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Buyers Rejection A rejection must occur within a reasonable time after the delivery of the goods. The buyer must promptly notify the seller of the rejection. The buyer must give the seller an opportunity to correct the problem with the goods. The rejection must occur before the buyer accepts the goods.
A buyer has a right to reject goods that do not conform to the contract.
If the buyer is a merchant, then the buyer has a special duty to follow reasonable instructions from the seller for disposing of the rejected goods; if no instructions are forthcoming and the goods are perishable, then he must try to sell the goods for the sellers account and is entitled to a commission for his
Process for Rejection of Goods The buyer is responsible for providing a notice of rejection letter to the supplier describing the defect(s) that renders the delivery as non-conforming to the Contract/PO, what the delivery and inspection criterion was, and how the delivered product does not conform.
(4)The buyer is also deemed to have accepted the goods when after the lapse of a reasonable time he retains the goods without intimating to the seller that he has rejected them.

People also ask

Conforming goods are the goods that meet the specifications of the sales contract. In sales law, the nature and quantity of goods needed by a buyer is normally specified in a purchase contract. A seller is bound to deliver the goods requested, to the buyer on an agreed consideration.
A buyer has a right to reject goods that do not conform to the contract.
Buyers Rejection A rejection must occur within a reasonable time after the delivery of the goods. The buyer must promptly notify the seller of the rejection. The buyer must give the seller an opportunity to correct the problem with the goods. The rejection must occur before the buyer accepts the goods.
Manner and Effect of Buyers Rightful Rejection. A buyer with the right to reject the goods is deemed to have accepted the goods if it keeps them for an unreasonable amount of time without rejecting them (UCC 2-602(1)).
Article 2 of the UCC (MCL 440.2101 et. seq.) governs the sale of goods. Article 2 is meant to provide default rules and gap-fillers that apply where two parties have not comprehensively addressed common issues in a written contract.

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