Warranties Clause
Promises about the quality, condition or legal status of goods, services or facts, with remedies if they prove untrue.
Qué es
A warranty is a contractual assurance that something is true or will perform to a stated standard, for example that software is free of known defects or that a seller owns what it sells. Breach of warranty gives rise to a claim for damages, distinct from a mere representation.
Por qué importa
Warranties allocate quality and legal-title risk and set the standard the supplier must meet. Clear warranties (and disclaimers) determine who pays when goods or services fall short, and they are central to product liability and acceptance.
Cómo aplicarla
- State each warranty precisely and tie it to an objective standard or specification.
- Define the remedy: repair, replacement, re-performance or refund, and the time limit.
- Disclaim all implied warranties not expressly given, where the law allows.
- Distinguish warranties from representations, which carry different remedies.
Consejos de negociación
- • Buyers should resist a sole-remedy cap that excludes consequential loss for core warranties.
- • Sellers should keep warranty periods short and remedies limited to repair or replacement.
Errores frecuentes
- • Confusing warranties and representations, which trigger different claims and remedies.
- • Failing to disclaim implied warranties, leaving wider exposure than intended.
Referencias legales
- BW 6:74 Conformity / non-performance Derecho neerlandés
- BW 6:248 Reasonableness and fairness Derecho neerlandés
Salvo indicación en contrario, las referencias remiten al derecho neerlandés (Burgerlijk Wetboek, el Código Civil neerlandés); los instrumentos de la UE como el RGPD se aplican en toda la UE. Se trata de información general, no de asesoramiento legal. Otras jurisdicciones tratan estos conceptos de forma distinta. Verifique el texto vigente y su situación con un abogado cualificado.
Preguntas frecuentes
Preguntas comunes sobre esta cláusula.