root of the contract造句
例句與造句
- That is, a breach of a condition that " goes to the root of the contract ".
- This in itself should go to the root of the contract and be enough to set it aside.
- I would not like to say, however, that negligence can never go to the root of the contract.
- whether the breach'goes to the root of the contract', or affects a'vital part'of the obligations or means that there is no'substantial performance '.
- It is not every breach of that term which absolves the employer from his promise to pay the price, but only a breach which goes to the root of the contract, such as an abandonment of the work when it is only half done.
- It's difficult to find root of the contract in a sentence. 用root of the contract造句挺難的
- If a warehouseman were to handle the goods so roughly as to warrant the inference that he was reckless and indifferent to their safety, he would, I think, be guilty of a breach going to the root of the contract and could not rely on the exempting clause.
- If he stores them in a different place, or if he consumes or destroys them instead of storing them, or if he sells them, or delivers them without excuse to somebody else, he is guilty of a breach which goes to the root of the contract and he cannot rely on the exempting clause.
- But if he should happen to damage them by some momentary piece of inadvertence, then he is able to rely on the exempting clause : because negligence by itself, without more, is not a breach which goes to the root of the contract ( see " Swan, Hunter, and Wigham Richardson, Ltd . v . France Fenwick Tyne and Wear Company, Ltd . " [ 1953 ] 2 Lloyd's Rep . 82, at p . 88 ), any more than non-payment by itself is such a breach : see " Mersey Steel and Iron Company, Ltd . v . Naylor, Benzon & Co . " ( 1884 ) 9 App.