SALE OF GOODS.
No. 4 of 1896.
401
(e)
"Document of title to goods" includes any bill of lading, dock warrant, warehouse keeper's certificate, and warrant or order for the delivery of goods, and any other document used in the ordinary course of business as proof of the possession or control of goods, or authorizing or purporting to authorize, either by indorsement or by delivery, the possessor of the document to transfer or receive goods thereby represented.
(f) "Fault" means wrongful act or default.
(g) "Future goods" means goods to be manufactured or acquired by the seller after the making of the contract of sale.
(h) "Goods" include all chattels personal other than things in action and money. The term includes emblements, industrial growing crops, and things attached to or forming part of the land which are agreed to be severed before sale or under the contract of sale.
(i) "Plaintiff" includes a defendant counterclaiming.
(j) "Property" means the general property in goods, and not merely a special property.
(k) "Quality of goods" includes their state or condition.
(l) "Sale" includes a bargain and sale as well as a sale and delivery.
(m) "Seller" means a person who sells or agrees to sell goods.
(n) "Specific goods" means goods identified and agreed upon at the time a contract of sale is made.
(o) "Warranty" means an agreement with reference to goods which are the subject of a contract of sale, but collateral to the main purpose of such contract, the breach of which gives rise to a claim for damages, but not to a right to reject the goods and treat the contract as repudiated.
(2) A thing is deemed to be done "in good faith" when it is in fact done honestly, whether it is done negligently or not.
(3) A person is deemed to be insolvent who either has ceased to pay his debts in the ordinary course of business or...