Title: Liability for Negotiable
1CHAPTER 25
Liability for Negotiable Instruments Banks
and Their Customers
2Banks Duty to Provide Information
- A bank is not required to provide a monthly
statement, but most do. - A statement (if provided) must disclose
- Interest rate paid
- Amount of interest earned
- Fees imposed by the bank
- The number of days covered by the statement
3The Banks Duty to Pay
- A bank must pay a check if the check is
authorized by the customer and complies with the
terms of the checking account agreement. - A bank is not required to pay a check on an
overdrawn account, but may choose to do so. It
is then allowed to either repay itself out of the
next deposit or demand immediate payment of the
overdraft.
4Wrongful Dishonor
- If a bank violates its duty and wrongfully
dishonors an authorized check, it is liable to
the customer for all actual and consequential
damages.
5Difficult Situations for a Bank
- The Death of a Customer
- Bank may continue to pay checks for ten days
after it learns of the death, unless it receives
a stop payment order from someone claiming an
interest. - Incompetent Customers
- Once notified that a court has found a customer
to be incompetent, the bank is liable if it pays
the customers checks.
6Invalid Instruments
- Forgery
- If a bank pays when the issuers name is forged,
it must recredit the issuers account. - Alteration
- If a check has been altered, the customer is
liable only for the original terms of the check,
and the bank is liable for the rest. - Completion
- If an incomplete check is later filled in by
someone other than the original issuer, the bank
is not liable unless it was on notice that the
completion was improper.
7Dating on Checks
- Stale Checks
- A bank is not required to pay checks that are
presented more than six months after their date,
but it is not liable if it does pay. - Post-dated Checks
- A bank is not liable for paying a post-dated
check unless the customer has notified the bank
in advance that a post-dated check is coming.
8Stop Payment Orders
- As a general rule, if a bank pays a check over a
stop payment order, it is liable to the customer
for the loss he suffers. - A stop payment order is only valid if it
describes the check with reasonable certainty. - An oral stop payment order is valid for 14 days
a written one for 6 months.
9Withdrawing Money by Check
- A bank may not allow funds to be withdrawn for
several days after a deposit is made.
10Withdrawing Cash
- Because a bank is at greater risk of loss when a
customer withdraws cash, he generally must wait
about a day longer to withdraw cash against a
deposit than the time period for writing a check.
11Provisions of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act of
1978
- Employers may require all employees to accept
payment by electronic transfer (direct deposit),
but may not require that it go to a particular
bank. - Electronic fund transfer cards (ATM, debit, etc.)
sent without a customers request must be invalid
until the consumer activates it.
12Debit, Credit and ATM Cards
- Some cards are both debit and ATM cards. If used
at an ATM, the card withdraws cash from the
users account. If used at merchants
point-of-sale terminal, the purchase amount is
deducted from the users account. - Credit cards do not deduct money from the users
account. The user gets a monthly bill detailing
the amount owed. - Debit cards are typically more widely accepted
than checks.
13Electronic Fund Transfer Act (contd)
- Documentation of electronic transfers must be
provided both at the ATM and in monthly or
quarterly statements. - If reported within 60 days, a bank must
investigate an error within the next 10 days or
provisionally credit the account until the
investigation can take place.
14Electronic Fund Transfer Act (contd)
- Consumer Liability for Unauthorized Transactions
(stolen ATM card) - If reported within 2 days of theft consumer
liable for 50, bank liable for the rest. - If more than 2 days, but within 60 days of theft
consumer liable for up to 500. - If not reported within 60 days, consumer is
liable for the full amount of loss.
15Privacy
- The Gramm-Leach-Bililey Act of 1999 requires that
banks and other financial institutions must
disclose to consumers any non-public information
they wish to reveal to third parties. The
consumer then has the option to opt-out or deny
the institution permission to disclose that
information.
16This area of law is important because virtually
everyone has written a check or used an ATM and
because the law regarding these transactions is
changing rapidly.
17Link to the Internet
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have an active link to the internet on this
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