DIN is a unique identification number for directors of Indian companies. It is valid for the director’s lifetime and is required for all Indian directors irrespective of their citizenship. However, DIN is not mandatory for directors of foreign companies with only branch offices in India.
Match the following committees with their mandates in List I and List II: 
| List-I (Reasons) | List-II (Examples) |
|---|---|
| (A) Contract contingent on marriage | (I) A and B contract to marry each other. Before the marriage, A goes mad. |
| (B) Repudiation of a voidable contract | (II) A agrees to sell B 100 bags of wheat. Before delivery, the government bans private trading. |
| (C) Supervening impossibility | (III) A contracts to give a loan if B marries C. C dies unmarried. |
| (D) Subsequent illegality | (IV) A forces B to sell his car worth 15,00,000 for 5,00,000. B rescinds the contract. |