This document defines and provides examples of actionable claims under Indian law. It states that an actionable claim is a species of property that can be owned and transferred. The Transfer of Property Act defines an actionable claim as a claim to an unsecured debt or a claim to any beneficial interest in movable property not in possession of the claimant. Examples provided show that an actionable claim allows someone to bring a legal action to recover money owed or damages, but does not include secured debts or contingent interests that cannot be recovered through the courts.
2. We are here …
1. Movable and immovable property
2. Attestation and notice
3. Actionable claim
4. Transfer of property
5. Restraints on transfer
6. Rule against perpetuities
7. Vested and contingent interest
8. Doctrine of election
9. Sale of immovable property
3. Actionable claim
• Is a species of property. Hence capable of
ownership and transfer.
• Sec. 3 of TP Act defines actionable claim to a
claim:
– To any debt other than a debt secured by mortgage of
immovable property or by hypothecation or pledge of
movable property
– To any beneficial interest in movablesd not in
possession actual or constructive of the claimant
– Which the Civil Courts recognise as affording grounds
for relief, whether such debt or beneficial interest be
existent, accruing, conditional or contingent.
4. In brief
• Actionable claim means:
– A claim to an unsecured debt or
– A claim to any beneficial interest in movable
property not in possession of the claimant
5. Chose-in-action
• In England: personal property, not in the
possession of the claimant, which can only
be recovered by taking action in the court.
• If an amount is certain, then only it can be
considered debt
• If the amount is uncertain, it is not debt
• Debts may be payable in future or
conditional or contingent
6. illustrations
• “A” owes Rs. 1000 to “B”. “B”’s claim is an actionable
claim. Because, “B” can bring an action in a court and
claim back the amount
• “A” borrows Rs. 1000 from “B” and mortgages his house
to him. Mortgage is not an actionable claim.
• “A” contracts to buy goods from “B”. On the due date, A
fails to take delivery and B sells the goods in the open
market at a loss of Rs. 1000. B has a right to claim the
damages from A, but this claim is not an actionable
claim.
• A contracts to sell to B, 100 bales of cotton deliverable
on a future day. B has a beneficial interest in the goods
and it is an actionable claim
7. Cases
• Doraiswamy Mualiar v. D. Aiyangar
• Jafer Meher Ali v. Budge Jute Mills
• Official Assignee v. Hukum Chand
8. The contents of this file have been compiled from various
reliable sources. Due care has been taken to avoid
errors. The author of this work takes no responsibility for
the consequences arising out of error. The reader is
advised to cross check with the text books and the Act in
case of confusion. You are allowed to share this file with
your friends without making changes to the contents of
this file. However, you are not allowed to exploit this
work commercially.
- Gagan K.
University of Mysore
gagan555@gmail.com