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Home » Doctrine of Privity of Contract

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Doctrine of Privity of Contract

7 min read

1) Meaning (Definition) #

Privity of contract means that a contract creates rights and obligations only between the parties who have made it. Therefore, a third person (stranger) who is not a party to the contract cannot generally sue to enforce it, even if the contract was intended to benefit them.

2) Core principle and Rule #

Rule (general):

  1. Only a party to the contract can sue upon it.
  2. A stranger to the contract cannot enforce the contract.
  3. Similarly, a stranger is ordinarily not made liable under it.

3) Statutory basis under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (ICA) #

The ICA does not use the word “privity” directly, but the rule flows from the scheme of the Act:

  • Section 2(h): contract = agreement enforceable by law (enforceability is between contracting parties).
  • Section 10: contracts are made by competent parties with consent, lawful consideration & object (again party-centric).
  • Section 37: “parties” must perform their promises (duty is on parties).
  • Section 73: compensation for breach is generally claimed by the party affected by breach (party enforcement).

The Supreme Court has clearly reaffirmed that a third party cannot enforce a contract, except under recognized exceptions.

4) Leading Case Laws (General Rule of Privity) #

(A) Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd. v. Selfridge & Co. Ltd. (1915, House of Lords) #

Facts: Dunlop (manufacturer) sold tyres to Dew (dealer) under a resale price maintenance scheme. Dew sold to Selfridge (retailer) on terms that Selfridge would not resell below a fixed price and would pay a sum as damages if it did. Selfridge sold below the fixed price. Dunlop sued Selfridge though Dunlop was not a party to the Dew–Selfridge contract.

Issue: Can Dunlop (a non-party) enforce the promise made by Selfridge to Dew?

Held: No. Dunlop was a stranger to the contract between Dew and Selfridge, hence could not sue on it. The case is a classic authority for the rule: only parties to a contract can sue upon it.

(B) Donoghue v. Stevenson (1932, House of Lords) — Privity when no formal contract exist (Contract vs Tort) #

Facts: Donoghue consumed ginger beer bought by her friend. She allegedly suffered illness due to a decomposed snail in the bottle. She had no contract with the manufacturer (Stevenson).

Issue: Can she claim against the manufacturer despite no privity of contract?

Held: She could proceed in tort (negligence) because a manufacturer owes a duty of care to the ultimate consumer even without a contract (“neighbour principle”). This case does not create a contract-exception to privity; it shows that absence of contractual privity blocks contract remedies, but tort may still provide relief.

(C) Landmark Indian authority reaffirming the Doctrine of Privity: M.C. Chacko v. State Bank of Travancore (1969, Supreme Court) #

Facts: A bank had dues arising from a borrower’s account supported by a personal guarantee given by a family elder. After the guarantor died, the bank’s attempt to enforce the guarantee directly was held barred by limitation. So the bank tried to recover by relying on a family deed/arrangement under which certain property/members were said to bear that liability—though the bank was not a party to that deed.

Issue: Can a third party (bank), not a party to the family deed/arrangement, enforce its terms to recover money?

Held: No. The Supreme Court reaffirmed privity of contract: a stranger to a contract cannot sue on it, except under recognised exceptions (like trust, charge, assignment, etc. discussed below). The bank could not claim an enforceable exception under that deed, so it could not enforce the family deed.

5) Exceptions to Privity of Contract #

I) Trust (Beneficiary can enforce) #

Rule: If the contract is made in such a manner that a party holds the benefit as trustee for a third person, then the beneficiary may enforce it (directly or through the trustee).

Illustration (safe and standard):
A contracts with B that B will hold ₹1,00,000 in trust for C and will pay C from that fund. Even though C is not a party, C can enforce because B is treated as a trustee for C.

II) Family settlement or Marriage settlement #

Rule: A third party can sue where the contract is part of a family arrangement or marriage settlement giving a clear benefit (maintenance or allowance) to that person.

Landmark: Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan v. Nawab Husaini Begum (1910, Privy Council) #

Facts: Husaini Begum was married (as a minor) to son of Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan. In connection with the marriage, Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan entered into an agreement with Husaini Begum’s father to pay Husaini Begum a fixed monthly allowance for her maintenance. To secure this obligation, the Nawab charged his own specified immovable property so the allowance would be payable out of income generated through that property. When payment was not made, Husaini Begum sued to enforce the allowance though she was not a signatory.

Issue: Can the wife, as the beneficiary of a family arrangement, enforce the agreement despite not being a party to it (privity), particularly where the promise is secured by a charge on the promisor’s property?

Held: Yes. The Privy Council allowed enforcement. Because the agreement was made for her direct benefit and created a charge on the defendant’s immovable property, she was entitled to proceed in equity to enforce the obligation, even though she was not formally a contracting party.

III) Charge on property (Benefit attached to property) #

Rule: If a transaction creates a charge or interest in specific property for the benefit of a third person, the third person may enforce the charge (right is attached to property, not merely personal).

Landmark (also supports this head): Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan v. Nawab Husaini Begum (1910) #

Held (point relevant here): The benefit was supported by a charge on property, for benefit of a person (Husaini Begum) therefore enforcement was permitted.

IV) Agency (Principal can sue/be sued) #

Rule: A contract made by an agent within authority binds the principal; thus, even if principal is not signing personally, law treats the principal as the real contracting party (privity is satisfied through agency).

ICA provisions:

  • Section 182 (agent/principal defined)
  • Section 226 (principal bound by agent’s acts)
  • Section 230 (agent not personally liable, subject to exceptions)

Landmark case: Watteau v. Fenwick (1893) #

Facts: Fenwick bought a beerhouse but let it continue in the name of the manager, Humble, who was ex-owner. Fenwick privately instructed Humble that he could buy only ale (a type of beer) stock and had no authority to buy cigars. Watteau, believing Humble was the owner, supplied cigars on credit. Humble didn’t pay, so Watteau sued Fenwick as the undisclosed principal.

Issue: If the real owner is an undisclosed principal, is he liable for a contract made by the agent (manager) where the agent exceeded the actual authority given by the principal, but the act is of a kind normally done by someone managing such a business?

Held: Yes. Fenwick was liable. Even though Humble’s actual authority was restricted, purchasing items like cigars was within the usual authority of a manager of a beerhouse. For an undisclosed principal, liability can attach for acts that are usual for an agent in that position, despite secret limitations and despite the third party not knowing the principal existed.

V) Assignment (Assignee can sue) #

Rule: Contractual rights may be assigned (transferred). The assignee then enforces the rights in his own name (subject to restrictions—e.g., personal contracts, or contracts prohibiting assignment).

Illustration:
A has a right to receive ₹5,00,000 from B under a contract. A assigns this right to C (valid assignment). Now C can sue B for payment as assignee of the contractual right.

VI) Acknowledgement or Estoppel #

Rule: If the promisor, by words or conduct, acknowledges liability towards the third party and the third party acts on it, the promisor may be prevented (estopped) from denying liability.

Illustration:
A and B agree that A will pay ₹10,000 to C (B’s creditor).
After that, A tells C directly: “Don’t worry, I will pay you ₹10,000 next week.”
So C does not file a case against B (he holds back because of A’s promise).
Later A refuses to pay and says “No privity.”
A can be estopped from denying payment because C relied on A’s assurance and changed position.

VII) Statutory exception (Right created by statute for third parties) #

Rule: Where a statute grants rights to a third party, privity does not apply because statutory right overrides the common law limitation.

Standard examples:

  1. Negotiable Instruments: a holder in due course can sue on the instrument though not an original party (statutory right).
  2. Motor Vehicle third-party insurance: statutes create direct rights for third-party victims against insurers.
  3. Consumer protection: consumers may sue manufacturers and service provider in many situations even without direct contractual privity (often supported by statute and tort principles example Donoghue Snail in Ginger Beer Bottle case above).

VIII) Mercantile & Commercial documents (e.g., Bills of lading, documents of title) #

Rule: In commercial law, rights pass with mercantile documents (like bills of lading), and the holder can enforce rights arising out of carriage usage.

Illustration:
A consignor ships goods and receives a bill of lading. The bill is endorsed to C (buyer also called consignee). C, as lawful holder, can claim delivery and enforce carriage-related rights through the commercial-document mechanism.

6) Conclusion #

The doctrine of privity preserves contractual certainty by restricting enforcement to contracting parties (Dunlop). However, to prevent injustice and to meet social and commercial needs, law recognizes settled exceptions such as trusts, family arrangements or marriage settlements, charges on property, agency, assignment, estoppel, statutory rights, and mercantile practice—while tort law (Donoghue) may provide relief even where contract privity fails.

Updated on 21 January 2026
Law of Contract I Privity of Contract

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Table of Contents
  • 1) Meaning (Definition)
  • 2) Core principle and Rule
  • 3) Statutory basis under the Indian Contract Act, 1872 (ICA)
  • 4) Leading Case Laws (General Rule of Privity)
    • (A) Dunlop Pneumatic Tyre Co. Ltd. v. Selfridge & Co. Ltd. (1915, House of Lords)
    • (B) Donoghue v. Stevenson (1932, House of Lords) — Privity when no formal contract exist (Contract vs Tort)
    • (C) Landmark Indian authority reaffirming the Doctrine of Privity: M.C. Chacko v. State Bank of Travancore (1969, Supreme Court)
  • 5) Exceptions to Privity of Contract
    • I) Trust (Beneficiary can enforce)
    • II) Family settlement or Marriage settlement
      • Landmark: Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan v. Nawab Husaini Begum (1910, Privy Council)
    • III) Charge on property (Benefit attached to property)
      • Landmark (also supports this head): Nawab Khwaja Muhammad Khan v. Nawab Husaini Begum (1910)
    • IV) Agency (Principal can sue/be sued)
      • Landmark case: Watteau v. Fenwick (1893)
    • V) Assignment (Assignee can sue)
    • VI) Acknowledgement or Estoppel
      • VII) Statutory exception (Right created by statute for third parties)
    • VIII) Mercantile & Commercial documents (e.g., Bills of lading, documents of title)
    • 6) Conclusion

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