  knowledge of the proposer.   The  theory  of expedition  which  was explained above  has  been  accepted. Section 5 of the Contract Act next lays down that a proposal may  be revoked at any time before the communication of  its acceptance  is  complete as against the  proposer,  but  not afterwards  and  an acceptance may be revoked  at  any  time before  the communication of the acceptance is  complete  as

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against the acceptor, but not afterwards.    In  the   third case in my above analysis this section is bound to     furnish difficulties, if we were to accept that the contract Is    only complete at the proposer’s end. The present is a case in which the proposer is claiming  the benefit of the completion of the contract at Ahmedabad.   To him  the  acceptor  may say that the  communication  of  the acceptance  in so far as he was concerned was complete  when he  (the  acceptor)  put his acceptance  in  the  course  of transmission  to (the proposer) so as to be out of his  (the acceptor’s)  power to recall.  It is obvious that the,  word of  acceptance  was spoken at Khamgaon and  the  moment  the acceptor  spoke  his  acceptance hi, put  it  in  course  of transmission to the proposer beyond his recall. He could not revoke his acceptance thereafter.  It may be that the gap of time was so short that one can say that the speech was heard instantaneously,  but if we are to put new  inventions  into the frame of our statutory law we are bound to say that  the acceptor  by speaking into the telephone put his  acceptance in the course of transmission to the proposer, however quick the  transmission.  What may be said in the  English  Common law, which is capable of being moulded by judicial dicta, we cannot always say under our statutory law because we have to guide  ourselves  by  the language of the  statute.   It  is contended  that  the  communication  of  an  acceptance   is complete  as  against  the acceptor when  it  comes  to  the knowledge  of the proposer but that clause governs cases  of acceptance  lost  through the fault of  the  acceptor.   For example,  the  acceptor  cannot be allowed to  say  that  he shouted 681 his  acceptance and communication was complete  where  noise from an aircraft overhead drowned his words.  As against him the communication can only be complete when it comes to  the knowledge   of  the  proposer.   He  must  communicate   his acceptance  reasonably.   Such is not the case  here.   Both sides  admit  that  the  acceptance  was  clearly  heard  at Ahmedabad.   The  acceptance  was  put  in  the  course   of transmission at Khamgaon and under the words of our  statute I  find  it difficult to say that the contract was  made  at Ahmedabad where the acceptance was heard and not at Khamgaon where it was spoken.  It is plain that the law was framed at a  time  when telephones, wireless, Telstar and  Early  Bird were  not contemplated.  If time has marched and  inventions have  made it easy to communicate instantaneously over  long distance  and the language of our law does not fit  the  new conditions it can be modified to reject the old  principles. But  we  cannot  go against the  language  by  accepting  an interpretation given without considering the language of our Act. In  my opinion, the language of s. 4 of the Indian  Contract Act  covers  the case of communication over  the  telephone. Our  Act  does not provide separately for  post,  telegraph, telephone  or wireless.  Some of these were unknown in  1872 and  no attempt has been made to modify the law.  It may  be presumed  that the language has been considered adequate  to cover  cases  of these new inventions.  Even  the  Court  of Appeal  decision is of 1955.  It is possible today not  only to speak on the telephone but to record the spoken words  on a   tape  and  it  is  easy  to  prove  that  a   particular conversation  took  place.  Telephones now  have  television added  to them.  The rule about lost letters  of  acceptance was  made  out of expediency because it was easier  in  com- mercial  circles  to prove the dispatch of the  letters  but very  difficult to disprove a statement that the letter  was

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not  received.  If the rule suggested is accepted  it  would put a very powerful defence in the hands of the proposer  if his  denial  that he heard the speech could  take  away  the implications of our law that acceptance is complete as  soon as it is put in course of transmission to the proposer. No doubt the authority of the Encores case is there and Lord Denning recommended an uniform rule, perhaps as laid down by he Court of Appeal.  But the Court of Appeal was not  called upon  to  construe  a  written  law  which  brings  in   the inflexibility  if its own language.  It was not required  to construe  the  words The communication of an  acceptance  is complete as against the 682 proposer, when it is put in a course of transmission to him, so as to be out of the power of the acceptor." Regard being had to the words of our statute I am  compelled to hold that the contract was complete at Khamgaon.  It  may be pointed out that the same result obtains in the  Conflict of laws as understood in America and quite a number of other countries  such as Canada, France, etc. also apply the  rule which  I  have  enunciated above even  though  there  is  no compulsion   of  any  statute.   I  have,  therefore,   less hesitation in propounding the view which I have attempted to set down here.      In the result I would allow the appeal with costs.                            ORDER In  view  of  the  opinion of the  majority  the  appeal  is dismissed with costs. 683