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Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

"Have manufactured for it"

I am reading a contract and ran into this sentence:

The Party is not in itself a Licensee and has no rights to create, manufacture, or have manufactured for it any Licensed Products...

What does "have manufactured for it" mean? How is it different from just "manufacture"? I am not even sure what "it" here refers to.

Thanks!
  

Top answer

If the party has something manufactured for it, it causes another person or persons to manufacture the licensed products on its (the original party's) behalf.

  • If the party has something manufactured for it, it causes another person or persons to manufacture the licensed products on its (the original party's) behalf.
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2 Answers
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If the party has something manufactured for it, it causes another person or persons to manufacture the licensed products on its (the original party's) behalf.
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Aha! So it's delegating or outsourcing. Am I getting it right?

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