Cator Can't Compete: Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)?

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Cator Can't Compete : Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)? / Lookofsky, Joseph.

The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law : Harmony, Cross-Inspiration, or Discord?. red. / Joseph Lookofsky; Mads Bryde Andersen. Copenhagen : Djøf Forlag, 2014. s. 131-146.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lookofsky, J 2014, Cator Can't Compete: Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)? i J Lookofsky & M Bryde Andersen (red), The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law : Harmony, Cross-Inspiration, or Discord?. Djøf Forlag, Copenhagen, s. 131-146.

APA

Lookofsky, J. (2014). Cator Can't Compete: Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)? I J. Lookofsky, & M. Bryde Andersen (red.), The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law : Harmony, Cross-Inspiration, or Discord? (s. 131-146). Djøf Forlag.

Vancouver

Lookofsky J. Cator Can't Compete: Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)? I Lookofsky J, Bryde Andersen M, red., The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law : Harmony, Cross-Inspiration, or Discord?. Copenhagen: Djøf Forlag. 2014. s. 131-146

Author

Lookofsky, Joseph. / Cator Can't Compete : Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)?. The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law : Harmony, Cross-Inspiration, or Discord?. red. / Joseph Lookofsky ; Mads Bryde Andersen. Copenhagen : Djøf Forlag, 2014. s. 131-146

Bibtex

@inbook{f5c147b06e5b41d6a637325da1e85799,
title = "Cator Can't Compete: Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)?",
abstract = "In his contribution to this volume, Professor Joseph Lookofsky argues that the resolution of a given buyer{\textquoteright}s non-conformity claim is likely to reflect an attempt to balance competing interests: the countervailing pulls between traditional caveat emptor doctrine (what you see is what you get) and the buyer{\textquoteright}s expectation that the seller should be responsible for certain defects (caveat venditor). Since the Danish (and other Scandinavian) domestic solutions to this conundrum do not match the international solution set forth in Article 35(3) of the CISG Convention, and since Article 35(3) has itself been subjected to differing interpretations, Professor Lookofsky sees reason to ask whether these differences might lead to a Scandinavian CISG “homeward trend.”",
author = "Joseph Lookofsky",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-87-574-3376-0",
pages = "131--146",
editor = "Joseph Lookofsky and {Bryde Andersen}, Mads",
booktitle = "The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law",
publisher = "Dj{\o}f Forlag",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Cator Can't Compete

T2 - Caveat Emptor under CISG Article 35(3)?

AU - Lookofsky, Joseph

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - In his contribution to this volume, Professor Joseph Lookofsky argues that the resolution of a given buyer’s non-conformity claim is likely to reflect an attempt to balance competing interests: the countervailing pulls between traditional caveat emptor doctrine (what you see is what you get) and the buyer’s expectation that the seller should be responsible for certain defects (caveat venditor). Since the Danish (and other Scandinavian) domestic solutions to this conundrum do not match the international solution set forth in Article 35(3) of the CISG Convention, and since Article 35(3) has itself been subjected to differing interpretations, Professor Lookofsky sees reason to ask whether these differences might lead to a Scandinavian CISG “homeward trend.”

AB - In his contribution to this volume, Professor Joseph Lookofsky argues that the resolution of a given buyer’s non-conformity claim is likely to reflect an attempt to balance competing interests: the countervailing pulls between traditional caveat emptor doctrine (what you see is what you get) and the buyer’s expectation that the seller should be responsible for certain defects (caveat venditor). Since the Danish (and other Scandinavian) domestic solutions to this conundrum do not match the international solution set forth in Article 35(3) of the CISG Convention, and since Article 35(3) has itself been subjected to differing interpretations, Professor Lookofsky sees reason to ask whether these differences might lead to a Scandinavian CISG “homeward trend.”

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-87-574-3376-0

SP - 131

EP - 146

BT - The CISG Convention and Domestic Contract Law

A2 - Lookofsky, Joseph

A2 - Bryde Andersen, Mads

PB - Djøf Forlag

CY - Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 117779882