Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
typical and atypical mercantile contract (APPLICABLE LAW: (APPLICABLE LAW:…
typical and atypical mercantile contract
ATIPIC CONTRACTS: they are those that lack legal regulation and that will be governed by the general contracting rules, in addition to the stipulations made by the parties, and related standards
TYPICAL CONTRACTS: They are all those that are governed fundamentally by: the general rules of the contracts (articles 1254 to 1314 of the Civil Code) the norms of similar contracts, of the same essential nature or of a similar nature
NEGOTIATION: remember that the conclusion of the contract
of international sale is nothing more than the culmination of a
series of stages that translate into meetings, communications,
exchange of opinions, proposals and counter proposals that
make up the phase prior to the conclusion of the contract and that is known
and drive with the negotiation term. In fact, in training
del comercio internacional uno de los temas a impartir es el relativo a
“Técnicas y Estrategias de la Negociación Internacional”.
INTERNATIONAL NEGOTIATION OF CONTRACTS: So we say that: the contract for the international sale of goods is the agreement of wills between two people (although we know that in some cases they may be more), through which one of them called a seller and established in a given country is obliged to deliver materially and legally
INTERNATIONAL CONTRACTS:
CONTRACTING PARTIES: without the purpose of
deepen or enter into greater elucidations, but by the
on the contrary, comment in a simple way this aspect
naturally it is fundamental and as we infer
of the concept expressed in the previous paragraph, we start from
the idea that we are facing a typical scenario,
APPLICABLE LAW:
APPLICABLE LAW: another of the great
advantages available to the parties involved
in the contract object of this guide and in relation to this
point that is decisive - both for its celebration
as mainly in its consequences- and that
It also becomes one of its clauses (placed
usually in the last part of the contract in writing