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a) The Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) is concerned with certain commercial transactions in, or regarding, personal property, and contracts and other documents concerning them. U.C.C. in force in 49 of the 50 states of the United States, represents an effort to codify "The Law Merchant".
There is a distinct difference between a code and other statutory enactments. A code is a comprehensive, systematic collection of statutes in a particular legal area. The Uniform Commercial Code contains and governs much of the law applicable to ordinary commercial transactions. A code, because of its comprehensive and integrated character, is its own best reference for interpretation. Non-code enactments are often fragmentary, and interpretation of them varies widely.
b) The purposes of the Uniform Commercial Code are set out in one of its initial passages. These purposes are as follows:
· to simplify, clarify and modernize the Law governing commercial transactions;
· to permit the continued expansion of commercial practices through custom, usage and agreement of the parties;
· to make uniform the law among the various jurisdictions.
It was also hoped to encourage resolution of commercial conflicts with a minimum of litigation. This purpose has largely failed.
c) Proposals for uniform legislation for sales of goods have been made since the 19th century. One of the UCC’s sponsors, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, has been in existence since 1892 and has drafted approximately 170 Uniform Acts. In the early 1940s the National Conference took on its most ambitious assignment: the creation of a uniform code of laws covering most commercial areas. It enlisted the help of the American Law Institute, whose membership comprised hundreds of the country’s leading judges, lawyers, and law professors. A decade later the first edition of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) appeared. It has since been adopted in whole or in substantial part by nearly all the states, and significant portions have been updated as the need arose.
d) The UCC is divided into twelve articles. The first ten articles contain the substantive provisions, summarized below and discussed in detail at various points throughout the text.
Articles 10 and 11 address the mechanism of enacting the Code, such as effective date, repeal of conflicting statutes, and transaction between repealed statutes and the Code.
The ten substantive articles are:
Article 1 General Provisions
Article 2 Sales
Article 2A Leases
Article 3 Commercial Paper
Article 4 Bank Deposits and Collections
Article 5 Letters of Credit
Article 6 Bulk Transfers
Article 7 Warehouse Receipts, Bills of Lading and Other Documents of Title
Article 8 Investment Securities
Article 9 Secured Transactions; Sales of Accounts and Chattel Paper
e) The UCC is neither mandatory nor comprehensive in its coverage. Generally, the parties are free to alter the effect of Code provisions by agreement. Further, the Code, to the extent it does not address a specific issue, is liberally supplemented by legal principles existing outside the UCC.
Contract law may cover agreements relating to transfers of merchandise, land, buildings, services, and other things tangible and intangible. The law of sales deals
only with transfers of rights in and to "goods" - a term referring to a relatively narrow class of items that we will define in a moment.
Also, the UCC's law of sales often requires knowledge beyond that demanded of the layperson by the law of contracts.
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