TY - BOOK AU - Mulla, Dinshaw Fardunji AU - Kannan, K. TI - The Sale of Goods Act and Indian Partnership Act SN - 9788119403349 U1 - 346.072 PY - 2024/// CY - Haryana PB - LexisNexis Publications, KW - Sales India KW - Partnership India KW - India N1 - Contents The Sale of Goods Act, 1930 1. Preliminary 2. Formation of the Contract 3. Effects of the Contract 4. Performance of the Contract 5. Rights of Unpaid Seller Against the Goods 6. Suits for Breach of the Contract 7. Miscellaneous The Indian Partnership Act, 1932 1. Preliminary 2. The Nature of Partnership 3. Relations of Partners to One Another 4. Relations of Partners to Third Parties 5. Incoming and Outgoing Partner 6. Dissolution of a Firm 7. Registration of Firms 8. Supplemental The Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008 1. Preliminary 2. Nature of Limited Liability Partnership 3. Incorporation of Limited Liability Partnership and Matters Incidental Thereto 4. Partners and Their Relations 5. Extent and Limitation of Liability of Limited Liability Partnership and Partners 6. Contributions 7. Financial Disclosures 8. Assignment and Transfer of Partnership Rights 9. Investigation 10. Conversion into Limited Liability Partnership 11. Foreign Limited Liability Partnership 12. Compromise, Arrangement or Reconstruction of Limited Liability Partnerships 13. Winding up and Dissolution 14. Business Transactions of Partner with Iimited Liability Partnership N2 - With large volume of commercial transactions involving sales of goods intra-country and intercountry, it may seem but paradoxical that case law does not abound in this branch of law. Further, if you consider a seamless effacement of physical market to virtual markets and internet sales, it could still be a matter of surprise that not many confront legal hurdles and get locked up in court litigation. If there are references to goods in courts' judgments, it is more often in the realm of service and goods tax law than under the Sale of Goods Act. It has become increasingly relevant to examine the context when the term 'goods' is used. and it will lead to misleading results if the definition in one enactment is applied to the other. In CST v Quickheal Technologies Ltd, the Supreme Court explained, while dealing with computer software written on a disc or CD, the definition of goods in the Sale of Goods Act cannot merely be extrapolated to taxing statutes like, say, the Customs Act. The increasing references to sale of goods have come through various economic activities by enlarging "tax on sale or purchase of goods" under the Constitution 46 amendment through Article 366(29A) to include within its scope the transfer, delivery or supply of goods that may take place under any of the transactions referred in sub-clauses (a) to (f) of the said Article. (Source: https://lawbookshop.net/mulla-sale-goods-act-indian-partnership-act-k-kannan-dinshaw-fardunji-mulla.html) ER -