(1) Foreword refers to the foreword of the contract, including the name of the contract, the names and addresses of both parties (full names are required). In addition, in the preface of the contract, the willingness of both parties to conclude the contract and the willingness to perform the contract, as well as the guarantee to perform the contract, are often stated.
(2) The text is the main part of the contract, which stipulates the terms of each transaction, usually including product name, quality specification, quantity, unit price, packaging, delivery time and place, transportation and insurance conditions, payment method, commodity inspection, objections and claims, force majeure and arbitration.
These terms reflect the rights and obligations of both parties. In order to avoid disputes between buyers and sellers after signing the contract, these terms should be specified accurately, in detail and strictly.
(3) the contract, which is the last part of the contract. This part generally lists the number of copies of the contract, the words used and their effectiveness, the time and place of signing, and the effective time.
Extended data:
Precautions:
The establishment of an international contract for the sale of goods is the result of an agreement between the two parties. When the offer made by one party is accepted by the other party, the contract is established. An offer is an expression of intention made by the offeror to one or more specific people in order to conclude a sales contract. Acceptance is the expression of the offeree's intention to conclude a contract.
Due to the differences between common law and civil law on the issue of offer and acceptance, the working group tried to reconcile the differences between the two legal systems in the drafting process. The Convention provides for the following:
Effective time of an offer: There is no difference between national laws, and the convention stipulates that an offer takes effect when it is delivered to the offeree. However, there are differences in German law between Anglo-American law and continental law on whether an offer is binding on the offeror. The Convention takes a compromise approach on this issue, stipulating that all offers, even irrevocable ones, can be withdrawn in principle.
As long as the withdrawal notice can reach the offeree before or at the same time as the offer. Once the offeree sends a notice of acceptance, the offeror cannot cancel his offer. The convention also stipulates that once an offer takes effect, it cannot be revoked in the following two cases: the offer stipulates the time limit for acceptance, or otherwise indicates that it is irrevocable; The offeree has reason to believe that the offer is irrevocable and has taken action accordingly.
Baidu Encyclopedia-International Sales Contract of Goods