postage

Logistics and Contract LawLegal glossary term

Legal Definition

Postage refers to the payment made for the carriage of goods or mail, typically through a postal service. In a legal context, it signifies the fee paid by a sender to the postal service to transport a document or package from one location to another.

Plain-English Translation

Imagine postage as the money you pay to get your letters or packages delivered across the country. It's the cost of sending something from here to there using the mail system.

Context in Contracts

It matters in legal documents because it establishes the cost and method of transportation for physical assets (like documents or packages) within contracts, litigation claims, or regulatory compliance related to logistics.

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01

A clause in a contract specifying that the 'postage' for a shipment must be included in the total payable amount.

02

A regulatory filing where the required postage fee for transporting physical evidence is calculated.

Document context

How postage shows up in legal documents

What is it?

The payment made by a sender to a postal service for the carriage of goods or mail, representing the fee paid to transport a document or package from one location to another.

Why does it matter?

It matters in legal documents because it establishes the cost and method of transportation for physical assets (like documents or packages) within contracts, litigation claims, or regulatory compliance related to logistics.

When does it matter?

Postage usually appears when discussing the cost of sending physical items, such as in contract clauses detailing shipping costs, insurance claims for goods in transit, or in regulatory filings that require physical transport.

Where is it usually seen?

It is usually seen in contracts governing logistics, transportation agreements, insurance policies covering shipments, and in regulatory compliance documents related to the movement of tangible assets.

Who is affected?

The sender (the party paying for the shipment) and the postal service (the entity providing the transport service) are affected by it; the recipient or consignee is also affected by the cost incurred.

How does it work?

It works by being quantified as a specific fee, often calculated based on weight, distance, and service type, which is then incorporated into the total cost calculation of a legal claim or contract.

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