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Sale of Goods Act, 1893, section 53.
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21.—For section 53 of the Act of 1893 there shall be substituted the section set out in the following Table:
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TABLE
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Remedy for breach of warranty.
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53.—(1) Subject to subsection (2), where there is a breach of warranty by the seller, or where the buyer elects, or is compelled, to treat any breach of a condition on the part of the seller as a breach of warranty, the buyer is not by reason only of such breach of warranty entitled to reject the goods, but he may—
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(a) set up against the seller the breach of warranty in diminution or extinction of the price, or
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(b) maintain an action against the seller for damages for the breach of warranty.
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(2) Where—
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(a) the buyer deals as consumer and there is a breach of a condition by the seller which, but for this subsection, the buyer would be compelled to treat as a breach of warranty, and
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(b) the buyer, promptly upon discovering the breach, makes a request to the seller that he either remedy the breach or replace any goods which are not in conformity with the condition,
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then, if the seller refuses to comply with the request or fails to do so within a reasonable time, the buyer is entitled:
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(i) to reject the goods and repudiate the contract, or
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(ii) to have the defect constituting the breach remedied elsewhere and to maintain an action against the seller for the cost thereby incurred by him.
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(3) The onus of proving that the buyer acted with promptness under subsection (2) shall lie on him.
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(4) The measure of damages for breach of warranty is the estimated loss directly and naturally resulting, in the ordinary course of events, from the breach of warranty.
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(5) In the case of breach of warranty of quality such loss is prima facie the difference between the value of the goods at the time of delivery to the buyer and the value they would have had if they had answered to the warranty.
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(6) The fact that the buyer has set up the breach of warranty in diminution or extinction of the price or that the seller has replaced goods or remedied a breach does not of itself prevent the buyer from maintaining an action for the same breach of warranty if he has suffered further damage.
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Supplementary
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