Law Notes Commercial Law Notes
A collection of the best Commercial Law notes the director of Oxbridge Notes (an Oxford law graduate) could find after combing through dozens of LLB samples from outstanding law students with the highest results in England and carefully evaluating each on accuracy, formatting, logical structure, spelling/grammar, conciseness and "wow-factor". Although this set of notes did not earn its author a 1st in exams, the notes are at a high standard and it seems the author just got unlucky.
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Ownership in Sales of Goods
Introduction to the sale of goods
Section 12 SGA, In a contract of sale…there is an implied condition on the part of the seller that, in the case of a sale, he has the right to sell the goods, and in the case of an agreement to sell he will have such a right at the time when the property is to pass…’.
So s.12 gives us the implied condition that the seller in the case of the sale has the right to sell the goods. In other words that the seller is the owner.
If we have an agreement to sell, then the seller has to be the owner by time the sale is preformed
So you could agree to sell something, and then later acquire ownership – linked to the right to sell
So s.12 presumes that the seller has the good title
In the relationship between seller and buyer, the seller can have many roles
Initially the seller is the owner of the goods and therefore s is selling the goods to the buyer
But as we will see quite often the buyer will pay for the goods and property will pass to him - he is now is the owner of the goods - but the goods continue to be in the possession of the seller
And as such the seller becomes the buyer’s bailee – and so the seller owes a duty to take reasonable care of the goods, and whatever is authorised by the buyer
What are the important results, which generally follow from the passing of property?
The first of these is that the risk in the goods prima facie passes with property
The second consequence is that generally speaking the seller is not entitled to sue for the price of the goods unless the property has passed
The classification of goods
Existing goods – s. 5(1) SGA
Goods that exist at the time of contract e.g. in a warehouse
Future goods - s. 5(3) ‘agreement to sell’
Something that is going to be manufactured, or something that is simply that you don’t have yet
Specific goods - If the goods are identified and agreed upon at the time of the contract then they are specific goods s.61 (1)
Unascertained goods – simply means goods which are not identified. In other words if the goods are not identified at the time of contract then they will fall under unascertained goods. There are three kinds of unascertainable goods:
Generic goods – goods referred to only as fitting a particular kind of description e.g. 100 tonnes of barley
It doesn’t matter there the barley came from, it just matters that the seller provides the correct amount
Goods not yet in existence – that still have yet to be manufactured or produced. For instance the sale of a reaping machine owned by a third party at the time of the sale. Well of course as yet it is kind of an agreement to sell, you have to wait until the first buyer acquires good title to it to sell it onto the second buyer. Seller owns it, buyer is waiting to own it, but in the mean time sells it to second buyer so a resale
Or where we have a part which is as yet unidentified of a specified bulk e.g. 500 tons out of 1000 tons of wheat aboard a vessel.
This is closer to being ascertainable. The goods must come from the specific vehicle stated. Almost quasi-generic.
When does property pass from the seller to buyer?
The exact moment at which the property passes depends upon whether the goods are specific or unascertained. This is a fundamental caveat to the subject.
Specific goods – look at the intention of the parties, when the parties intend it to pass: SGA, ss 17(1) and (2). Discern intention from conduct or express terms.
Unascertained goods – property passes when parties intend it to pass (SGA, s17), but first the goods have to be ascertained (SGA. 16)
Key distinction between specific and unascertained goods: once ascertained goods are treated as specific goods
Unascertained goods
Where parties do not clearly evince their intention on when property shall pass in unascertained goods, then the s.18 rules apply:
The rules are of the greatest importance, for the parties often do not have any clear intention, still less express any, as to the passing of the property
In a deliverable state
Seller bound to put into deliverable state
In a deliverable state but seller must weigh/measure/test re: price
Delivered by seller on ‘approval’ or ‘sale or return’ terms
Sale by description
Serve to guide us when property passes for specific goods. 1-4 is for specific goods, and rule 5 is for unascertained goods.
s.18 rule 1 - ‘Where there is an unconditional contract for the sale of specific goods in a deliverable state the property in the goods passes to the buyer when the contract is made, and it is immaterial whether the time of payment or the time of delivery, or both, be postponed.’
So in other words where we have specific goods in a deliverable state, property passes when the contract is made.
Unconditional usually meaning without a condition precedent – something that has to happen before the contract is preformed
(i) Goods must be specific (under rule 1)
s.61 gives us a definition of specific goods
The common law also gives us insight into what specific goods means, the case of :
Kursell v Timber Operators [1927]
In this case the seller sold to the buyer, and this is from the contract “all the trees in a Latvian forest conforming to 15 meters tall by a particular date”
15 years to remove the trees. The forest was confiscated before the sale took place
The C of A held that property had not passed as the goods were not sufficiently identified. Why? Because in order for the them to be identified something had to be done (measure & cut the trees down). Not enough certainty
(ii) Goods must be unconditional (under rule 1)
A contract not subject to a condition precedent or subsequent
But every contract must at least contain at least some essential stipulations and most contracts contain a great many
(ii) Goods must be in a deliverable state
Philip Head v Showfronts
This contract involved the sale of a carpet, and it was held that the carpet was not in a deliverable state, as...
Buy the full version of these notes or essay plans and more in our Commercial Law Notes.
A collection of the best Commercial Law notes the director of Oxbridge Notes (an Oxford law graduate) could find after combing through dozens of LLB samples from outstanding law students with the highest results in England and carefully evaluating each on accuracy, formatting, logical structure, spelling/grammar, conciseness and "wow-factor". Although this set of notes did not earn its author a 1st in exams, the notes are at a high standard and it seems the author just got unlucky.
As an added...
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