Consumer Supply of Services (Purchase Order)

£13.99 Includes VAT

 

 

Purchase Order suitable for the supply of services involving home improvements, installation or building works. The terms should be incorporated on the back of or attached to a customer's purchase order.
These standard terms are suitable for a business to an individual and not from business to business.
 
The purchase order itself should be signed by a representative on behalf of the business and provide the company / business details.
 
The purchase order should also contain details of the price, (including deposit, VAT and any other charges) together with a specification of the works to be completed. The purchase order should also be dated.
 
These standard terms are not suitable for hire purchase, credit or conditional sales where the Consumer Credit Act 1974 would apply.
 
Clauses in this agreement:
 
  • Customer to obtain building / planning permission or other consents.
  • Provide service with care and skill and making good any damage.
  • When deposit and balance of price is payable.
  • Interest chargeable on outstanding amounts.
  • The amount of notice the customer must give to cancel their order.
  • Details of guarantees (if any) provided by the business.
  • Complaint details for dissatisfied customers.
Reasons to buy:
 
All businesses need to have clear terms and conditions of business to reassure customers they are dealing with a professional organisation. For the organisation it provides commercial certainty and clear terms that can be enforced against the customer.
 
Upgrade?

Business Legal Documents - CompactLaw Business Pack contains these terms & conditions and more business documents.

  • Free technical support
  • Document format: Microsoft Word
  • Download from our site today

Press comments

"Obtaining even the most basic legal information from a solicitor can be expensive. Next time, before you make that call, have a look at CompactLaw.

It is quick to access and easy to navigate, and offers factsheets on legal processes, costs and issues."

The Guardian