Unlawful Object
Unlawful Object
Meaning of Unlawful Consideration and Object: – Two things are necessary for
a contract to be a valid contract i.e., a valid object and a valid consideration. If they
are not, hence it is Unlawful consideration. If the object and consideration are not
valid, then the contract is said to be void.
Therefore the Indian Contract Act provides us with the parameters that make up such
legitimate consideration and objects of contract.
Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act clearly states that the consideration or object
of a contract is considered a valid consideration or object and if they are not, the
object and consideration shall be deemed to be unlawful. Section 23 of the Indian
Contract Act, 1872, specifies three issues, for example, consideration for the
agreement, the object of the agreement and the agreement in essence. Section 23
makes a restriction on the freedom of an individual in connection to going into
agreements and subjects the privileges of such individual to the overriding
contemplations of public policy and the other provisions articulated under it.
The word “Object” used in Section 23 indicates and signifies “purpose” and doesn’t
imply importance in a similar sense as “consideration”. Therefore, despite the fact
that the consideration of an agreement might be legal and genuine, that won’t stop
the agreement from being unlawful if the purpose (object) of the agreement is illicit.
Section 23 limits the courts since the section isn’t guided by the thought or motive,
to the object of the exchange or transaction fundamentally and not to the reasons
which lead to the equivalent.