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

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1 First on the list of their declared objectives was ‘ The establishment of a store for the sale of provisions , clothing etc. ’ ; and third ‘ To commence the manufacture of such articles as the Society may determine upon , for the employment of such members as may be without employment , or who may be suffering in consequence of repeated reductions in their wages . ’
2 Because of the complexity of conveying all the assets , agreements for the sale of businesses are perhaps even more varied than share sale agreements .
3 The move is widely expected to see the society — which is currently a tied agent of Standard Life for the sale of investments — reviewing the options for starting its own life-assurance operation .
4 There was a market for the sale of products of the forest ( meat , fish , nuts and honey ) and agricultural goods ( grain , sheepskins and vegetables ) .
5 The district council claim that unauthorised use of the farm shop for the sale of goods not produced within the farm holding is not a use ancillary to agricultural use , and is contrary to policies laid down by the district local plan .
6 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 .
7 However , even a change from one class of use to another will require planning permission only if the change is deemed to be a ‘ material ’ change : if , for instance , an entrepreneur wishes to convert a shop , which falls into the class of buildings used primarily for the sale of goods by retail , into a restaurant see Westminster City Council v. McDonald 's Hamburgers ( 1986 ) 7 CL 325 ( b ) .
8 ‘ ( 1 ) Where a member state prohibits retail premises from being open on Sunday for the sale of goods to customers , save in respect of certain specified items sales of which are permitted , and where the effect of the prohibition is to reduce in absolute terms the sales of goods in those premises including goods manufactured in other member states , and correspondingly to reduce the volume of imports of goods from other member states , is such a prohibition a measure having equivalent effect to a quantitative restriction on imports within the meaning of article 30 of the Treaty ?
9 Contracts other than for the sale of goods
10 IN most respects a purchase made at an auction constitutes an ordinary contract for the sale of goods .
11 It is perfectly possible in law for parties to make an interim agreement for the sale of goods which requires further negotiation to iron out the less important details of the transaction , Pagnan S.p.A .
12 Where there is a contract for the sale of goods by description , there is an implied condition that the goods will correspond with the description .
13 The result of all this is that the terms contained in the Sale of Goods Act which are implied into a contract for the sale of goods will not apply to a computer software contract .
14 It was held that when time for delivery is of the essence of a contract for the sale of goods ( that is , a condition ) and after the stipulated time has elapsed the buyer waives his right to cancel by pressing for delivery , converting the term into a warranty , he may later give notice setting a reasonable deadline , once again making the time for delivery a condition of the contract .
15 The contract for the sale of goods was voidable not void , and had not been avoided when the goods were delivered .
16 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 .
17 International distributorship agreements will also fall under s 26 since they are pure agreements for the sale of goods , and thus fall within the SGA ( see SGA s 1(3) ) .
18 An arrangement where an agent works on a commission with a consignment stock , is obviously not an agreement for the sale of goods , but is a contract under or in pursuance of which possession of goods passes ( UCTA , s 26(3) ( a ) ) .
19 Precedent 1 is a set of standard conditions for the sale of goods written from the viewpoint of the seller .
20 Under a contract for the sale of goods the seller 's basic obligation is to deliver the goods , and the buyer 's basic obligations are to accept and pay for them ( SGA 1979 , s27 ) .
21 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 .
22 Thus , for instance , a clause in a contract between a retailer and a consumer for the sale of goods which requires the consumer to indemnify the manufacturer against product liability claims brought by third parties injured by the goods would be subject to the reasonableness test under s4 .
23 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 .
24 A contract is an international supply contract if three conditions are satisfied : ( a ) it is a contract for the sale of goods or it is one under , or in pursuance of which , possession or ownership of goods passes ; and ( b ) it is made by parties whose places of business ( or habitual residence , if they have no place of business ) are in the territories of different states ; and ( c ) either ( i ) at the time the contract is made , the goods are in the course of carriage , or will be carried , between the territories of two states ; or ( ii ) the acts constituting offer and acceptance were done in the territories of different states ; or ( iii ) the contract provides for the goods to be moved to the territory of a state other than that in which the offer and acceptance took place .
25 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 .
26 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 " .
27 In order to satisfy the SGA 1979 , the definition requires that the following components be present : ( a ) Contract for the sale of goods It should be noted that within the definition of a contract of sale a distinction is drawn between an executory sale or agreement to sell , and an executed transfer .
28 However , much will depend upon the circumstances so that profits à prendre can not be considered as a contract for the sale of goods being simply a privilege to work the land in question .
29 There may also be a contract of sale with respect to a future contingency so that s5(2) of SGA 1979 states : ( 2 ) There may be a contract for the sale of goods the acquisition of which by the seller depends on a contingency which may or may not happen .
30 The approach of the law is to distinguish the following transactions , namely , a contract for the sale of goods with a severable contract for services , a sale of goods , a contract for work and materials , and lastly , the supply of services .
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