Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] the [noun sg] of goods " in BNC.

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1 In Keen v Parker [ 1976 ] RTR 213 it was held that a sidecar designed for the carriage of goods was just as much a sidecar as one which carried passengers .
2 Answer guide : The question here i6 what should be included as the cost of goods sold .
3 Note : In the answer below these are assured not to be included in the stock of goods for resale on the shelves .
4 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 .
5 Nevertheless , whether the parties want compromise or a contest , their legal advisers can not satisfy them without a thorough knowledge of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 ( " UCTA " ) , and of the underlying principles contained in the Sale of Goods Act 1979 ( " SGA " ) , and the Supply of Goods And Services Act 1982 ( " SGSA " ) .
6 The San Giorgio case is also of interest for present purposes in that it accepts that Community law does not prevent a national legal system from disallowing repayment of charges where to do so would entail unjust enrichment of the recipient , in particular where the charges have been incorporated into the price of goods and so passed on to the purchaser .
7 However , a new approach to the question of remedies available for breach was occasioned by Diplock LJ in Hong Kong Fir Shipping Co Ltd v Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd [ 1962 ] 2 QB 26 ( at p70 ) : There are … many contractual undertakings of a more complex character which can not be categorised as being " conditions " or " warranties " , if the late 19th century meaning adopted in the Sale of Goods Act , 1893 , and used by Bowen LJ in Bentsen v Taylor , Sons & Co be given to those terms .
8 When applied to the world of goods , such approaches therefore tend to subsume the whole spectrum of industrial commodities under a variety of notions of cultural dominance .
9 Reference may also be made to the Sale of Goods Act 1893 , s.I(3) ; Timus v. Littlewood [ 1916 ] 1 K.B .
10 The profits made by the sale of goods are ploughed back into wild bird conservation .
11 Although the development officers ’ budget was almost entirely used for the payment of support workers it could also be used for the purchase of goods ( for example a single bed for a client coming out of hospital ) but not for the purchase of other services .
12 He is an agent entrusted with the possession of goods of several principals , or sometimes only one principal , for the purpose of sale in his own name without disclosing the name of this principal and he is remunerated by a commission .
13 The supplier and EC customer may arrange for work to be supplied in the form of goods rather than services , by making two separate supplies .
14 The word ‘ property ’ as used in the Sale of Goods Act means ownership .
15 The word ‘ ascertained ’ is used in the Sale of Goods Act to mean goods which become identified and agreed upon only after the contract is made .
16 The meaning of this word as used in the Sale of Goods Act is in doubt .
17 Revenues realized in a particular period ( measured by the selling prices of goods and services delivered to customers ) less related expenses ( measured by the cost of goods and services used ) gives a profit for the period in question .
18 It still puts such services at a disadvantage compared with the supply of goods to a customer elsewhere in the EC which is zero-rated if VAT numbers are known .
19 In other parts of Brazil , giant corporations exist alongside small peasant producers , with whom they have developed a complex inter-dependence , based on the supply of goods rather than labour .
20 This transfer of ownership is called by the Sale of Goods Act ‘ the Transfer of Property . ’
21 When the Cooking Centre is no longer available a new repository will have to be found for the storage of goods in excess of normal everyday requirements .
22 A clue to these will often be found in the Sale of Goods Act .
23 The wealthy nations are going to be better able to use and organise information , whose value will be very much more closely linked to the value of goods .
24 It all depended on the availability of goods trains in any particular station at any particular time .
25 Traffic carried by the new truck waterway thus increased beyond the volume of goods which had been conveyed along the old cul-de-sac Arun Navigation and it was necessary to extend the waterside storage buildings that had been established at Newbridge .
26 Held , allowing the appeal ( Lord Lowry dissenting ) , that an act expressly or impliedly authorised by the owner of goods or consented to by him could amount to an appropriation of the goods within section 1(1) of the Theft Act 1968 where such authority or consent had been obtained by deception ; and that , accordingly , the defendant had been rightly convicted of theft ( post , pp. 1073F , 1076G–H , 1080C–F , 1081C–D , 1109F , 1111E ) .
27 Examples of contracts governed by the Supply of Goods and Services Act are hybrid contracts , that is , those which involve part services and part goods such as a contract for the painting of a portrait .
28 Thus , whereas section 1 deals with false statements associated with the supply of goods , section 14 deals with false statements associated with the provision of services .
29 So far as the sales of goods are concerned , the current law is consolidated in the Sale of Goods Act , 1979 .
30 Copyright is thus excluded from the definition of goods .
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