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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There are three N.F.P.A. Codes which specify the protection of the storage of goods in the United States of America .
2 It would appear from paragraph ( a ) that a seller who has a monopoly over the supply of the kind of goods in question is unlikely to convince the court of the reasonableness of a wide exemption clause , especially if it was a large demand for the product which enabled him to insist on the clause being in the contract .
3 Erm Of the total of goods that are sold in industrialized countries , such as , that have been manufactured , only three percent of them are made in developing countries .
4 Regulations 802/68 and 803/68 respectively on the concept of the origin of goods and on the valuation of goods for customs purposes were enacted under Article 235 on the basis that the treaty had not otherwise provided the necessary powers .
5 Such ideal conditions contrast sharply with the actual experiences of ‘ war communism ’ : money became valueless because of the disappearance of goods , wages were replaced by rations — the rations of abject poverty not abundance — prices became imaginary because money no longer had any value , and paper money was issued by keeping the printing presses working day and night , amounting to hyper-inflation !
6 The shaded area between the actual time-series and the trend line in Fig. 3.1 is called the output gap and is a reflection of the output of goods and services which has been lost as a result of the unemployment .
7 The usual solution to this problem is to express local authority expenditure as a proportion of the gross national product ( GNP ) , that is , the total value of the output of goods and services produced within the country , together with the net property income from abroad .
8 As a result the Company lost its monopoly ; after 1697 all English merchants could trade with West Africa , though they were supposed to pay a tax of 10 per cent of the value of goods exported from England , the proceeds of which went to the Royal Africa Company to enable it to keep up its forts on the West African coast .
9 Why else may money prices give a poor indication of the value of goods and services ?
10 I. Industrialists use the advantage of the transshipment of goods at Hull for a number of flour mills and also oil-seed mills which make cattle cake .
11 These are perhaps best illustrated by the workmen who , for example , seem to be incapable of doing anything without 20-minute tea breaks , management which seems uninterested in providing proper supervision , or boards which seem more interested in finding ways of jacking up their remuneration package irrespective of performance , or complaining to Government about interest rates , rather than wondering why they are not making some of the flood of goods which our continental competitors find it profitable to sell to the UK .
12 As the law stands , everything turns on the fortuitous circumstance of the existence or non-existence of a formal contract between two parties even though the reality of the supply of goods and services from one of the principals to another within the meaning of section 17(3) is not in question .
13 The leading case on the requirement of reasonableness arose , not under the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 , but under the earlier provisions of the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 which were replaced by the 1977 Act .
14 The statutory terms ( as to title , description , quality and sample ) implied by sections 2–5 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 are dealt with in the same way as the corresponding terms implied in contracts of sale of goods .
15 Turning to hire contracts , it will be remembered that there are statutory implied terms as title , description , quality and sample implied by sections 6–10 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 ( see paragraph 8–08 above ) .
16 A further explanation , however , is required in relation to the term as to reasonable care and skill implied by section 13 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 .
17 or ( c ) The promotion ( e.g. by advertising or labelling ) of the supply of goods or services .
18 These words were new in section 14 by virtue of the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 .
19 Computer hardware , if it is sold , will be subject to the Sale of Goods Act 1979 whereas an agreement for specially written ( " bespoke " ) software will be within the scope of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 .
20 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 .
21 Expert systems and other types of software which provide advice could , arguably , be construed as supplying a service and thus fall within the ambit of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 .
22 This is because section 12(1) of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 states that a " contract for the supply of a service " means : … a contract under which a person ( " the supplier " ) agrees to carry out a service .
23 The first Part of this book deals with standard sets of conditions covering various relationships that can arise in the context of the supply of goods and services in the course of a business , ranging from short form standard conditions for the supply of goods and the provision of services , to a full contract for the supply of a turnkey system .
24 Section 6(1) of the UCTA states that ( under any contract for the sale or hire purchase of goods , not merely business contracts — see s 6(4) ) liability for breach of the obligations arising from the warranties as to title and quiet possession implied under SGA 1979 , s 12 ( in relation to sale of goods ) and s 8 of the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 ( in relation to goods disposed of on hire purchase ) can not be excluded or restricted by reference to any contract term .
25 This gives rise to special problems in the area of the supply of goods which infringe third party intellectual property rights , where the UCTA applies .
26 5.1 The Seller warrants that [ ( except in relation to intellectual property rights of third parties as referred to in Condition 5.3 ) ] the Seller has good title to the goods [ and that ( pursuant to s 12(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 , or s 2(3) of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 , whichever Act applies to the Order ) it will transfer such title as it may have in the goods to the Purchaser pursuant to Condition 5.5 ] .
27 14.1 If and to the extent that s 6 and/or 7(3A) of the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 applies to the Order , no provision of these terms and conditions shall operate or be construed to operate so as to exclude or restrict the liability of the Seller for breach of the express warranties contained in Condition 5 , or for breach of the applicable warranties as to title and quiet possession implied into the terms and conditions of the Order by s 12(3) of the Sale of Goods Act 1979 , or s 2(3) of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 , whichever Act applies to the Order .
28 properly will depend on either the specific instructions given to him or arguments about the implied duties of an expert conducting a reference : for three possible examples , see 14.8 , 14.9 and 14.10. a breach of the implied duty under s14 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 , unless there is a specific time provision or the duty has been expressly excluded by agreement with the parties .
29 The standard of competence of a professional was laid down in Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Committee [ 1957 ] 1 WLR 582 and now in s13 of the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 ; there is an implied obligation of reasonable skill and care .
30 In addition , the case was decided under the provisions of the Supply of Goods ( Implied Terms ) Act 1973 , under which reasonableness was to be assessed at the time of breach .
  Next page