Contract Termination Notification
Introduction
The supply contract is a particular type of contract through which the supplier (or supplier) undertakes to perform over time a series of periodic services "Service (economy)"), determined or indeterminate, in exchange for the payment of a price, which may be unitary or for each periodic service.
Some legal philosophers equate this contract to a commercial sale, denying it autonomy. However, the supply contract is distinguished from the sale for the following reasons: a) the sale is an instantaneous contract, while the supply is a successive contract; b) the purchase and sale cannot have as its object the provision of services, the supply can; c) the purchase and sale contract can be civil or commercial, while the supply is always commercial; d) the purchase and sale contract is a transfer of ownership, the supply contract may also be a transfer of use or enjoyment, or have as its object the provision of personal services. Therefore, both types of contracts are not confused or identified. Examples of this are the supply of public services or private services.
Definition and scope
According to Joaquín Garrigues Díaz-Cañabate, it can be defined as: "the contract by which one company (supplier or provider) undertakes, through a unit price, to deliver to another (supplied) movable things at times and in quantities fixed by the contract or determined by the creditor according to its needs."[1] While for the author Emilio Novoa it is "a main, consensual, commutative and onerous contract by which one of the parties obliges the supply or delivery of generic things in determined quantities and times (or undetermined and according to orders) at a price stipulated or that can be stipulated independently of the parties.
Features
Its economic function consists of satisfying the periodic needs that the client "Customer (economy)") (or supplier) has to receive certain movable things without having to stipulate as many contracts as there are periods of need. Therefore, it is a contract.
the insurable interest.