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SALES OF GOODS
ACT, 1930

   AMANPREET KAUR
   EKTA VERMA
   AKHIL PANCHAL
   MANISH MAINI
TOPICS COVERED:
 Formation of contract of sales
 Difference between sale and Agreement to sell,

 Difference between sale and hire purchase,

 Difference between sale and bailment

 Bail agreement

 Conditions and warranties

 Rule of Caveat Emptor

 Rights of unpaid seller.
HISTORY

   Sale of goods act was enacted in 1930.

   Borrowed from the English act.

   Came into force in July, 1930.

   Prior to the act, the law of sale of goods was
    contained in chapter VII of the Indian contract
    act,1872.
FORMATION
      OF
CONTRACT OF SALE
DEFINITION
   Sec 4(1) of the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930
    defines the contract of he sale of goods in the
    following manner:



“ A contract of sale of goods is a contract whereby
 the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the
 property in goods to the buyer for a price”.
The term “Contract of sale of goods‟ is a generic term
  and it includes:
  a.   Sale and
  b.   An agreement to sell
       where the seller transfers the ownership
       rights to the buyer immediately on making
       the contract, it is the contract of sale, but
       where the ownership rights are to pass on
       some future date upon the fulfillment of
       certain conditions then it is called an
       agreement to sell.
ESSENTIALS OF A CONTRACT OF SALE
   Two parties- buyer and seller

   Goods

   Price

   Transfer of general property

   Essential elements of a valid contract

   A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
Sale                          Agreement to sell

 Ownership passes to          Ownership remains
  the buyer.                    with the seller.
 It is a executed             It is a executory
  contract.                      contract.
 Risk of loss falls on the    Risk of loss falls on the
  buyer.                        seller.
 Seller cannot resell the     Seller can sell goods to
                                third party.
 goods.
                               It can be in case of
 It can be in case of          future and
  existing and specific         unascertained goods.
  goods.
Sale                             Agreement to sell


 In case of breach of a          In case of breach of a
  contract, seller can sue for     contract, seller can sue
  the price of the goods .         only for damages not for
 The seller is only entitled      the price.
  to the ratable dividend of      The seller may refuse to
  the price due if the buyer       sell the goods to the buyer
  becomes insolvent.               w/o payments if the buyer
 The buyer is entitled to         becomes insolvent.
  recover the specific            Buyer can claim only
  property from the                ratable dividend for the
  assignee if the seller           money paid.
  becomes insolvent.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN
Sale                          Hire-purchase agreement

 Property in the goods        The goods passes to
  is transferred to the         the hirer on the
  buyer immediately at          payment of the last
  the time of the contract.     installment.
 The position of the          The position of the
  buyer is that of owner        buyer is that of a bailee
  of the owner of the           till he pays the last
  goods.                        installment.
Sale                          Hire purchase agreement




   The buyer cannot             The hirer may,
    terminate the contract        terminate the contract,
    and is bound to pay the       by returning the goods
    price of the goods.           to its owner without any
                                  liability to pay the
                                  remaining installment.
BAILMENT
   Bailment is the delivery of the goods for some
    specific purpose under a contract on the condition
    that the same goods are to be returned to the bailor
    or are to be disposed of according to the directions
    of the bailor.

   For example:-
    A guard hired to protect the paintings at a museum.
FEATURES OF BAILMENT

1.  Subject is personal property
2.  Transfer is temporary possession
3.  Transfer is temporary control
4.  Both parties intend to return the goods
A bailment must be personal property.
Real property such as land and buildings, cannot be
    bailed.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN
Sale                          Bailment

   The property in goods      There is only transfer
    is transferred from the     of possession of goods
    seller to the buyer.        from the bailor to the
                                bailee for any of the
                                reasons like safe
                                custody, carriage etc.
   The return of goods in     The bailee must return
    contract of sale is not     goods to the bailor on
    possible.                   the accomplishment of
                                the purpose for which
                                bailment was made.
Sale                        Bailment

   The consideration is       The consideration may
    the price in terms of       be gratuitous or non
    money.                      gratuitous.
CONDITIONS AND WARRANTIES
       [SEC 12]
TERMS

   Representation: Statement made by the seller
    before entering into a contract.

   Stipulation: If such representation forms an integral
    part of the contract and other party relies upon it.

  No Representation: CAVEAT EMPTOR‟
i.e., Let the Buyer Beware – is applied
CONDITION AND WARRANTY


   “A stipulation in a contract of sale with reference to
    goods which are subject matter there of, may be a
    condition or a warranty.”



   These stipulations forms a part of the contract of
    sale and breach of it provides a remedy to the
    buyer against the seller.
CONDITION [SEC12(2)]

   “ A condition is a stipulation essential to the main
    purpose of the contract, the breach of which gives
    rise to a right to treat the contract as repudiated.”

   It goes to the root of the contract.

   Its non fulfillment upsets the very basis of the
    contract.
   Example :- [Behn v. Burness,1863]

   By charter party( a contract by which a ship is hired for
    the carriage of goods), it was agreed that ship m of 420
    tons “now in port of Amsterdam” should proceed direct
    to new port to load a cargo. In fact at the time of the
    contract the ship was not in the port of Amsterdam and
    when the ship reached Newport, the charterer refused
    to load. Held, the words “now in the port of Amsterdam”
    amounted to a condition, the breach of which entitled
    the charterer to repudiate the contract.
WARRANTY : SEC.12(3)
   A warranty is a stipulation collateral to the main
    purpose of the contract the breach of which gives
    rise to a claim for damages but not right to reject
    the goods and treat the contract as repudiated.
DISTINCTION BETWEEN
Condition                         Warranty

 It is a stipulation which    It is a stipulation which
  is essential for the          is collateral to the main
  main purpose of the           purpose of the
  contract.                     contract.
 In case of breach of a       In case of breach of
  condition, the                warranty, the aggrieved
  aggrieved party can           party can claim
  repudiate the contract        damages only.
  of sale.
Condition                   Warranty

   A breach of condition      The breach of
    may be treated as           warranty cannot be
    breach of warranty.         treated as a breach of
                                a condition.
TYPES

 Express Conditions : Expressely provided in the
  contract
 Implied conditions & warranty(sec 14 to 17) : which
  the law implies in a contract of sale
IMPLIED CONDITIONS :

 Conditions as to title [Sec.14(a)]
   [Rowland v. Divall,(1923)]
 Sale by description [Sec.15]
 [Bowes v.shand,(1877)]
 Condition as to quality or fitness.[Sec.16(1)]
 Conditions as to Merchantability [Sec.16(2)]
  [R.S.Thakur v. H.G.E. corp., A.I.R.(1971)]
 Conditions implied by custom[Sec.16(3)].
 Sale by Sample (Sec.17)
 Condition as to wholesomeness.
IMPLIED WARRANTIES
 Warranty of Quiet possession-Sec.14(6)
 Warranty against encumbrances-Sec.14(c)

 Warranty to disclose dangerous natures of goods.

 Warranty as to quality or fitness by usage of trade –
  Sec.16(4).
CAVEAT EMPTOR
 Let the „Buyer Beware‟
The maxim Caveat Emptor does not apply & the
     contract will be subject to the implied conditions
     under the following circumstances :
1.   Sale under fitness for buyers purpose
2.   Sale under merchantable quality
3.   Sale under usage of trade
4.   Consent by Fraud
EXCEPTIONS

 Fitness for buyer‟s purpose.
 Sale under a patent or trade name.

 Merchantable quality

 Usage of trade

 Consent by fraud
RIGHTS OF UNPAID SELLER
UNPAID SELLER (SEC.45)

   A seller of goods is deemed to be an unpaid seller when:-

•   The whole of the price has not been paid or tendered;

•   A bill of exchange or other negotiable instrument has been
    received as a conditional payment, and the condition on which
    it was received has not been fulfilled by reason of the dishonour
    of the instrument or otherwise.
CONDITIONS
   The term "seller" includes any person who is in the position of
    a seller, as, for instance, an agent of the seller to whom the
    bill of lading has been endorsed, or a consignor or agent who
    has himself paid, or is directly responsible for, the price.

   The seller shall be called an unpaid seller even when only a
    small portion of the price remains to be unpaid.

   It is for the non payment of the price and not for other
    expenses that a seller is termed as an unpaid seller.

   Where the full price has been tendered by the buyer and the
    seller refused to accept it, the seller cannot be called as
    unpaid seller.
CONTINUED        ……..

   Where the goods have been sold on credit, the seller
    cannot be called as an unpaid seller. Unless :

   If during the credit period seller becomes insolvent, or

On the expiry of the credit period, if the price remains
 unpaid,
Then, only the seller will become an unpaid seller.
1) Right against goods:
Where the property in the goods has passed
 Lien on goods

 A right of stoppage-in-transit

 A right of Re-sale

Where the property in the goods has not passed
 Withholding delivery

 Stoppage in transit

2) Right against the buyer:
 Suit for price

 Suit for damages

 Repudiation o contract

 Suit for interest
RIGHT OF LIEN (SEC.47-49) :
 the goods are not sold on credit
 the goods have been sold on credit, but the period
  of credit has expired
 the buyer becomes insolvent
RIGHT OF STOPPAGE IN TRANSIT (SEC.50-52)
 The transit is end in following cases:
 If the buyer obtains the possession of the goods
  before its arrival at the destination
 If, after the arrival at their destination, the carrier
  acknowledges to the buyer that he holds on his
  behalf
 If the carrier wrongfully refuses to deliver the goods
  to the buyer
RIGHT OF RE-SALE (SEC.54)
 Where the goods are of perishable nature
 When the buyer does not pay the price
Sales of goods act, 1930

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Sales of goods act, 1930

  • 1. SALES OF GOODS ACT, 1930 AMANPREET KAUR EKTA VERMA AKHIL PANCHAL MANISH MAINI
  • 2. TOPICS COVERED:  Formation of contract of sales  Difference between sale and Agreement to sell,  Difference between sale and hire purchase,  Difference between sale and bailment  Bail agreement  Conditions and warranties  Rule of Caveat Emptor  Rights of unpaid seller.
  • 3. HISTORY  Sale of goods act was enacted in 1930.  Borrowed from the English act.  Came into force in July, 1930.  Prior to the act, the law of sale of goods was contained in chapter VII of the Indian contract act,1872.
  • 4. FORMATION OF CONTRACT OF SALE
  • 5. DEFINITION  Sec 4(1) of the Indian Sale of Goods Act, 1930 defines the contract of he sale of goods in the following manner: “ A contract of sale of goods is a contract whereby the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer for a price”.
  • 6. The term “Contract of sale of goods‟ is a generic term and it includes: a. Sale and b. An agreement to sell where the seller transfers the ownership rights to the buyer immediately on making the contract, it is the contract of sale, but where the ownership rights are to pass on some future date upon the fulfillment of certain conditions then it is called an agreement to sell.
  • 7. ESSENTIALS OF A CONTRACT OF SALE  Two parties- buyer and seller  Goods  Price  Transfer of general property  Essential elements of a valid contract  A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
  • 8. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN Sale Agreement to sell  Ownership passes to  Ownership remains the buyer. with the seller.  It is a executed  It is a executory contract. contract.  Risk of loss falls on the  Risk of loss falls on the buyer. seller.  Seller cannot resell the  Seller can sell goods to third party. goods.  It can be in case of  It can be in case of future and existing and specific unascertained goods. goods.
  • 9. Sale Agreement to sell  In case of breach of a  In case of breach of a contract, seller can sue for contract, seller can sue the price of the goods . only for damages not for  The seller is only entitled the price. to the ratable dividend of  The seller may refuse to the price due if the buyer sell the goods to the buyer becomes insolvent. w/o payments if the buyer  The buyer is entitled to becomes insolvent. recover the specific  Buyer can claim only property from the ratable dividend for the assignee if the seller money paid. becomes insolvent.
  • 10. DISTINCTION BETWEEN Sale Hire-purchase agreement  Property in the goods  The goods passes to is transferred to the the hirer on the buyer immediately at payment of the last the time of the contract. installment.  The position of the  The position of the buyer is that of owner buyer is that of a bailee of the owner of the till he pays the last goods. installment.
  • 11. Sale Hire purchase agreement  The buyer cannot  The hirer may, terminate the contract terminate the contract, and is bound to pay the by returning the goods price of the goods. to its owner without any liability to pay the remaining installment.
  • 12. BAILMENT  Bailment is the delivery of the goods for some specific purpose under a contract on the condition that the same goods are to be returned to the bailor or are to be disposed of according to the directions of the bailor.  For example:- A guard hired to protect the paintings at a museum.
  • 13. FEATURES OF BAILMENT 1. Subject is personal property 2. Transfer is temporary possession 3. Transfer is temporary control 4. Both parties intend to return the goods A bailment must be personal property. Real property such as land and buildings, cannot be bailed.
  • 14. DISTINCTION BETWEEN Sale Bailment  The property in goods  There is only transfer is transferred from the of possession of goods seller to the buyer. from the bailor to the bailee for any of the reasons like safe custody, carriage etc.  The return of goods in  The bailee must return contract of sale is not goods to the bailor on possible. the accomplishment of the purpose for which bailment was made.
  • 15. Sale Bailment  The consideration is  The consideration may the price in terms of be gratuitous or non money. gratuitous.
  • 17. TERMS  Representation: Statement made by the seller before entering into a contract.  Stipulation: If such representation forms an integral part of the contract and other party relies upon it.  No Representation: CAVEAT EMPTOR‟ i.e., Let the Buyer Beware – is applied
  • 18. CONDITION AND WARRANTY  “A stipulation in a contract of sale with reference to goods which are subject matter there of, may be a condition or a warranty.”  These stipulations forms a part of the contract of sale and breach of it provides a remedy to the buyer against the seller.
  • 19. CONDITION [SEC12(2)]  “ A condition is a stipulation essential to the main purpose of the contract, the breach of which gives rise to a right to treat the contract as repudiated.”  It goes to the root of the contract.  Its non fulfillment upsets the very basis of the contract.
  • 20. Example :- [Behn v. Burness,1863]  By charter party( a contract by which a ship is hired for the carriage of goods), it was agreed that ship m of 420 tons “now in port of Amsterdam” should proceed direct to new port to load a cargo. In fact at the time of the contract the ship was not in the port of Amsterdam and when the ship reached Newport, the charterer refused to load. Held, the words “now in the port of Amsterdam” amounted to a condition, the breach of which entitled the charterer to repudiate the contract.
  • 21. WARRANTY : SEC.12(3)  A warranty is a stipulation collateral to the main purpose of the contract the breach of which gives rise to a claim for damages but not right to reject the goods and treat the contract as repudiated.
  • 22. DISTINCTION BETWEEN Condition Warranty  It is a stipulation which  It is a stipulation which is essential for the is collateral to the main main purpose of the purpose of the contract. contract.  In case of breach of a  In case of breach of condition, the warranty, the aggrieved aggrieved party can party can claim repudiate the contract damages only. of sale.
  • 23. Condition Warranty  A breach of condition  The breach of may be treated as warranty cannot be breach of warranty. treated as a breach of a condition.
  • 24. TYPES  Express Conditions : Expressely provided in the contract  Implied conditions & warranty(sec 14 to 17) : which the law implies in a contract of sale
  • 25. IMPLIED CONDITIONS :  Conditions as to title [Sec.14(a)] [Rowland v. Divall,(1923)]  Sale by description [Sec.15] [Bowes v.shand,(1877)]  Condition as to quality or fitness.[Sec.16(1)]  Conditions as to Merchantability [Sec.16(2)] [R.S.Thakur v. H.G.E. corp., A.I.R.(1971)]  Conditions implied by custom[Sec.16(3)].  Sale by Sample (Sec.17)  Condition as to wholesomeness.
  • 26. IMPLIED WARRANTIES  Warranty of Quiet possession-Sec.14(6)  Warranty against encumbrances-Sec.14(c)  Warranty to disclose dangerous natures of goods.  Warranty as to quality or fitness by usage of trade – Sec.16(4).
  • 27. CAVEAT EMPTOR Let the „Buyer Beware‟ The maxim Caveat Emptor does not apply & the contract will be subject to the implied conditions under the following circumstances : 1. Sale under fitness for buyers purpose 2. Sale under merchantable quality 3. Sale under usage of trade 4. Consent by Fraud
  • 28. EXCEPTIONS  Fitness for buyer‟s purpose.  Sale under a patent or trade name.  Merchantable quality  Usage of trade  Consent by fraud
  • 30. UNPAID SELLER (SEC.45)  A seller of goods is deemed to be an unpaid seller when:- • The whole of the price has not been paid or tendered; • A bill of exchange or other negotiable instrument has been received as a conditional payment, and the condition on which it was received has not been fulfilled by reason of the dishonour of the instrument or otherwise.
  • 31. CONDITIONS  The term "seller" includes any person who is in the position of a seller, as, for instance, an agent of the seller to whom the bill of lading has been endorsed, or a consignor or agent who has himself paid, or is directly responsible for, the price.  The seller shall be called an unpaid seller even when only a small portion of the price remains to be unpaid.  It is for the non payment of the price and not for other expenses that a seller is termed as an unpaid seller.  Where the full price has been tendered by the buyer and the seller refused to accept it, the seller cannot be called as unpaid seller.
  • 32. CONTINUED ……..  Where the goods have been sold on credit, the seller cannot be called as an unpaid seller. Unless :  If during the credit period seller becomes insolvent, or On the expiry of the credit period, if the price remains unpaid, Then, only the seller will become an unpaid seller.
  • 33. 1) Right against goods: Where the property in the goods has passed  Lien on goods  A right of stoppage-in-transit  A right of Re-sale Where the property in the goods has not passed  Withholding delivery  Stoppage in transit 2) Right against the buyer:  Suit for price  Suit for damages  Repudiation o contract  Suit for interest
  • 34. RIGHT OF LIEN (SEC.47-49) :  the goods are not sold on credit  the goods have been sold on credit, but the period of credit has expired  the buyer becomes insolvent
  • 35. RIGHT OF STOPPAGE IN TRANSIT (SEC.50-52)  The transit is end in following cases:  If the buyer obtains the possession of the goods before its arrival at the destination  If, after the arrival at their destination, the carrier acknowledges to the buyer that he holds on his behalf  If the carrier wrongfully refuses to deliver the goods to the buyer
  • 36. RIGHT OF RE-SALE (SEC.54)  Where the goods are of perishable nature  When the buyer does not pay the price