Section 202 Indian Contract Act is one of the most important provisions for understanding when a Power of Attorney can continue even after the principal’s death. It creates an exception to the general rule that agency ends when the person who gave the authority dies. That distinction matters a great deal in property and financial transactions, where many people assume that an “irrevocable” Power of Attorney automatically survives forever. However, the law is more precise than that, and the real deciding factor is whether the agency is truly coupled with interest.
Imagine this. You buy a flat in Pune, pay the full amount, receive possession, and also get a General Power of Attorney in your favour. At first, everything appears secure. However, when the seller dies, the legal position may change overnight. That is exactly the kind of dispute that brings Section 202 Indian Contract Act into sharp focus.
A Power of Attorney, or POA, is a legal document through which one person, called the principal, authorises another person, called the agent, to act on their behalf. It may cover property, finances, contracts, or business matters. In simple language, it creates an agency relationship, and that relationship is governed by the Indian Contract Act.
The general rule is straightforward. Under Section 201, an agency ends when the principal dies or becomes of unsound mind. So, unless an exception applies, the agent’s authority also ends at that point. This is why a Power of Attorney is not automatically permanent, even if the parties casually describe it that way.
That rule exists for a reason. Once the authority that created the agency disappears, the agent cannot continue to act as though nothing has changed. In most situations, the death of the principal brings the agency to an immediate close.
Section 202 creates the exception. It applies when the agency is coupled with an interest, meaning the agent has a real existing stake in the subject matter. In that case, the agency may survive the principal’s death because ending it would prejudice that existing interest.
However, this phrase is often misunderstood. It does not refer to a general expectation, a future benefit, or a hope that the agent will gain something later. The law requires a present legal or financial interest that already exists when the authority is created.
That rule exists for a reason. Once the authority that created the agency disappears, the agent cannot continue to act as though nothing has changed. In most situations, the death of the principal brings the agency to an immediate close.
The Supreme Court’s decision in M. S. Ananthamurthy & Anr. v. J. Manjula & Ors. shows how this doctrine works in real life. In that matter, the parties had a property transaction involving a GPA, possession, and an agreement to sell. Everything looked complete on paper, but the situation became legally complicated when the principal died and the heirs challenged what followed.
The crucial fact was that a sale deed had been executed after the principal’s death. Since the agency had already ended under Section 201, the GPA holder had no continuing authority to execute the document. The Court therefore treated the post-death act as invalid.
One important lesson from the case is that legal labels do not control the outcome by themselves. A document may say “irrevocable,” but that alone does not make it so under the law. Courts look at the real substance of the arrangement and ask whether a genuine interest is actually being protected.
That is why the phrase Section 202 Indian Contract Act cannot be used as a magic phrase to save every POA. If the facts do not support a real existing interest, the label will not rescue the document.
The Supreme Court’s reasoning can be understood in two parts. First, there must be a principal-agent relationship. Second, the agent must have an existing interest in the subject matter. If either part is missing, Section 202 does not apply.
This is the key distinction that many buyers miss. Paying the full price or receiving possession may create contractual rights, but that does not automatically amount to the kind of proprietary or financial stake required by the section. The interest must be real, present, and legally recognisable.
The confusion around GPA transactions has existed for years, especially in property markets where people tried to avoid full registration or stamp duty. Many transactions were structured using a GPA, agreement to sell, and possession, as if those elements together were enough to transfer ownership. But the courts have consistently rejected that approach.
The Supreme Court in Suraj Lamp & Industries Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Haryana made the law clear. A GPA does not convey title in immovable property. It merely authorises someone to act on behalf of another person. It does not transfer ownership.
So, even if a transaction looks complete in practical terms, Section 202 Indian Contract Act cannot be used to convert a GPA into a title document. If there is no genuine existing interest, the agency cannot be treated as surviving death merely because the parties wanted it to.
Many buyers believe that once they have paid in full and taken possession, they must have enough legal control over the property. That belief is understandable, but it is not the same as ownership. The law distinguishes between a contractual expectation and a legal interest that can support an irrevocable agency.
This distinction matters because the court will not allow a transaction to be dressed up as something it is not. If the structure is really a workaround for proper transfer formalities, Section 202 will not validate it.
The confusion around GPA transactions has existed for years, especially in property markets where people tried to avoid full registration or stamp duty. Many transactions were structured using a GPA, agreement to sell, and possession, as if those elements together were enough to transfer ownership. But the courts have consistently rejected that approach.
A classic example is a lender who receives authority to deal with mortgaged property in case of default. Here, the lender already has a financial interest because the property secures the loan. The POA is not just a convenience; it is a protection for an existing stake.
If the borrower dies during the loan period, the lender’s authority may still survive because the agency is coupled with that financial interest. In that situation, Section 202 protects the substance of the deal rather than letting the authority vanish with the person who created it.
The same logic applies in structured finance and some business arrangements. A security trustee may be given authority to hold and enforce security for lenders, and that authority is tied to an existing legal and financial interest. In such situations, the POA may properly fall within Section 202.
The key point is always the same: the interest must exist first. It cannot be invented later merely to make the POA look stronger or more permanent. Courts will always test whether the authority truly protects something real.
For buyers, the safest lesson is simple. Do not rely on a GPA as a substitute for a registered sale deed. A GPA gives authority, not ownership. If property is being purchased, a registered sale deed remains the strongest and safest legal document.
If you are dealing with property, do not assume that an irrevocable POA will automatically protect you. Do not assume that possession plus agreement to sell equals title. And do not assume that Section 202 will help unless there is a genuine, existing interest in the subject matter.
The best approach is to get the legal structure right from the start. If there is a sale, register the sale deed. If there is a financial or security arrangement, make sure the POA clearly reflects the real interest it is meant to protect.
The real strength of Section 202 is that it balances two things. First, it protects genuine commercial and financial interests. Second, it prevents people from using a Power of Attorney as a disguised method of transfer when the law requires proper conveyancing and registration.
In legitimate lending and security situations, the law must preserve the lender’s or stakeholder’s rights. Otherwise, real commercial arrangements could collapse simply because the principal dies. That would create uncertainty and unfairness in finance and property dealings.
At the same time, the courts draw a firm line against misuse. A GPA cannot become ownership just because someone wants it to. The courts have made it clear that Section 202 Indian Contract Act is a shield for real interests, not a loophole for avoiding the law.
The simplest way to understand this provision is to remember one rule: the document’s label is never enough. What matters is the actual interest behind it. If the interest is real and existing, Section 202 may apply. If it is only a label, a hope, or a workaround, the law will not protect it.
That is why the Ananthamurthy case and Suraj Lamp are so important together. One explains when authority ends after death, and the other explains why GPA sales cannot replace proper title transfer. Read together, they send a clear message: the law protects substance, not shortcuts.
Blog Author: MP Legal Consultants
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