Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
A Project on
SALE AND AGREEMENT TO SELL
SUBMITTED BY: -Faiz Kazi ROLL NO- 45 SEMESTER III; BATCH XI 2012-13
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CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.PAGE 3 OBJECTIVES...PAGE 4 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY......PAGE 4 SECTION 4PAGE 5 SECTION 5PAGE 5 ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF SALE.PAGE 6 STATUTORY TRANSACTIONSPAGE 7 SALE OR RETURN..PAGE 8 SALE OR BAILMENT..PAGE 8 SALE OR HIRE..PAGE 8 SALE OR AGENCY...PAGE 9 CONDITIONAL CONTRACTSPAGE 10 CONTINGENT CONTRACTS..PAGE 10 PROMISSORY CONTRACTS...PAGE 10 MORTGAGE...PAGE 11 PLEDGE.......PAGE 11 SALE DISTINGUISHED FROM AN AGREEMENT TO SELL...PAGE 12 CONCLUSIONPAGE 13
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
First and foremost, I am thankful to Mrs. Padma, Faculty of Law Of Contracts, HNLU, for allotting me the topic i.e.SALE AND AGREEMENT TO SELL to work as a project on Law of Contracts. She has been very kind in providing inputs for this work, by way of suggestions and materials. I would also like to thank my dear colleagues and friends in the University, who have helped me with ideas about this work. Last, but not the least I thank the University Administration for equipping the University with such good library and internet facilities, without which, no doubt this work would not have taken the shape in correct time.
FaizKazi ROLL NO.-45
SOCIOLOGY MAJOR
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Objectives:
(i) (ii) To discuss and do an extensive research on the topic Sale and Agreement to Sell. To show how the judiciary interprets the statute and to discuss various cases.
Research Methodology:
The method of research adopted for the project is analytical methodology. For the present project relevant data and information has been received and collected from secondary sources and there has been use of authentic books and websites which provided reliable information and data.
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1 2
Popatlal Shah v. State of Madras, AIR 1953 SC 274 Union of India v. the Central india Machinery Mfg Co Ltd &Ors AIR 1997 SC 1537 3 Harrison v. Luke (1845) 14 M&W 139 4 Commissioner of Income Tax Andhra Pradesh v. M/s Motors & General Stores (P) Ltd. AIR 1968 SC 200 5 Aldridge v. Johnson (1857) 7 E&B 885 6 South Australian insurance Co v Randell (1869) LR 3 PC 101 7 Popatlal Shah v State of Madras AIR 1953 SC 274
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Statutory Transactions:
Sometimes a contract may not be entered into by the normal process of negotiation, but under a statutory compulsion. When the goods are supplied under a statutory compulsion whether that results into a sale or not, is the question which has arisen in a number of cases. It has been held in the English cases that supply of goods by virtue of a statutory, would not be a sale of such goods as the consensual element which forms the basis of a contract is absent.8 Cases of compulsory acquisition of property by the stand on a different footing since there is no question in such cases of offer and acceptance nor of consent, either express or implied. Though compulsory acquisition of property would exclude the element of mutual assent which is vital to a sale, so long as mutual assent, express or implied, is not totally excluded the transaction will amount to sale. A transaction which is affected in compliance with the obligatory sense of a statue may nevertheless be a sale in the eyes of law.9 In cases of the so called statutory transactions whether they amount in law to sale or not, would depend upon whether the liberty of contract in relation to the fundamentals of the transaction is completely excluded by the provision of the statue or order.
8 9
Appleby v Sleep [1968] 2 All ER 265 M/s Vishnu Agencies (Pvt) Ltd v Commercial Tax Officer &Ors AIR 1978 SC 449
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Sale or Return:
Contract on Sale or return means that the option is with the buyer to keep them as goods sold to him or return them to the seller within the stipulated time or within a reasonable time.10
Sale or Bailment:
There is a test to distinguish to differentiate between a sale of goods and bailment. The test is whether the party delivering the goods is entitled to the specific return of what he has delivered. If not, there is no bailment, although the party may be entitled to claim goods of like amount and quality, or goods or money at his election, for example, where wheat of several owners is delivered to a miller, who may grind and sell it, the parties describing the transaction as storage.11 Whether the containers such as sacks, barrels and bottles in which the goods are supplied, are themselves the subject of a sale or are merely bailed to the buyer is a question of construction of the contract. The question may arise in context of merchantability of the goods when they are packed in a defective container which may render the goods unmerchantable or harmful.12
Sale or Hire:
A common method of selling goods is by means of an agreement commonly known as hire-purchase agreement, which is more accurately described: as a hiring agreement coupled with an optionto purchase, that is to say, the owner lets out the chattel on hire and undertakes to sell it to the hirer his making a certain number of payments. If that is the real effect of the agreement, there is no contract of sale until the hirer has made the requisite number of payments, and he remains a bailee until then. But some so-called hire-purchase agreements are in reality contracts to purchase, the price to be paid in installments, and in those cases the contract is a contract of sale and not of hiring.13 It must be depend on the terms of the contract whether it is to be regarded as a contract of hiring or a contract of sale.14
10 11
Poole v Smiths Car Sales (Balham) Ltd [1962] 2 All ER 482 (CA) South Australian Insurance Co v Randell (1869) LR 3 PC 101 12 Geddling v Marsh [1920] 1 KB 668 13 Lee v Butler [1893] 2 QB 318 14 McEntire v Crossley Brothers [1895] AC 457
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Sale or Agency:
The essence of a contract of sale is the transfer of title to the goods for a price paid or promised. The transferee in such a case, is liable to the transferor as a debtor for the price to be paid and not an agent for the proceeds of debtor for the price to be paid and not as an agent for the proceeds of debtor for the price to be paid and not as an agent for the proceeds of sale. The essence of agency to sell is the delivery of the goods to a person who is to sell them not as his own property but as the property of the principal who continues to be the owner of the goods and therefore, will be liable to account for the sale proceeds. The question as to whether a transaction is a sale or a contract of agency is a mixed question of fact and law.15Mere formal description of a person as an agent or buyer is not conclusive, unless the context shows that the parties clearly intended to treat a buyer as a buyer and not an agent. 16
15 16
Sri TirumalaVenkateshwara Timber and Bamboo Firm v Commercial Tax Officer, Rajahmundry AIR 1968 SC 784 Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd v Sales tax officer Bhopal AIR 1977 Sc 1275
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Conditional Contracts:
Contracts are conditional when their enforceability against one or both parties depends upon the performance or fulfillment of some condition, and condition may be either contingent or promissory. The transfer of the property in the goods may be subjected by a term of contract of sale to a condition that the property shall not pass until the price is paid in full. The contracts containing such retention of title clause are absolute contracts for the sale of goods within the meaning of s4(2) of the Act.17
Contingent Contracts:
In the first class of case, the promise of one or both parties to a contract may be dependent upon the happening of an uncertain event or upon the existence of a state of affairs at the time when the performance is due, or upon the existence of a state of affairs not within the promisors knowledge at the time of the making of the contract, without there being any promise or statement by him that the event will happen or that the state of affairs exists or will continue. If the event does not happen, or the state of affairs does not exist or continue, thee promise cannot be enforced against him, and the other party is relived from further liability, though he has no right of action for the breach of the promise.18
Promissory Conditions:
In the second class of case, the obligation of one party to perform his promise is dependent upon the performance by the other party of his promise and that promise by the other party of his promise and that promise may take form of a statement which he must make good, as well as of a promise to do something in the future. In such cases, the promise to be performed or statement to be made good by the party making it, is a promissory condition, and its non-fulfillment not only relieves the other party from all his obligations under the contract, but may also give him a right of action.
17 18
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Mortgage:
A mortgage of goods is in form and in strict law a conditional sale, but from the earliest times equity has regarded it as nothing more than a security. It therefore, does not give that complete domination to the mortgagee over the goods sold which is an essential part of the contract of sale,19 and is, therefore, not regarded as such and is expressly excluded from the operation of the Act by s 66(3). But there may be a sale with a condition for resale to the original seller which need have nothing to do with a mortgage.20
Pledge:
A sale is defined as a transfer of the property in goods and s 2(1-1) of the Act defines property so as to mean the general property in the goods and not merely a special property. In pledge, the pledger retains the general property. A pledge is still further removed from a contract of sale, for when the chattel is delivered to the pledgee the general property is retained by the pledger, and the pledgee has only a right to sell the article pledged on the expiration of the time for which the loan secured by the pledge was granted, and after notice to the pledger.21 A pledge, too, is entirely outside the Act, as is any other form of charge upon personal goods or any other form of security in which they play a part.
19 20
MR Dhavan v Madan Mohan &Ors AIR 1969 Del 313 Beckett v Tower Assets Co [1891] 1 QB 1 21 Contract Act ss 172,177
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Sec 55 Sec 56
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Conclusion:
Section 4 of the Sale of Goods Act, 1930, comprises of the project topic Sale and Agreement to Sell. Section 4(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 price.
The definition of contract of sale of goods reveals that either actual sale or an agreement to sell,
both are covered under the act. But, there are certain differences between the two. Where in a contract of sale, the property in the goods is immediately transferred from the buyer to the seller it is called a sale. Where under a contract of sale, the transfer of property in the goods is to take place in the future or after the fulfillment of certain conditions, it is called An agreement to sell.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY:
1) LAW OF SALE OF GOODS AND HIRE PURCHASE, AVTAR SINGH, 6th Edition 2) POLLOCK AND MULLA, THE SALE OF GOODS ACT
WEBLIOGRAPHY:
1) www.managementparidise.com 2) www.chestofbooks.com 3) www.slidenotes.blogspot.in
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