Bailment For Hire - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: bailment for hirebailment for hire
bailment for hire see bailment ...
Hire
Hire [locatio, conductio, Lat.], a bailment for a reward or compensation. It is divisible into four sorts:-(1) The hiring of a thing for use (locatio rei). (2) The hiring of work and labour (locatio operis faciendi). (3) The hiring of care and services to be performed or bestowed on the thing delivered (locatio custodi'). (4) The hiring of the carriage of goods (locatio operis mercium vehendarum) from one place to another. The three last are but sub-divisions of the general head of hire of labour and services.The rights, duties, and obligations of the parties resulting from the contract of bailment for hire may be thus stated:-(I.) Hire of things. The letting to hire implies an obligation to deliver the thing to the hirer; to refrain from every obstruction to the use of it by the hirer during the period of the bailment; to do no act that shall deprive the hirer of the thing; to warrant the title and right of possession to the hirer, in order to enable him to use the thing, or to perfor...
bailment
bailment [Anglo-French bayllment, from bailler to hand over see bail ] : the transfer of possession but not ownership of personal property (as goods) for a limited time or specified purpose (as transportation) such that the individual or business entity taking possession is liable to some extent for loss or damage to the property compare deposit loan for consumption and loan for use at loan NOTE: The typical elements of a bailment are delivery of the personal property, acceptance of the delivery, and possession or control of the property. Any of these elements may be actual or constructive. Bailments may be created by contracts, either express or implied, which require agreement, and the agreement may also be express or implied. Contracts for the lease of a car, for sale of goods on consignment, and for the transport of goods are examples of bailments. bailment for hire : a bailment that either benefits both parties or only the bailee ;esp : one in which the bailee receives comp...
bailment for mutual benefit
bailment for mutual benefit :bailment for hire at bailment ...
compensated bailment
compensated bailment : bailment for hire at bailment ...
Hire purchase agreement and contract for sale
Hire purchase agreement and contract for sale, a contract of hire-purchase is properly speaking a contract of hire by which the hirer is granted an option to buy but is not, as under a contract of sale, under a legal obligation to do so. The contract of hire-purchase is one of the variations of the contract of bailment, but it is a modern development of commercial life, and the rules with regard to bailments, which were laid down before any contract of hire-purchase was contemplated, cannot be applied simpliciter, because such a contract has in it not only the element of bailment but also the element of sale, Instalment Supply Ltd. v. S.T.O., (1974) 4 SCC 739: AIR 1974 SC 1105....
Bailment
Bailment [fr. bailler, Fr., to deliver], a compendious expression to signify a contract resulting from delivery; perhaps best defined as a 'delivery of a thing in trust for some special object or person, and upon a contract express or implied, to conform to the object or purpose of the trust.'In the celebrated case of Coggs v. Bernard, (1704) Ld Raym 909; 1 Sm L C, Lord Holt divided bailments thus:-(1) Depositum, or a naked bailment of goods, to be kept for the use of the bailor.A restaurant keeper has been held liable for loss of an overcoat entrusted by a customer to a waiter, Ultzen v. Nicols, (1894) 1 QB 92; Orchard v. Bush & Co., (1898) 2 QB 284.(2) Commodatum. Where goods or chattels that are useful are lent to the bailee gratis, to be used by him. See Coughlin v. Gillison, (1899) 1 QB 145.(3) Locatio rei. Where goods are lent to the bailee to be used by him for hire.(4) Vadium. Pawn or pledge.(5) Locatio operis faciendi. Where goods are delivered to be carried, or something is t...
Consumer hire agreement
Consumer hire agreement, the vehicle and credit hire agreements restrict the hiring to a period not exceeding 12 weeks, the liability to pay under the credit hire agreement subsists for more than three months so these are consumer hire agreements, Burdis v. Livsey (CA), (2003) LR 36 QB.Is an agreement for the bailment of goods to the hirer which: '(I).........(a) is not a hire-purchase agreement, and (b) is capable of subsisting for more than there months; and (c) does not require, the hirer to make payments exceeding ' 25,000', Burdis v. Livsey (CA), (2002) 3 WLR 762 [Consumer Credit (Increase of Monetary Limits) Order 1998, s. 15]...
Locato-conductio, or Hiring
Locato-conductio, or Hiring, a bailment for reward or compensation. See HIRE....
Deposit (Bailment)
Deposit (Bailment), Bailment by deposit may be defined as a bailment of a chattel, to be kept for the bailor gratuitously and returned upon demand, Halsbury's Laws of England (2), para 1806, p. 835....
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