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Suppose you are a farmer, and sign an agreement with a local grocer to sell a la

ID: 420644 • Letter: S

Question

Suppose you are a farmer, and sign an agreement with a local grocer to sell a large quantity of eggs to him every month. The written contract states that you will sell him “good quality” eggs. However, when you send the first shipment, the grocer comes back and says they are not high quality enough and he will not pay you. You reply that your eggs meet United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) guidelines for being “Grade AA” which are the highest grade you can receive, but the grocer says the contract does not say anything about the USDA and that his willingness to pay depends only on his own ideas about what is good quality. Do you think you would be likely to prevail in court if you file a lawsuit? What do you think should have been added to the contract to avoid this kind of dispute?

Explanation / Answer

Prevail in a court:

In my opinion I do not think this would succeed in the law of court due to below reasons:

In the contract the following information needs to be added to avoid on such kind of disputes.