THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT
LawLaw ฮฝฯฮผฮฟฯ:ย Positive command of sovereign or divine. One can be ruled either by a Statute, a Statue, or a Statement. Legislation is the rule-making process by a political or religious organisation. Physics governs natural law. Logical thinking is a sign of a healthy brain function. Dharma is eternal for Sanatanis. Judiciary > Show me the face, and I will show you the law. Some people know how to bend the law rather than break it. Law Practice. Read a scholarly article for IndiaIndia Hind/ hend >hindia. Bharat Varsha (Jambudvipa used in Mahavamsha) is the name of this land mass. The people of this land are Sanatan Dharmin and they always defeated invaders. Indra (10000 yrs) was the oldest deified King of this land. Manu's jurisprudence enlitened this land. Vedas have been the civilizational literature of this land. Guiding principles of this land are : เคธเคคเฅเคฏเค เคตเคฆ เฅค เคงเคฐเฅเคฎเค เคเคฐ เฅค เคธเฅเคตเคพเคงเฅเคฏเคพเคฏเคพเคจเฅเคฎเคพ เคชเฅเคฐเคฎเคฆเค เฅค The place also been called Hindusthan in Pesia. The word Hendu is mentioned in Avesta. Read more and Myanmar
[INDIA ACT I, 1877.]
(1st May, 1877.)
PART I.
Preliminary.
1-2. * * * *
Interpretation clause.
3. In this Act, unless there be something repugnant in the subject or context,-
โobligationโ includes every duty enforceable by law;
โtrustTrust It originated and was reduced to practice under the jurisdiction of courts by the civil law, was expanded and developed in the courts of chancery, and has been employed in nearly every field of human activity. The fundamental nature of a trust is the division of title, with the trustee being the holder of legal title and the beneficiary that of equitable title. By definition, the creation of a trust must involve a conveyance of property. > Trust Deed โซ Having trust/faith/confidence in somethingโ includes every species of express, implied or constructive fiduciary ownership;
โtrusteeโ includes every person holding, expressly, by implication or constructively, a fiduciary character.
Illustrations.
(a) Z bequeaths land to A, โnot doubting that he will pay thereout an annuity of Rs. 1,000 to B for his life.โ A accepts the bequest. A is a trustee within the meaning of this Act for B, to the extent of the annuity.
(b) A is the leg..1, medical or spiritualSpiritual Inspirational or inspired, energetic, motivated. It is all about earthly potency. It can not be translated as Adhatmya in Sanskrit. 'Christian Spirituality' means being motivated by Christian ideas. An airy or thin, like invisible earthly matter, is also called Spiritual. "Take and receive my spirit" means take courage from me, or just blowing wind from one's mouth. adviser of B. By availing himself of his situation as such adviser, A gains some pecuniary advantage which might otherwise have accrued to B.A is a trustee for B, within the meaning of this Act, of such advantage.
(c) A, being Bโs banker, discloses for his own purpose the state of Bโs account. A is a trustee, within the meaning of this Act, for B, of the benefit gained by him by means of such disclosure.
(d) A, the mortgagee of certain leaseholds, renews the leaseLeasehold The leaseholder has no right or interest in the land, he pays rent to the landlord for using the flat or house. A lease is an agreement between the freeholder and the tenant. Commonhold is a form of ownership (or tenure) for multi-occupancy developments (flats of a building). Each unit-holder owns the freehold of their flat, and a commonhold or residentsโ association owns and manages the common parts of the property. in his own name. A is a trustee, within the meaning of this Act, of the renewed lease, for those interested in the original lease.
(e) A, one of several partners, is employed to purchase goods for the firm. A, unknown to his co partners supplies them, at the market-price, with goods previously bought by himself when the price was lower, and thus makes a considerable profit. A is a trustee for his co-partners, within the meaning of this Act, of the profit so made.
(f) A, the manager of Bโs indigo-factory, becomes agentAgent An agent is a person employed to do any act for another or to represent another in dealings with third persons. The person for whom such act is done, or who is so represented, is called the principal. Indian Contract Act for C, a vendor of indigo-seed and receives, without Bโs assent, commission on the seed purchased from C for the factory. A is a trustee, within the meaning of this Act, for B, of the commission so received.
(g) A buys certain land with notice that B has already contracted to buy it. A is a trustee, within the meaning of this Act, for B, of the land so bought.
(h) A buys land from B, having notice that C is in occupation of the land. A omits to make any inquiry as to the nature of Cโs interest therein. A is a trustee, within the meaning of this Act, for C, to the extent of that interest.
โsettlementโ means any instrument (other than a will or codicil as defined by the Succession Act), whereby the destination or devolution of successive interests in moveable or immoveable property is disposed of or is agreed to be disposed of ;
Words defined in ContractContract An agreement enforceable by law is a contract. All agreements are contracts if they are made by the free consent of parties competent to contract, for a lawful consideration and with a lawful object, and are not hereby expressly declared to be void. Indian Contract Act. Act.
and all words occurring in this Act, which are defined in the Contract Act, shall be deemed to have the meanings respectively assigned to them by that Act.
Savings.
4. Except where it is herein otherwise expressly enacted, nothing in this Act shall be deemed-
(a) to give any right to relief in respect of any agreementContract An agreement enforceable by law is a contract. All agreements are contracts if they are made by the free consent of parties competent to contract, for a lawful consideration and with a lawful object, and are not hereby expressly declared to be void. Indian Contract Act. which is not a contract;
(b) to deprive any person of any right to relief, other than specific performanceSpecific performance The remedy of specific performance is special and extraordinary and is at the courtโs discretion, which the court would only exercise โif, under all the circumstances, it is just an equitable to do soโ. Factors affecting the courtโs discretion include considerations such as: (a) whether damages would be an adequate remedy; and (b) whether the person against whom the relief of specific performance is being sought would suffer substantial hardship., which he may have under any contract; or
(c) to affect the operation of the Registration Act on documentsDocument It means any matter expressed or described or otherwise recorded upon any substance by means of letters, figures or marks or any other means or by more than one of those means, intended to be used, or which may be used, for the purpose of recording that matter and includes electronic and digital records. (Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam 2023).
Specific relief how given.
5. Specific relief is given-
(a) by taking possession of certain property and delivering it to a claimant;
(b) by ordering a party to do the very act which he is under an obligation to do;
(c) by preventing a party from doing that which he is under an obligation not to do;
(d) by determining and declaring the rights of parties otherwise than by an award of compensation; or
(e) by appointing a receiver.
Preventive relief.
6. Specific relief granted under clause (c) of section 5 is called preventive relief.
Relief not granted to enforce penal law.
7. Specific relief cannot be granted for the mere purpose of enforcing a penal law.
PART II.
Of Specific Relief.
CHAPTER I.
OF RECOVERING POSSESSION OF PROPERTY.
(a) Possession of Immoveable Property.
Recovery of specific immoveable property.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
8. A person entitled to the possession of specific immoveable property may recover it in the manner prescribed by the Code of Civil ProcedureCode of Civil Procedure Main Sections: Filing, Summons, Trial, Judgment, Execution, Appeal, Interim Applications, Interim Injunction, Cost, Notice
Rules: Order VII.
Statutory Drafting and Forms: General Pleding.
Suit by person dispossessed of immoveable property.
9. If any person is dispossessed without his consentConsent Dr. Dhruvaram Murlidhar Sonar v. State of Maharashtra [2018] 13 SCR 920 : (2019) 18 SCC 191; Pramod Suryabhan Pawar v. State of Maharashtra [2019] 11 SCR 423 : (2019) 9 SCC 608.Shiv Pratap Singh Rana v. State of Madhya Pradesh & Anr [2024] 7 S.C.R. 8. Doing Sex: involves an active understanding of the circumstances, actions and consequences of the proposed act. An individual who makes a reasoned choice to act after evaluating various alternative actions (or inaction) as well as the various possible consequences flowing from such action (or inaction), consents to such action. of immoveable property otherwise than in due course of law, he or any person claiming through him may by suit recover possession thereof, notwithstanding any other title that may be set up in such suit.
Nothing in this section shall bar any person from suing to establish his title to such property and to recover possession thereof.
No suit under this section shall be brought against the Government.
No appeal shall lie from any order or decree passed in any suit instituted under this section, nor shall any review of any such order or decree be allowed.
(b) Possession of Moveable Property.
Recovery of specific moveable property.
10.ย A person entitled to the possession of specific moveable property may recover the same in the manner prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure.
Explanation 1.-A trustee may sue under this section for the possession of property to the beneficial interest in which the person for whom he is trustee is entitled.
Explanation 2.-A special or temporary right to the present possession of property is sufficient to support a suit under this section.
Illustrations.
(a) A bequeaths land to B for his life, with remainder to C. A dies. B enters on the land, but C, without Bโs consent, obtains possession of the title deeds. B may recover them from C.
(b) A pledges certain jewels to B to secure a loan. B disposes of them before he is entitled to do so. A, without having paid or tendered the amount of the loan, sues B for possession of the jewels. The suit should be dismissed, as A is not entitled to their possession, whatever right he may have to secure their safe custody.
(c) A receives a letter addressed to him by B. B gets back the letter without Aโs consent. A has such a property therein as entitles him to recover it from B.
(d) A depositorโs booksBook Council of Trent (1545โ1563) the Catholic Church created a Congregation of the Index, to declare a writing dangerous and to burn it, till it exists without notice. For Christians, the Bible, and for Muslims Quran, is only good for human guidance and nothing else. After Jesus, St. Peter and St. Paul are the most educated persons in the Christian world. and papers for safe custody with B. B loses them and C finds them, but refuses to deliver them to B when demanded. B may recover them from C, subject to Cโs right, if any, under section 168 of the Contract Act.
(e) A, a warehouse-keeper, is charged with the delivery of certain goods to Z, which B takes out of Aโs possession. A may sue B for the goods.
Liability of person in possession, not as owner, to deliver to person entitled to immediate possession.
11. Any person having the possession or control of a particular article of moveable property, of which he is not the owner, may be compelled specifically to deliver it to the person entitled to its immediate possession, in any of the following cases;-
(a) when the thing claimed is held by the defendant as the agent or trustee of the claimant;
(b) when compensation in moneyMoney ฮงฯฮฎฮผฮฑฯฮฑ, ฮฝฯฮผฮนฯฮผฮฑ (currency), Old French monoie, Pecunia, Money supply, Reserve money, Monetary System, Money-laundering, Electronic Money, Money Transfer, Promissory notes. Coin of Alexander (330 B.C.E). Dematerialized form is Paper Currency( In USA 1600 CE and in 1861 in India). Money makes men. Balance of Payments, Net borrowing. Euro, Dollar, INR. would not afford the claimant adequate relief for the loss of the thing claimed;
(c) when it would be extremely difficult to ascertain the actual damage caused by its loss;
(d) when the possession of the thing claimed has been wrongfully transferred from the claimant.
Illustrations.
of clause (a)– A, proceeding to EuropeEurope EU andย Countries -ย Albania Andorra Austria Belarus Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria Croatia Cyprus Czech Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Latvia Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Malta Moldova Monaco Montenegro Netherlands North Macedonia Norway Poland Portugal Romania Russia San Marino Serbia Slovakia Slovenia Spain Sweden Switzerland Ukraine United Kingdomย Vatican City., leaves his furniture in charge of B as his agent during his absence. B, without Aโs authority, pledges the furniture to C, and C, knowingKnowledge Knowledge is derived from the process of an informed person integrating data from sense organs or intuition into their psyche. This concept is explored in the Vedic Nasadiya Sukta, which questions the possibility of ultimate truth or knowledge. In different languages, such as Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, and Chinese, knowledge is expressed as "ฮท ฮณฮฝฯฯฮท," "Scientia," "เคเฅเคเคพเคจเคฎเฅโ ," and "็ฅ่ฏ Zhฤซshรฌ," respectively. that B had no right to pledge the furniture, advertises it for sale. C may be compelled to deliver the furniture to A, for he holds it as Aโs trustee.
of clause (b)– Z has got possession of an idol belonging to Aโs family, and of which A is the proper custodian. Z may be compelled to deliver the idol to A.
of clause (c)– A is entitled to a picture by a dead painter and a pair of rare China vases. B has possession of them. The articles are of too special a character to bear an ascertainable market-value. B may be compelled to deliver them to A.
CHAPTER II.
OF THE SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE OF CONTRACTS.
(a) Contracts which may be specifically enforced.
Cases in which specific performance enforceable.
12. Except as otherwise provided in this Chapter, the specific performance of any contract may in the discretion of the Court be enforced-
(a) when the act agreed to be done is in the performance, wholly or partly, of a trust;
(b) when there exists no standard for ascertaining the actual damage caused by non-performance of the act agreed to be done;
(c) when the act agreed to be done is such that pecuniary compensation for its non-performance would not afford adequate relief; or
(d) when it is probable that pecuniary compensation cannot be got for the non-performance of the act agreed to be done.
Explanation.-Unless and until the contrary is provedProved A fact is said to be proved when, after considering the matters before it, the Court either believes it to exist, or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man ought, under the circumstances of the particular case, to act upon the supposition that it exists;, the Court shall presume that the breach of a contract to transfer immoveable property cannot be adequately relieved by compensation in money, and that the breach of a contract to transfer moveable property can be thus relieved.
Illustrations.
of clause (a)– A holds certain stock in trust for B. A wrongfully disposes of the stock. The law creates an obligation on A to restore the same quantity of stock to B, and B may enforce specific performance of this obligation.
of clause (b)–
A agrees to buy, and B agrees to sell, a picture by a dead painter and two rare China vases. A may compel B specifically to perform this contract, for there is no standard for ascertaining the actual damage which would be caused by its non-performance.
of clause (c)– A contracts with B to sell him a house for Rs.1,000. B is entitled to a decree directing A to convey the house to him, he paying the purchasemoney.
In consideration of being released from certain obligations imposed on it by its Act of Incorporation, a railway-company contract with Z to make an archway through their railway to connect lands of Z severed by the railway, to construct a road between certain specified points, to pay a certain annual sum towards the maintenance of this road and also to construct a siding and a wharf as specified in the contract. Z is entitled to have this contract specifically enforced for his interest in its performance cannot be adequately compensated for by money; and the Court may appoint a proper person to superintend the construction of the archway, road, siding and wharf.
A contracts to sell, and B contracts to buy, a certain numberNumber ฮฯฮนฮธฮผฯฯ of railway-shares of a particular description. A refuses to complete the sale. B may compel A specifically to perform this agreement, for the shares are limited in number and not always to be had in the market, and their possession carries with it the status of a shareholder which cannot otherwise be procured.
A contracts with B to paint a picture for B, who agrees to pay therefor Rs.1,000. The picture is painted. B is entitled to have it delivered to him on payment or tender of the Rs.1,000.
of clause (d)– A transfers without endorsement, but for valuable consideration, a promissory note to B. A becomes insolvent, and C is appointed his assignee. B may compel C to endorse the note, for C has succeeded to Aโs liabilities and a decree for pecuniary compensation for not endorsing the note would be fruitless.
Contract of which the subject has partially ceased to exist.
13. Notwithstanding anything contained in section 56 of the Contract Act, a contract is not wholly impossible of performance because a portion of its subject-matterMatter Normal matter is made of molecules, which are themselves made of atoms. Inside the atoms, electrons are spinning around the nucleus. The nucleus is made of protons and neutrons. Inside the protons and neutrons, exist indivisible quarks, like the electrons. All matter around us is made of elementary particles. ( building blocks of matter > quarks and leptons). All stable matter in the universe is made from particles that belong to the first-generation. Fundamental forces result from the exchange of force-carrier particles, which belong to a broader group called โbosonsโ. The strong force is carried by the โgluonโ, electromagnetic force is carried by the โphoton.โ, existing at its date, has ceased to exist at the timeTime ฯฯฯฮฝฮฟฯ. Judicial: Where any expression of it occurs in any Rules, or any judgment, order or direction, and whenever the doing or not doing of anything at a certain time of the day or night or during a certain part of the day or night has an effect in law, that time is, unless it is otherwise specifically stated, held to be standard time as used in a particular country or state. (In Physics, time and Space never exist actually-โquantum entanglementโ) เคฏเคฎเค , เคชเฅเค, (เคฏเคฎเคฏเคคเคฟ เคจเคฟเคฏเคฎเคฏเคคเคฟ เคเฅเคตเคพเคจเคพเค เคซเคฒเคพเคซเคฒเคฎเคฟเคคเคฟ เฅค เคฏเคฎเฅ + เค
เคเฅ เฅค เคตเคฟเคถเฅเคตเฅ เค เคเคฒเคฏเคคเฅเคฏเฅเคต เคฏเค เคธเคฐเฅเคตเฅเคตเคพเคฏเฅเคถเฅเค เคธเคจเฅเคคเคคเคฎเฅ เฅค เค
เคคเฅเคต เคฆเฅเคฐเฅเคจเคฟเคตเคพเคฐเฅเคฏเฅเคฏเคเฅเค เคคเค เคเคพเคฒเค เคชเฅเคฐเคฃเคฎเคพเคฎเฅเคฏเคนเคฎเฅ เฅฅเคฏเคฎเฅเคถเฅเค เคจเคฟเคฏเคฎเฅเคถเฅเคเฅเคต เคฏเค เคเคฐเฅเคคเฅเคฏเคพเคคเฅเคฎเคธเคเคฏเคฎเคฎเฅ เฅค เคธ เคเคพเคฆเฅเคทเฅเคเฅเคตเคพ เคคเฅ เคฎเคพเค เคฏเคพเคคเคฟ เคชเคฐเค เคฌเฅเคฐเคนเฅเคฎ เคธเคจเคพเคคเคจเคฎเฅ เฅฅ of the performance.
Illustrations.
(a) A contracts to sell a house to B for a lakh of rupees. The day after the contract is made the house is destroyed by a cyclone. B may be compelled to perform his part of the contract by paying the purchase money.
(b) In consideration of a sum of money payable by B, A contracts to grant an annuity to B for Bโs life. The day after the contract has been made, B is thrown from his horse and killed. Bโs representative may be compelled to pay the purchase-money.
Specific performance of part of contract where part unperformed is small.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
14. Where a party to a contract is unable to perform the whole of his part of it, but the part which must be left unperformed bears only a small proportion to the whole in value, and admits of compensation in money, the Court may, at the suit of either party, direct the specific performance of so much of the contract as can be performed, and award compensation in money for the deficiency.
Illustrations.
(a) A contracts to sell B a piece of land consisting of 100 acres. It turns out that 98 acres of the land belong to A, and the two remaining acres to a stranger, who refuses to part with them. The two acres are not necessary for the use or enjoyment of the 98 acres nor so important for such use or enjoyment that the loss of them may not be made good in money. A may be directed at the suit of B to convey to B the 98 acres and to make compensation to him for not conveying the two remaining acres; or B may be directed, at the suit of A, to pay to A, on receiving the conveyance and possession of the land, the stipulated purchase-money less a sum awarded as compensation for the deficiency.
(b) In a contract for the sale and purchase of a house and lands for two lakhs of rupees, it is agreed that part of the furniture should be taken at a valuation. The Court may direct specific performance of the contract notwithstanding the parties are unable to agree as to the valuation of the furniture, and may either have the furniture valued in the suit and include it in the decree for specific performance, or may confine its decree to the house.
Specific performance of part of contract where part unperformed is large.
15. Where a party to a contract is unable to perform the whole of his part of it, and the part which must be left unperformed forms a considerable portion of the whole, or does not admit of compensation in money, he is not entitled to obtain a decree for specific performance. But the Court may, at the suit of the other party, direct the party in default to perform specifically so much of his part of the contract as he can perform, provided that the plaintiff relinquishes all claimA Claim A claim is โfactually unsustainableโ where it could be said with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is entirely without substance, which can be the case if it were clear beyond question that the facts pleaded are contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. to further performance, and all right to compensation either for the deficiency, or for the loss or damage sustained by him through the default of the defendant.
Illustrations.
(a) A contracts to sell to B a piece of land consisting of 100 acres. It turns out that 50 acres of the land belong to A, and the other 50 acres to a stranger, who refuses to part with them. A cannot obtain a decree against B for the specific performance of the contract; but if B is willing to pay the price agreed upon, and to take the 50 acres which belong to A, waiving all right to compensation either for the deficiency or for loss sustained by him through Aโs neglect or default, B is entitled to a decree directing A to convey those 50 acres to him on payment of the purchase-money.
(b) A contracts to sell to B an estate with a house and garden for a lakh of rupees. The garden is important for the enjoyment of the house. It turns out that A is unable to convey the garden. A cannot obtain a decree against B for the specific performance of the contract, but if B is willing to pay the price agreed upon, and to take the estate and house without the garden, waiving all right to compensation either for the deficiency or for loss sustained by him through Aโs neglect or default, B is entitled to a decree directing A to convey the house to him on payment of the purchase-money.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
Specific performance of independent part of contract.
16. When a part of a contract which, taken by itself, can and ought to be specifically performed, stands on a separate and independent footing from another part of the same contract which cannot or ought not to be specifically performed, the Court may direct specific performance of the former part.
Bar in other cases of specific performance of part of contract.
17. The Court shall not direct the specific performance of a part of a contract except in cases coming under one or other of the three last preceding sections.
Purchaserโs rights against vendor with imperfect title.
18. Where a person contracts to sell or let certain property, having only an imperfect title thereto, the purchaser or lessee (except as otherwise provided by this Chapter ) has the following rights:-
(a) if the vendor or lessor has subsequently to the sale or lease acquired any interest in the property, the purchaser or lessee may compel him to make good the contract out of such interest;
(b) where the concurrence of other persons is necessary to validate the title, and they are bound to convey at the vendorโs or lessorโs request, the purchaser or lessee may compel him to procure such concurrence;
(c) where the vendor professes to sell unincumbered property, but the property is mortgaged for an amount not exceeding the purchase-money, and the vendor has in factFact Something เคคเคฅเฅเคฏ (In-formation) that truly exists or happens or some-thing that has actual existence. Circumstances: a fact or event that makes a situation the way it is. Indian Evidence Act:ย It means and includesโ (i) anything, state of things, or relation of things, capable of being perceived by the senses;
(ii) any mental condition of which any person is conscious. โfacts in issueโ means and includes any fact from which, either by itself or in connection with other facts, the existence, non-existence, nature or extent of any right, liability or disability, asserted or denied in any suit or proceeding, necessarily follows. only a right to redeem it, the purchaser may compel him to redeem the mortgage and to obtain a conveyance from the mortgagee;
(d) where the vendor or lessor sues for specific performance of the contract, and the suit is dismissed on the ground of his imperfect title, the defendant has a right to a return of his deposit (if any) with interest thereon, to his costsCosts Subject to any written law, costs are at the discretion of the Court, and the Court has the power to determine all issues relating to the costs of or incidental to all proceedings, including by whom and to what extent the costs are to be paid, at any stage of the proceedings or after the conclusion of the proceedings. Generally โCostsโ includes charges, disbursements, expenses, fees, and remuneration. Costs in any matter are payable from the date of the order of the Court unless the parties otherwise agree. The costs of a third-party funding contract are not recoverable as part of the costs of, or costs. of the suit, and to a lien for such deposit, interest and costs on the interest of the vendor or lessor in the property agreed to be sold or let.
PowerPower The amount of energy transferred or converted per unit of time. In the International System of Units, the unit of it is the watt, equal to one joule per second. The capacity of energy infrastructure is rated using watts, which indicate its potential to supply or consume energy in a given period of time. A Power-plant rated at 100 MW has the potential to produce 100 MWh if it operates for one hour. to award compensation in certain cases.
19. Any person suing for the specific performance of a contract may also ask for compensation for its breach, either in addition to, or in substitution for, such performance.
If in any such suit the Court decides that specific performance ought not to be granted, but that there is a contract between the parties which has been broken by the defendant and that the plaintiff is entitled to compensation for that breach, it shall award him compensation accordingly.
If in any such suit the Court decides that specific performance ought not to be granted, but that it is not sufficient to satisfy the justiceJustice ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฮนฮฟฯฯฮฝฮท > judicature ( ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฮนฮฟฯฯฮฝฮท) > judge (ฮดฮนฮบฮฑฯฯฮฎฯ / ฮบฯฮนฯฮฎฯ). The whole purpose of Plato`s Republic is to search for Justice. The purpose of Justice is to establish a perfect State. The State of happiness (ฮตฯ
ฯฯ
ฯฮฏฮฑ) of the case, and that some compensation for breach of the contract should also be made to the plaintiff, it shall award him such compensation accordingly.
Compensation awarded under this section may be assessed in such manner as the Court may direct.
Explanation.– The circumstance that the contract has become incapable of specific performance does not preclude the Court from exercising the jurisdictionJurisdiction Authority by which courts receive and decide cases. Limited Jurisdiction: the authority over only particular types of cases, or cases under a prescribed amount in controversy, or seeking only certain types of relief, the District Court is a court of limited jurisdiction. Original Jurisdiction:ย Jurisdiction of the first court to hear a case. conferred by this section.
Illustrations.
of the second paragraphA contracts to sell a hundred maunds of rice to B. B brings a suit to compel A to perform the contract or to pay compensation. The Court is of opinionOpinion A judge's written explanation of a decision of the court. In an appeal, multiple opinions may be written. The courtโs ruling comes from a majority of judges and forms the majority opinion. A dissenting opinion disagrees with the majority because of the reasoning and/or the principles of law on which the decision is based. A concurring opinion agrees with the end result of the court but offers further comment possibly because they disagree with how the court reached its conclusion. that A has made a valid contract and has broken it, without excuse, to the injury of B, but that specific performance is not the proper remedy. It shall award to B such compensation as it deems just.
of the third paragraphA contracts with B to sell him a house for Rs.1,000, the price to be paid and the possession given on the 1st January, 1942. A fails to perform his part of the contract, and B brings his suit for specific performance and compensation, which is decided in his favour on the 1st January, 1943. The decree may, besides ordering specific performance, award to B compensation for any loss which he has sustained by Aโs refusal.
of the ExplanationA, a purchaser, sues B, his vendor, for specific performance of a contract for the sale of a patent. Before the hearing of the suit the patent expires. The Court may award A compensation for the non-performance of the contract, and may, if necessary, amend the plaint for that purpose.
A sues for the specific performance of a resolution passed by the directors of a public company, under which he was entitled to have a certain number of shares allotted to him, and for compensation for the non-performance of the resolution. All the shares had been allotted before the institution of the suit. The Court may, under this section, award A compensation for the non-performance.
Liquidation of damagesDamages Damages (often termed โuser damageโ) are readily awarded at common law for the invasion of rights to tangible moveable or immovable property (by detinue, conversion or trespass). Damages are also available on a similar basis for patent infringement and breaches of other intellectual property rights of a proprietary character. not a bar to specific performance.
20. A contract, otherwise proper to be specifically enforced, may be thus enforced, though a sum be named in it as the amount to be paid in case of its breach, and the party in default is willing to pay the same.
Illustration.
A contracts to grant B an under-lease of property held by A under C, and that he will apply to C for a licence necessary to the validity of the under-lease, and that, if the licence is not procured, A will pay B Rs. 10,000, A refuses to apply for the licence and offers to pay B the Rs.10,000. B is nevertheless entitled to have the contract specifically enforced if C consents to give licence.
(b) Contracts which cannot be specifically enforced.
Contracts not specifically enforceable.
21. The following contracts cannot be specifically enforced:-
(a) a contract for the non-performance of which compensation in money is an adequate relief;
(b) a contract which runs into such minute or numerous details, or which is so dependent on the personal qualifications or volition of the parties, or otherwise from its nature is such, that the Court cannot enforce specific performance of its material terms;
(c) a contract the terms of which the Court cannot find with reasonable certainty;
(d) a contract which is in its nature revocable;
(e) a contract made by trustees either in excess of their powers or in breach of their trust;
(f) a contract made by or on behalf of a corporationCorporation A legally established entity that can enter into contracts, own assets and incur debt, as well as sue and be suedโall separately from its owner(s). The term covers both for-profit and nonprofit corporations and includes nonstock corporations, incorporated membership organizations, incorporated cooperatives, incorporated trade associations, professional corporations and, under certain circumstances, limited liability companies. or public company created for special purposes, or by the promoters of such company, which is in excess of its powers;
(g) a contract the performance of which involves the performance of a continuous duty extending over a longer period than three years from its date;
(h) a contract of which a material part of the subject-matter, supposed by both parties to exist, has, before it has been made, ceased to exist.
And, save as provided by the [ArbitrationArbitration (ADR) A dispute settlement process whereby the parties agree to submit their differences to judges of their own choice and to abide by the decision of the judges. Act,1944], no contract to refer present or future differences to arbitration shall be specifically enforced; but if any person who has made such a contract [other than an arbitration agreement to which the provisions of the said Act apply] and has refused to perform it sues in respect of any subject which he has contracted to refer, the existence of such contract shall bar the suit.
Illustrations
to (a)– A contracts to sell, and B contracts to buy, a lakh of rupees in the four per cent, loan of the Government of India:
A contracts to sell, and B contracts to buy, 40 chests of indigo at Rs.1,000 per chest:
In consideration of certain property having been transferred by A to B, B contracts to open a credit in Aโs favour to the extent of Rs.10,000, and to honour Aโs drafts to that amount;
The above contracts cannot be specifically enforced, for in the first and second both A and B, and in the third A, would be reimbursed by compensation in money.
to (b)– A contracts to render personal service to B:
A contracts to employ B on personal service:
A, an author, contracts with B, a publisher, to complete a literary work:
B cannot enforce specific performance of these contracts.
A contracts to buy Bโs business at the amount of a valuation to be made by two valuers, one to be named by A and the other by B. A and B each name a valuer, but before the valuation is made A instructs his valuer not to proceed:
By a charter-party entered into in Calcutta between A, the owner of a ship, and B, the charterer, it is agreed that the ship shall proceed to Rangoon, and there load a cargo of rice, and thence proceed to London, freight to be paid, one-third on arrival at Rangoon, and two-thirds on delivery of the cargo in London;
A lets land to B and B contracts to cultivate it in a particular manner for three years next after the date of the lease;
A and B contract that, in consideration of annual advances to be made by A, B will for three years next after the date of the contracts grow particular crops on the land in his possession and deliver them to A when cut and ready for delivery:
A contracts with B that, in consideration of Rs.1,000 to be paid to him by B, he will paint a picture for B:
A contracts with B to execute certain works which the Court cannot superintend:
A contracts to supply B with all the goods of a certain class which B may require:
A contracts with B to take from B a lease of a certain house for a specified term, at a specified rent, โif the drawing-room is handsomely decorated,โ even if it is held to have so much certainty that compensation can be recovered for its breach:
A contracts to marry B:
The above contracts cannot be specifically enforced.
to (c)– A, the owner of a refreshment-room, contracts with B to give him accommodation there for the sale of his goods and to furnish him with the necessary appliances. A refuses to perform his contract. The case is one for compensation and not for specific performance, the amount and nature of the accommodation and appliances being undefined.
to (d)– A and B contract to become partners in a certain business, the contract not specifying the duration of the proposed partnership. This contract cannot be specifically performed, for, if it were so performed, either A or B might at once dissolve the partnership.
to (e)– A is a trustee of land with power to lease it for seven years. He enters into a contract with B to grant a lease of the land for seven years, with a covenant to renew the lease at the expiry of the term. This contract cannot be specifically enforced.
The directors of a company have power to sell the concern with the sanction of a general meeting of the shareholders. They contract to sell it without any such sanction. This contract cannot be specifically enforced.
Two trustees, A and B, empowered to sell trust-property worth a lakh of rupees, contract to sell it to C for Rs.30,000. The contract is so disadvantageous as to be a breach of trust. C cannot enforce its specific performance.
The promoters of a company for working mines contract that the company, when formed, shall purchase certain mineral property. They take no proper precautions to ascertain the value of such property and in fact agree to pay an extravagant price therefor. They also stipulate that the vendors shall give them a bonus out of the purchase-money. This contract cannot be specifically enforced.
to (f)– A company existing for the sole purpose of making and working a railway contract for the purchase of a piece of land for the purpose of erecting a cotton mill thereon. This contract cannot be specifically enforced.
to (g)–
A contracts to let for twenty-one years to B the right to use such part of a certain railway made by A as was upon Bโs land and that B should have a right of running carriages over the whole line on certain terms, and might require A to supply the necessary engine-power, and that A should during the term keep the whole railway in good repair. Specific performance of this contract must be refused to B.
to (h)– A contracts to pay an annuity to B for the lives of C and D. It turns out that, at the date of the contract, C, though supposed by A and B to be alive, was dead. The contract cannot be specifically performed.
(c) Of the Discretion of the Court.
Discretion as to decreeing specific performance.
22. The jurisdiction to decree specific performance is discretionary, and the Court is not bound to grant such relief merely because it is lawful to do so; but the discretion of the Court is not arbitrary but sound and reasonable, guided by judicial principles and capable of correction by a Court of appealCourt of Appeal It is the highest court within the Senior Courts of England and Wales under the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (Created in 1875) and deals only with appeals from other courts or tribunals.
It is divided into two Divisions, Criminal and Civil, and is based at the Royal Courts of Justice in London (High Court). The judges of the Court of Appeal are the Lord/Lady Chief Justice, the Master of the Rolls, the President of the Kingโs Bench Division, the President of the Family Division, the Chancellor of the High Court and the Lord and Lady Justices..
The following are cases in which the Court may properly exercise a discretion not to decree specific performance:-
I. Where the circumstances under which the contract is made are such as to give the plaintiff an unfair advantage over the defendant, though there may be no fraud or misrepresentation on the plaintiffโs part.
Illustrations.
(a) A, a tenant for life of certain property, assigns his interest therein to B. C contracts to buy, and B contracts to sell, that interest. Before the contract is completed, A receives a mortal injury from the effects of which he dies the day after the contract is executed. If B and C were equally ignorant or equally aware of the fact, B is entitled to specific performance of the contract. If B knew the fact, and C did not, specific performance of the contract should be refused to B.
(b) A contracts to sell to B the interest of C in certain stock-in-trade. It is stipulated that the sale shall stand good, even though it should turn out that Cโs interest is worth nothing. In fact, the value of Cโs interest depends on the result of certain partnership accountsAccounting It is the process of recording, summarizing, analyzing, and reporting financial transactions of a business or individual.
Types of Accounts >
Assets-
Things you own (cash, property)
Liabilities-
Things you owe (loans, bills)
Equity-
Ownerโs stake in the business
Revenue-
Money you earn (sales, services)
Expenses-
Costs to run the business
, on which he is heavily in debt to his partners. This indebtedness is known to A, but not to B. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to A.
(c) A contracts to sell, and B contracts to buy, certain land. To protect the land from floods, it is necessary for its owner to maintain an expensive embankment. B does not knowKnowledge Knowledge is derived from the process of an informed person integrating data from sense organs or intuition into their psyche. This concept is explored in the Vedic Nasadiya Sukta, which questions the possibility of ultimate truth or knowledge. In different languages, such as Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, and Chinese, knowledge is expressed as "ฮท ฮณฮฝฯฯฮท," "Scientia," "เคเฅเคเคพเคจเคฎเฅโ ," and "็ฅ่ฏ Zhฤซshรฌ," respectively. of this circumstance, and A conceals it from him. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to A.
(d) Aโs property is put up to auction. B requests C, Aโs attorney, to bid for him. C does this inadvertently and in good faithFaith ย ฯฮฏฯฯฮตฮน.. The persons present, seeing the vendorโs attorney bidding, think that he is a mere puffer and cease to compete. The lot is knocked down to B at a low price. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to B.
II. Where the performance of the contract would involve some hardship on the defendant which he did not foresee, whereas its nonperformance would involve no such hardship on the plaintiff.
Illustrations.
(e) A is entitled to some land under his fatherโs will on condition that if he sells it within twenty-five years, half the purchase-money shall go to B. A, forgetting the condition, contracts, before the expiration of the twenty-five years, to sell the land to C. Here the enforcement of the contract would operate so harshly on A that the Court will not compel its specific performance in favour of C.
(f) A and B, trustees, join their beneficiary, C, in a contract to sell the trust-estate to D, and personally agree to exonerate the estate from heavy incumbrances to which it is subject. The purchase-money is not nearly enough to discharge those incumbrances, though, at the date of the contract, the vendors believed it to be sufficient. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to D.
(g) A, the owner of an estate, contracts to sell it to B, and stipulates that he, A, shall not be obliged to define its boundary. The estate really comprises a valuable property, not known to either to be part of it. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to B unless he waives his claim to the unknown property.
(h) A contracts with B to sell him certain land, and to make a road to it from a certain railway station. It is found afterwards that A cannot make the road without exposing himself to litigation. Specific performance of the part of the contract relating to the road should be refused to B, even though it may be held that he is entitled to specific performance of the rest with compensation for loss of the road.
(i) A, a lessee of mines, contracts with B, his lessor, that at any time during the continuance of the lease B may give notice of his desire to take the machinery and plant used in and about the mines, and that he shall have articles specified in his notice delivered to him at a valuation on the expiry of the lease. Such a contract might be most injurious to the lesseeโs business, and specific performance of it should be refused to B.
(j) A contracts to buy certain land from B. The contract is silent as to access to the land. No right of way to it can be shown to exist. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to B.
(k) A contracts with B to buy from Bโs manufactory and not elsewhere all the goods of a certain class used by A in his trade. The Court cannot compel B to supply the goods, but if he does not supply them A may be ruined, unless he is allowed to buy them elsewhere. Specific performance of the contract should be refused to B.
The following is a case in which the Court may properly exercise a discretion to decree specific performance:-
III. Where the plaintiff has done substantial acts or suffered losses in consequence of a contract capable of specific performance.
Illustration.
A sells land to a railway company, who contract to execute certain works for his convenience. The company take the land and use it for their railway. Specific performance of the contract to execute the works should be decreed in favour of A.
(d) For whom Contracts may be specifically enforced.
Who may obtain specific performance.
23. Except as otherwise provided by this Chapter, the specific performance of a contract may be obtained by-
(a) any party thereto;
(b) the representative in interest, or the principal, of any party thereto: provided that, where the learningLearning Educational learning theories: Cognitive Learning Theory, Behaviorism Learning Theory, Constructivism Learning Theory, Humanism Learning Theory, Connectivism Learning Theory, Transformative Learning Theory, Social Learning Theory, Experiential Learning Theory., skill, solvency or any personal quality of such party is a material ingredient in the contract or where the contract provides that his interest shall not be assigned, his representative in interest or his principal shall not be entitled to specific performance of the contract, unless where his part thereof has already been performed;
(c) where the contract is a settlement on marriage or a compromise of doubtful rights between members of the same family, any person beneficially entitled thereunder;
(d) where the contract has been entered into by a tenant for life in due exercise of a power, the remainderman;
(e) a reversioner in possession, where the agreement is a covenant entered into with his predecessor in title and the reversioner is entitled to the benefit of such covenant;
(f) a reversioner in remainder, where the agreement is such a covenant and the reversioner is entitled to the benefit thereof and will sustain material injury by reason of its breach;
(g) when a public company has entered into a contract and subsequently becomes amalgamated with another public company, the new company which arises out of the amalgamation;
(h) when the promoters of a public company have, before its incorporation, entered into a contract for the purposes of the company, and such contract is warranted by the terms of the incorporation, the company.
(e) For whom Contracts cannot be specifically enforced.
Personal bars to the relief.
24. Specific performance of a contract cannot be enforced in favour of a person-
(a) who could not recover compensation for its breach;
(b) who has become incapable of performing, or violates, any essential term of the contract that on his part remains to be performed;
(c) who has already chosen his remedy and obtained satisfaction for the alleged breach of contract; or
(d) who, previously to the contract, had notice that a settlement of the subject-matter thereof (though not founded on any valuable consideration) had been made and was then in force.
Illustrations
to clause (a)– A, in the character of agent for B, enters into an agreement with C to buy Cโs house. A is in reality acting not as agent for B but on his own account. A cannot enforce specific performance of this contract.
to clause (b)– A contracts to sell B a house and to become tenant thereof for a term of fourteen years from the date of the sale at a specified yearly rent. A becomes insolvent. Neither he nor his assignee can enforce specific performance of the contract.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
A contracts to sell B a house and garden in which there are ornamental trees, a material element in the value of the property as a residence. A, without Bโs consent, fells the trees. A cannot enforce specific performance of the contract.
A, holding land under a contract with B for a lease, commits waste, or treats the land in an unhusband like manner. A cannot enforce specific performance of the contract.
A contracts to let, and B contracts to take, an unfinished house, B contracting to finish the house and the lease to contain covenants on the part of A to keep the house in repair. B finishes the house in a very defective manner; he cannot enforce the contract specifically though A and B may sue each other for compensation for breach of it.
to clause(c)– A contracts to let, and B contracts to take, a house for a specified term at a specified rent. B refuses to perform the contract. A thereupon sues for, and obtains, compensation for the breach. A cannot obtain specific performance of the contract.
Contracts to sell property by one who has no title or who is a voluntary settler.
25. A contract for the sale or letting of property, whether moveable or immoveable, cannot be specifically enforced in favour of a vendor or lessor-
(a) who, knowing himself not to have any title to the property, has contracted to sell or let the same;
(b) who, though he entered into the contract believing that he had a good title to the property, cannot, at the time fixed by the parties or by the Court for the completion of the sale or letting, give the purchaser or lessee a title free from reasonable doubt;
(c) who, previous to entering into the contract, has made a settlement (though not founded on any valuable consideration) of the subject-matter of the contract.
Illustrations.
(a) A, without Cโs authority, contracts to sell to B an estate which A knows to belong to C. A cannot enforce specific performance of this contract, even though C is willing to confirm it.
(b) A bequeaths his land to trustees, declaring that they may sell it with the consent in writing of B. B gives a general prospective assent in writing to any sale which the trustees may make. The trustees then enter into a contract with C to sell him the land. C refuses to carry out the contract. The trustees cannot specifically enforce this contract, as in the absence of Bโs consent to the particular sale to C, the title which they can give C is, as the law stands, not free from reasonable doubt.
(c) A, being in possession of certain land, contracts to sell it to Z. On inquiry it turns out that A claims the land as heir of B, who left the country several years before, and is generally believed to be dead, but of whose death there is no sufficient proofProof Mathematical proof, Direct proof, Proof by contraposition, Proof by contradiction, Proof by construction, Proof by exhaustion, Closed chain inference, Probabilistic proof, Combinatorial proof, Nonconstructive proof, Computer-assisted proofs.. A cannot compel Z specifically to perform the contract.
(d) A, out of natural love and affection, makes a settlement of certain property on his brothers and their issue, and afterwards enters into a contract to sell the property to a stranger. A cannot enforce specific performance of this contract so as to override the settlement and thus prejudice the interests of the persons claiming under it.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
(f) For whom Contracts cannot be specifically enforced, except with a Variation.
Non-enforcement except with variation.
26. Where a plaintiff seeks specific performance of a contract in writing, to which the defendant sets up a variation, the plaintiff cannot obtain the performance sought, except with the variation so set up, in the following cases (namely):-
(a) where by fraud or mistake of fact the contract of which performance is sought is in terms different from that which the defendant supposed it to be when he entered into it;
(b) where by fraud, mistake of fact, or surprise the defendant entered into the contract under a reasonable misapprehension as to its effect as between himself and the plaintiff;
(c) where the defendant, knowing the terms of the contract and understanding its effect, has entered into it relying upon some misrepresentation by the plaintiff, or upon some stipulation on the plaintiffโs part which adds to the contract, but which he refuses to fulfil;
(d) where the object of the parties was to produce a certain legal result, which the contract as framed is not calculated to produce;
(e) where the parties have, subsequently to the execution of the contract, contracted to vary it.
Illustrations.
(a) A, B and C sign a writing by which they purport to contract each to enter into a bond to D for Rs. 1,000. In a suit by D, to make A, B and C separately liable each to the extent of Rs. 1,000, they prove that the wordWord ฮฯฮณฮฟฯย โeachโ was inserted by mistake; that the intentionIntention This means to โhave in mind.โ A plant to do a thing (Planning: premeditation is evident through evidence of active preparation, e.g., hoarding pills, purchase of weapon). It refers to the aim, purpose, or goal of the behavior, e.g., to seek an end to/solution. A consciousย mental processย to move precedes the brainโs preparation for movement. was that they should give a joint bond for Rs. 1,000. D can obtain the performance sought only with the variation thus set up.
(b) A sues B to compel specific performance of a contract in writing to buy a dwelling-house. B proves that he assumed that the contract included an adjoining yard, and the contract was so framed as to leave it doubtful whether the yard was so included or not. The Court will refuse to enforce the contract, except with the variation set up by B.
(c) A contracts in writing to let to B a wharf, together with a strip of Aโs, land delineated in a map. Before signing the contract, B proposed orally that he should be at liberty to substitute for the strip mentioned in the contract another strip of Aโs land of the same dimensions, and to this A expressly assented. B then signed the written contract. A cannot obtain specific performance of the written contract, except with the variation set up by B.
(d) A and B enter into negotiations for the purpose of securing land for B for his life, with remainder to his issue. They execute a contract, the terms of which are found to confer an absolute ownership on B. The contract so framed cannot be specifically enforced.
(e) A contracts in writing to let a house to B, for a certain term, at the rent of Rs. 100 per month, putting it first into tenantable repair. The house turns out to be not worth repairing, so, with Bโs consent, A pulls it down and erects a new house in its place, B contracting orally to pay rent at Rs. 120 per in-nsem. B then sues to enforce specific performance of the contract in writing. He cannot enforce it except with the variations made by the subsequent oral contract.
(g) Against whom Contracts may be specifically enforced.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
Relief against parties and persons claiming under them by subsequent title.
27. Except as otherwise provided by this Chapter, specific performance of a contract may be enforced against-
(a) either party thereto;
(b) any other person claiming under him by a title arising subsequently to the contract, except a transferee for value who has paid his money in good faith and without notice of the original contract;
(c) any person claiming under a title which, though prior to the contract and known to the plaintiff, might have been displaced by the defendant;
(d) when a public company has entered into a contract and subsequently becomes amalgamated with another public company, the new company which arises out of the amalgamation;
(e) when the promoters of a public company have, before its incorporation, entered into a contract, the company: provided that the company has ratified and adopted the contract and the contract is warranted by the terms of the incorporation.
Illustrations
to clause (b)– A contracts to convey certain land to B by a particular day. A dies intestate before that day without having conveyed the land. B may compel Aโs heir or other representative in interest to perform the contract specifically.
A contracts to sell certain land to B for Rs. 5,000. A afterwards conveys the land for Rs. 6,000 to C, who has notice of the original contract. B may enforee specific performance of the contract as against C.
A contracts to sell land to B for Rs. 5,000. B takes possession of the land. Afterwards A sells it to C for Rs. 6,000. C makes no inquiry of B relating to his interest in the land. Bโs possession is sufficient to affect C with notice of his interest, and he may enforce specific performance of the contract against C.
A contracts, in consideration of Rs. 1,000, to bequeath certain of his lands to B. ImmediatelyForthwith In Rao Mahmood Ahmad Khan v. Ranbir Singh ,ย has held that the word โforthwithโ is synonymous with the word immediately, which means with all reasonable quickness.ย When a statute requires something to be doneย โforthwithโย orย โimmediatelyโย or evenย โinstantlyโ, it should probably be understood as allowing a reasonable time for doing it. The interpretation of the word โforthwithโ would depend upon the terrain in which it travels and would take its colour depending upon the prevailing circumstances which can be variable. (Shento Varghese v. Julfikar Husen & Ors [2024] 6 S.C.R. 409).
Anwar Ahmad v. State of UPย [1976] 1 SCR 779ย : AIR (1976) SC 680;ย Nevada Properties (P) Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra & Anr.ย [2019] 15 SCR 223ย : (2019) 20 SCC 119;ย State of Maharashtra v. Tapas D. Neogyย [1999] Supp. 2 SCR 609ย : 1999 INSC 417;ย Ravinder Kumar & Anr. v. State of Punjabย [2001] Supp. 2 SCR 463ย : (2001) 7 SCC 690;ย Bhajan Singh and Ors. v. State of Haryanaย [2011] 7 SCR 1ย : 2011 INSC 422;ย HN Rishbud v. State of Delhiย [1955] 1 SCR 1150ย : (1954) 2 SCC 934;ย Sk. Salim v. State of West Bengalย [1975] 3 SCR 394ย : (1975) 1 SCC 653;ย China Apparao and Others v. State of Andhra Pradeshย [2002] Supp. 3 SCR 175ย : (2002) 8 SCC 440;ย Navalshankar Ishwarlal Dave v. State of Gujaratย [1993] 3 SCR 676ย : 1993 Supp. 3 SCC 754;ย Rao Mahmood Ahmad Khan v. Ranbir Singhย [1995] 2 SCR 230ย : (1995) Supp. 4 SCC 275;ย Bidya Deb Barma v. District Magistrateย [1969] 1 SCR 562 : (1968) SCC OnLine SC 82.ย after the contract A dies intestate, and C takes out administration to his estate. B may enforce specific performance of the contract against C.
A contracts to sell certain land to B. Before the completion of the contract, A becomes a lunatic and C is appointed his committee. B may specifically enforce the contract against C.
to clause (c)– A, the tenant for life of an estate, with remainder to B, in due exercise of a power conferred by the settlement under which he is tenant for life, contracts to sell the estate to C, who has notice of the settlement. Before the sale is completed, A dies. C may enforce specific performance of the contract against B.
A and B are joint tenants of land, his undivided moiety of which either may alienate in his lifetime, but which, subject to that right, devolves on the survivor. A contracts to sell his moiety to C and dies. C may enforce specific performance of the contract against B.
Specific performance in case of part performance of contract to lease.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
27A. Subject to the provisions of this Chapter, where a contract to lease immoveable property is made in writing signed by the parties thereto or on their behalf, either party may, notwithstanding that the contract, though required to be registered, has not been registered, sue the other for specific performance of the contract if,-
(a) where specific performance is claimed by the lessor, he has delivered possession of the property to the lessee in part performance of the contract; and
(b) where specific performance is claimed by the lessee, he has, in part performance of the contract, taken possession of the property, or, being already in possession, continues in possession, in part performance of the contract, and has done some act in furtherance of the contract:
Provided that nothing in this section shall affect the rights of a transferee for consideration who has no notice of the contract or of the part performance thereof.
This section applies to contracts to lease executed after the first day of April, 1930.
(h) Against whom Contracts cannot be specifically enforced.
What parties cannot be compelled to perform.
28. Specific performance of a contract cannot be enforced against a party thereto in any of the following cases:-
(a) if the consideration to be received by him is so grossly inadequate with reference to the state of things existing at the date of the contract, as to be either by itself or coupled with other circumstances evidenceEvidence All the means by which a matter of fact, the truth of which is submitted for investigation, is established or disproved.
Bharatiya Sakshya (Second) Adhiniyam 2023
of fraud or of undue advantage taken by the plaintiff;
(b) if his assent was obtained by the misrepresentation ( whether wilful or innocent), concealment, circumvention or unfair practices, of any party to whom performance would become due under the contract, or by any promise of such party which has not been substantially fulfilled;
(c) if his assent was given under the influence of mistake of fact, misapprehension or surprise:
Provided that, when the contract provides for compensation in case of mistake, compensation may be made for a mistake within the scope of such provision, and the contract may be specifically enforced in other respects if proper to be so enforced.
Illustrations
to clause (c)– A, one of two executors, in the erroneous belief that he had the authority of his co-executor, enters into an agreement for the sale to B of his testatorโs property. B cannot insist on the sale being completed.
A directs an auctioneer to sell certain land. A afterwards revokes the auctioneerโs authority as to 20 acres of this land, but the auctioneer inadvertently sells the whole to B, who has no notice of the revocation. B cannot enforce specific performance of the agreement.
(i) The Effect of dismissing a Suit for Specific Performance.
Bar of suit for breach after dismissal.
29. The dismissal of a suit for specific performance of a contract or part thereof shall bar the plaintiffโs right to sue for compensation for the breach of such contract or part, as the case may be.
(j) Awards and Directions to execute Settlements.
Application of preceding sections to awards and testamentary directions to execute settlements.
30. The provisions of this Chapter as to contracts shall, mutatis mutandisMutatis mutandis It means "with necessary changes in the points of detail" or "with such change as may be necessary", apply to awards and to directions in a will or codicil to execute a particular settlement.
CHAPTER III.
OF THE RECTIFICATION OF INSTRUMENTS.
When instrument may be rectified.
31. When, through fraud or a mutual mistake of the parties, a contract or other instrument in writing does not truly express their intention, either party, or his representative in interest, may institute a suit to have the instrument rectified; and if the Court find it clearly proved that there has been fraud or mistake in framing the instrument, and ascertain the real intention of the parties in executing the same, the Court may in its discretion rectify the instrument so as to express that intention, so far as this can be done without prejudice to rights acquired by third persons in good faith and for value.
Illustrations.
(a) A, intending to sell to B his house and one of three godowns adjacent to it, executes a conveyance prepared by B, in which, through Bโs fraud, all three godowns are included. Of the two godowns which were fraudulently included, B gives one to C and lets the other to D for a rent, neither C nor D having any knowledgeKnowledge Knowledge is derived from the process of an informed person integrating data from sense organs or intuition into their psyche. This concept is explored in the Vedic Nasadiya Sukta, which questions the possibility of ultimate truth or knowledge. In different languages, such as Greek, Latin, Sanskrit, and Chinese, knowledge is expressed as "ฮท ฮณฮฝฯฯฮท," "Scientia," "เคเฅเคเคพเคจเคฎเฅโ ," and "็ฅ่ฏ Zhฤซshรฌ," respectively. of the fraud. The conveyance may, as against B and C, be rectified so as to exclude from it the godown given to C; but it cannot be rectified so as to affect Dโs lease.
(b) By a marriage settlement A the father of B, the intended wife, covenants with C, the intended husband, to pay to C, his executors, administrators and assigns, during, Aโs life, an annuity of Rs. 5,000. C dies insolvent and the officialOffice ฮฮพฮฏฯฮผฮฑ > Officer > Office-bearer (1593) > Opus, officium, ex officio (Latin). Box-office (Cash Box). assignee claims the annuity from A. The Court, on finding it clearly proved that the parties always intended that this annuity should be paid as a provision for B and her children, may rectify the settlement and decree that the assignee has no right to any part of the annuity.
PresumptionPresumption An inference of the truth or falsehood of a proposition or fact that stands until rebutted by evidence to the contrary. as to intent of parties.
32. For the purpose of rectifying a contract in writing, the Court must be satisfied that all the parties thereto intended to make an equitable and conscientious agreement.
Principles of rectification.
33. In rectifying a written instrument, the Court may inquire what the instrument was intended to mean, and what were intended to be its legal consequencesLegal relations It is established law that in the domestic or social context, there is a presumption that the parties do not intend for legal consequences to follow and hence do not intend to create legal relations, which imposes the burden of proof on the party seeking to enforce the agreement to prove that the parties did in fact intend for their arrangement to have legal consequences. A domestic arrangement in which prima facie attracts the presumption gave rise to an enforceable contract, then he must plead that the parties had the requisite intention to create legal relations, and also plead the material facts sustaining that assertion., and is not confined to the inquiry what the language of the instrument was intended to be.
Specific enforcement of rectified contract.
34. A contract in writing may be first rectified and then, if the plaintiff has so prayed in his plaint and the Court thinks fit, specifically enforced.
Illustration.
A contracts in writing to pay his attorney, B, a fixed sum in lieu of costs. The contract contains mistakes as to the name and rights of the client, which, if construed strictly, would exclude B from all rights under it. B is entitled, if the Court thinks fit, to have it rectified, and to an order for payment of the sum, as if at the time of its execution it had expressed the intention of the parties.
CHAPTER IV.
OF THE RESCISSION OF CONTRACTS.
When rescission may be adjudged.
35. Any person interested in a contract in writing may sue to have it rescinded, and such rescission may be adjudged by the Court in any of the following cases, namely:-
(a) where the contract is voidable or terminable by the plaintiff;
(b) where the contract is unlawful for causes not apparent on its face, and the defendant is more to blame than the plaintiff;
(c) where a decree for specific performance of a contract of sale, or of a contract to take a lease, has been made, and the purchaser or lessee makes default in payment of the purchase-money or other sums which the Court has ordered him to pay.
When the purchaser or lessee is in possession of the subject-matter, and the Court finds that such possession is wrongful, the Court may also order him to pay to the vendor or lessor the rents and profits, if any, received by him as such possessor.
In the same case, the Court may, by order in the suit in which the decree has been made and not complied with, rescind the contract, either so far as regards the party in default, or altogether, as the justice of the case may require.
Illustrations
to (a)– A sells a field to B. There is a right of way over the field of which A has direct personal knowledge, but which he conceals from B. B is entitled to have the contract rescinded.
to (b)– A, an advocate, induces his client B, a HinduHindu ืึดื ึฐืึผืึผืึธื (hinฤแธแบสผรกh), ฮนฮฝฮดฮฟฯ
ฯฯฮผฯฯ: Hendย (Hendu). The establishment of a satellite state of the Ghaznavidย Empireย (capital: Lahore)ย in the Punjab (first half of the 11th century) was known as Hindustanโaย geographical name given by the Persians, who came to visit Bharatvarsha (โเคนเคฟเคจเฅเคฆเฅเคธเฅเคคเคพเคจ). Asadiโs Garsasp-nama, expeditions to Hend and Sarandib (Sri Lanka) have been featured. Sanatan Dharma is the actual Dharmic tradition of the Hindus. People who live in Hindusthan are Hindu (The word is an original word), whether they follow Islam, Christianity, Buddhism, Mahavira, or Nanaka. In this way, Tribals are also Hindu. Indian sword (ลกamลกir-e hendi in zaแธตm-e hendi). Anbar-e hendi (India perfumes) by Farroki. Ebn Battuta (Toแธฅfat al-noแบแบฤr fi แธกarฤสพeb al-amแนฃฤrwa สฟajฤสพeb al-asfฤr: ca. 1330) first mentioned 'Hindu Kush.' widow, to transfer property to him for the purpose of defrauding Bโs creditors. Here the parties are not equally in fault, and B is entitled to have the instrument of transfer rescinded.
Rescission for mistake.
36. Rescission of a contract in writing cannot be adjudged for mere mistake, unless the party against whom it is adjudged can be restored to substantially the same position as if the contract had not been made.
Alternative prayerPraying It can be interpreted as a political idea. It implicitly assumes the existence of the powerful and the powerless, with an intermediate agency positioned between them. This agency, often unquestioned and abstract, functions to preserve the existing balance between power and poverty. In doing so, prayer operates as a mechanism that normalizes hierarchy, encourages acceptance over challenge, and sustains the status quo without requiring conscious awareness from those who participate in it. for rescission in suit for specific performance.
37.ย A plaintiff instituting a suit for the specific performance of a contract in writing may pray in the alternative that, if the contract cannot be specifically enforced, it may be rescinded and delivered up to be cancelled; and the Court, if it refuses to enforce the contract specifically, may direct it to be rescinded and delivered up accordingly.
Court may require party rescinding to do equity.
38.ย On adjudging the rescission of a contract, the Court may require the party to whom such relief is granted to make any compensation to the other which justice may require.
CHAPTER V.
OF THE CANCELLATION OF INSTRUMENTS.
When cancellation may be ordered.
39.ย Any person against whom a written instrument is void or voidable, who has reasonable apprehension that such instrument, if left outstanding, may cause him serious injury, may sue to have it adjudged void or voidable; and the Court may, in its discretion, so adjudge it and order it to be delivered up and cancelled.
If the instrument has been registered under the Registration Act, the Court shall also send a copy of its decree to the officer in whose officeOffice ฮฮพฮฏฯฮผฮฑ > Officer > Office-bearer (1593) > Opus, officium, ex officio (Latin). Box-office (Cash Box). the instrument has been so registered; and such officer shall note on the copy of the instrument contained in his books the fact of its cancellation.
Illustrations.
(a) A, the owner of a ship, by fraudulently representing her to be seaworthy, induces B, an underwriter, to insure her. B may obtain the cancellation of the policy.
(b) A conveys land to B, who bequeaths it to C and dies. Thereupon D gets possession of the land and produces a forged instrument stating that the conveyance was made to B in trust for him. C may obtain the cancellation of the forged instrument.
(c) * * * * *
(d) A agrees to sell and deliver a ship to B, to be paid for by Bโs acceptances of four bills of exchange, for sums amounting to Rs. 30,000, to be drawn by A on B. The bills are drawn and accepted, but the ship is not delivered according to the agreement. A sues B on one of the bills, B may obtain the cancellation of all the bills.
What instruments may be partially cancelled.
40.ย Where an instrument is evidence of different rights or different obligations, the Court may, in a proper case, cancel it in part and allow it to stand for the residue.
Illustration.
A draws a bill on B, who endorses it to C by whom it appears to be endorsed to D, who endorses it to E. Cโs endorsement is forged. C is entitled to have such endorsement cancelled, leaving the bill to stand in other respects.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
Power to require party for whom instrument is cancelled to make compensation.
41. On adjudging the cancellation of an instrument, the Court may require the party to whom such relief is granted to make any compensation to the other which justice may require.
CHAPTER VI.
OF DECLARATORY DECREES.
Discretion of Court as to declaration of status or right.
42. Any person entitled to any legal character, or to any right as to any property, may institute a suit against any person denying, or interested to deny, his title to such character or right, and the Court may in its discretion make therein a declaration that he is so entitled, and the plaintiff need not in such suit ask for any further relief:
Bar to such declaration.
Provided that no Court shall make any such declaration where the plaintiff, being able to seek further relief than a mere declaration of title, omits to do so.
Explanation.– A trustee of property is a โperson interested to denyโ a title adverse to the title of some one who is not in existence, and for whom, if in existence, he would be a trustee.
Illustrations.
(a) A is lawfully in possession of certain land. The inhabitants of a neighbouring village claim a right of way across the land. A may sue for a declaration that they are not entitled to the right so claimed.
(b) A bequeaths his property to B, C and D, โto be equally divided amongst all and each of them, if living at the time of my death, then amongst their surviving children.โ No such children are in existence. In a suit against Aโs executor, the Court may declare whether B, C and D took the property absolutely, or only for their lives, and it may also declare the interests of the children before their rights are vested.
(c) A covenants that, if he should at any time be entitled to property exceeding one lakh of rupees, he will settle it upon certain trusts. Before any such property accrues, or any persons entitled under the trusts are ascertained, he institutes a suit to obtain a declaration that the covenant is void for uncertainty. The Court may make the declaration.
(d) A alienates to B property in which A has merely a life interest. The alienation is invalid as against C, Who is entitled as reversioner. The Court may in a suit by C against A and B declare that C is so entitled.
(e) The widow of a sonless Hindu alienates part of the property of which she is in possession as such. The person presumptively entitled to possess the property if he survive her may, in a suit against the alienee, obtain a declaration that the alienation was made without legal necessity and was therefore void beyond the widowโs lifetime.
(f) A Hindu widow in possession of property adopts a son to her deceased husband. The person presumptively entitled to possession of the property on her death without a son may, in a suit against the adopted son, obtain a declaration that the adoption was invalid.
(g) A is in possession of certain property. B, alleging that he is the owner of the property, requires A to deliver it to him. A may obtain a declaration of his right to hold the property.
(h) A bequeaths property to B for his life, with remainder to Bโs wife and her children, if any, by B, but, if B die without any wife or children, to C. B has a putative wife, D, and children, but C denies that B and D were ever lawfully married. D and her children may, in Bโs lifetime, institute a suit against C and obtain therein a declaration that they are truly the wife and children of B.
Effect of declaration.
43. A declaration made under this Chapter is binding only on the parties to the suit, persons claiming through them respectively, and, where any of the parties are trustees, on the persons for whom, if in existence at the date of the declaration, such parties would be trustees.
Illustration.
A, a Hindu, in a suit to which B, his alleged wife and her mother are defendants, seeks a declaration that his marriage was duly solemnized and an order for the restitution of his conjugal rightsConjugal Rights Right of a person to sexual intercourse with the marriage partner (Husband/wife). Sexual rights are available to same-sex people.. The Court makes the declaration and order. C, claiming that B is his wife, then sues A for the recovery of B. The declaration made in the former suit is not binding upon C.
CHAPTER VII.
OF THE APPOINTMENT OF RECEIVERS.
Appointment of receivers discretionary.
44.ย The appointment of a receiver pending a suit is a matter resting in the discretion of the Court.
Reference to Code of Civil Procedure.
The mode and effect of his appointment, and his rights, powers, duties and liabilities, are regulated by the Code of Civil Procedure.
CHAPTER VIII.
OF THE ENFORCEMENT OF PUBLIC DUTIES.
Power to order public servants and others to do certain specific acts.
45.ย The High CourtHigh Court High Court Judges in England and Wales handle complex and tough cases, sitting in London and traveling to court centers around the country. They preside over serious criminal and important civil cases, and support the Lord and Lady Justices in hearing appeals. High Court Judges are commonly referred to as โMr/Mrs/Ms Justice surnameโ and are given the prefix โThe Honourableโ. They are assigned to the Kingโs Bench Division, the Family Division, or the Chancery Division. The Kingโs Bench Division focuses on civil wrongs and judicial review, the Family Division deals with family law, and the Chancery Division handles various cases including company law and probate. Judges are appointed through a rigorous process overseen by the Judicial Appointments Commission. may make an order requiring any specific act to be done or forborne, within the local limits of its ordinary original civil jurisdiction, by any person holding a public office whether of a permanent or a temporary nature, or by any corporation or inferior Court of Judicature:
Provided-
(a) that an application for such order be made by some person whose property, franchise or personal right would be injured by the forbearing or doing (as the case may be) of the said specific act;
(b) that such doing or forbearing is, under any law for the time being in force, clearly incumbent on such person or Court in his or its public character, or on such corporation in its corporate character;
(c) that in the opinion of the High Court such doing or forbearing is consonant to right and justice;
(d) that the applicant has no other specific and adequate legal remedy; and
(e) that the remedy given by the order applied for will be complete.
Exemptions from such power.
Nothing in this section shall be deemed to authorize the High Court-
(f) to make any order binding on [* * * *] the President of the Union;
(g) to make any order on any other servant of the Government, as such, merely to enforce the satisfaction of a claimA Claim A claim is โfactually unsustainableโ where it could be said with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is entirely without substance, which can be the case if it were clear beyond question that the facts pleaded are contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. upon the Government; or
(h) to make any order which is otherwise expressly excluded by any law for the time being in force.
Application how made. Procedure thereon.
46. Every application under section 45 must be founded on an affidavitAffidavit Anย ex parteย statement in writing made under oath before a notary public or other officer authorized to administer oaths, about facts which the affiant either knows of his own personal knowledge or is aware of to the best of his knowledge. of the person injured, stating his right in the matter in question, his demandDemand In economics, the amount of a good or service that consumers are willing to buy at a particular price. of justice and the denial thereof; and the High Court may, in its discretion, make the order applied for absolute in the first instance, or refuse it, or grant a rule to show causeShow Cause A process directed to a person to appear in court and present reasons why a certain order, judgment, or decree should not be made final. why the order applied for should not be made.
Order in alternative.
If, in the last case, the person, Court or corporation complained of shows no sufficient cause, the High Court may first make an order in the alternative, either to do or forbear the act mentioned in the order, or to signify some reason to the contrary and make an answer thereto by such day as the High Court fixes in this behalf.
Peremptory order.
47. If the person, Court or corporation to whom or to which such order is directed makes no answer, or makes an insufficient or a false answer, the High Court may then issue a peremptory order to do or forbear the act absolutely.
Execution of, and appeal from, orders.
48. Every order under this Chapter shall be executed, and may be appealed from, as if it were a decree made in the exercise of the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the High Court.
Costs.
49. The costs of all applications and orders under this Chapter shall be in the discretion of the High Court.
Bar to issue of mandamusMandamus Dr Rai Shivendra Bahadur v. Governing Body of the Nalanda College [AIR 1962 SC 1210] that so that mandamus may issue to compel an authority to do something, it must be shown that the statute imposes a legal duty on that authority and the aggrieved party has a legal right under the statute to enforce its performance..
50. Neither the High Court nor any Judge thereof shall hereafter issue any writ of mandamus.
THE SPECIFIC RELIEF ACT.
Power to frame rules.
51. The High Court shall frame rules to regulate the procedure under this Chapter; and, until such rules are framed, the practice of such Court as to applications for and grants of writs of mandamus shall apply, so far as may be practicable, to applications and orders under this Chapter.
PART III.
Of Preventive Relief.
CHAPTER IX.
OF INJUNCTIONS GENERALLY.
Preventive relief how granted.
52. Preventive relief is granted at the discretion of the Court by injunction, temporary or perpetual.
Temporary injunctions.
53. Temporary injunctions are such as are to continue until a specified time, or until the further order of the Court. They may be granted at any period of a suit, and are regulated by the Code of Civil Procedure.
Perpetual injunctions.
A perpetual injunction can only be granted by the decree made at the hearing and upon the meritsMerits Strict legal rights of the parties; a decision โon the meritsโ is one that reaches the right(s) of a party as distinguished from a disposition of the case on a ground not reaching the rights raised in the action; for example, in a criminal case double jeopardy does not apply if charges are nolle prossed before trial commences, and in a civil action res judicata does not apply if a previous action was dismissed on a preliminary motion raising a technicality such as improper service of process. of the suit; the defendant is thereby perpetually enjoined from the assertion of a right, or from the commission of an act, which would be contrary to the rights of the plaintiff.
CHAPTER X.
OF PERPETUAL INJUNCTIONS.
Perpetual injunctions when granted.
54. Subject to the other provisions contained in, or referred to by, this Chapter, a perpetual injunction may be granted to prevent the breach of an obligation existing in favour of the applicant, whether expressly or by implication.
When such obligation arises from contract, the Court shall be guided by the rules and provisions contained in Chapter II of this Act.
When the defendant invades or threatens to invade the plaintiffโs right to, or enjoyment of, property, the Court may grant a perpetual injunction in the following cases (namely):-
(a) where the defendant is trustee of the property for the plaintiff;
(b) where there exists no standard for ascertaining the actual damage caused, or likely to be caused, by the invasion;
(c) where the invasion is such that pecuniary compensation would not afford adequate relief;
(d) where it is probable that pecuniary compensation cannot be got for the invasion;
(e) where the injunction is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of judicial proceedings.
Explanation. – For the purpose of this section a trademarkTrade Mark The Indian trademark system is similar to the UKโs. Trademarks protect symbols, colours or other devices used to identify a businessโ products or services. A trademark is valid for 10 years, then may be renewed indefinitely for further 10-year periods. is property.
Illustrations.
(a) A lets certain lands to B, and B contracts not to dig sand or gravel thereout. A may sue for an injunction to restrain B from digging in violation of his contract.
(b) A trustee threatens a breach of trust. His co-trustees, if any, should, and the beneficial owners may, sue for an injunction to prevent the breach.
(c) The directors of a public company are about to pay a dividend out of capital or borrowed money. Any of the shareholders may sue for an injunction to restrain them.
(d) The directors of a fireFire It was created from stones approximately 400,000 years ago, or possibly much earlier. Researchers have discovered the earliest known instance of human-created fire, which took place in the east of England 400,000 years ago (in the village of Barnham). The Rigveda mentions the use of Agni for Yagna much earlier than 10,000 years ago. and life-insurance company are about to engage in marine insurance. Any of the shareholders may sue for an injunction to restrain them.
(e) A, an executor, through misconduct or insolvency, is bringing the property of the deceased into danger. The Court may grant an injunction to restrain him from getting in the assets.
(f) A, a trustee for B, is about to make an imprudent sale of a small part of the trust-property. B may sue for an injunction to restrain the sale, even though compensation in money would have afforded him adequate relief.
(g) A makes a settlement (not founded on marriage or other valuable consideration) of an estate on B and his children. A then contracts to sell the estate to C. B or any of his children may sue for an injunction to restrain the sale.
(h) In the course of Aโs employment as an advocate, certain papers belonging to his client, B, come into his possession. A threatens to make these papers public, or to communicate their contents to a stranger. B may sue for an injunction to restrain A from so doing.
(i) A is Bโs medical adviser. He demands money of B which B declines to pay. A then threatens to make known the effect of Bโs communications to him as a patient. This is contrary to Aโs duty, and B may sue for an injunction to restrain him from so doing.
(j) A, the owner of two adjoining houses, lets one to B and afterwards lets the other to C. A and C begin to make such alterations in the house let to C as will prevent the comfortable enjoyment of the house let to B. B may sue for an injunction to restrain them from so doing.
(k) A lets certain arable lands to B for purposes of husbandry, but without any express contract as to the mode of cultivation. Contrary to the mode of cultivation customary in the districtDistrict India has 800 districts under 29 federal states and 8 union territories.
Adilabad Agar-Malwa Agra Ahilyanagar Ahmedabad Aizawl Ajmer Akola Alappuzha Aligarh Alipurduar Alirajpur Alluri Sitharama Raju Almora Alwar Ambala Ambedkar Nagar Amethi Amravati Amreli Amritsar Amroha Anakapalli Anand Ananthapuramu Anantnag Anjaw Annamayya Anugul Anuppur Araria Ariyalur Arvalli Arwal Ashoknagar Auraiya Aurangabad Ayodhya Azamgarh Bagalkote Bageshwar Baghpat Bahraich Bajali Baksa Balaghat Balangir Baleshwar Ballari Ballia Balod Balodabazar-Bhatapara Balotra Balrampur Balrampur-Ramanujganj Banas Kantha Banda Bandipora Banka Bankura Banswara Bapatla Bara Banki Baramulla Baran Bareilly Bargarh Barmer Barnala Barpeta Barwani Bastar Basti Bathinda Beawar Beed Begusarai Belagavi Bemetara Bengaluru Rural Bengaluru Urban Betul Bhadohi Bhadradri Kothagudem Bhadrak Bhagalpur Bhandara Bharatpur Bharuch Bhavnagar Bhilwara Bhind Bhiwani Bhojpur Bhopal Bichom Bidar Bijapur Bijnor Bikaner Bilaspur Bilaspur Birbhum Bishnupur Biswanath Bokaro Bongaigaon Botad Boudh Budaun Budgam Bulandshahr Buldhana Bundi Burhanpur Buxar Cachar Central Chamarajanagar Chamba Chamoli Champawat Champhai Chandauli Chandel Chandigarh Chandrapur Changlang Charaideo Charkhi Dadri Chatra Chengalpattu Chennai Chhatarpur Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar Chhindwara Chhotaudepur Chikkaballapura Chikkamagaluru Chirang Chitradurga Chitrakoot Chittoor Chittorgarh Chumoukedima Churachandpur Churu Coimbatore Cooch Behar Cuddalore Cuttack Dadra And Nagar Haveli Dahod Dakshin Bastar Dantewada Dakshin Dinajpur Dakshina Kannada Dhenkanal Dholpur Dhubri Dhule Dibang Valley Dibrugarh Didwana-Kuchaman Dima Hasao Dimapur Dindigul Dindori Diu Doda Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Konaseema Dumka Dungarpur Durg East East Garo Hills East Godavari East Jaintia Hills East Kameng East Khasi Hills East Siang East Singhbum Eastern West Khasi Hills Eluru Ernakulam Erode Etah Etawah Faridabad Faridkot Farrukhabad Fatehabad Fatehgarh Sahib Fatehpur Fazilka Ferozepur Firozabad Gadag Gadchiroli Gajapati Ganderbal Gandhinagar Ganganagar Gangtok Ganjam Garhwa Gariyaband Gaurela-Pendra-Marwahi Gautam Buddha Nagar Gaya Ghaziabad Ghazipur Gir Somnath Giridih Goalpara Godda Golaghat Gomati Gonda Gondia Gopalganj Gorakhpur Gumla Guna Guntur Gurdaspur Gurugram Gwalior Gyalshing Hailakandi Hamirpur Hamirpur Hanumakonda Hanumangarh Hapur Harda Hardoi Haridwar Hassan Hathras Haveri Hazaribagh Hingoli Hisar Hnahthial Hojai Hooghly Hoshiarpur Howrah Hyderabad Idukki Imphal East Imphal West Indore Jabalpur Jagatsinghapur Jagitial Jaipur Jaisalmer Jajapur Jalandhar Jalaun Jalgaon Jalna Jalore Jalpaiguri Jammu Jamnagar Jamtara Jamui Jangoan Janjgir-Champa Jashpur Jaunpur Jayashankar Bhupalapally Jehanabad Jhabua Jhajjar Jhalawar Jhansi Jhargram Jharsuguda Jhunjhunu Jind Jiribam Jodhpur Jogulamba Gadwal Jorhat Junagadh Kabeerdham Kachchh Kaimur (Bhabua) Kaithal Kakching Kakinada Kalaburagi Kalahandi Kalimpong Kallakurichi Kamareddy Kamjong Kamle Kamrup Kamrup Metro Kancheepuram Kandhamal Kangpokpi Kangra Kannauj Kanniyakumari Kannur Kanpur Dehat Kanpur Nagar Kapurthala Karaikal Karauli Karbi Anglong Kargil Karimganj Karimnagar Karnal Karur Kasaragod Kasganj Kathua Daman Damoh Dangs Darbhanga Darjeeling Darrang Datia Dausa Davanagere Deeg Dehradun Deogarh Deoghar Deoria Devbhumi Dwarka Dewas Dhalai Dhamtari Dhanbad Dhar Dharashiv Dharmapuri Dharwad Dhemaji Katihar Katni Kaushambi Kendrapara Kendujhar Keyi Panyor Khagaria Khairagarh-Chhuikhadan-Gandai Khairthal-Tijara Khammam Khandwa (East Nimar) Khargone (West Nimar) Khawzawl Kheda Kheri Khordha Khowai Khunti Kinnaur Kiphire Kishanganj Kishtwar Kodagu Koderma Kohima Kokrajhar Kolar Kolasib Kolhapur Kolkata Kollam Kondagaon Koppal Koraput Korba Korea Kota Kotputli-Behror Kottayam Kozhikode Kra Daadi Krishna Krishnagiri Kulgam Kullu Kumuram Bheem Asifabad Kupwara Kurnool Kurukshetra Kurung Kumey Kushinagar Lahaul And Spiti Lakhimpur Lakhisarai Lakshadweep District Lalitpur Latehar Latur Lawngtlai Leh Ladakh Leparada Lohardaga Lohit Longding Longleng Lower Dibang Valley Lower Siang Lower Subansiri Lucknow Ludhiana Lunglei MAUGANJ Madhepura Madhubani Madurai Mahabubabad Mahabubnagar Mahasamund Mahendragarh Mahesana Mahisagar Mahoba Mahrajganj Maihar Mainpuri Majuli Malappuram Malda Malerkotla Malkangiri Mamit Mancherial Mandi Mandla Mandsaur Mandya Munger Murshidabad Muzaffarnagar Muzaffarpur Mysuru Nabarangpur Nadia Nagaon Nagapattinam Nagarkurnool Nagaur Nagpur Nainital Nalanda Nalbari Nalgonda Namakkal Namchi Namsai Nanded Nandurbar Nandyal Narayanpet Narayanpur Manendragarh-Chirmiri-Bharatpur(M C B) Mangan Mansa Marigaon Mathura Mau Mayiladuthurai Mayurbhanj Medak Medchal Malkajgiri Meerut Meluri Mirzapur Moga Mohla-Manpur-Ambagarh Chouki Mokokchung Mon Moradabad Morbi Morena Mulugu Mumbai Mumbai Suburban Mungeli Narmada Narmadapuram Narsimhapur Nashik Navsari Nawada Nayagarh Neemuch New Delhi Nicobars Nirmal Niuland Niwari Nizamabad Noklak Noney North North 24 Parganas North And Middle Andaman North East North Garo Hills North Goa North Tripura North West Ntr Nuapada Nuh Pakke Kessang Pakur Pakyong Palakkad Palamu Palghar Pali Palnadu Palwal Panch Mahals Panchkula Pandhurna Panipat Panna Papum Pare Parbhani Parvathipuram Manyam Paschim Bardhaman Paschim Medinipur Pashchim Champaran Patan Pathanamthitta Pathankot Patiala Patna Pauri Garhwal Peddapalli Perambalur Peren Phalodi Phek Pherzawl Pilibhit Pithoragarh Poonch Porbandar Prakasam Pratapgarh Pratapgarh Prayagraj Puducherry Pudukkottai Pulwama Pune Purba Bardhaman Ranipet Ratlam Ratnagiri Rayagada Reasi Rewa Rewari Ri Bhoi Rohtak Rohtas Rudraprayag Rupnagar S.A.S Nagar Sabar Kantha Sagar Saharanpur Saharsa Sahebganj Saitual Sakti Salem Salumbar Samastipur Samba Purba Medinipur Purbi Champaran Puri Purnia Purulia Rae Bareli Raichur Raigad Raigarh Raipur Raisen Rajanna Sircilla Rajgarh Rajkot Rajnandgaon Rajouri Rajsamand Ramanagara Ramanathapuram Ramban Ramgarh Rampur Ranchi Ranga Reddy Sambalpur Sambhal Sangareddy Sangli Sangrur Sant Kabir Nagar Saraikela Kharsawan Saran Sarangarh-Bilaigarh Satara Satna Sawai Madhopur Sehore Senapati Seoni Sepahijala Serchhip Shahdara Shahdol Shahid Bhagat Singh Nagar Shahjahanpur Shajapur Shamator Shamli Sheikhpura Sheohar Sheopur Shi Yomi Shimla Shivamogga Shivpuri Shopian Shrawasti Siaha Siang Siddharthnagar Siddipet Sidhi Sikar Simdega Sindhudurg Singrauli Sirmaur Sirohi Sirsa Sitamarhi Sitapur Sivaganga Sivasagar Siwan Solan Solapur Sonbhadra Sonepur Sonipat Sonitpur Soreng South South 24 Parganas South Andamans South East South Garo Hills South Goa South Salmara Mancachar South Tripura South West South West Garo Hills South West Khasi Hills Sri Muktsar Sahib Sri Potti Sriramulu Nellore Sri Sathya Sai Srikakulam Srinagar Sukma Sultanpur Sundargarh Supaul Surajpur Surat Surendranagar Surguja Suryapet Tamenglong Tamulpur Tapi Tarn Taran Tawang Tehri Garhwal Tengnoupal Tenkasi Thane Thanjavur The Nilgiris Theni Thiruvallur Thiruvananthapuram Thiruvarur Thoothukkudi Thoubal Thrissur Tikamgarh Tinsukia Tirap Tiruchirappalli Tirunelveli Tirupathur Tirupati Tiruppur Tiruvannamalai Tonk Tseminyu Tuensang Tumakuru Udaipur Udalguri Udham Singh Nagar Udhampur Udupi Ujjain Ukhrul Warangal Wardha Washim Wayanad West West Garo Hills West Godavari West Jaintia Hills West Kameng West Karbi Anglong West Khasi Hills West Siang West Singhbhum West Tripura Wokha Y.S.R. Yadadri Bhuvanagiri Yadgir Yamunanagar Yavatmal Zunheboto Umaria Una Unakoti Unnao Upper Siang Upper Subansiri Uttar Bastar Kanker Uttar Dinajpur Uttara Kannada Uttarkashi Vadodara Vaishali Valsad Varanasi Vellore Vidisha Vijayanagara Vijayapura Vikarabad Viluppuram Virudhunagar Visakhapatnam Vizianagaram Wanaparthy, B threatens to sow the lands with seed injurious thereto and requiring many years to eradicate. A may sue for an injunction to restrain B from sowing the lands in contravention of his implied contract to use them in a husband like manner.
(l) A, B and C are partners, the partnership being determinable at will. A threatens to do an act tending to the destruction of the partnership property. B and C may, without seeking a dissolution of the partnership, sue for an injunction to restrain A from doing the act.
(m) A, a Hindu widow in possession of her deceased husbandโs property, commits destruction of the property without any cause sufficient to justify her in so doing. The heir-expectant may sue for an injunction to restrain her.
(n) A, B and C are members of an undivided Hindu family. A cuts timber growing on the family property, and threatens to destroy part of the family house and to sell some of the family utensils. B and C may sue for an injunction to restrain him.
(o) A, the owner of certain houses in Rangoon, becomes insolvent, B buys them from the Official Assignee and enters into possession. A persists in trespassing on and damaging the houses, and B is thereby compelled, at considerable expense, to employ men to protect the possession. B may sue for an injunction to restrain further acts of trespass.
(p) The inhabitants of a village claim a right of way over Aโs land. In a suit against several of them, A obtains a declaratory decree that his land is subject to no such right. Afterwards each of the other villagers sues A for obstructing his alleged right of way over the land. A may sue for an injunction to restrain them.
(q) A, in an administration-suit to which a creditor, B, is not a party, obtains a decree for the administration of Cโs assets. B proceeds against Cโs estate for his debt. A may sue for an injunction to restrain B.
(r) A and B are in possession of contiguouslands and of the mines underneath them. A works his mine so as to extend under Bโs mine and threatens to remove certain pillars which help to support Bโs mine. B may sue for an injunction to restrain him from so doing.
(s) A rings bells or makes some other unnecessary noise so near a house as to interfere materially and unreasonably with the physical comfort of the occupier, B. B may sue for an injunction restraining A from making the noise.
(t) A pollutes the air with smoke so as to interfere materially with the physical comfort of B and C, who carry on business in a neighbouring house. B and C may sue for an injunction to restrain the pollution.
(u) A infringes Bโs patent. If the Court is satisfied that the patent is valid and has been infringed, B may obtain an injunction to restrain the infringement.
(v) A pirates Bโs copyrightCopyright Indiaโs copyright framework provides all the basic protections required by international law. Some aspects, such as the term of protection, go beyond international law as set out in the Berne Convention and the WTOโs Trade-related aspects of intellectual property agreement. Copyright owners do get automatic protection through Indian law.. B may obtain an injunction to restrain the piracy unless the work of which copyright is claimed is libellous or obscene.
(w) A improperly uses the trademark of B. B may obtain an injunction to restrain the user, provided that Bโs use of the trademark is honest.
(x) A, a tradesman, holds out B as his partner against the wish and without the authority of B. B may sue for an injunction to restrain A from so doing.
(y) A, a very eminent man, writes letters on family topics to B. After the death of A and B, C, who is Bโs residuary legatee, proposes to make money by publishing Aโs letters. D, who is Aโs executor, has a property in the letters, and may sue for an injunction to restrain C from publishing them.
(z) A carries on a manufactory and B is his assistant. In the course of his business A imparts to B a secret process of value. B afterwards demands money of A, threatening, in case of refusal, to disclose the process to C, a rival manufacturer. A may sue for an injunction to restrain B from disclosing the process.
Mandatory injunctions.
55. When, to prevent the breach of an obligation, it is necessary to compel the performance of certain acts which the Court is capable of enforcing, the Court may in its discretion grant an injunction to prevent the breach complained of, and also to compel performance of the requisite acts.
Illustrations.
(a) A, by new buildings, obstructs lights to the access and use of which B has acquired a right under the Limitation Act, Part IV. B may obtain an injunction, not only to restrain A from going on with the buildings, but also to pull down so much of them as obstructs bโs lights.
(b) A builds a house with eaves projecting over Bโs land. B may sue for an injunction to pull down so much of the eaves as so project.
(c) In the case put as illustration (i) to section 54, the Court may also order all written communication made by B, as patient, to A, as medical adviser, to be destroyed.
(d) In the case put as illustration (y) to section 54, the Court may also order Aโs letters to be destroyed.
(e) A threatens to publish statements concerning B which would be punishable under Chapter XXI of the Penal CodePenal Code Indian Penal Code (Naya Samhita-2023),
Pakistan Penal code-1960,. The Court may grant an injunction to restrain the publicationPublication It includes any speech, writing, broadcast, or other communication in whatever form (including internet and social media), which is addressed to the public at large or any section of the public., even though it may be shown not to be injurious to Bโs property.
(f) A, being Bโs medical adviser, threatens to publish Bโs written communications with him, showing that B has led an immoral life. B may obtain an injunction to restrain the publication.
(g) In the cases put as illustrations (v) and (w) to section 54 and in illustrations (e) and (f) to this section, the Court may also order the copies produced by piracy, and the trade-marks, statements and communications, therein respectively mentioned, to be given up or destroyed.
56. An injunction cannot be granted
Injunction when refused.
(a) to stay a judicial proceeding pending at the institution of the suit in which the injunction is sought, unless such restraint is necessary to prevent a multiplicity of proceedings;
(b) to stay proceedings in a Court not subordinate to that from which the injunction is sought;
(c) to restrain persons from applying to any legislative body:
(d) to interfere with the public duties of any department of the Government, or with the sovereign acts of a foreign Government;
(e) to stay proceedings in any criminal matter;
(f) to prevent the breach of a contract the performance of which would not be specifically enforced;
(g) to prevent, on the ground of nuisance, an act of which it is not reasonably clear that it will be a nuisance;
(h) to prevent a continuing breach in which the applicant has acquiesced;
(i) when equally efficacious relief can certainly be obtained by any other usual mode of proceeding except in case of breach of trust;
(j) when the conduct of the applicant or his agents has been such as to disentitle him to the assistance of the Court;
(k) where the applicant has no personal interest in the matter.
Illustrations.
(a) A seeks an injunction to restrain his partner, B, from receiving the partnership debts and effects. It appears that A had improperly possessed himself of the books of the firm and refused B access to them. The Court will refuse the injunction.
(b) A manufactures and sells crucibles, designating them as โpatent plumbago- crucibles,โ though, in fact, they have never been patented. B pirates the designation. A cannot obtain an injunction to restrain the piracy.
(c) A sells an article called โMexican Balm,โ stating that it is compounded of diverse rare essences, and has sovereign medicinal qualities. B commences to sell a similar article to which he gives a name and description such as to lead peopleMen ฮฮฝฮธฯฯฯฮฟฮน (People), a woman (ฮณฯ
ฮฝฮฑฮฏฮบฮฑ), Man (ฮฮฝฮดฯฮฑฯ) > Adama, Manu > No proof to establish that due to mutation a monkey turned into a human being. into the belief that they are buying Aโs Mexican Balm. A sues B for an injunction to restrain the sale. B shows that Aโs Mexican Balm consists of nothing but scented hogโs lard. Aโs use of his description is not as honest one and he cannot obtain an injunction.
Injunction to perform negative agreement.
57. Notwithstanding section 56, clause (f), where a contract comprises an affirmative agreement to do a certain act, coupled with a negative agreement, express or implied, not to do a certain act, the circumstance that the Court is unable to compel specific performance of the affirmative agreement shall not preclude it from granting an injunction to perform the negative agreement; provided that the applicant has not failed to perform the contract so far as it is binding on him.
Illustrations.
(a) A contracts to sell to B for Rs.1,000 the good-will of a certain business unconnected with business premises, and further agrees not to carry on that business in Rangoon. B pays A the Rs. 1,000 but A carries on the business in Rangoon. The Court cannot compel A to send his customers to B, but B may obtain an injunction restraining A from carrying on the business in Rangoon.
(b) A contracts to sell to B the good-will of a business. A then sets up a similar business close by Bโs shop and solicits his old customers to deal with him. This is contrary to his implied contract, and B may obtain an injunction to restrain A from soliciting the customers, and from doing any act whereby their good-will may be withdrawn from B.
(c) A contracts with B to sing for twelve months at Bโs theatre and not to sing in public elsewhere. B cannot obtain specific performance of the contract to sing, but he is entitled to an injunction restraining A from singing at any other place of public entertainment.
(d) B contracts with A that he will serve him faithfully for twelve months as a clerk. A is not entitled to a decree for specific performance of this contract. But he is entitled to an injunction restraining B from serving a rival house as clerk.
(e) A contracts with B that, in consideration of Rs.1,000 to be paid to him by B on a day fixed, he will not set up a certain business within a specified distance. B fails to pay the money. A cannot be restrained from carrying on the business within the specified distance.
More Stories
Caste Disabilities Removal Act (1850)
Presidency Small Cause Courts Act, 1882
Aligarh Muslim University Act 1920