Cancellation of Order, Goods Not Received
Dear
Pursuant
to our purchase order #: ________________ dated ________________, our Company
agreed to purchase certain goods and/or services. However, our Company has not received the
goods and/or services as of the cancellation date and therefore gives you final
notice of cancellation of this purchase order. .
This cancellation does not affect
any other purchase orders our Company has with you. Should you have any questions, please contact
at us at our address.
Yours
very truly,
_____________
Authorized
Employee
Cancellation of Order,
Goods Not Received
Review list
This
review list is provided to inform you about the document in question and assist
you in its preparation.
1. A
buyer's right to cancel a contract for goods is determined by the contract and
the law. The governing law in most
states is the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC).
Make sure that you are legally entitled to cancel the contract before
sending this notice. The best grounds
available under the UCC are time specific ones, such as going past a
cancellation date. If the goods are not
made for your specific use, this is notice is usually enough to end the
issue. If the goods are made to your specific
specification, and the Seller has nowhere else to sell them, then you have a
more troubling issue that good negotiations can usually resolve. This is the most benign kind of notice
because it merely cancels this one order but does not affect others or disrupt
the overall relationship.
2. This notice is typically sent when the goods called
for in the contract are not delivered.
If the goods were received but do not conform to the contract, you
should send our Rejection of Non-Conforming Goods Notice. This Notice must be sent timely to ensure the
buyer's rights and remedies are not lost.
The term of art is that both parties must act properly to mitigate, or
lessen, each other’s potential losses.
This is a good faith common sense approach that Courts vigorously review
should litigation occur (e.g., “Did the party or parties act reasonably to
protect the interests of the other?” And
so on and so on).
3. This notice is designed for use with the purchase of
"goods" (i.e., tangible personal property such furniture, supplies
and other such items). It does not
include real estate or intangible property (i.e., copyrights, software and
other intellectual property).
4. Keep a copy of this
letter in your Vendor file. Frequent
requirement to use this letter should suggest seeking another vendor to fulfill
your business requirements and provides evidence of bad performance on their
part for any legal ramifications that may arise out of their attempt to make
late deliveries. As a practical matter,
you can often use this letter to obtain extended payment terms in return for
you accepting late goods, assuming you can use them. Occasionally, you can often get a price
concession for acceptance of late goods.
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