
Business Law 13th Edition by Frank Cross, Kenneth Clarkson, Roger LeRoy Miller
Edition 13ISBN: 978-1133046783
Business Law 13th Edition by Frank Cross, Kenneth Clarkson, Roger LeRoy Miller
Edition 13ISBN: 978-1133046783 Exercise 7
Business Case Problem with Sample Answer: Nonconforming Goods.
Padma Paper Mills, Ltd., converts waste paper into usable paper. In 2007, Padma entered into a contract with Universal Exports, Inc., under which Universal Exports certified that it would ship white envelope cuttings, and Padma paid $131,000 for the paper. When the shipment arrived, however, Padma discovered that Universal Exports had sent multicolored paper plates and other brightly colored paper products. Padma accepted the goods but notified Universal Exports that they did not conform to the contract. Can Padma recover even though it accepted the goods knowing that they were nonconforming? If so, how? [Padma Paper Mills, Ltd. v. Universal Exports, Inc., 34 Misc.3d 1236(A) (N.Y.Sup. 2012)] (See page 430.)
![Business Case Problem with Sample Answer: Nonconforming Goods. Padma Paper Mills, Ltd., converts waste paper into usable paper. In 2007, Padma entered into a contract with Universal Exports, Inc., under which Universal Exports certified that it would ship white envelope cuttings, and Padma paid $131,000 for the paper. When the shipment arrived, however, Padma discovered that Universal Exports had sent multicolored paper plates and other brightly colored paper products. Padma accepted the goods but notified Universal Exports that they did not conform to the contract. Can Padma recover even though it accepted the goods knowing that they were nonconforming? If so, how? [Padma Paper Mills, Ltd. v. Universal Exports, Inc., 34 Misc.3d 1236(A) (N.Y.Sup. 2012)] (See page 430.)](https://storage.examlex.com/SM2127/11eb99e8_2d75_0c9b_886f_91eb354e4827_SM2127_00.jpg)
Padma Paper Mills, Ltd., converts waste paper into usable paper. In 2007, Padma entered into a contract with Universal Exports, Inc., under which Universal Exports certified that it would ship white envelope cuttings, and Padma paid $131,000 for the paper. When the shipment arrived, however, Padma discovered that Universal Exports had sent multicolored paper plates and other brightly colored paper products. Padma accepted the goods but notified Universal Exports that they did not conform to the contract. Can Padma recover even though it accepted the goods knowing that they were nonconforming? If so, how? [Padma Paper Mills, Ltd. v. Universal Exports, Inc., 34 Misc.3d 1236(A) (N.Y.Sup. 2012)] (See page 430.)
Explanation
Nonconforming Goods.
Yes, P can recover...
Business Law 13th Edition by Frank Cross, Kenneth Clarkson, Roger LeRoy Miller
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