South Carolina Statutes
§ 36-7-206 — Termination of storage at warehouse's option.
South Carolina § 36-7-206
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 36COMMERCIAL CODE
Ch. 7COMMERCIAL CODE—WAREHOUSE RECEIPTS, BILLS OF LADING AND OTHER DOCUMENTS OF TITLE
This text of South Carolina § 36-7-206 (Termination of storage at warehouse's option.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 36-7-206 (2026).
Text
(a)A warehouse, by giving notice to the person on whose account the goods are held and any other person known to claim an interest in the goods, may require payment of any charges and removal of the goods from the warehouse at the termination of the period of storage fixed by the document of title, or, if a period is not fixed, within a stated period not less than thirty days after the warehouse gives notice. If the goods are not removed before the date specified in the notice, the warehouse may sell them pursuant to Section 36-7-210.
(b)If a warehouse in good faith believes that the goods are about to deteriorate or decline in value to less than the amount of its lien within the time provided in subsection (a) and Section 36-7-210, the warehouse may specify in the notice given under sub
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Legislative History
HISTORY: 1962 Code SECTION 10.7-206; 1966 (54) 2716; 2014 Act No. 213 (S.343), SECTION 2, eff October 1, 2014. OFFICIAL COMMENT Prior Uniform Statutory Provision: Former Section 7-206. Changes: Changes for style. Purposes: 1. This section provides for three situations in which the warehouse may terminate storage for reasons other then enforcement of its lien as permitted by Section 7-210. Most warehousing is for an indefinite term, the bailor being entitled to delivery on reasonable demand. It is necessary to define the warehouse's power to terminate the bailment, since it would be commercially intolerable to allow warehouses to order removal of the goods on short notice. The thirty day period provided where the document does not carry its own period of termination corresponds to commercial practice of computing rates on a monthly basis. The right to terminate under subsection (a) includes a right to require payment of "any charges", but does not depend on the existence of unpaid charges. 2. In permitting expeditious disposition of perishable and hazardous goods the pre-Code Uniform Warehouse Receipts Act, Section 34, made no distinction between cases where the warehouse knowingly undertook to store such goods and cases where the goods were discovered to be of that character subsequent to storage. The former situation presents no such emergency as justifies the summary power of removal and sale. Subsections (b) and (c) distinguish between the two situations. The reason of this section should apply if the goods become hazardous during the course of storage. The process for selling the goods described in Section 7-210 governs the sale of goods under this section except as provided in subsections (b) and (c) for the situations described in those subsections respectively. 3. Protection of its lien is the only interest which the warehouse has to justify summary sale of perishable goods which are not hazardous. This same interest must be recognized when the stored goods, although not perishable, decline in market value to a point which threatens the warehouse's security. 4. The right to order removal of stored goods is subject to provisions of the public warehousing laws of some states forbidding warehouses from discriminating among customers. Nor does the section relieve the warehouse of any obligation under the state laws to secure the approval of a public official before disposing of deteriorating goods. Such regulatory statutes and the regulations under them remain in force and operative. Section 7-103. Cross References: Sections 7-103 and 7-403. Definitional Cross References: "Delivery". Section 1-201. "Document of title". Section 1-102. "Good faith". Section 1-201 [7-102]. "Goods". Section 7-102. "Notice". Section 1-202. "Notification". Section 1-202. "Person". Section 1-201. "Reasonable time". Section 1-205. "Value". Section 1-204. "Warehouse". Section 7-102. Editor's Note 2014 Act No. 213, SECTION 51, provides as follows: "SECTION 51. This act becomes effective on October 1, 2014. It applies to transactions entered into and events occurring after that date."
Nearby Sections
15
§ 36-7-101
Short title.§ 36-7-102
Definitions and index of definitions.§ 36-7-104
Negotiable and nonnegotiable warehouse receipt, bill of lading or other document of title.§ 36-7-105
Reissuance in alternative medium.§ 36-7-106
Control of electronic document of title.§ 36-7-208
Altered warehouse receipts.§ 36-7-209
Lien of warehouse.Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 36-7-206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/7/36-7-206.