A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law
This book offers a genealogy of the core concepts of Indian contract law, tracing their trajectory from the nineteenth century soil of English jurisprudence in which they germinated, to their transplantation into the Indian Contract Act 1872, and the interpretation of the provisions containing these concepts by Indian courts and influential treatise-writers, over the last one hundred and fifty years.

The concepts studied by the book are: i) formation; ii) consideration; iii) privity; iv) capacity; v) consent; vi) frustration; vii) damages viii) stipulated sums; and ix) unjustified enrichment. With respect to each of these concepts, the book seeks to provide an account of the state of the English law at the eve of the drafting of the Act, with a particular emphasis on the impact the civil law had on the concept and a close study of the legislative history of the provisions of the Act codifying the concept, with a view to uncovering what the drafters had originally envisaged.

Based on extensive doctrinal and archival research, the book offers:

  • a historical background to the drafting of the Indian Contract Act and the codification process
  • a jurisprudential exploration of the limitations of common law codification gleaned from the working of the Act
  • the draft of the contract code accompanying the report of the Indian Law Commissioners in 1866, which is essential to understand the intention of the drafters of the Act
  • historical insights which hold the key to illuminating contemporary contract law problems of the kind courts routinely grapple with
1147193559
A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law
This book offers a genealogy of the core concepts of Indian contract law, tracing their trajectory from the nineteenth century soil of English jurisprudence in which they germinated, to their transplantation into the Indian Contract Act 1872, and the interpretation of the provisions containing these concepts by Indian courts and influential treatise-writers, over the last one hundred and fifty years.

The concepts studied by the book are: i) formation; ii) consideration; iii) privity; iv) capacity; v) consent; vi) frustration; vii) damages viii) stipulated sums; and ix) unjustified enrichment. With respect to each of these concepts, the book seeks to provide an account of the state of the English law at the eve of the drafting of the Act, with a particular emphasis on the impact the civil law had on the concept and a close study of the legislative history of the provisions of the Act codifying the concept, with a view to uncovering what the drafters had originally envisaged.

Based on extensive doctrinal and archival research, the book offers:

  • a historical background to the drafting of the Indian Contract Act and the codification process
  • a jurisprudential exploration of the limitations of common law codification gleaned from the working of the Act
  • the draft of the contract code accompanying the report of the Indian Law Commissioners in 1866, which is essential to understand the intention of the drafters of the Act
  • historical insights which hold the key to illuminating contemporary contract law problems of the kind courts routinely grapple with
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A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law

A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law

by Shivprasad Swaminathan
A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law

A Historical Introduction to Indian Contract Law

by Shivprasad Swaminathan

Hardcover

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Overview

This book offers a genealogy of the core concepts of Indian contract law, tracing their trajectory from the nineteenth century soil of English jurisprudence in which they germinated, to their transplantation into the Indian Contract Act 1872, and the interpretation of the provisions containing these concepts by Indian courts and influential treatise-writers, over the last one hundred and fifty years.

The concepts studied by the book are: i) formation; ii) consideration; iii) privity; iv) capacity; v) consent; vi) frustration; vii) damages viii) stipulated sums; and ix) unjustified enrichment. With respect to each of these concepts, the book seeks to provide an account of the state of the English law at the eve of the drafting of the Act, with a particular emphasis on the impact the civil law had on the concept and a close study of the legislative history of the provisions of the Act codifying the concept, with a view to uncovering what the drafters had originally envisaged.

Based on extensive doctrinal and archival research, the book offers:

  • a historical background to the drafting of the Indian Contract Act and the codification process
  • a jurisprudential exploration of the limitations of common law codification gleaned from the working of the Act
  • the draft of the contract code accompanying the report of the Indian Law Commissioners in 1866, which is essential to understand the intention of the drafters of the Act
  • historical insights which hold the key to illuminating contemporary contract law problems of the kind courts routinely grapple with

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032480091
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/16/2025
Pages: 324
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Shivprasad Swaminathan is Professor and Dean at the Shiv Nadar School of Law, Shiv Nadar University, Chennai. He got his undergraduate degree from Indian Law Society, Pune before going on to read for the BCL and D. Phil at Oxford University, where he was a Clarendon Scholar. He is the co-editor of Foundations of Indian Contract; and his work has been published in leading journals including Cambridge Law Journal, Modern Law Review, Legal Theory and Oxford Journal of Legal Studies.

Table of Contents

List of Cases vi Preface xvi Acknowledgements xxi 1 Historical Background to the Indian Contract Act 1 2 Formation 22 3 Consideration 43 4 Privity 73 5 Capacity 98 6 Consent 116 7 Frustration 140 8 Damages and Stipulated Sums 165 9 Unjustied Enrichment 202 10 Thrills and Perils of Common Law Codication 239 Appendix 251 References 287 Index 296

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