Part 6: The “Special Ops” of Contract Law – Quasi, Bailment, Guarantee & Agency

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    ​ The “Special Ops” of Contract Law – Quasi, Bailment, Guarantee & Agency

    ​Up until now, we’ve talked about contracts where two people sit down and explicitly agree to something. But the real world is messy. What happens when you leave your car with a valet? Or when your dad co-signs your education loan? Or when a delivery guy hands you a pizza you didn’t order, but you eat it anyway?

    ​The second half of the Indian Contract Act (Sections 124 onwards, plus Quasi-Contracts) deals with these specific, everyday relationships.

    ​1. Quasi-Contracts: The “Accidental” Contract (Sections 68-72)

    ​A Quasi-Contract isn’t actually a contract. There is no offer, no acceptance, and no true consent. It is an obligation imposed by law to prevent Unjust Enrichment.

    • The Golden Rule: You cannot get rich at someone else’s expense unfairly.
    • The Pizza Example (Section 70): If Zomato accidentally delivers your neighbor’s paid-for pizza to your door, and you eat it, you are legally bound to pay for it. You didn’t make a contract with Zomato, but the law pretends you did so that you don’t get a free meal at their expense.
    • Finder of Lost Goods (Section 71): If you find a diamond ring on the street, you don’t own it. You become a “bailee” (more on that below) and must take reasonable care of it and try to find the true owner.

    ​2. Indemnity vs. Guarantee: Who Takes the Fall?

    ​These two often get confused, but for CLAT-PG, the distinction is crucial. It’s all about how many people are involved and when the liability hits.

    • The Setup: Two parties (Indemnifier and Indemnity Holder).
    • The Promise: “If you suffer a loss because of my conduct or the conduct of any other person, I will make good that loss.”
      • Real-World Example: Most general insurance contracts (fire, marine) are contracts of indemnity. Note for CLAT: Life insurance is generally not considered a strict contract of indemnity in India because you can’t put a financial value on a human life.

    ​Contract of Guarantee (Section 126)

    • The Setup: Three parties (Creditor, Principal Debtor, and Surety).
    • The Promise: “Give my friend a loan. If he doesn’t pay you back, I will.”
    • The Catch: The Surety’s liability is co-extensive with the Debtor. However, the Surety’s liability is secondary. The Creditor must first try to get the money from the friend (the primary defaulter) before coming after you.

    ​3. Bailment & Pledge: The Art of Handing Things Over

    ​Whenever you give your physical property to someone else without transferring ownership, you are entering this territory.

    ​Bailment (Section 148)

    • The Setup: Delivery of goods for a specific purpose.
    • The Rule: The exact same goods must be returned (or disposed of as directed) once the purpose is accomplished.
      • Everyday Examples: Giving your clothes to a dry cleaner, handing your laptop to a repair shop, or leaving your car with a restaurant valet.
    • The Duty: The person receiving the goods (the Bailee) must take as much care of them as a “man of ordinary prudence” would take of his own things.

    ​Pledge (Section 172)

    • The Setup: A Pledge is simply a special type of bailment.
    • The Difference: Here, the goods are delivered specifically as security for a debt or promise.
      • Everyday Example: Pawning your gold jewelry at a Muthoot Finance branch to get a cash loan. If you don’t repay the loan, the “Pawnee” has the right to sell the gold to recover their money.

    ​4. Agency: The Clone Protocol (Section 182)

    ​Corporations cannot physically sign papers or negotiate deals—they are invisible legal fictions. They act through Agents.

    • The Core Maxim: Qui facit per alium facit per se (He who acts through another does the act himself).
    • The Setup: An Agent is employed to do any act for a Principal, or to represent the Principal in dealings with third persons.
      • The Magic Trick: When an authorized Agent signs a contract with a third party, it is legally as if the Principal signed it. The Agent completely drops out of the picture and usually cannot be sued personally if things go wrong.

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