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Creating a Negotiable Instrument

Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide or previous slide . CHAPTER 23. Creating a Negotiable Instrument. Quote of the Day.

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Creating a Negotiable Instrument

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  1. Click your mouse anywhere on the screen to advance the text in each slide. After the starburst appears, click a blue triangle to move to the next slide or previous slide. CHAPTER 23 Creating a Negotiable Instrument

  2. Quote of the Day “A negotiable bill or note is a courier without luggage.” John B. Gibson, Overton v. Tyler, 1846

  3. Commercial Paper • Commercial paper is a contract to pay money. • It can be: • A Substitute for Money • A Loan of Money

  4. Promissory Note • The possessor of a piece of commercial paper has an unconditional right to be paid, as long as: • the paper is negotiable; • it has been negotiated to the possessor; • the possessor is a holder in due course; and • the issuer cannot claim any of the limited number of “real” defenses.

  5. Types of Negotiable Instruments • Note (also called a promisory note) is a promise to pay money. • Certificate of Deposit (CD) is a note made by a bank. • Draft is an order directing someone else to pay money for you (e.g., checks). • Cashier’s check -- a draft drawn by a bank on its own account. • Traveler’s check -- a draft issued by and paid by the same company (such as American Express)

  6. Rights • The possessor of non-negotiable commercial paper has the same rights--no more, no less--as the person who made the original contract. • The possessor of negotiable commercial paper has more rights than the person who made the original contract.

  7. Requirements for Negotiability • The Instrument Must: • Be in Writing. • Be Signed by the Maker or Drawer. • Contain an Unconditional Promise or Order to Pay. • State a Definite Amount of Money. • Be Payable on Demand or at a Definite Time. • Be Payable to Order or to Bearer.

  8. Definitions • Trade acceptance -- draft drawn by a seller of goods on the buyer and payable to the sell or some third party • Sight draft -- payable on demand • Time draft -- payable at some particular time in the future • Order paper -- payable to the named person or anyone designated by that named person • Bearer paper -- payable to anyone in possession of the paper

  9. Interpretation of Ambiguities • Negotiation • To be negotiated, order paper must first be indorsed and then delivered to the transferee. • Bearer paper must simply be delivered to the transferee; no indorsement is required.

  10. Contradictory Terms • When terms contradict, three rules apply: • Words take precedence over numbers. • Handwritten terms prevail over typewritten terms. • Typed terms prevail over printed terms.

  11. Indorsement • An indorsement is the signature of the payee. • Blank Indorsement -- does not designate a new payee; becomes bearer paper. • Special Indorsement -- does designate a new payee; only that person may cash the check. • Restrictive Indorsement -- limits the check to one particular use (such as deposit into a particular account).

  12. Holder in Due Course • A holder in due course has an automatic right to receive payment for a negotiable instrument (unless issuer can claim one of a few “real” defenses). • Requirements for Holder in Due Course • Under §3-302 of the UCC, a holder in due course is a holder who have given value for the instrument, in good faith, without notice of outstanding claims or other defects.

  13. Notice of Outstanding Claims or Other Defects • The instrument is overdue • The instrument is dishonored • The instrument is altered, forged, or incomplete • The holder has notice of certain claims or disputes

  14. Shelter Rule • Under the shelter rule, the transferor of an instrument passes on all of his rights. • When a holder in due course transfers an instrument, the recipient acquires all the same rights even if she is made a holder in due course herself.

  15. Defenses • Real and personal defenses are valid against an ordinary holder; only real defenses can be used against a holder in due course. • Real Defenses • Include: Forgery, Bankruptcy, Minority, Alteration Duress, Mental Incapacity, Illegality, and Fraud in the Execution. • Personal Defenses • Include Breach of Contract, Lack of Consideration, Prior Payment, Unauthorized Completion, Fraud in the Inducement, Non-Delivery and Claims in Recoupment.

  16. “Commercial paper is a fact of life for most people today; it is used extensively in business and consumer transactions. But, whenever someone acquires a document, he ought to quickly ask himself, ‘How certain am I to be paid the face value of this document?’”

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