Example sentences of "[noun pl] [prep] the [noun] of goods " in BNC.

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1 Pickfords had relied on canals and roads for the transport of goods , but Baxendale early appreciated the advantages of railways .
2 In s6 of UCTA 1977 there are certain special provisions which relate to the statutory implied terms in contracts of sale and s7 ( as amended by the SGSA 1982 ) , contains analogous provisions with regard to other contracts for the transfer of goods .
3 It does n't matter that the guitar was second-hand ; the law talks about contracts for the sale of goods , and does n't refer to first , second , third or even fourth hand .
4 The SGSA s 2 implies warranties as to title and quiet possession into all contracts " for the transfer of goods " which are equivalent to those implied into contracts for the sale of goods under s 12 of the SGA .
5 This is obviously the case with contracts for the sale of goods and other supply contracts , where there is an extensive body of statutory implied terms .
6 There is one proviso : s6 applies to clauses excluding liability for breach of the implied terms in contracts for the sale of goods and applies to all contracts , including those not made in the course of a business .
7 This approach is assisted by the common law saving provision found in s62(2) of the SGA 1979 which states : ( 2 ) The rules of the common law , including the law merchant , except in so far as they are inconsistent with the provisions of this Act , and in particular the rules relating to the law of principal and agent and the effect of fraud , misrepresentation , duress or coercion , mistake , or other invalidating cause , apply to contracts for the sale of goods .
8 In particular , in the interpretation of provisions of the SGA 1979 relating to implied terms , Lord Diplock said ( at p501 ) that the Act " ought not to be construed so narrowly as to force on parties to contracts for the sale of goods promises and consequences different from what they must reasonably have intended " .
9 The latter two Acts will be referred to as necessary in this and the following chapters , and , needless to say , no legal adviser should be without copies of these Acts , as well as a standard reference work on the subject , when drafting conditions or contracts for the supply of goods and services .
10 The UCTA is concerned to regulate the use of clauses which exclude liability for failure to perform , for certain other types of tortious acts , and for failure to comply with certain warranties implied into contracts for the supply of goods and services under the SGA and SGSA ( for instance as to good title under the SGA ) .
11 ( ii ) international contracts for the supply of goods ;
12 The particular approach to consumer contracts for the supply of goods and services will be discussed in detail in Chapter 5 .
13 Having dealt with the question of exclusion clauses in general , the UCTA then deals with the question of the extent to which liability for breach of certain warranties implied into contracts for the supply of goods and services under the SGA , the SGSA and the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 can be excluded by express provision in the relevant contract .
14 International contracts for the supply of goods , even if prima facie caught under s 27 , will be exempt under s 26 of the UCTA , if they fulfil its rather strict requirements .
15 The DTI consider that although the title of the Directive applies to all contracts involving consumers , the recitals and indeed parts of the text , imply that it can only apply to contracts for the supply of goods and services .
16 Schedule 2 , for example , lists a number of factors which the court is to take into account in assessing reasonableness under ss6 and 7 — ie in relation to clauses excluding liability for breach of the implied terms in contracts for the supply of goods .
17 Definition and Nature of Contracts for the Supply of Goods
18 ( d ) Transfers of goods and services The law has traditionally distinguished between contracts for the supply of goods and contracts for the supply of services .
19 Indeed the Law Commission Working Paper No 77 , Implied Terms in Contracts for the Supply of Goods ( 1977 ) , recognised three possible approaches : firstly , the bailor is strictly liable ( Jones v Page ( 1867 ) 15 LT 619 per Kelly CB at p621 ) ; secondly , the goods must be as fit as care and skill can make them ( Hyman v Nye ( 1881 ) 6 QBD 685 per Lindley J at p682 ) ; thirdly , the bailor is liable only if he fails to take reasonable care to ensure that the goods are fit which , as the via media of the two other approaches , was eventually adopted in s9 of SGSA 1982 .
20 Category of contract : contracts for the barter of goods , and for the supply of labour and materials .
21 Category of contract : business contracts for the barter of goods , for the supply of labour and materials , and for the hire , lease rental or bailment of goods .
22 Category of contract : business contracts for the barter of goods , for the supply of labour and materials , and for the hire , lease rental or bailment of goods .
23 contracts for the hire of goods
24 The Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 implies terms into contracts under which the property ( ownership ) in goods passes , and also into contracts for the hire of goods and contracts for services .
25 The Hague Rules embodied in the 1924 Brus-sels Convention on Bills of Lading contain no express internationality requirement at all , though clearly directed at contracts for the carriage of goods by sea from one State to another , a point made explicit by the Visby amendments .
26 ( ii ) all contracts where the party ( " businessman " ) seeking to rely on the exemption clause entered into the contract in the course of a business ( except those businesses excluded under Sched 1 to the UCTA — basically those which have some other form of statutory regulation such as insurance contracts , contracts for the carriage of goods by sea , or contracts whose subject matter is specialised , and which therefore have a particular body of law governing them , such as real property or intellectual property ) .
27 This states that individuals will value currencies for the bundle of goods that can be purchased with them .
28 ( 2B ) For the purposes of this Act , the quality of goods includes their state and condition and the following ( among others ) are in appropriate cases aspects of the quality of goods — ( a ) fitness for all the purposes for which goods of the kind in question are commonly supplied , ( b ) appearance and finish , ( c ) freedom from minor defects , ( d ) safety , and ( e ) durability .
29 Thus , if the allocation of risks under the Sale of Goods Act is uncertain , the contract can provide for foreseeable contingencies .
30 The draftsmen of the Supply of Goods and Services Act elected not to attempt to define " service " , probably in deference to the very wide variety of services offered both to consumers and to businesses .
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