Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Law of Sale of Good (Sale of Goods Act)
- Strictly for the "SALE' of
"GOOD" excludes contract
of hire or leasing, gifts ,
sale of house, provision of
services etc
- Includes WEB-BASED
TRANSACTIONS, provided that
both the buyer and seller are
BASED IN SINGAPORE
(applicable to other countries
provided that the Singapore
Govt governs the transaction)
- IMPLIED TERMS
- Obligations implied by the
SOGA are AUTOMATICALLY
IMPLIED into every contract of
sale EVEN IF THE PARTIES MAY
NOT HAVE EXPRESSIVELY
ADDRESSED THESE ISSUES
- SECTION 12
- Section 12(1): Implied
CONDITION(if breached,
the seller can repudiate
contract, reject goods and
sue for damages if any):
Seller has the RIGHT TO
SELL the goods (PASS
THE OWNERSHIP OF THE
GOOD)
- Section 12(2): Implied
WARRANTY that goods will
be free from any CHARGES
or ENCUMBRANCES(claims
by another party) not made
known to the buyer before
the contract-> if some third
party has some proprietary
interest in the good BUT
SELLER STILL SELLS
WITHOUT DISCLOSING-->
BREACH OF SECTION
12(2)
- Should not have any
lawful interference from
a third party
- eg the sale of pirated
goods, goods that
infringe patent rights of
3rd parties
- SECTION 13
- Section 13: Implied term
that GOODS WILL
CORRESPOND WITH THE
DESCRIPTION
- "contract for sale of good
by description"- goods
ordered by looking at
catalogues,magazines
- Section 13(3): sale of goods
DOES NOT cease to be a sale
by description just because
the good had been
exposed(shown, inspected)
and selected by the buyer
- BUT, the buyer must have
RELIED on the description
- SECTION 14 (140-141)
- Section 14: ONLY applies when the seller is selling in the
COURSE OF BUSINESS; Buyer would not be protected if he
buys goods from seller who is not selling IN THE COURSE
OF BUSINESS
- IMPLIED: Goods will be
satisfactory; 14 2(A);
satisfactory= reasonable
man would regard the
good as satisfactory
considering the
description, price, and all
other relevant
circumstances
- 1) Fit to be used for ALL the
purpose/functions that its
commonly used for 2) Appearance
and finish 3) Freedom from minor
defects (for NEW products since a
reasonable man would expect a
new product to be in perfect
condition), 4) safety (labelling,
warning if needed) 5) durability
(depends on type of good)
- 14(2): Covers packaging as
well(there might not be anything wrong
with the good) + Where MANY goods
are concerned, ALL of them must be of
satisfactory quality (buyer entitled to
reject the whole lot)
- EXCEPTION: 14(2) DOES NOT
APPLY if defects were known to buyer
BEFORE contract made/ buyer
examined the goods BEFORE
contract and THAT should have
revealed the defect
- BUYER