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19 - 1 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts. 19 - 2 Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Comprehensive statutory scheme. Serves as a model act. The UCC includes.

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Presentation on theme: "19 - 1 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts. 19 - 2 Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Comprehensive statutory scheme. Serves as a model act. The UCC includes."— Presentation transcript:

1 19 - 1 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts

2 19 - 2 Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Comprehensive statutory scheme. Serves as a model act. The UCC includes laws that cover most aspects of commercial transactions. The common law of contracts governs if the UCC is silent.

3 19 - 3 Overview of the Uniform Commercial Code Article 1General provisions Article 2Sales Article 2ALeases Article 3Commercial paper Rev. Article 3Negotiable instruments Article 4Bank deposits & collections Article 4AWire transfers

4 19 - 4 Overview of the Uniform Commercial Code (continued) Article 5Letters of credit Article 6Bulk transfers Article 7Documents of title Article 8Investment securities Article 9Secured transactions

5 19 - 5 Article 2 (Sales) All states except Louisiana have adopted some version of Article 2 (Sales) of the UCC. Article 2 is also applied by federal courts to sales contracts governed by federal law. Article 2 applies only to transactions in goods – i.e., tangible items.

6 19 - 6 Article 2 (Sales) (continued) Article 2 does not apply to transactions in intangible items, real estate, or service. What is a sale? –The passing of title from a seller to a buyer for a price.

7 19 - 7 What are Goods? Tangible things that are movable at the time of their identification to the contract. Money and intangible items such as stocks, bonds, and patents are not tangible goods. Real estate and services are not tangible.

8 19 - 8 Services Services are not covered by Article 2. Mixed sales involve both goods and services. Article 2 applies to mixed sales only if the goods are the predominate part of the transaction.

9 19 - 9 Who Is a Merchant? A person who: 1. Deals in the goods of the kind involved in the transaction, or 2. By his or her occupation holds himself or herself out as having knowledge or skill peculiar to the goods involved in the transaction.

10 19 - 10 Article 2A (Leases) Article 2A applies only to leases involving goods. Article 2A does not apply to real estate or other leases. Many states have adopted Article 2A.

11 19 - 11 What Is a Lease? A transfer of the right to the possession and use of the named goods for a set term in return for certain consideration. – Lessor – the person who transfers the right of possession and use of goods under the lease. – Lessee – the person who acquires the right to possession and use of goods under a lease.

12 19 - 12 Finance Lease A three-party transaction consisting of the lessor, the lessee, and the supplier. The lessor does not select, manufacture, or supply the goods. The lessor acquires title to the goods or the right to their possession and use in connection with the terms of the lease.

13 19 - 13 Offer A contract for the sale or lease of goods may be made in any manner sufficient to show agreement. This includes conduct by both parties that recognizes the existence of a contract. A contract may be found even though the moment of its making is undetermined.

14 19 - 14 Open Terms Sometimes the parties to a sales or lease contract leave open a major term in the contract. Gap-filling rule allows open terms to be read into contract. –Open Price Term –Open Payment Term –Open Delivery Term –Open Time Term –Open Assortment Term

15 19 - 15 Firm Offer Rule A merchant who (1) offers to buy, sell, or lease goods, and (2) gives a written and signed assurance on a separate form that the offer will be held open, –cannot revoke the offer for the time stated or, –if no time is stated, for a reasonable time. –Three months is the maximum amount of time permitted under this rule.

16 19 - 16 Consideration The formation of a sales and lease contract requires consideration. In common law, modifications to a contract need to be supported by new consideration. Under the UCC, modifications to sales and lease contracts require no consideration.

17 19 - 17 Acceptance Both common law and the UCC provide that a contract is created when the offeree sends an acceptance to the offeror, not when the offeror receives the acceptance. The UCC permits acceptance by any reasonable manner or method of communication.

18 19 - 18 Additional Terms Under common law, the mirror image rule applies, an additional terms are considered a counteroffer. Under the UCC, additional terms are allowed unless acceptance is expressly conditional on assent to the stated terms. If one party is a nonmerchant, the additional terms are treated as proposed additions.

19 19 - 19 Accommodation Shipment A shipment that is offered to the buyer as a replacement for the original shipment when the original shipment cannot be filled. The accommodation is a counteroffer from the seller to the buyer. The buyer is free either to accept or to reject the counteroffer.

20 19 - 20 Statute of Frauds A rule that requires all contracts for the sales of goods costing $500 or more, and lease contracts involving payments of $1,000 or more be in writing. The writing must be sufficient to indicate that a contract has been made between the parties.

21 19 - 21 Exceptions to the Statute of Frauds Specially Manufactured Goods Admissions in Pleadings or Court Part Acceptance

22 19 - 22 Written Modification Oral modification is not enforceable if the parties agree that any modification of the sales or lease contract must be in a signed writing. In the absence of such an agreement, oral modifications to sales and lease contracts are binding if they do not violate the Statute of Frauds.

23 19 - 23 Parol Evidence Rule A rule that states that when a sales or lease contract is evidenced by a writing that is intended to be a final expression of the parties’ agreement or confirmatory memorandum, the terms of the writing may not be contradicted by evidence of: 1. A prior oral or written agreement, or 2. A contemporaneous oral agreement.

24 19 - 24 Parol Evidence Rule, continued If the express terms are not clear on their face, reference may be made to certain outside sources: –Course of performance. –Course of dealing. –Usage of trade.

25 19 - 25 © 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Comparison of Contract Law and the Law of Sales (1 of 3) TopicCommon Law Contracts UCC Law of Sales DefinitenessContract must contain all of the material terms of the parties’ agreement. UCC gap-filling rules permit terms to be implied if the parties intended to make a contract. Irrevocable Offers Option contracts.Option contracts. Firm offers by merchants to keep an offer open are binding up to three months without any consideration.

26 19 - 26 © 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Comparison of Contract Law and the Law of Sales (2 of 3) TopicCommon Law Contracts UCC Law of Sales Counteroffer s Acceptance must be a mirror image of the offer. A counteroffer rejects and terminates the offer. Additional terms of an acceptance become part of the contract if (1) they do not materially alter the terms of the offer and (2) the offeror does not object within a reasonable time after reviewing the acceptance.

27 19 - 27 © 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Comparison of Contract Law and the Law of Sales (3 of 3) TopicCommon Law Contracts UCC Law of Sales Statute of FraudsWriting must be signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought. Writing may be enforced against a party who has not signed it. ModificationConsideration is required Consideration is not required

28 19 - 28 Performance of Sales and Lease Contracts

29 19 - 29 Identification of Goods Distinguishing goods named in contract from seller’s or lessor’s other goods Seller or lessor retains risk of loss until goods identified Title cannot pass until goods identified

30 19 - 30 Identification of Goods (continued) Parties can agree to time and manner of identification Existing goods are identified by naming specific goods Future goods are identified when born, planted, shipped. Marked or designated

31 19 - 31 Passage of Title The passing of title from a seller to a buyer for a price. Title cannot be passed until goods exist and have been identified. Title passes upon terms agreed to in contract. If no terms are stated, title passes when delivery is completed.

32 19 - 32 Shipment and Destination Contracts Shipment Contract –Seller should make proper shipping arrangements –Deliver the goods into the carrier’s hands Destination Contract –Seller delivers goods either to buyer’s place of business or another destination specified in sales contract

33 19 - 33 Shipment and Destination Contracts (continued) Delivery of Goods without Moving Them –Buyer is required to pick up goods from seller –May require document of title or bill of lading

34 19 - 34 Risk of Loss: No Breach of Sales Contract Carrier Cases: Movement of Goods – Shipment Contracts - Risk of loss passes to buyer when seller delivers the conforming goods to the carrier – Destination Contracts - Risk of loss passes to buyer when seller delivers the conforming goods to the specified destination

35 19 - 35 Risk of Loss: No Breach of Sales Contract Noncarrier Cases: No Movement of Goods – Merchant Seller - Risk of loss passes to buyer when buyer receives the goods – Nonmerchant Seller - Risk of loss passes to buyer upon ‘tender of delivery’ of the goods: - When seller places or holds the goods available for the buyer to take delivery and notifies the buyer of this fact

36 19 - 36 Risk of Loss: No Breach of Sales Contract (continued) Goods in Possession of a Bailee - Risk of loss passes to buyer when: - buyer receives a negotiable document of title covering the goods - The Bailee acknowledges the buyer’s right to possession of the goods or, - The buyer receives a nonnegotiable document of title or other written direction to deliver and has a reasonable time to present the direction to the bailee and demand the goods

37 19 - 37 Risk of Loss: Conditional Sales Sale on Approval - There is no sale unless and until the buyer accepts the goods Sale on Return - Sale is considered final only if the buyer fails to return the goods within the specified time

38 19 - 38 Risk of Loss: Conditional Sales Consignment - Seller (consignor) delivers goods to buyer (consignee) to sell - Consignor is paid a fee if he/she sells the goods on behalf of the consignor

39 19 - 39 Risk of Loss: Breach of Sales Contract Seller in Breach - If seller delivers nonconforming goods to the buyer Buyer in Breach - If buyer refuses to take delivery of conforming goods, repudiates the contract or otherwise breaches the contract

40 19 - 40 Risk of Loss: Lease Contracts Risk of loss is retained by the lessor. In case of finance lease, risk of loss passes to the lessee If a tender of delivery of goods fails to conform to the lease contract, the risk of loss remains with the lessor or supplier until cure or acceptance

41 19 - 41 Sales by Nonowners Void Title and Lease: Stolen Goods - Purchase of lease of stolen goods do not result in transfer of title of the goods and the lessee does not acquire any leasehold interest in the goods.

42 19 - 42 Sales by Nonowners (continued) Voidable Title - Purchaser has voidable title if goods were obtained by fraud, if a check is later dishonored, or if he/she impersonates another person

43 19 - 43 Sales by Nonowners (continued) Entrustment Rule –If an owner entrusts the possession of his/her goods to a merchant who deals in goods of that kind, the merchant has the power to transfer all rights/title in the goods to a buyer in the ordinary course of business. –The real owner cannot reclaim the goods from this buyer

44 19 - 44 Remedies for Breach of Sales and Lease Contracts

45 19 - 45 Tender of Delivery Transfer or delivery of goods to the buyer or lessee in accordance with sales or lease contract Requires: –Conforming goods to be put aside and held for buyer or lessee –Notification be made to buyer or lessee –Goods must be tendered in single delivery unless otherwise noted in contract –Payment due upon delivery unless otherwise noted

46 19 - 46 Place of Delivery Contract usually states place and time of delivery If contract silent, place is seller’s or buyer’s place of business If they have no place of business, it is their residence

47 19 - 47 Place of Delivery (continued) If goods at warehouse and are to be delivered without being moved, delivery occurs when seller: –Tenders buyer negotiable document of title –Produces acknowledgement from bailee of buyer’s right of possession –Tenders nonnegotiable document of title or written direction to bailee to deliver goods to buyer

48 19 - 48 Delivery in Carrier Cases Shipment Contracts –Do not name destination Seller must put goods in carrier’s possession and contract for delivery Obtain and deliver all documents necessary for buyer to obtain possession Notify buyer of shipment Destination Contracts –Names destination –Delivery must be made at reasonable time and in reasonable manner

49 19 - 49 Perfect Tender Rule If goods fail to conform, buyer/lessee may: –Reject entire shipment –Accept whole shipment, or –Reject part and accept part

50 19 - 50 Exceptions Agreement of Parties –Parties may contract to limit perfect tender rule Defective or nonconforming goods may be rejected Seller/lessor may replace nonconforming goods Buyer/lessee accepts nonconforming goods with compensation Substitution of Carriers –Commercially reasonable carrier may be substituted if agreed-upon delivery manner fails or becomes unavailable

51 19 - 51 Cure UCC gives seller/lessor opportunity to cure – time has not expired –must notify buyer/lessee of intentions

52 19 - 52 Installment Contract –Goods delivered and accepted at different times –Requires specific knowledge –Seller can only reject entire contract if default impairs value of entire contract –Seller can reject non-conforming shipments

53 19 - 53 Destruction of Goods Contract void –If goods are totally destroyed through no fault of either party before risk of loss passes –Both parties excused from performance Contract voidable –If goods are partially destroyed through no fault of either party before risk of loss passes –Buyer may inspect goods and choose to void the contract

54 19 - 54 Buyer’s and Lessee’s Performance Once seller/lessee has tendered delivery, buyer/lessee is obligated to accept and pay as per sales/lease contract. If contract silent, UCC controls.

55 19 - 55 Right of Inspection Buyer has the right to inspect goods before paying for them Buyer may reject nonconforming goods Parties may agree as to time and place of inspection If contract silent, inspection must occur at reasonable time and place

56 19 - 56 Payment –Due from buyer when and where goods delivered –Contract may set terms –Can be paid in any manner acceptable in ordinary course of business If cash required, buyer must be given an extension to secure cash

57 19 - 57 Acceptance Contract is created when the offeree sends an acceptance to the offeror, not when the offeror receives the acceptance. The UCC permits acceptance by any reasonable manner or method of communication. Acceptance occurs if buyer acts inconsistently with seller’s ownership rights. Buyers/lessees must accept “commercial unit”.

58 19 - 58 Revocation of Acceptance Buyer can revoke acceptance if: –Goods are non-conforming –The nonconformity substantially impairs the value of the goods –The seller’s promise to timely cure is not met –Goods were accepted before non- conformity was discovered and the nonconformity was difficult to discover –The goods were accepted before the nonconformity was discovered and the seller/lessor assured the buyer/lessee that the goods were conforming

59 19 - 59 Right to Withhold Delivery Delivery of goods may be withheld if: –Seller/lessor is in possession of goods when buyer/lessee breaches contract –Buyer/lessee fails to make payment when due –Buyer/lessee repudiates contract If part of the shipment has been delivered at time of breach, seller/lessor may withhold delivery of remainder. If seller/lessor discovers that buyer/lessee is insolvent, they may require cash payment.

60 19 - 60 Right to Stop Goods in Transit Seller/lessor may stop shipment in transit if: –He discovers buyer’s/lessee’s insolvency –Buyer/lessee repudiates shipment –Buyer/lessee fails to make payment when due Seller/lessor must give sufficient notice to allow bailee to prevent delivery

61 19 - 61 Right to Reclaim Goods Seller/lessor may reclaim goods if: –The buyer misrepresented their solvency in writing within 3 months before delivery –Paid for goods with a check that bounced –If the lessee is in default of the contract

62 19 - 62 Right to Dispose of Goods Must be made in good faith Seller/lessor must give notice to buyer/lessee of intention –Notice not required with perishable goods or goods that will quickly decline in value Seller/lessor may recover damages Profit does not revert to original buyer

63 19 - 63 Right to Recover the Purchase Price or Rent Seller/lessor may sue to recover if: –Buyer/lessee fails to pay as due –Buyer/lessee breaches contract after goods have been identified and seller/lessor cannot resell or dispose of them –Goods are damaged or lost after risk passes to buyer/lessee

64 19 - 64 Additional Rights Seller/lessor may sue to recover damages caused by buyer’s or lessee’s breach. Seller/lessor may recover lost profits. Seller/lessor may cancel contract if buyer/lessee breaches.

65 19 - 65 Buyer’s and Lessee’s Remedies Buyer may reject nonconforming goods or improperly tendered goods. –May reject the whole, accept the whole, or accept any commercial unit and reject the rest –Must reject within a reasonable time period. –Must follow reasonable instructions for return of goods. If goods are perishable, must make reasonable effort to sell them on seller’s behalf. –Buyer entitled to reimbursement for shipping, holding, storage expenses.

66 19 - 66 Buyer’s and Lessee’s Remedies (continued) If buyer makes full or partial payment before goods are received and seller/lessor becomes insolvent within ten days of receiving payment, they can recover goods. If goods are unique, buyer can obtain specific performance Buyer/lessor may cover. Buyer/lessee has right to replevy goods, if they are wrongfully withheld.

67 19 - 67 Buyer’s and Lessee’s Remedies (continued) Buyer/lessee may cancel contract if seller/lessor fails to deliver conforming goods or repudiates contract –Buyer/lessee may recover damages Buyer/lessee may recover damages for accepted nonconforming goods Buyer/lessee may recover damages for loss from seller’s breach

68 19 - 68 Additional Performance Issues Assurance of Performance –An adequate assurance of due performance may be demanded in writing by either party.

69 19 - 69 Anticipatory Repudiation –Occurs when a party repudiates the contract before performance is required. –Wavering is not sufficient. –Aggrieved party may: Await performance for a commercially reasonable time. Treat contract as breached at time of anticipatory repudiation. Indicate repudiation is considered final.

70 19 - 70 Statute of Limitations –The UCC provides that an action for breach of any written or oral sales or lease contract must commence within four years after the cause of the action accrues.

71 19 - 71 Agreements Affecting Remedies Parties may agree to remedies in addition to those available under the UCC. UCC allows for liquidated damages as a substitute for actual damages.


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