HomeNewsTrendsExpert ColumnsCOVID-19 impact: Can you piggyback on force majeure clause and avoid contractual obligations?

COVID-19 impact: Can you piggyback on force majeure clause and avoid contractual obligations?

The law is a living organic thing and there are at least two reasons why those who have no money to honour their bills can remain optimistic.

April 29, 2020 / 11:48 IST
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Rohin Dubey

Whatever be the fate of COVID-19 and the ensuing nationwide lockdown, companies face the harsh reality of receiving little to no revenue in the foreseeable future. Cruel decisions become inevitable: where is the money to honour contracts with employees, vendors or third parties? In this climate, every organisation urgently needs to answer the question: does the law allow them to avoid their contractual commitments?

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At the level of reality check, the law does not matter. If you have no money, you can’t pay anyone no matter what the law says. You would then expect that companies who have taken the trouble to actually have written contracts would scramble to hunt for ‘act of God’ type clauses in their existing documentation. The problem is that these ‘act of God’ clauses contemplate events such as tsunamis and earthquakes but rarely disease. Commercial contracts are after all products of human experience and who in living memory recalls being hit by a pandemic? But stretch and fit to event we must and so, already, countless companies have rightly or wrongly used existing force majeure clauses in their templated standard documentation to refuse payment. Whether such self-serving distortion is defensible depends largely on the precise language used in these clauses and this will doubtless be the subject of much dispute in courts in the years to come.

What about those who weren’t savvy enough to include these legal obscurities in the paperwork? Fortunately for them, there is a glimmer of light out there in the legal fine print: Indian contract law has embedded within it a ‘doctrine of frustration’.