| SALE OF GOODS ACT, 1930 | | | master of finance and control (Part 1) September 30, 2011 Submitted by: Nishtha Tewari-2506 Aditi Rao-2560 Jasmeet Kaur-2562 SALE OF GOODS ACT, 1930 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT We would like to extend our gratitude towards Dr. Nidhi Jain for her guidance and constant supervision as well as for providing necessary information regarding the project & also for her support in completing the project. SALE OF GOODS ACT, 1930 CONTENTS I. Contract
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benamidar and is impleaded in the suit. In the said decision, it has also been held that "a beneficiary cannot be called a holder of the instrument and payment to him cannot discharge the maker thereof unless the case falls under section 82(c) of the Act". So also, it has been held in the decision reported in Subharaya v. Abiram,3 that a beneficiary does not become a holder of the instrument even upon getting a declaration that he is the beneficial owner and the payee is only a benamidar. In this connection
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of sale is transferred by the delivery of the property from the seller to the buyer, agrees Hutchison et al, (1991). In a contract of sale, both the seller and the buyer have roles/obligations to play/perform to qualify the sale. Apart from making a payment by the buyer and receiving of the same payment by the seller, there need for the object sold or the merx to be delivered to the buyer. Delivery is effected by the physical hand over of the property to the buyer and there are several varieties
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dealing with resistance to change. This project will take a look at the Office of Research and Technology Applications involvement in the AFMS Technology Transfer process. The paper will stress need and the value to ensure that the Air Force’s Intellectual Property is protected. The AFMS ORTA provides the oversight for the technical transfer mechanisms while also ensuring the further development and collaboration of Air Force Inventions are legally executed. Air Force Office of Research and Technology
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uses knowledge for growth. Intellectual property embraces the results of human creative endeavors including literary and artistic works, performances of performing artists, sound recordings, broadcasts, inventions, industrial designs, trademarks and service marks, protection against unfair competition, undisclosed information, geographical indications, layout designs of integrated circuits and new varieties of plants. The law of intellectual property recognizes and protects, among other things
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b. A contract entered by the guardian for the beneficiary of a minor is not valid. c. A minor by misrepresenting his age can enter into a valid contract. d. A minor can create contractual obligations as a partner. e. A minor can ratify all invalid acts as valid on attaining majority at any time. 3. Which of the following will amount to material alteration of a cheque? a. When the holder crosses an uncrossed cheque. b. When the holder converts general crossing into special crossing by adding the name
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PROPERTY LAW Introduction -Historically there were two branches of Property Law: • Real property: (Land and interests in land) • Personal property: (Everything besides land and interests in land) -The reason for the two separate branches is that historically land was the most valuable type of property (and arguably still is). -This course predominately focuses on real property. *Note that personal property can become real property by being attached to real property
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A contract entered by the guardian for the beneficiary of a minor is not valid. c. A minor by misrepresenting his age can enter into a valid contract. d. A minor can create contractual obligations as a partner. e. A minor can ratify all invalid acts as valid on attaining majority at any time. 3. Which of the following will amount to material alteration of a cheque? a. When the holder crosses an uncrossed cheque. b. When the holder converts general crossing into special crossing by adding the
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principal or an employer is held liable for the wrongful acts committed by agents or employees while acting within the course and scope of their agency or employment. | agency | A relationship between two parties in which one party (the agent) agrees to represent or act for the other (the principal). | apparent authority | Authority that is only apparent, not real. In agency law, a person may be deemed to have had the power to act as an agent for another party if the other party’s manifestations
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I. Introduction The Copyright Law Copyright is the exclusive right, to an intellectual property of any person, including elements of authorship, musical, literary, architectural, pictorial, choreographic, pantomimic, graphic, sculptural, and cartographic creations to print, publish or sell copies of his or her original work. Copyright is a law that protects published and unpublished work that you can see, hear and touch, from being reproduced without prior consent from the creator of the work.
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