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Objectives
Theory and Principles Negotiable instruments. Definition and features of bill of exchange. Cheque, components, features and crossing To understand the components of cheques. Return cheques & BMC Difference between bills of exchange and cheques To define promissory notes.
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Theory
Money as medium of exchange. Now FIAT BE, cheques, & Promissory notes as proxy for money: For ease of exchange Security in exchange Bill of Exchange Act 1949 derived from English law (Common Law, Tort, & Law of Equity)
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Principles
Common Law s nemo dat quod non habet (no one can give what he doesn t possess). With negotiable instrument, the above common law principle may not apply. Thus, if you steal a RM500 bearer cheque and negotiates with an innocent party who takes it in good faith and for value, value, that innocent party acquires good title to the cheque.
Transferability transferor transfers whatever title in the instrument he has to the transferee. If transferor has defective title (such as stolen cheque), he can only transfer the defective title. Transferee will obtain a defective title. Transferability is viewed from the angle of transfer . Transferring a bad title will result into the receiver acquiring a bad title.
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Negotiability transferee acquires a better title to the instrument than that possessed by the transferor. Negotiate to obtain value. Depending on the case, transferee may acquire a good title, although the transferor transfers defective title. It s from the angle of acquiring. receiver may acquire good title which was bad at time of transfer. Thus, all negotiable instruments are transferable. Not all transferable instruments are negotiable.
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3. The transferee who takes in good faith and for value will obtain a good title though the transferor may have had a defective title or may not have title to it. 4. The holder does not have to give notice to any holder to establish his/her title.
Example of negotiable instruments bill of exchange (which also includes cheques), treasury bills, dividend warrant, bank draft, negotiable instrument of deposit (NID), bearer securities, etc. Traveller s cheques are not really a negotiable instrument. It has a condition attached, i.e., drawer must sign in front of the payee.
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Bills of Exchange
BE is a written promise of payment from one person to another that is legally binding. Initially, there are 3 parties: 1. the drawer 2. the drawee the person to whom the bill is addressed n who becomes the acceptor when he/she signs the bill. 3. the payee Should the bill be negotiated (i.e. transferred) then anyone holding or endorsing it becomes a party to the bill n liable upon it.
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Where the acceptor is unable to pay, the beneficiary should look to the drawer or any person who subsequently signed the bill. Eg., exporter draws a BE n subsequently signed n accepted by the importer (acceptor). Here, Importer accepts the obligation to pay n will pay 90 days later. Exporter discounts the BE with the banker (beneficiary) n obtains the money immediately. If 90 days later the banker fails to recover the money from the importer/acceptor, the banker can seek recovery from either the exporter or the importer.
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Acceptance by the drawee is indicated by his /her signature. BEs are widely used in internationally trade. In domestic trade they are replaced by cheques.
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Necessary Elements of BE
1. Unconditional order in writing: Order for payment is independent of any condition. Unconditional: Pay to Izzat the sum of RM500. Conditional: Pay to CT Sara the sum of RM700 if she graduates with PMK of 3.8. In Ong Kim Lian V Kwek Beng Choo, Both men Choo, and documents to be identified. False drawing not allowed amount to conditional order.
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Court case
At 60 days after sight D/A on arrival of steamer, pay this first of exchange .. to the order of RHB Bank, Kuala Lumpur Is it a bill of exchange? Is the order conditional?
D/A means documents released against acceptance n payment was not conditional upon arrival of steamer. It is a BE.
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RM50,000
To: Saad
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90 days after sight pay Shahril or order the sum of RM50,000 Arshad To: Saad
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In Nathan v Ogdens (1905), R cheque: * If the request is for receipt by the payee, n does not involve the bank, it s a BE. * If the request for a receipt is addressed to the bank not to pay unless receipted, then it is a condition, n it is not a BE. In Thairlwall v Great Northen Railway Company (1910), a clause stating that the cheque must be presented within 3 months of issue is not a condition. It was just an instruction to the payee n not a condition for the bank to fulfil.
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Order in writing instruction must be an order n not a mere request. This explains why your cheque is pre-printed prePay . Or order .
For a cheque, the written order could be on any material such as a pair of knickers, a cow, m dustbin lid.
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2.
Addressed by one person to another: Dayang sells a book to Kathie: A. Kathie draws a RHB cheque for $50 to pay Dayang.
Kathie is drawer, RHB is drawee & Dayang drawer, is payee. B. Kathie uses $50 cash cheque she receives from Harun to pay Dayang. Kathie signs on the back of that cheque and passes it to Dayang. Kathie is indorser, Dayang is a payee indorser,
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C.
Dayang is a drawer, Kathie a drawee drawer, D. Dayang draws a 30-day 30usance/tenor/after sight draft. Kathie accepts
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Dual roles Drawer drawee: Drawer draws a bill on the drawee requiring payment to himself. Banker releases loan to the borrower by bank s cheque. DraweeDrawee-payee: Customer draws a cheque on the MBB to pay loan to MBB. DraweeDrawee-drawer: Bank issues a draft drawn on its head office. The word person means legal person & include a company, Treasurer. For a cheque, joint drawers acceptable, but not alternative ones.
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* The use of facsimile signature should be supported by an indemnity insurance policy. * Possible that agent is liable on a cheque, unless he stressed his agency. To stress, quote per pro . * Unsigned bill invalid, not tradable.
* Note that for a BE, it is signed by the person receiving payment, n accepted by the person making payment.
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On demand expressed to be payable on demand, at sight, or on presentation or when time for payment is not stated. Fixed future date pay on January 10, 2005.
Determinable future date 60 days from the date the goods are dispatched, 30 days after sight.
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a certain sum will also include exchange rate where this can be determined. Where words n figure disagree, it is safe to pay based on amount in words.
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bearer. For the cheque: * To a specified person the payee whom the drawer intends to receive the money. Joint payees are acceptable (eg, Mr & Mrs Harold).
* Or to the order of a specified person this allows the payee to pass the cheque on to someone else, by merely endorses the cheque n orders it to be paid to the other person. Person may also be State Secretary or Bendahari UUM
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* A bill may be payable either to order. Section 8(4), an order bill is expressed to be payable to order or to a particular person. it can still be transferred. * Or to bearer (the person in possession of the cheque) it is rare for a cheque to be written to bearer . But it become a bearer cheque when payee endorses it in blank.
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For bearer payable to bearer or on which the only or last indorsement is indorsement in blank. Indorsement is a signature on the back of the bill. Sec. 34(1), indorsement in blank is where the holder (an indorser) signs the bill on the reverse without naming the person (an indorsee) to whom title is being transferred. Be then becomes a bearer instrument.
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Parties to a bill
Drawer a person who draws the BE, such as the seller. Drawee the person who will be making the payment, such as the buyer or the bank so authorized to pay. Payee the party who is to receive the payment. Acceptor drawee who sign to indicate he accepts the obligation to pay at a later date. Endorser one who endorses/signs on the back of BE (to transfer or to negotiate BE to another party).
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Transferor one who transfers, either by delivering a bearer bill or by endorsement. Holder payee or endorsee or bearer in possession of BE. Holder must have possession of BE. However, the possessor may not be the owner of the BE. If he accepts irregular BE, he doesn t acquire a better title than the person from whom he took. Can still sue in his own name but subject to the defects of title of prior parties.
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Holder s rights convert blank to special indorsement, cross the uncrossed cheque, request a fresh cheque to replace the lost one, negotiate, present, give notice of dishonor, right of action (sue in his own name), enforce against anyone who has signed it n against his immediate transferor. Holder gets no better title than the person from whom he took. A person who takes the bill which is irregular on the face of it is same as if the bill is overdue. He is just the holder , not holder in due course .
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Holder for value where value or valuable consideration has been given for the bill. Valuable can be: a. any valuable consideration. b. settlement of debt. c. where the holder has a lien on the cheque. Once a BE/cheque is given the value, all subsequent holders are holders of value.
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Example of lien In negotiating the bills, banker pays seller 10% of the amount (seller has line of credit with the banker). The 90% is deferred until such time when the banker receives payment from the buyer. The goods automatically pledged to the banker. Here, banker holds claim over the value (10%). The pledge of goods forms a consideration.
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Rights of holder for value: 1. He can sue in his own name but his title depends on what his transferor has. Example: A payee who received a cheque which was returned due to insufficient of funds??? A payee was paid with a stolen cheque carrying a forged signature of a drawer??? BE Act says that a forged or unauthorized signature is wholly inoperative. transferor.
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Holder in due course is someone who 1. takes the bill complete and regular on the face of it (on both sides of the BE/cheque), which means that: a. no forgery of essential endorsement b. cheque is complete, without any missing sections. C. cheque must not be overdue n must be taken without notice of previous dishonor.
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Examples: 1. A cheque payable to P or order is stolen and P s indorsement is forged, no one can become a holder or holder in due course of that cheque because P s signature is essential to pass the title. However, he may sometimes have the rights of holder in due course against certain parties who are estopped from setting up the forgery. Eg. entitled to sue indorser who become a party to the cheque subsequent to the forgery, n tracing down the chain until the person who accepts the cheque with forged indorsement is found. That person has to bear the loss, unless he can find the person who forged the indorsement.
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2.If payable to P or bearer instead, P s signature is not essential to pass the title. The innocent party could become holder in due course of that cheque provided he satisfies the conditions on slide 27.
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2. take the BE/cheque in good faith n for value. Good faith is something done honestly n without notice or intent of deceit or fraud whether negligent or not . 3. must personally give value. 4. must take the BE/cheque without notice of defect in title of the person negotiating the BE/cheque to him.
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Note The value may be full or partial. But giving partial value may indicate bad faith. Also, prior mark of return cheque constitutes notice of defect .
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Rights of holder in due course: A. is an absolute legal owner of BE/cheue. His title cannot be disputed n is not affected by any defect in the previous title or by any counter claims (eg, claims of set-off). setB. can enforce against any prior parties, sue all prior parties, if necessary, in his own name if BE/cheque is not paid/honored. C. can pass a perfect title to his immediate transferee.
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Impliedly, every holder is prima facie holder in due course unless one or more of the above conditions are absent. A payee of a cheque can t be a holder in due course, as it was issued n not negotiated to him. The cheue was merely transferred to him. He is just a holder of that cheque.
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3. in documentary collection, banker discount (i.e. negotiates) a usance BE to a walk-in walkcustomer (seller with no line of credit with the banker). Banker then sends the BE for collection to the buyer. If buyer refuses to pay, banker can resort to seller for reimbursement. If buyer signed acceptance but failed to pay, banker has recourse against seller as well as buyer. Banker is holder in due course. 4. OCBC v Woo Hing Brothers (M) S/B on Traveller s cheques.
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Wrongful Possessor
is a person who takes a BE/cheque bearing a forged (or unauthorized) essential endorsement. A forged signature is no signature. So he can not be a holder, a holder for value or a holder in due course.
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Seller Goods
Buyer
BE , Documents
BE, Documents
RHB Bank
Deutche Bank
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HSBC BE K.L. BE
Indorser
BE Importer, Sintok
Drawee
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Rules
Present on the due date. On demand present within reasonable time to make drawer or endorser liable. Present at the proper place, at reasonable hour on a business day to payer or his authorized representative. Present at proper place specified, or business address or his residence If no one can be found at proper place? No 2nd or 3rd presentation is necessary.
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If drawn upon or accepted by two or more persons, present to all of them, unless partnership Where drawee or acceptor is dead, and no place of payment is specified, present to his personal representative, example his son or wife. Where specified by agreement or by customary practice, present through post/mail.
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Acceptance
When the drawee signs on the bill. Sign to indicate accepting the obligation to pay, unconditionally. Sign to indicate acceptance of goods in trust of bank, i.e., ownership of goods is with the bank. BE payable on demand needs not be presented to drawee for acceptance. It may be paid immediately.
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Acceptance is necessary when: 1. The bill is payable after sight, presentment is necessary to determine the date of payment.
2. Where the bill expressly state that it must be presented for payment. 3. Where the bill is payable elsewhere other than at the place of residence or business of drawee.
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NonNon-Acceptance
Four ways BE dishonored for non-acceptance nonWhen acceptance is refused or can t be obtained When drawee does not accept within the customary time When acceptance given is qualified and holder refuses to take it When presentment for acceptance is excused and the bill is not accepted. Immediate right of recourse against drawer and indorsers accrues to the holder.
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Payment
BE must be presented for payment, else drawer and endorser are discharged from liability. Presentment for payment must be made by holder of the bill or his agent to the drawee or his agent at the proper place , at a reasonable hour and on a business day. Bill unpaid after presentment is said to be dishonored. Holder then has right of action against drawer and endorser, but must give them notice of dishonor first.
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Dishonored by non-acceptance. nonDishonored by non-payment and the bill nonbecomes overdue and unpaid. To take legal actions it is necessary to obtain proof of dishonor by noting and protesting.
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Discharge of Bill
When payment made in due course by or on behalf of the drawee or acceptor at or after maturity, in good faith. When the acceptor of the bill becomes the holder of the bill at or after maturity. When holder unconditionally renounces his rights in writing or by returning to the acceptor. Where the bill is intentionally cancelled by the holder or his agent.
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Cheque
A bill of exchange, which is an unconditional order in writing, addressed by one person customer) bank, (drawer customer) to the drawee bank, signed by the drawer, requiring the drawee bank to pay on demand (i.e. on presentation) a sum certain in money to, or to the order of, a specified person (payee) or to bearer and which does not (payee) order the drawee to perform additional acts.
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Unconditional see slides on BE. Order in writing - see slides on BE. Addressed by a person to another person (banker) - see slides on BE. Signed by the drawer - see slides on BE.
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Payable on demand post dated cheque is not within the definition of on demand. However, it will still be enforceable between the parties to it ( the drawer, drawee n payee). A sum certain in money - see slides on BE. To, or to the order of, a specified person see slides on BE.
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Types of endorsements
Blank endorsement endorser merely signs on the reverse, making it a bearer cheque, hence, needs no further endorsement to transfer the title. Rationale is, a cheque payable to bearer is transferable without any endorsement.
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Special endorsement endorser specifies the person to whom the cheque is being transferred (endorsee). For the endorsee to transfer the tile further, he must endorse the cheque himself Eg, Pay to the order of Azlan
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Restrictive endorsement prohibits further transfer, eg, Pay to the order of Azlan only . Endorsee has all rights of a holder (can sue in his own name, etc.), but not free to transfer the title, n can not be a holder in due course. Why? A mere transfer from transferor to Azlan.
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Conditional endorsement eg, Pay Sarah on giving birth to her fifteenth child . Paying banker can just ignore this endorsement. Although bank has right to ask for proof of the condition, it is under no obligation to do so.
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Types of cheque
Open cheque Pay to Norhatiyah or bearer Order cheque Pay to Faziana, Pay to Wira only Bearer cheque Pay to Faziana or bearer Faziana may transfer to Azlan by signing/indorsing on the back of the cheque in blank or write Pay to the order of azlan or Pay to the order of Azlan only .
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A cheque starts its life when it is issued. Delivery is either actual or constructive. Constructive delivery effected by mere intention. Example, drawer completes a cheque n notifies payee n holding it on payee s behalf the cheque is deemed issued. Sec. 2 Holder is payee or indorsee in possession of it or the bearer.
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Crossing
Cross to to prevent fraud & as safeguard to drawer and subsequent holders. General crossing two parallel lines & Company and/or Not Negotiable .Must be paid direct into payee s account. Must not exchange for cash over the counter. ABC Bank Bhd appears in between the two parallel lines, cheque must only be paid by the drawee banker to the banker named in the crossing.
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Special crossing
This is the addition of the name of a bank, with or without the addition of two transverse lines on the cheque. To ensure paying bank pays the proceeds of the cheque to the bank stated in the crossing. Collecting banker stamps its crossing stamp for the same reason - if lost or stolen, paying bank will only make payment to bank stated in crossing. If two banks stated, the cheque will be returned.
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Not Negotiable crossing court case. In Wilson and Meeson vs Pickering, a clerk took a signed blank cheque from his employer (the cheque duly crossed nonnonnegotiable and fraudulently made it payable to Pickering. Court held employer could recover from Pickering since the clerk has received no title to the cheques, Pickering could get no better title because of the crossing.
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Account Payee crossing becomes a Pay Order, not transferable n negotiable. Banker deemed negligent if it collects such cheque for the party other than the named payee (n loses its statutory protection). Should not be paid to third party unless one with undoubted standing and with satisfactory explanation why it is negotiated. In House Property Company of London Ltd vs London County and Westminster Bank Ltd, cheque drawn in favor of two trustees was paid into account of the trustees solicitor. Bank was liable for wrongful conversion in that they acted negligently for collecting account payee cheque for someone other than the named payee.
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In RHB Bhd v Comax Sdn Bhd (1999) $650,000 payable to Abrasive Waterjet S/B was credited into a/c Abrasive Waterjet Services S/B. Held: Validity of a/c payee cheque is restricted to the parties thereto. RHB was negligent.
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Not Negotiable and Account Payee crossing The safest crossing. It prevent negotiability and warns the collecting banker to pay only to the named payee. Now bank pre-print A/C Payee only. pre-
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Order cheque negotiated by indorsement. Holder may indorse generally or specially. Bearer cheque negotiated by delivery alone. Remains as bearer for rest of its life, Sec. 8 (3). Can t convert into an order cheque. Pay X or Y to negotiate, both must indorse, unless a partnership. Forged or unauthorized indorsement/signature deemed irregular, i. e. the cheque is not complete n regular on its face. an innocent 3rd party who gives value in good faith can t be the holder in due course (Arab Bank Ltd v Ross).
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Material Alteration
Sec 64 of BE Act 1949: where materially altered without consent of all parties liable to the cheques, the cheque is void except as against a. a party who has himself made, authorized or consented to alteration b. subsequent endorser provided alteration is not apparent c. a holder in due course.
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Banker will not pay cheque bearing material alteration unless the alteration has been agreed to and signed by the drawer Where not apparent, a holder in due course can enforce the cheque as if it was unaltered.
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Note: the bank may not be liable for any nonnon-apparent alteration, as in the case of London/Joint Stock Bank v Macmillan n Arthur. Arthur. Current practice, all cheques with alteration will be retuned unpaid on technical ground and charges RM10 per cheque.
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3.
liable to financial loss if fails to notify customer of the dishonor of a cheque within reasonable time (such as customer unable to enforce the cheque against previous endorser).
Other cases of negligent: a. collecting, without sufficient enquiry, cheques payable to a partnership, into private a/c of a partner. b. A/c payee cheque paid into a/c of 3rd party. c. collecting, without sufficient enquiry, cheque paying to a limited co., for an a/c other than the company s.
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Sec 85 of the Bill of Exchange Act: Where a banker, in good faith and without negligence: a. receives payment for a customer of an instrument to which this section applies, or b. having credited the customer s account with the amount of such an instrument, receives payment thereof for himself and the customer has no title or defective title to the instrument, the banker does not incur any liability to the true owner of the instrument by reason only having received payment thereof.
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Defence of estoppel
Estoppel if acting based on customer s conduct or statement, banker is prevented from denying.
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Holder for value. What constitutes giving value: 1. payment against unclear effects, value considered not given in absence of agreement, if bank has not done so on regular basis in the past, n when bank policy expressly forids. 2. reduction of debt, must be specific or permanent reduction, not just a temporary decrease n the debt. 3. bank holding a lien on cheque, value considered given.
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4. when the bank is paid for services by check, value is deemed given. Eg., foreign currency transactions, n estate agency fee. 5. where cheque is cashed over the counter, value deemed given.
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doctrine of
Although forged signature is no signature , customer my be estopped from preventing the debiting of cheque to his a/c as in London Joint Stock Bank v Macmillan and Arthur (1918), and in Greenwood v Martin Bank (1933).
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Subrogation
Where a bank has paid a cheque in breache a mandate, then it has a right of subrogation, i.e. right to step into the shoes of the creditor. Eg., ability of the bank to claim back from the customer th goods purchased with stopped cheque , in order to prevent the unjust enrichment of the customer.
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In B. Liggett (Liverpool) Ltd v Barclays Bank Ltd (19280, court held that the bank could be subrogated to the position of trade creditors n enforce the cheque. Rationale to prevent unjust enrichment of the customer.
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Thus, in Barclays Bank Ltd. V W.J.Smith, Son & Cooke (Southern) Ltd and Sowman (1979), bank able to reclaim money from beneficiary paid on stop payment cheque. In National Westminster Bank Ltd v Barclays Bank International Ltd and Ismail (1975), bank able to reclaim money paid out on forged cheque.
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Returned cheque
Reasons - Refer to drawer, Words and figure differ, Post-dated, Unauthorized alteration, OutPostOutdated (stale), Signature irregular, A/C Payee only, etc. Returned due to insufficient of fund global closure of accounts after 3 returned cheques within 1-year period. Only current account of 1same constitution affected. Can only open current a/c after 6-month 6probationary period.
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For current account with incoming payments, a/c will be frozen, incoming payments will be credited to the account, and withdrawal is by bank draft only.
5.3.05 RC
7.10.05 RC
3.4.06 RC
8.8.06 RC
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No protection. Statutory protection (sec 85) on cheque bearing forged indorsement Yes. Restricts title but not transfer No. Prevents its transferability
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Cheque Drawn Payable Acceptance Upon a banker On demand Usually accepted. drawer primarily liable to holder.
BE Upon any person On demand, fixed or determinable Not accepted. Acceptor primarily liable.
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Promissory notes
Is an unconditional promise in writing made by the maker to another signed by the maker, engaging to pay, on demand or at a fixed or determinable future time, a sum certain in money to, or to the order of, a specified person or to bearer. It s an I OWE YOU note, a promise made to pay a specified sum of money. Example, bank note, and commemorative notes issued by BNM, TB. Bankers Draft an order to pay a specified sum. May treat as BE or promissory note.
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Much like BE. Principal differences a note is a promise to pay and has only 2 parties, i.e the maker who is liable to pay and the payee (holder in case of bearer note) Who is entitled to money it represents. I promise to pay ..
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It is inchoate (incomplete or undeveloped) and ineffective until its delivery to the payee or bearer (put into circulation). Otherwise, no one in position to sue the maker. Like BE, negotiated by delivery or by delivery plus endorsement. Presentment, noting, protesting, etc applies. Special rule where a note payable on demand is negotiated, it is not deemed to be overdue for the purpose of affecting the holder with defects of title of which it has no notice.
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Summary
We have discussed: Theory & principles Characteristics of negotiable instrument Definition & features of bill of exchange Definition & features of cheque Protecton to bankers Returned cheques & BMC Differences between BE and cheque Promissory notes Any more questions?
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Woodland Development Sdn Bhd vs Chartered Bank (1986) Cheques of $10,000 favoring Woodland, or bearer, $50,000 favoring Woodland and crossed A/C Payee & $10,000 favoring Woodland, or bearer and crossed A/C Payee paid into account of another company. Bank was negligent.
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Kepitigalla Rubber Estates Ltd vs National Bank of India (1909). The company s secretary forged company s cheques for 2 months. Accepted and paid by the bank. Bank is liable if pays the cheques under a forged signature.
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Greenwood vs Martins Bank Ltd: Wife has been forging husband s signature. Husband noticed but did not inform the bank. Bank is not liable. Customer has duty to inform banker immediately.
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