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    Hire purchase (HP) is the legal term for a conditional sale contract developed in the UK, and now found in India, Australia, New Zealand, and other states which have adopted the English law concept. In cases where a buyer cannot afford to pay the asked price as a lump sum but can afford to pay a percentage as a deposit, the contract allows the buyer to hire the goods for a monthly rent. When a sum equal to the original full price plus interest has been paid in equal installments, the buyer may then exercise an option to buy the goods at a predetermined price (usually a nominal sum) or return the goods to the owner. If the buyer defaults in paying the instalments, the owner can repossess the goods which differentiates HP from other unsecured consumer credit systems and benefits the economy because markets can expand while minimising the seller's exposure to risk of default. Equally, HP is advantageous both to private consumers because it spreads the cost of expensive items over an extended time period, and to certain business consumers in that the balance sheet and taxation treatment of hire purchased goods differs from outright capital purchases. The need for HP is reduced when consumers have collateral or other forms of credit are readily available.

    The following is a statement of principles common to the different state laws. For a detailed explanation, readers should refer to the law operating in the state in which any proposed transaction is to take place and/or seek professional advice.


        Hire purchase
            Standard provisions
            The seller and the owner
                Implied warranties and conditions to protect the hirer
            The hirers rights
            The hirers obligations
            The owners rights
            U.S. Terminology
            See also

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    Standard provisions
    To be valid, HP agreements must be in writing and signed by both parties. They must clearly set out the following information in a print that all can read without effort:

      a clear description of the goods
      the cash price for the goods
      the HP price, i.e., the total sum that must be paid to hire and then purchase the goods
      the deposit
      the monthly instalments (most states require that the applicable interest rate is disclosed and regulate the rates and charges that can be applied in HP transactions) and
      a reasonably comprehensive statement of the parties' rights (sometimes including the right to cancel the agreement during a "cooling-off" period).

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    The seller and the owner
    If the seller has the resources and the legal right to sell the goods on credit (which usually depends on a licensing system in most countries), the seller and the owner will be the same person. But most sellers prefer to receive a cash payment immediately. To achieve this, the seller transfers ownership of the goods to a Finance Company, usually at a discounted price, and it is this company that hires and sells the goods to the buyer. This introduction of a third party complicates the transaction. Suppose that the seller makes false claims as to the quality and reliability of the goods that induce the buyer to "buy". In a conventional contract of sale, the seller will be liable to the buyer if these representations prove false. But, in this instance, the seller who makes the representation is not the owner who sells the good to the buyer only after all the instalments have been paid.

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    Implied warranties and conditions to protect the hirer
    The extent to which buyers are protected varies from state to state, but the following are usually present:
      the hirer will be allowed to enjoy quiet possession of the goods, i.e. no-one will interfere with the hirer's possession during the term of this contract
      the owner will be able to pass title to, or ownership of, the goods when the contract requires it
      that the goods are of merchantable quality and fit for their purpose, save that exclusion clauses may, to a greater or lesser extent, limit the Finance Company's liability
      where the goods are let by reference to a description or to a sample, what is actually supplied must correspond with the description and the sample.

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    The hirers rights
    The hirer usually has the following rights:
      To buy the goods at any time by giving notice to the owner and paying the balance of the HP price less a rebate (each state has a different formula for calculating the amount of this rebate)
      To return the goods to the buyer — this is subject to the payment of a penalty to reflect the owner's loss of profit but subject to a maximum specified in each state's law to strike a balance between the need for the buyer to minimise liability and the fact that the owner now has possession of an obsolescent asset of reduced value
      With the consent of the owner, to assign both the benefit and the burden of the contract to a third person. The owner cannot unreasonably refuse consent where the nominated third party has a good credit rating
      Where the owner wrongfully repossesses the goods, either to recover the goods plus damages for loss of quiet possession or to damages representing the value of the goods lost.

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    The hirers obligations
    The hirer usually has the following obligations:
      to pay the hire installments
      to take reasonable care of the goods (if the hirer damages the goods by using them in a non-standard way, he or she must continue to pay the installments and, if appropriate, compensate the owner for any loss in asset value)
      to inform the owner where the goods will be kept.

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    The owners rights
    The owner usually has the right to terminate the agreement where the hirer defaults in paying the instalments or breaches any of the other terms in the agreement. This entitles the owner:
      to forfeit the deposit
      to retain the instalments already paid and recover the balance due
      to repossess the goods (which may have to be by application to a Court depending on the nature of the goods and the percentage of the total price paid)
      to claim damages for any loss suffered.

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    U.S. Terminology
    In the United States, where the word hire most commonly refers to employment, the comparable system is called Closed-end leasing, also sometimes known as lease purchase, lease option, and rent-to-own.

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    See also
     
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    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hire purchase". link