Consumer Protection
Consumer Protection
Consumer Protection
COURSEWORK
INDEX NUMBER:
150010089
LECTURER:
COURSEWORK:
INTRODUCTION
The contemporary era is marked as the era of consumers. As soon as a person is
born, s/he starts consuming. He needs clothes, milk, oil, soap, water, and many more
things and these needs keep taking one form or the other all along his life. Thus we
all are consumers in the literal sense of the term. No country can knowingly or
unknowingly disregard the interest of the consumers. This can be argued on the
basis of fast enactment of consumer protection laws in almost all part of the world.
Apart from the consumer protection laws in developed world, we could find the
accelerated rate of lawmaking for consumers in developing countries like Thailand,
Sri Lanka, Korea, Mongolia, Philippines, Mauritius, China, Taiwan, Nepal,
Indonesia, Malaysia and South Africa. Uganda is however an exception to this rule.
When we approach the market as a consumer, we expect value for money, that is,
right quality, right quantity, right prices, information about the mode of use among
others but there may be instances where a consumer is harassed or cheated.
The Government understood the need to protect consumers from unscrupulous
suppliers, and several laws have been made for this purpose. We have the Contract
Act, the Sale of Goods Act, the Dangerous Drugs Act, the Prevention of Food
Adulteration Act, the Standards of Weights and Measures Act, among many others
which to some extent protect consumer interests. However, these laws require the
consumer to initiate action by way of a civil suit involving lengthy legal process
which is very expensive and time consuming. This is evidenced in the case of
Kalemera Godfrey & Ors v Unilever (U) Ltd & Anor1
There is no specific framework on consumer protection to provide a simpler and
quicker access to redressal of consumer grievances. The term consumer is not
defined among the current laws. The rights of a consumer are scattered in various
statutes.
CONSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE
The 1995 Constitution of Uganda in objective XIV and Article 21 provides that the
state shall endeavour to make sure that every Uganda enjoys a right of access to
clean water and food. Still every person shall be equal under the law in respect to
economic status and shall enjoy equal protection under the law 2.
DEFINITION OF A CONSUMER
In the absence of a specific legislation on consumer protection in Uganda, the term
consumer is not defined and thus the authorities relied upon for this definition is
either textbooks or legal dictionaries. The Oxford dictionary of Law 3 defines
consumers as, those who contract otherwise than in the course of a business to
obtain goods or services from those who supply them in the course of a business.
Very often than not, Ugandan laws usually resemble Indian laws. For the purposes of
the definition, the Indian consumer protection Act defines a consumer as,
any
person who
(i)buys any goods for a consideration which has been paid or promised or partly
paid and partly promised, or under any system of deferred payment, and
includes any user of such goods other than the person who buys such goods
for consideration paid or promised or partly paid or partly promised, or under
any system of deferred payment when such use is made with the approval of
such person, but does not include a person who obtains such goods for resale
or for any commercial purpose; or
(ii) hires or avails of any services for a consideration which has been paid or
promised or partly paid and partly promised, or under any system of deferred
payment, and includes any beneficiary of such services other than the person
who hires or avails of the services for consideration paid or promised, or
partly paid and partly promised, or under any system of deferred payment,
when such services are availed of with the approval of the first mentioned
person;
There is one basic thought that consumers need to be protected. Another thought is
how he can be protected? Now, when we say that there is need to protect the
consumers, a question arises - consumers are protected against what? Thus some
rights of consumers which need to be protected are4:
Right to safety - It is right to be protected against the marketing of goods and
services which are hazardous to life and property.
Right to information - It is right to be informed about the quality, quantity, potency,
purity, standard and price of goods or services, with a view to protect the consumer
against unfair trade practices
Right to choose - The right to choose can be made meaningful by ensuring access to
a variety of goods and services at competitive prices.
Fair and effective competition must be encouraged so as to provide consumers with
the widest range of products and services at the lowest cost.
Right to represent - It is right to be heard and to be assured that consumers interests
will receive due consideration at appropriate forums.
Right to redressal - It is a right to seek redressal against unfair trade practices or
restrictive trade practices or unserpulous exploitation of consumers.
Right to education - The right to consumer education is a right which ensures that
consumers are informed about the practices prevalent in the market and the
remedies available to them.
WHAT REALLY IS CONSUMER PROTECTION?
The above paragraphs have defined a consumer, and declared his rights that need
protection under the law. How what really does consumer protection mean?
The Oxford Dictionary of Law 5 defines consumer protection as, The protection,
especially by legal means, of consumers (those who contract otherwise than in the
course of a business to obtain goods or services from those who supply them in
the course of a business).
5 Supra note 2
6 Substantive law defines rights and duties as opposed to giving the rules by which rights
and duties are established.
7 Uganda Law Reform Commission A STUDY REPORT ON SELECTED TRADE
LAWS CONSUMER PROTECTION LAW Kampala, Uganda 2004
emptor (buyer beware), it cautions consumers to rely on their own resources and
devices when contracting8.
The Act has a number of weaknesses. For example section 54 permits parties to
contract out of the provisions of the Act by stipulating that where any right, duty or
liability would arise under a contract of sale by implication of law, it may be
negatived or varied by express agreement or the course of dealing between the
parties, or by usage, if the usage be such as to bind both parties to the contract. In
practice, most vendors and suppliers make consumers accept the exclusion or
limitation of the protective provisions embodied in the Act. Section 5 of the Sale of
Goods Act requires that a contract for the sale of goods of the value of two hundred
shillings or more has to be in writing if it is to be enforceable. This provision is also
very limiting first, because in Uganda today, two hundred shillings has lost value.
Secondly, you cannot write a written contract simply because you have bought a
bunch of matooke at 15,000. Therefore, a consumer who buys defective goods may
fail to enforce the breach in a court of law because the contract of sale was not in
writing.
The Public Health Act is intended to make provision for securing and maintaining
health. It covers a wide range of public health and consumer matters such as
sanitation, housing, prevention of infectious diseases, and protection of foodstuffs,
public water supplies, meat and milk.
From the above analysis of the laws currently regulating consumer protection, it is
now plausible to conclude that there is a pressing need to enact a consumer
protection law that boldly lays down the rights of consumers, the obligations of the
suppliers and the remedies open to aggrieved consumers. There is also an imperative
need for the establishment of consumer protection courts or tribunals to quickly
redress consumer whinges.
consumers from access to adequate and accurate information about the products
they buy.
CONCLUSION
Uganda currently lacks a specific framework on consumer protection. There is
however a bill on Consumer Protection drafted in 1999 and 2004. Two reports have
been published specifically on the need for consumer protection in Uganda. First a
report by Reid & Priest in 1999 and Secondly by Uganda Law Reform Commission in
2004. Consumers are however currently protected by various legislations as
enunciated above. There is thus a pressing need for a specific framework to deal with
consumer whinges. With inspiration from the Consumer laws in UK and India and
even South Africa there is also a need for consumer protection courts or tribunals.
REFERENCES
STATUTES
1995 Constitution of Uganda
Contract Act, Cap. 73
The Sale of Goods Act, Cap. 82
The Weights and Measures Act, Cap. 103.
The Uganda National Bureau of Standards Act, Cap. 327.
National Drug Policy and Authority Act, Cap. 206.
The Public Health Act
Food and Drugs Act
Unfair contracts Act UK
Consumer Protection Act India
WORKING PAPERS