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Old February 26th 06, 06:07 PM posted to rec.aviation.piloting
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Default Stand up in Court?

I am not lawyer......
But one would think.. that any statement in the sales contract that states
that "the buyer understands that the aircraft is currently not airworthy and
the buyer is responsible to make it airworthy if he desires" would be
enough.

I would not stipulate any items that renders it un airworthy, that would or
could imply that repairing those items only would render the aircraft
airworthy, any thing else that is found out that needs to be repaired after
the sale to make it airworthy, the buyer "might" have some recourse against
the seller for non disclosure.

But as always, "let the buyer beware".
BT

"Flyingmonk" wrote in message
oups.com...
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/KOLB-...QQcmdZViewItem

or http://makeashorterlink.com/?B6E5245BC

"I would like to have a waiver sighed by the buyer,you are buying this
as a NON-FLYING AIRCRAFT(you will have to install the prop, to make it
flyable) Just for liability."

Would a statement like the above or a waiver stand up in a court of law
to keep the seller from losing in court? ...or would this be
considered a way to skirt the law?

The Monk