Example sentences of "goods to [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Are employment figures alone sufficient to infer that the economy has shifted from a goods to a service economy , that the economy has moved from an industrial stage to a post-industrial stage .
2 From this it follows that s62(4) applies to transactions where the sale is a complete sham , ie where the owner purports to sell goods to a creditor in order to raise secured finance while retaining possession .
3 There is then a risk that the buyer , before he has paid and therefore before he has acquired title , sells and delivers the goods to a sub-purchaser who is unaware that he is buying from someone who has no title .
4 As long as the carrier continues to be liable for the delivery of the goods to a holder of the missing bill of lading , the indemnity has to run for long or indefinite periods of time .
5 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 .
6 A publican or tobacconist who , in good faith , sells his goods to a 15-year-old who looks 20 has committed a crime , unless he successfully employs the permitted defence that he sold the goods innocently .
7 Typically then they operate to defeat the title of the unpaid seller ( let us call him C ) who has entrusted his goods to a buyer who , without paying C , has in turn sold them to an innocent purchaser .
8 The House of Lords rejected this argument and held that the two sections could defeat the title only of an owner who had entrusted possession of his goods to a buyer .
9 Our plans were to stay in Arad for two nights , deliver food and goods to a gypsy community close by , visit the church with which we have a link with and then continue our journey to Bucharest ( the final 380 miles ) on Wednesday .
10 The second category relates to a transaction whereby a private person disposes of goods to a businessman .
11 For example a manufacturer who sells his goods to a wholesaler may in the contract exclude his liability in respect of defects in the goods .
12 There was no time for thought as they transported their meagre goods to a place Travis considered a safe distance from the wreck .
13 Suppose that under a contract , the seller is to deliver the goods to a ship and that the buyer is to nominate the ship so that delivery can be made .
14 If a manufacturer in Hong Kong sells his goods to a merchant in Manila the payment which he receives is no doubt sourced in Manila but his profit on the transaction arises in and is derived from his manufacturing operation in Hong Kong .
15 ‘ ( 1 ) The unpaid seller of goods loses his lien or right of retention in respect of them ( a ) when he delivers the goods to a carrier or other bailee or custodier for the purpose of transmission to the buyer without reserving the right of disposal of the goods ; ( b ) when the buyer or his agent lawfully obtains possession of the goods , ( c ) by waiver of the lien or right of retention . ’
16 Thus if a seller entrusts identified and appropriated goods to a carrier with instructions that they be conveyed to the buyer but not handed over until the buyer has paid , the goods will remain the seller 's property until the buyer pays for them .
17 Sometimes we are not convincing because what we say is belied by our actions — for instance , a woman who wears a permanent fixed smile while trying to reprimand a subordinate , or when returning faulty goods to a shop .
18 The directors are anxious to relieve themselves of their personal liability , so they decide to use what money is available in repaying the bank and to leave those who have supplied goods to the company to whistle for their money .
19 He may , where the goods are at the time of the sale in the possession of a third party ( e.g. at a warehouse ) , instruct the third party to hold the goods to the order of the buyer .
20 Secondly , there are offences intended to prevent anyone wrongly claiming to have supplied goods to the Queen ( or to anyone else ) or wrongly claiming royal approval , e.g. by displaying an emblem resembling that of the Queen 's Award to Industry .
21 463 , a decision of the Court of Appeal to the effect that the false pretences rule concerning the passing of a good title to an innocent purchaser applied when the owner had been induced by false pretences to deliver goods to the buyer on sale or return .
22 Release of the goods to the buyer , and verification of all the terms and conditions of the credit was a two step process .
23 Thus , unless otherwise agreed it is not for the seller to convey the goods to the buyer but for the latter to collect them .
24 Where the seller is authorised or required to send the goods to the buyer , delivery to a carrier for that purpose will normally constitute complete performance of the seller 's duty of delivery , section 32(1) .
25 When the carrier wrongfully refuses to deliver the goods to the buyer .
26 ‘ ( 1 ) Where the seller wrongfully neglects or refuses to deliver the goods to the buyer , the buyer may maintain an action against the seller for damages for non-delivery. ( 2 ) The measure of damages is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting , in the ordinary course of events , from the seller 's breach of contract .
27 Section 2(1) of the Sale of Goods Act defines a contract of sale of goods as : ‘ a contract whereby the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer for a money consideration , called the price . ’
28 The words in section 2(1) ‘ transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer ’ have been interpreted by the courts to require that the transfer of ownership to the buyer should be the main object of the agreement .
29 ( 2 ) Where , in pursuance of the contract , the seller delivers the goods to the buyer or to a carrier or other bailee or custodier ( whether named by the buyer or not ) for the purpose of transmission to the buyer , and does not reserve the right to disposal , he is taken to have unconditionally appropriated the goods to the contract . ’
30 This is a " good " and the transaction is clearly subject to the Sale of Goods Act 1979 , section 2(1) of which states : … a contract of sale of goods is a contract by which the seller transfers or agrees to transfer the property in goods to the buyer for a money consideration called the price .
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