The Sale of Goods Act 1930
The Sale of Goods Act 1930
The Sale of Goods Act 1930
Contract of Sale of Goods: It is a contract whereby the seller transfer or agrees to transfer
the property in goods to the buyer for a price.
1. There must be at least two parties: - Seller and buyer, as the property in the goods
have to pass from one person to another. The buyer and the seller must be
different persons. A person cannot by his own goods.
2. Transfer or Agreement to transfer the “ownership” of goods: -
3. Subject matter must be “Goods”:- Sale of immovable property is not covered by
this Act.
4. Consideration is price : - Consideration in a contract of sale, has to be the legal
tender. Where goods are exchanged for goods, it would amounts to Barter, not
sale. Similarly, where there in no consideration, it would be a gift and not a sale.
Where goods are sold for a price, which is to be paid partly in cash and partly in
goods, that is a sale.
5. Absolute or qualified: - A contract of sale may be absolute or conditional.
6. All other essentials or a valid contract must be present.
Goods
1. Goods means every kind of movable property other than actionable claims and
money and includes stock and shares, growing crops, grass, and things attached to
or forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed before sale or under the
contract of sale.
2. Thus, immovable are not goods and the Act does not apply to sale of immovable
property like land, building, plant erected at site etc. Thing attached to earth like
‘Standing crop or ‘tree’ is ‘goods’ only when it is agreed to be served before sale
or under contract of sale.
3. Actionable claim is a claim which can be enforced by going to the court. An
overdue debt is an actionable claim, since the creditor can take action against the
debtor to enforce the claim by going to a court of law. Thus, an actionable claim
cannot be bought and sold as goods, though it can be assigned.
Existing goods are such goods as are in existence at the time of the contract of sale, i.e.,
those owned or possessed by the seller.
Future goods: means goods to be manufactured or produced or acquired by the seller after
making the contract of sale. Thus, under the Act, a contract of sale of future goods, e.g.
1,000 quintals of potatoes to be grown on A’s field, is not illegal, though the actual sale of
future goods is not possible. This is an example of “agreement to sell”
Contingent Goods: - Goods, the acquisition of which by the seller depends upon
happening/ non – happening of an uncertain event (contingency). They are also a type of
future goods. E.g.: x agrees to sell 10 units of an article provided the ship, which is
bringing them reaches the port safely.
(i) Specific Goods: - Goods identified and agreed upon at the time a
contract of sale is made Eg: A car, a table.
(ii) Ascertained Goods: - Goods identified subsequent to the formation of
the contract of sale. The terms, ascertained and specific are commonly
used for the same kind of goods. The goods are ascertained when out
of a mass of unascertained goods, the quantity contracted for is
identified and set aside, Eg: - A, a TV shop owner, agreed to sell B a
particular model TV identified by the customer out of the several TVs
on display.
(iii) Unascertained Goods: - Goods not identified at the time of making of
the contract of sale. They are no definite and specific. They are goods
defined by description only. Eg. A visits a TV sales showroom and
agrees to buy a TV out of the 50 models on display. The shop owner
agrees to sell. This sale agreement is for unascertained goods as the
specific TV is yet to be identified.