Explain in detail why in 1950 25 percent of employees were


Discussion

Explain in detail why in 1950 25% percent of employees were part of the union and today about only 11% percent of employees belong to the union?

Question

Please answer the essay question of chapter 20 in detail with citing.

Chapter 20 assignment: Essay question 3,4- page 475

Textbook : ESSENTIALS of BUSINESS LAW[FIFTH EDITION]By Jeffrey F. Beatty and Susan S. Samuelson.

Chapter 20 : OWNERSHIP,RISK, AND WARRANTIES

Question 3. YOU BE THE JUDGE WRITING PROBLEM Construction Helicopters paid Heli-Dyne Systems $315,000 for three helicopters that were in Argentina. Two were ready to fly, and one was disassembled for routine maintenance. The contract said nothing about risk of loss (the parties could have saved a lot of money by reading this chapter). Heli-Dyne arranged for an Argentine company to oversee their loading on board the freight ship Lynx.

The two helicopters and 25 crates containing the disassembled craft were properly loaded, but when the ship arrived in Miami, only 7 of the crates appeared. Heli-Dyne refused to supply more parts, and Construction sued. Who bears the loss? Argument for Construction: Construction had no control over the goods until they reached Miami. Although we do not know exactly what happened to the crates, we know the one party that had nothing to do with the loss: Construction.

The company should not pay for damage it never caused. Argument for Heli-Dyne: Because the contract failed to specify risk of loss, it is a shipment contract. In such an agreement, risk of loss passes to the buyer when the seller delivers the goods to a carrier. Heli-Dyne delivered the goods and has no further responsibility.

Question 4. Leighton Industries needed steel pipe to build furnaces for a customer. Leighton sent Callier Steel an order for a certain quantity of “A 106 Grade B” steel. Callier confirmed the order and created a contract by sending an invoice to Leighton, stating that it would send “A 106 Grade B” steel, as ordered. Callier delivered the steel, and Leighton built the furnaces, but they leaked badly and required rebuilding. Tests demonstrated that the steel was not in fact “A 106 Grade B,” but an inferior steel. Leighton sued. Who wins?

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