Contract and Its Kinds (Continued)
Contract and Its Kinds (Continued)
4. By Parties
a. Unilateral contract
b. Bilateral contract
1. Classification of Contract by Enforceability:
a. Valid contract
When agreement fulfills basic essentials of contract.
If any party breaches agreement, the other party can file suit against him/her.
e.g. “A” promises to sell his car to “B” for Rs. 800,000.
b. Void contract
Not enforceable by law.
Contract that was valid at the time of its formation but with the passage of
time becomes unenforceable/ void due to certain reasons.
Benefit received by any party is bound to return it back to the other party.
c. Void Agreement
An agreement that is unenforceable from its formation, i.e. it is void ab-initio.
It lacks essentials to contract except free consent. Parties are not competent,
consideration is unlawful, object is unlawful.
e.g. “A” promises to buy bike from “B” who is a minor.
“C” promises to buy a dog from “B” for 10,000. the dog was dead before the
agreement was made but the parties were unaware.
d. Voidable Contract
A contract that is valid but that can be declared invalid at the request of one of
the parties because of a defect or illegality in making it.
e. Unenforceable Contract
Contract not enforceable on the basis of technical defects such as absence of
writing, registration, requisite stamp etc.
e.g. “C” borrows Rs. 1 billion from “B” and makes a pronote on Rs. 10 stamp paper.
f. Illegal Agreement
Agreement forbidden by law, or is fraudulent or involves injury to the person or
property of another or court regards it immoral or opposed to public policy.
A collateral agreement to illegal agreement is also void.
e.g. Lending money for smuggling or buying a car for bomb blast.
2. By Formation
a. Express contract
The agreement of the parties is expressed in words, either in oral or written form.
The terms of which are all clearly stated either orally or in writing, so there is no
difficulty in understanding the rights and obligations of the parties.
e.g. “A” tells on telephone to “B” that he wants to sell his car for 15 Lakhs and “B” informs
“A” that he agrees to buy the car.
b. Implied contract
It is a legally-binding obligation that derives from actions, conduct, or circumstances of
one or more parties in an agreement.
It arises when one person without request, render services.
e.g. A shoe shiner starts polishing your shoes and you allow him, is an implied contract.
c. Quasi contract
A quasi contract is a court-imposed document designed to prevent one party
from unfairly benefiting at another party's expense, even though no contract
exists between them. Also called constructive contract.
e.g. Finding the lost goods and returning it back to the owner.
3. By Performance
a. Executed contract
A contract that has been fully performed by both parties.
e.g. “A” buys a book from “B” for 500. “B” delivers the book and “A” pays the price.
b. Executory contract
An executory contract is a contract that has not yet been fully performed.
e.g. “A” agrees to teach “B” next month and “B” promises to pay Rs. 800.
4. By Parties
a. Unilateral contract
When one party, the offeror, makes an offer. It could be an offer to the general public
or to a specific person.
The party making the offer, makes a promise in exchange for the act of performance
by the other party.
e.g. “A” promises to pay Rs. 1000 to anyone who finds his lost bag.
b. Bilateral contract
A promise made by one party in exchange for the performance of some act by the other
party.
e.g. Any sales agreement is an example of a bilateral contract.