Example sentences of "[prep] which [art] goods " in BNC.

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1 A court in deciding whether goods were unsafe will have regard to all the circumstances , including the purpose for which the goods were marketed , their ‘ get-up , ’ any instructions or warnings given , and also any published standards of safety .
2 ‘ ( 3 ) Where the seller sells goods in the course of a business and the buyer , expressly or by implication , makes known ( a ) to the seller or ( b ) … any particular purpose for which the goods are being bought , there is an implied condition that the goods supplied under the contract are reasonably fit for that purpose .
3 In all such cases , the buyer is far better advised to include an express statement of the purpose for which the goods are intended , and an express warranty as to their suitability for it .
4 ( j ) The implied obligation of fitness for purpose The implied condition of merchantability is supplemented by the fitness for purpose provision found in s14(3) of SGA 1979 which provides : ( 3 ) Where the seller sells goods in the course of a business and the buyer , expressly or by implication , makes known ( a ) to the seller , or ( b ) where the purchase price or part of it is payable by instalments and the goods were previously sold by a credit-broker to the seller , to that credit-broker , any particular purpose for which the goods are being bought , there is an implied condition that the goods supplied under the contract are reasonably fit for that purpose , whether or not that is a purpose for which such goods are commonly supplied , except where the circumstances show that the buyer does not rely , or that it is unreasonable for him to rely , on the skill or judgment of the seller and credit-broker .
5 Firstly , knowledge on the part of the seller , bailor , transferor or their agent of the purpose for which the goods are sought .
6 ( p93 ) It would appear that as long as the buyer communicates the purpose for which the goods are required , he does not have to specify all of the particular applications so long as they fall within the scope of normal purpose .
7 The registry was to act as an agent for the parties ' endorsement of bills , as well as for the delivery of the paper based bill of lading with which the goods would be claimed from the carrier .
8 In this way , the question of suitability is really only another aspect of the description or specification with which the goods are to conform , and it is up to the seller to accept or reject this term as he sees fit .
9 Section 4 provides : ( 1 ) A person applies a trade description to goods if he ( a ) affixes or annexes it to or in any manner marks it on or incorporates it with ( i ) the goods themselves or ( ii ) anything in , on or with which the goods are supplied ; or ( b ) places the goods in , on or with anything which the trade description has been affixed or annexed to , marked on or incorporated with , or places any such thing with the goods ; or ( c ) uses the trade description in any manner likely to be taken as referring to the goods .
10 Where products are still subject to a national organisation of the market , and the conditions under which the goods are marketed leads to distortion of the terms of competition under which similar goods are marketed in other member states , the Commission may impose compensatory charges upon exports of the product from the member state of origin .
11 Proviso ( a ) It is difficult to understand this defence because it is already included within the statutory definition of merchantibility as it will affect the description under which the goods are sold .
12 The number indicates the year in which the goods were made .
13 Use your gumption as they say in Yorkshire and above all pay attention to the way in which the goods are described to you .
14 The rule extends to the packaging in which the goods are supplied .
15 And a similar list for a heavy goods vehicle manufacturers might look something like this : 1 A release on the year 's export success for both the heavy goods vehicle publications and all the publications covering the industries to which the goods were sold .
16 The business to which the goods are sold ( if it is registered for VAT ) , when it makes its return to Customs and Excise , claims back the VAT which it has paid on the goods , which is known as the input tax .
17 First , the fitness of purpose envisaged is a fitness not just for one or some of the purposes to which the goods are commonly put , but a fitness for all such purposes .
18 The factors were the scale of the burglary , the evident planning , the speed at which the goods arrived and the quantity of goods .
19 In this case the court gave a further reason why the false statement was not caught by section 14 , namely that it related to the price at which the goods were offered for supply and section 14 did not cover false statements about prices .
20 Elementary description had a natural place particularly where " errors of description " had been excepted and the courts tended to discover some measure of description by which the goods had been sold ( see for example Taylor v Bullen ( 1850 ) 5 Ex 779 ) .
21 One must look to the contract as a whole to identify the kind of goods that the seller was agreeing to sell and the buyer to buy … where , as in the instant case , the sale ( to use the words of s13 ) is " by sample as well as by description " , characteristics of the goods which would be apparent on reasonable examination of the sample are unlikely to have been intended by the parties to form part of the " description " by which the goods were sold , even though such characteristics are mentioned in references in the contract to the goods that are its subject matter .
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