A. CISG United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods In effect since January 1, 1988 Current state parties: 62, including.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Reaching Agreement: The Process of Contract Formation C. LIMITING THE OFFERORS POWER TO REVOKE: THE EFFECT OF PRE-ACCEPTANCE RELIANCE 1.Under the common.
Advertisements

Part IV Statutes of Frauds. R2 § 110. Classes of Contracts Covered (1) The following classes of contracts [may not be enforced] unless there is a written.
Chapter 8 Export Business Negotiation and Conclusion of Contract Abstract: This chapter tells the general procedures of business negotiation, the basical.
2-105(1) "Goods" means all things (including specially manufactured goods) which are movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale other.
1 Scope Scope of the UCC: to provide a uniform and consistent set of rules to deal with all phases of commercial sales transactions. Scope of Art. II of.
Sales Contracts.  Sale – Contract in which ownership of goods transfers immediately from the seller to the buyer  Ownership – Collection of rights that.
LUMSA – International Commercial Law 31 October 2014 Prof. Avv. Roberto Pirozzi
1 of 27 Lecture 10 SALES Topics covered: Introduction to the UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods Transactions, persons, and.
Business Law: Ch 6 Offer and Acceptance.
History and Development of the CISG
Prentice Hall © PowerPoint Slides to accompany THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT OF BUSINESS AND ONLINE COMMERCE 5E, by Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 13 Sales and.
The Formation of Sales Contracts Chapter 10. Article 2-Sales of Goods Sale: "the passing of title from the seller to the buyer for a price" [UCC 2-106(1)].
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall 1 Chapter 18 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts Chapter 18 Formation of Sales and Lease.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 18: Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts Chapter 18: Formation of.
Copyright © 2008 by West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 23 Nature and Form of Sales Contracts Twomey Jennings Anderson’s.
Zara Law Offices 111 John Street Suite 510 New York, NY Tel: Fax: THE UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION.
CH1 INTERNATIONAL TRADE CONTRACTS
Contracts: Concepts, Terms, and the Agreement
Chapter 18 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts
Export Sales Contracts.  An agreement between a seller and an overseas customer for the performance, financing, and other aspects of an export transaction.
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 19: Introduction to Sales and Leases By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts.
2-105(1) "Goods" means all things (including specially manufactured goods) which are movable at the time of identification to the contract for sale other.
By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts
Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts Chapter 19.
Formation of the Contract ----How the UCC changes the common law.
Offer and Acceptance Chapter 6. Because of its limited resources the court system is very selective in what it will enforce. Criminal laws and laws allowing.
Hether C. Macfarlane Pacific McGeorge School of Law How to Reason Like a Civilian?
CHAPTER 16 FORMATION OF THE SALES CONTRACT & CONTRACTS FOR LEASING GOODS DAVIDSON, KNOWLES & FORSYTHE Business Law: Cases and Principles in the Legal Environment.
Chapter 9 Contracts for the Sale of Goods Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior.
Agreement Offer and Acceptance Chapter 2. Offer  Offer: A promise or commitment to do or refrain from doing some specified thing in the future. Offer.
Copyright © 2004 by Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany BUSINESS LAW E-Commerce and Digital Law International Law and Ethics.
FORMATION OF THE CONTRACT & GENERAL PROVISIONS “Sales of Goods” Cristina Carbonell.
Meeting of the Minds The parties can form a contract only if they had a meeting of the minds. – They must understand each other and intend to reach an.
Agreement By Dhoni Yusra. Introduction Contracts are voluntary agreements between the parties. One party makes an offer that is accepted by the other.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 10 Agreement Chapter 10 Agreement.
Case 1-2: Sei Fujii v. State of CaliforniaUnited States, Supreme Court of California, Facts: A California law made land purchased by an alien Japanese,
© 2007 West Legal Studies in Business, A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 14 The Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts.
Chapter 24 Nature and Forms of Sales Twomey, Business Law and the Regulatory Environment (14th Ed.)
Contract Law for Paralegals: Traditional and E-Contracts © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All rights reserved Formation of Sales.
Scope of UNCISG When is contract governed by the CISG?
21-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
A Workshop on the CISG The LL.M. in Business Laws (English Program) Faculty of Law Thammasat University Prachan Road Bangkok Assoc Prof Anan Chantara-opakorn,
” “ International Trade Law CISG 1980(Lecture 3) Prof.ssa M.E. de Leeuw, Ph.D., Dr., Università di Ferrara.
Unification of the international contract law and Russian Law UN Convention on contracts for the international sale of goods.
Lecture 7 Introduction to International Trade Law The CISG
LEB Slide Set 5 International and British Contract Law Entire Agreement ICC Model Contract Matti Rudanko.
Chapter 6 Offer and Acceptance (6.1 Creation of Offers; 6.2 Termination of Offers, 6.3 Acceptances) Unit 2 Contract Law.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
Prof. Jasper S. Kim1 INTERNATIONAL SALES & CONTRACTS -CISG Prof. Jasper S. Kim.
Chapter 17 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts.
International Contracts Slide Set 7 International and British Contract Law Entire Agreement ICC Model Contract Matti Rudanko.
Copyright © 2010 South-Western Legal Studies in Business, a part of South-Western Cengage Learning. and the Legal Environment, 10 th edition by Richard.
United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (“CISG”) Matt Bradshaw.
Eastern Mediterranean University
Sale of Goods Contracts
Introduction to Sales and Lease Contracts
Module 7(b) Commercial Dispute Resolution International Commercial Disputes International Commercial Arbitration Winter 2017 ©MNoonan2009.
Chapter 18 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts
Markkinoiden juridinen toimintaympäristö Kalvot 5
Kansainväliset sopimukset Kalvot 7
UCC Article 2 Chapter 20 Sale of Goods.
CISG United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980 Satu Pitkänen 2015.
CISG GENERAL PROVISIONS.
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS CONTRACTS
Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
Chapter 20 Formation of Sales and Lease Contracts
The Formation of Sales Contracts
Interpreting International Business Contracts Satu Pitkänen 2015
Interpreting International Business Contracts Satu Pitkänen 2016
Presentation transcript:

A. CISG United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods In effect since January 1, 1988 Current state parties: 62, including Canada Mexico China Russia France United States Germany Web site: http://www.uncitral.org/

B. COVERAGE OF CISG International contracts: buyer and seller must have their places of business in different states. Both states must be contracting parties to the convention, or The rules of private international law must lead to the application of the law of a contracting state. Exception: A contracting state may declare that it will apply the CISG only when the buyer and seller are both from contracting states.

B. COVERAGE OF CISG Opting in and out The parties to a contract may exclude or modify the CISG’s application by a choice of law clause. Whether parties can exclude a domestic law and adopt the CISG in its place depends on the rules of the state where the case is heard.

B. COVERAGE OF CISG Merchants: CISG applies only to commercial sales transactions between merchants CISG Art.1: buyers and sellers must both have “places of business.” CISG Art. 2(a): the Convention does not apply to sales of goods bought for personal, family, or household use.

B. COVERAGE OF CISG Subject Matter of CISG: The formation of contracts. The remedies available to buyers and sellers.

B. COVERAGE OF CISG Subject Matter Not Covered: The validity of contracts. The competency of the parties. The rights of third parties. Liability for death or personal injury. Sales to consumers. Sales of services

B. COVERAGE OF CISG Sales commonly subject to special regulation: Auction sales, Sales on execution or otherwise by authority of law, Sales of stocks, shares, investment securities, negotiable instruments, or money Sales of ships, vessels, hovercraft, or aircraft, and Sales of electricity.

C. CISG COMPARED General sources of CISG rules: French Civil Code, the French Commercial Code, and similar civil law codes.

C. CISG COMPARED Distinctive CISG provisions: Interpretation Firm offers Time of acceptance Acceptance with additional terms Definiteness Formalities Remedies

D. INTERPRETATION Interpretation of a CISG Contract is based on— the parties’ intent, and all relevant circumstances.

D. INTERPRETATION Parties’ Intent Subjective Intent of a speaker is admissible if the other party knew or could not have been unaware of the speaker’s intent. Objective Intent is used when a speaker’s intent is not clear to the other party. Objective intent is determined according to the understanding that a reasonable person of the same kind as the other party would have had in the same circumstances.

D. INTERPRETATION Relevant Circumstances: courts are to give due consideration … to all relevant circumstances, including: negotiations leading up to the contract. practices the parties have established between themselves. conduct of the parties after they agree to the contract.

D. INTERPRETATION Rationale for using all relevant circum-stances: to do away with the technical rules that domestic courts sometimes use to interpret contracts. Example: CISG does not use the common law’s parol evidence rule. Caveat: The CISG allows parties to derogate from or vary the effect of any of the provisions of the Convention. If the parties include a contract term (often called an integration clause) directing a court to ignore all prior or contemporaneous agreements, the court will have to give effect to that term.

E. FIRM OFFERS Firm Offer is Irrevocable if: the offeror indicates, whether by stating a fixed time or otherwise, that it is irrevocable, or the offeree acts in reliance on the reasonable belief that it is irrevocable. Firm Offer Does Not Have to be: in writing (as required by the UCC), or supported by consideration or cause.

F. TIME OF ACCEPTANCE Acceptance is Effective and a contract formed only when the indication of assent reaches the offeror. Caveat: An offeror may not revoke an offer once it has been dispatched. Basis: French Civil Code's receipt rule. Compare: UCC provides that an acceptance is effective upon dispatch.

G. ADDITIONAL TERMS Additions, limitations, or other modifications constitute a “counteroffer.” Caveat: This is so only if— the additional or different terms materially alter the terms of the offer, or the offeror fails to promptly object to changes that are not material.

G. ADDITIONAL TERMS Material alterations are changes to the following: Price Payment quality and quantity of the goods place and time of delivery extent of one party’s liability to the other settlement of disputes Basis: French mirror image rule and UCC § 2-207.

H. DEFINITENESS A contract must be sufficiently definite so that a court can enforce it. A contract is sufficiently definite if it: describes the goods, and expressly or impliedly fixes or makes provision for determining the quantity.

H. DEFINITENESS Price should be stated or a means provided for determining it. Price not stated: courts imply will the price generally charged at the time of the contract for like goods sold under comparable circumstances in the trade concerned

I. FORMALITIES No Formalities: The CISG does not require a contract to be in any particular form A contract may be proven by oral testimony regardless of the price involved. Basis: French Commercial Code.

J. REMEDIES Buyer’s Right of Avoidance Requirements for avoiding a contract: The seller commits a fundamental breach, or The seller commits a lesser breach and the buyer gives the seller a Nachfrist notice that the seller rejects or does not comply with during the period it specifies. Basis: German Civil Code.

J. REMEDIES Nachfrist Notice: the fixing of an additional period of time of reasonable length for performance by the seller of his obligations. The period must be definite and the obligation to perform within that period must be clear. During the Nachfrist period the seller is entitled to correct (i.e., “cure”) the non-conformity at his own expense. A cure may not be made if the breach is fundamental and the buyer chooses to avoid the contract.

J. REMEDIES Time for Avoidance: Once the Nachfrist period has run, or once the fundamental breach becomes clear, the buyer has a reasonable time in which to avoid the contract.

J. REMEDIES Seller’s Right of Avoidance Analogous to that of the buyer’s avoidance remedy

J. REMEDIES Buyer’s Right to a Reduction in Price Applicable when: the seller delivers non-conforming goods the buyer accepts them, and the seller is not responsible for the non-conformity

J. REMEDIES Formula for determining the price reduction: The price is to be reduced by that ratio of: The value at the time of delivery of the goods actually delivered, to The value that conforming goods would have had at the time of delivery.

J. REMEDIES Example Idaho potatoes sold at $3.50/bushel for delivery in Djakarta Damaged in transit by act of nature Undamaged potatoes are worth $4.00/bushel if purchased in Djakarta Damages potatoes are worth $2.80/bushel The price reduction ratio is: $2.80 = 7 $4.00  10 Applying this ratio, the reduced price the buyer pays is: $3.50 x 7/10  =  $2.45