breach of warranty

listen to the pronunciation of breach of warranty
English - Turkish
(Sigorta) garantinin ihlali
garantiyi bozma
English - English
(Kanun) Violation of an agreement between a seller and a buyer as to the condition, content, quality, or title of the item sold
In letter-of-credit law, the failure of a party to fulfill the warranties on transfer and presentment
In real property, the failure of the seller to pass title as either expressed or implied (by law) in the conveyancing document
The inability of a seller to pass along a clear title to a buyer
(See 47) A legal cause of action; a theory on which an injured party seeks damages It arises when a salesperson makes erroneous statements or offers false promises regarding a product's characteristics and capabilities A legal cause of action; a theory on which an injured party seeks damages It arises when a salesperson makes erroneous statements or offers false promises regarding a product's characteristics and capabilities
Occurs when the physical conditions of the land or the condition of title are not as stated in the contract of sale
Inability, on the part of the seller, to pass along clear title to a buyer
The failure of the seller of real property to pass title as either expressed or implied by law in the conveyancing document
a breach that occurs when an item is deficient according to the terms of a warranty
When used in reference to an insurance applicant or policyowner, the result of making fraudulent statements or withholding information that causes an insurance company to assume a risk it would not otherwise insure Misrepresentation by the policyowner as to a condition precedent to the issuance of the policy (See also: condition precedent ) This act voids the policy (See also: warranty )
A seller's inability to pass clear title to a buyer
breach of warranty

    Hyphenation

    breach of war·ran·ty

    Turkish pronunciation

    briç ıv wôrınti

    Pronunciation

    /ˈbrēʧ əv ˈwôrəntē/ /ˈbriːʧ əv ˈwɔːrəntiː/

    Etymology

    [ 'brEch ] (noun.) before 12th century. Middle English breche, from Old English br[AE]c act of breaking; akin to Old English brecan to break.
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