Customer Cause definition

Customer Cause means any breach of the obligations of the Customer or any other default, act, omission, negligence or statement of the Customer, of its employees, servants, agents in connection with or in relation to the subject-matter of this Call Off Contract and in respect of which the Customer is liable to the Supplier;
Customer Cause means any breach by the Customer of its obligations under this Call Off Contract including Clause 10 (Customer Responsibilities) (unless caused or contributed to by the Supplier or as the result of any act or omission by the Customer to which the Supplier has given its prior consent);
Customer Cause means any breach of the obligations of the Customer or

Examples of Customer Cause in a sentence

  • All Equipment brought onto the Premises shall be at the Supplier's own risk and the Customer shall have no liability for any loss of or damage to any Equipment unless and to the extent that the Supplier is able to demonstrate that such loss or damage was caused by or contributed to by the Customer Cause.

  • The Supplier shall be liable for all loss of, or damage to the Property, (excluding fair wear and tear), unless such loss or damage was solely caused by the Customer Cause.

  • If the Customer fails to pay the Supplier undisputed sums of money when due, the Supplier shall notify the Customer in writing of such failure to pay including specifying the Customer Cause, detailing the overdue amount, explaining why the undisputed sums are due and requiring the failure to be remedied.

  • A Party shall not be responsible for any Loss under this Call Off Contract if and to the extent that it is caused by the default of the other (Default on the part of the Supplier and Customer Cause on the part of the Customer).

  • Otherwise, delivery will occur at 9.00am on the next Working Day properly addressed prepaid and delivered as evidenced by signature of a delivery receipt Any notices from either Party relating to termination (Clause 31), partial termination, suspension or partial suspension (Clause 32), waiver (Clause 43) Default or Customer Cause and any dispute under the Dispute Resolution Procedure (Clause 56) may not be served by email.


More Definitions of Customer Cause

Customer Cause means any of the following causes: (1) any improper use, misuse or unauthorised alteration of the Software or Service by the Customer; (2) any use of the Software or Service by the Customer in a manner inconsistent with the then- current Documentation or DataTools’ instructions which are provided from time to time; 3) the use by the Customer of any hardware or software not provided by DataTools or approved by DataTools in writing for use by the Customer in connection with the Software or Service; or (4) the use of a non-current version or release of the Software.
Customer Cause means any Service Outage caused directly or indirectly as a result of any act or omission of Customer or by any third party acting on Customer’s behalf including, without limitation, (i) failure to permit entry by UnitedLayer or make facilities or components available to UnitedLayer for testing or repair or otherwise to comply with UnitedLayer’s instructions and service requirements, (ii) defect in any Customer equipment which is not managed by UnitedLayer, (iii) improper configuration not performed by UnitedLayer;
Customer Cause an act or omission of the Customer or any of its suppliers or contractors which causes the Solution to become unavailable or which prevents the Customer from accessing the Solution or receiving the Services, including any failure of the Customer’s Equipment or the telecommunications system between the Customer and its provider.
Customer Cause has the meaning set out in Clause 5.2;
Customer Cause means any breach by the Customer of its obligations under a Call-Off Agreement (including Schedule 5 (Customer Responsibilities) of such agreement) or any other default, negligence or negligent statement of the Customer;
Customer Cause means any of the following causes of an Error,: (a) any negligent or improper use, misapplication, misuse or abuse of, or damage to, the Xxxxxx Systems by Organization or its Representatives; (b) any maintenance, update, improvement or other modification to or alteration of the Xxxxxx Cloud Services or the Xxxxxx Systems by Organization or its Representatives; (c) any use of the Xxxxxx Cloud Services or the Xxxxxx Systems by Organization or its Representatives in a manner inconsistent with the then-current Documentation; (d) any use by Organization or its Representatives of any products or services that Xxxxxx has not provided or caused to be provided to Organization; (e) delay or failure of performance by Organization of its obligations under this Agreement; or (f) any use by Organization of a non-current version or release of the Xxxxxx Cloud Services, notwithstanding notice from Xxxxxx that updates, fixes or patches are required; (g) or any act or omission by Organization or any Authorized User/access to or use of the Xxxxxx Cloud Services by Organization or any Authorized User, or using Organization's or an Authorized User's access credentials, that does not strictly comply with this Agreement and the Documentation. For clarity, if any of the foregoing is authorized by Xxxxxx in writing, it will not be considered a “Customer Cause”.
Customer Cause means any Service Outage caused directly or indirectly as a result of any act or omission of Customer or by any third party acting on Customer’s behalf including, without limitation, (i) failure to permit entry by UnitedLayer or make facilities or components available to UnitedLayer for testing or repair or otherwise to comply with UnitedLayer’s instructions and service requirements, (ii) defect in any Customer equipment which is not managed by UnitedLayer, (iii) improper configuration not performed by UnitedLayer; (iv) service interruptions requested by Customer, (v) Customer failure to act in a timely and/or proper manner when notified to do so by UnitedLayer, or (vi) transmission of data at a rate in excess of the CDR or the requested burstable port that the Customer is on.