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Implied Warranty In a common law, it is assumed and assursed that in a contract of sale, the goods sold and purchased are reasonably fit for its use and is merchantible (tradeable). Such assurance or warranties are implied.
Implied Warranty of Merchantability: Warranty that guarantees that goods purchased by consumers are reasonably fit for their ordinary purpose.
IMPLIED WARRANTY OF HABITABILITY - Law that exists in most states which governs residential rentals and asserts that regardless of what a lease says, the landlord must provide premises that are safe and liveable (habitable) at some basic level.
implied warranty of habitability - The requirement that landlords maintain livable premises for their tenants. imprison - The confinement of a person in prison or otherwise as punishment for committing a crime.
implied warranty n. an assumption at law that products are "merchantable," meaning they work and are useable as normally expected by consumers, unless there is a warning that they are sold "as is" or second-hand without any warranty.
Implied Warranty of Merchantability - An assumption in law that the goods are fit for the ordinary purposes for which such goods are used. This implied warranty applies to every sale by a merchant who deals in goods of the kind sold.
implied warranty of habitability: A legal rule that requires landlords to keep their rental units fit for people to live in. A rental unit must comply with important building and housing code standards that affect tenants' health and safety.
implied warranty A guarantee about the quality of goods or services purchased that is not written down or explicitly spoken. Virtually everything you buy comes with two implied warranties. One for "merchantability" and one for "fitness.
An implied warranty is one which, not being expressly made, the law implies by the fact of the sale; for example, the seller is, understood to warrant the title of goods be sells, when they are in his possession at the time of the sale; Ld. Raym.
implied warranty that the property being sold is merchantable (as by being of a quality that is generally acceptable in that line of trade) Under the U.C.C.
Demise. French démettre, to put away, lay down: Latin dismittere, demittere. In a lease for years, creates an implied warranty of title and a covenant for quiet enjoyment. Scott v. Rutherford, 102 U.S. 109 (1875).
has lost little of its pristine force in the sale of land (and) dictates that, in the absence of an express warranty, there is no implied warranty of fitness for human habitation upon the purchase of a house already completed at the time of sale.
A written statement of good quality of merchandise, clear title to real estate or that a fact stated in a contract is true. An "express warranty" is a definite written statement and "implied warranty" is based on the circumstances surrounding the ...
See also: Warranty, Warrant, Law, State, Information
 
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