Ch 19 Introduction to Sales
27. Which of the following is true regarding an open price term?
It makes the contract unenforceable.
The price may be fixed by the seller.
The price is the “reasonable” price at the time of delivery.
The price is set by the buyer.
28. To simplify, clarify, and modernize the law governing commercial transactions, the UCC permits the use of “open
terms” in sales contracts. In the use of “open terms,” which of the following is true?
The court will use market value and other comparable sales to determine what a reasonable price would have
been at the time of delivery if the parties have not settled the price in the contract.
If time of payment is not mentioned in the contract, payment within a commercially reasonable time is
presumed.
If the contract permits the buyer or seller to determine the price during contract performance, the UCC
requires the party to do so in good faith.
All of the above are true.
29. Harriett raises and sells hippos. In order to keep her hippos happy and healthy, she feeds them Hippo Chow, which she
buys from the local pet store. Under the UCC, Harriett is:
a merchant of both hippos and Hippo Chow.
a merchant of hippos, but not of Hippo Chow.
a merchant of Hippo Chow, but not of hippos.
not a merchant of either hippos or Hippo Chow.
30. Dean Builders agrees to purchase all of its sump pump requirements for the new houses it builds from Satisfactory
Sump Pump, Inc. These two business have had similar agreements the last three years and Dean’s requirements have
averaged 100 sump pumps per year. This year there was an unusually wet spring and Dean’s requirements doubled to 200
sump pumps. Because of the high demand of sump pumps, the market price of the pumps tripled. Satisfactory Sump
Pump, Inc. delivers 100 pumps at $75, the contract price. Satisfactory has exhausted its inventory and cannot deliver any
more, so Dean buys the other 100 pumps from other suppliers at $225 each. Dean sues Satisfactory Sump Pump, Inc. for
the additional expense. What is the most likely result?
Satisfactory Sump Pump, Inc. wins; output and requirements contracts are not enforceable since no quantity is
stated.
Dean wins; Satisfactory Sump Pump, Inc. agreed to meet the needs of Dean and did not do so, which is a
breach.
Satisfactory Sump Pump, Inc. wins; requirements contracts are governed by a good faith standard, and it was
unreasonable for Dean to demand so many additional pumps.
Dean wins; the requirement of good faith applies only between merchants, and Dean is not a merchant.
31. Under the UCC statute of frauds, the writing for a sale of goods must:
be signed by both parties.