96
July 13, 2010

July 13, 2010. 1. Possession of the instrument

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Page 1: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

July 13, 2010

Page 2: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument
Page 3: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

1. Possession of the instrument

Page 4: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

2. Good Title

Depends on words of negotiability found on the instrument.

Page 5: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

2. Good Title

Bearer words = possession alone is good title

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2. Good Title

Order words = properly indorsed

Page 7: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Indorsement – Generally

Signature by payee (or later holder), normally on the back.

Page 8: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Blank indorsement

Signature by payee only.

Creates bearer paper so later negotiations are by transfer of possession.

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Special indorsement

Signature by payee which names new person entitled to the money.

Creates order paper so later negotiations need indorsement of new person.

Page 10: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Restrictive indorsement

Signature by payee indicating “for deposit” or “for collection” only.

If bank does not comply, bank is liable for conversion.

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“Pay to the order of George Bush.”

First U.S. President named George Bush?

Second U.S. President named George Bush?

Some other person with the name of George Bush?

Page 12: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

“Pay to the order of William Bell and Walter Bishop.”

Both must indorse to negotiate.

Page 13: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

“Pay to the order of William Bell or Walter Bishop.”

Only one must indorse to negotiate.

Page 14: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

“Pay to the order of William Bell and/or Walter Bishop.”

Only one must indorse to negotiate.

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If transferred for value, transferee has specifically enforceable right to transferor’s indorsement.

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If transferred for value, transferee has specifically enforceable right to transferor’s indorsement.

If check deposited in your account, bank becomes holder even without your indorsement.

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“Pay to the order of Jerry W. Beyer.”

Indorse in incorrect name (“Jerry W. Beyer”), or

Indorse in correct name (“Gerry W. Beyer”), but

Person giving value may require both indorsements.

Page 18: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

A payee without legal capacity (e.g., minor or incompetent) may indorse.

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Page 20: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

1. Negotiable instrument.

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2. Held by a holder.

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3. Authenticity of instrument not apparently questioned.

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4. Holder paid value.

Value may be different from face value.

Not a gift.

Page 24: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

5. Holder in good faith:

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5. Holder in good faith:

a. Honesty in fact (subjective), plus

Page 26: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

5. Holder in good faith:

a. Honesty in fact (subjective), plus

b. Observance of reas0nable commercial standards of fair dealing (objective).

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6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired:

Page 28: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired:

a. Principal overdue

▪ Note = due date has passed

▪ Check = more than 90 days from date of issue

Page 29: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired: a. Principal overdue b. Instrument dishonored

Note = maker refused to pay Check = drawee bounces check

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6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired: a. Principal overdue b. Instrument dishonored c. Unauthorized signature

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6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired: a. Principal overdue b. Instrument dishonored c. Unauthorized signature d. Alteration

Page 32: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired: a. Principal overdue b. Instrument dishonored c. Unauthorized signature d. Alteration e. Any claim

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6. Without notice of the following things at the time instrument acquired: a. Principal overdue b. Instrument dishonored c. Unauthorized signature d. Alteration e. Any claim f. Any defense or claim in recoupment

(counterclaim)

Page 34: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What does notice mean?

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What does notice mean?

1. Actual knowledge (subjective)

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What does notice mean?

1. Actual knowledge (subjective) 2. Receipt of a notice

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What does notice mean?

1. Actual knowledge (subjective) 2. Receipt of a notice 3. Reason to know based on facts

and circumstances

Page 38: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Shelter Rule – HDC rights pass along with instrument.

Maker Payee

HDC

Holder

gift

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1. Infancy

Normally, under 18 years old

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2. Duress

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3. Lack of Legal Capacity

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4. Illegality making obligation void

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5. Fraud in the execution (fraud in the factum)

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6. Bankruptcy discharge

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7. Omission of required consumer protection language

ANY HOLDER OF THIS CONSUMER CREDIT CONTRACT IS SUBJECT TO ALL CLAIMS AND DEFENSES WHICH THE DEBTOR COULD ASSERT AGAINST THE SELLER OF GOODS OR SERVICES OBTAINED PURSUANT HERETO OR WITH THE PROCEEDS HEREOF. RECOVERY HEREUNDER BY THE DEBTOR SHALL NOT EXCEED AMOUNTS PAID BY THE DEBTOR.

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8. Statute of Limitations

Note = 6 years from due date

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8. Statute of Limitations

Note = 6 years from due date

Check = earlier of:

1. 3 years after dishonor, or

2. 10 years after issue.

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9. Obligor pays former holder before receiving notice from current holder that instrument has been transferred.

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10. Alteration

11. Unauthorized signatures and forgeries

[covered in detail later]

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Examples:

Non-delivery of goods Defective goods Non-performance of services Misrepresentation of goods Breach of warranty

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No one can take an instrument away from a holder in due course, even the true owner.

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Principal = MegaStore, Inc.

Agent = Nancy, the bookkeeper authorized

to sign checks

Issue = Is Nancy personally liable when she

signs notes and checks for MegaStore?

Page 54: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Agent (Nancy) can avoid personal liability if:

1. Identify principal (MegaStore, Inc.) on the

note, and

Page 55: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Agent (Nancy) can avoid personal liability if: 1. Identify principal (MegaStore, Inc.) on

the note, and

2. Indicate agent (Nancy) is signing for principal (MegaStore, Inc.) for example:

Nancy, as agent for MegaStore, Inc.

Nancy, bookkeeper. MegaStore, Inc. by Nancy

Page 56: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Agent (Nancy) can avoid personal liability if the instrument is a check and principal’s name (MegaStore) is on the check.

Page 57: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Primary liability to holder.

No conditions to payment other than note being due.

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Secondary liability to holder.

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Secondary liability to holder.

Conditions on drawer’s liability to holder:

1. Presentment to drawee within 30 days of issue (but, non-compliance only a problem if drawee becomes insolvent), and

Page 60: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Secondary liability to holder.

Conditions on drawer’s liability to holder:

1. Presentment to drawee within 30 days of issue (but, non-compliance only a problem if drawee becomes insolvent), and

2. Dishonor (drawee refuses to pay)

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Secondary liability to holder.

Conditions on indorser’s liability to holder: 1. Presentment to maker or drawee

within 30 days of indorsement (non-compliance discharges indorser’s liability),

Page 62: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Secondary liability to holder.

Conditions on indorser’s liability to holder: 1. Presentment to maker or drawee

within 30 days of indorsement (non-compliance discharges indorser’s liability),

2. Dishonor (maker or drawee refuses to pay), and

Page 63: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Secondary liability to holder.

Conditions on indorser’s liability to holder: 1. Presentment to maker or drawee

within 30 days of indorsement (non-compliance discharges indorser’s liability),

2. Dishonor (maker or drawee refuses to pay), and

3. Notice of dishonor to indorser within 30 days of dishonor.

Page 64: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Disclaimer of liability allowed.

Page 65: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Order of liability if several indorsers = liable in order of signatures.

Sue prior indorsers for payment.

Liable to later indorsers.

Page 66: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

None – drawee did not sign draft/check.

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Acceptance or Certification – Drawee signs the draft.

Page 68: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Acceptance or Certification – Drawee signs the draft:

1. Drawee primarily liable.

2. Drawer discharged.

3. Indorsers discharged.

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Final Payment ends contract actions on check.

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Final Payment ends contract actions on check.

Final payment occurs when: 1. Drawee bank pays the item in

cash, or

Page 71: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Final Payment ends contract actions on check.

Final payment occurs when: 1. Drawee bank pays the item in cash,

or 2. Drawee bank does not revoke

provisional settlement by “midnight deadline,” that is, midnight of the next banking day after the banking day of receipt.

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Page 73: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Liable in capacity in which accommodation party signs.

1. Maker

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Liable in capacity in which accommodation party signs.

1. Maker

2. Indorser (name outside chain of title)

Page 75: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Presumed to be a guaranty of payment.

Page 76: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Can expressly limit guaranty to one of collection only.

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Implied – arise automatically.

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Implied – arise automatically.

Off-instrument liability so possession of the instrument is NOT necessary to recover.

Page 80: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Implied – arise automatically.

Off-instrument liability so possession of the instrument is NOT necessary to recover.

Goal is to get money back that was improperly paid previously.

Page 81: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Who makes transfer warranties?

Person who transfers the instrument AND receives consideration for the instrument.

Page 82: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

To whom are transfer warranties made?

1. Immediate transferee, and

2. Subsequent transferees if transferor (1) indorsed or (2) if instrument is a check passing through collection process.

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What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time

of transfer.

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What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time

of transfer. 2. All signatures authentic and

authorized.

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What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time

of transfer. 2. All signatures authentic and

authorized. 3. The instrument has not been

altered.

Page 86: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time of

transfer. 2. All signatures authentic and

authorized. 3. The instrument has not been

altered. 4. No defense would defeat the

transferor’s ability to collect the money (“perfect plaintiff” warranty).

Page 87: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time of

transfer. 2. All signatures authentic and

authorized. 3. The instrument has not been altered. 4. No defense would defeat the

transferor’s ability to collect the money (“perfect plaintiff” warranty).

5. Transferor has no knowledge of bankruptcy of maker, acceptor, or drawer.

Page 88: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What are the transfer warranties? 1. Transferor was a holder at time of

transfer. 2. All signatures authentic and authorized. 3. The instrument has not been altered. 4. No defense would defeat the

transferor’s ability to collect the money (“perfect plaintiff” warranty).

5. Transferor has no knowledge of bankruptcy of maker, acceptor, or drawer.

6. If remotely created item, that alleged drawer authorized the item.

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Disclaiming warranties:

1. Check = transferor cannot disclaim

2. Notes and non-check drafts – transferor may disclaim

Page 90: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

Who makes presentment warranties?

1. Person who presents the instrument for payment, and

2. All previous transferors of the instrument.

Page 91: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

To whom are presentment warranties made?

1. Note = Maker

2. Draft = Drawee or acceptor

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What are the presentment warranties on a non-certified check or draft?

1. Presenter (and prior transferors) were holders at the time of presentment (or transfer).

Page 93: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What are the presentment warranties on a non-certified check or draft?

1. Presenter (and prior transferors) were holders at the time of presentment (or transfer).

2. Instrument is not altered.

Page 94: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What are the presentment warranties on a non-certified check or draft?

1. Presenter (and prior transferors) were holders at the time of presentment (or transfer).

2. Instrument is not altered. 3. Presenter (and prior transferors) had

no knowledge of an unauthorized drawer’s signature.

Page 95: July 13, 2010.  1. Possession of the instrument

What is the presentment warranty on a note?

Presenter (and prior transferors) were holders at the time of presentment (or transfer).

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Disclaiming warranties:

1. Check = cannot disclaim

2. Notes and non-check drafts = may disclaim