Commercial Paper and Secured Transactions Flashcards

1
Q

Post-Dated Check

A

It does not represent a current demand to pay. However, a bank is protected against liability for paying the check before its date unless the customer expressly notifies the bank of the postdating. This allows the bank to identify the check as it is processed through its computers.

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2
Q

Contrary terms

A

Whenever there is a conflict between written words and numbers, the written words prevail.

If the instrument contains contrary terms, words control figures unless the words are ambiguous or uncertain (i.e., illegible), in which case, figures control.

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3
Q

Alteration of an instrument

A

Where a person fails to exercise ordinary care and thereby substantially contributes to an alteration of an instrument, that person is precluded from asserting the alternation against a person who, in good faith, pays the instrument and takes it for collection. If a bank knows of an alteration, this does not apply.

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4
Q

Large blank space on check

A

A large blank space left after the figure and the words on the check do constitute a failure to exercise ordinary care.

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5
Q

Unauthorized completion of check

A

An unauthorized, but not fraudulent, completion of a check does not discharge the drawer from the obligation. A check can be enforced according to its altered format since it was not for an amount in excess of the debt owed to the payee. Further, if the alteration was made possible only because of the failure to exercise ordinary care by the drawer in leaving large blanks, the drawer cannot complain of the alteration of the document and is precluded from asserting the alteration against a person who, in good faith, pays the instrument as completed.

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6
Q

What counts as value?

A

An antecedent debt.

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7
Q

To whom does a bank owe an obligation

A

A bank does not owe any obligation to a holder of a draft drawn on the bank to pay the draft; rather the bank’s only obligation runs to its customer, and that obligation is to pay drafts that are properly payable.

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8
Q

Holder in Due Course

A

A holder is someone in possession of an instrument with a right to enforce it.

A person who takes the instrument for value, in good faith, and without notice of any defenses or claims to the instrument is a holder in due course. A HDC takes free of most defenses—they are subject only to “real” defenses (e.g., incapacity) and not personal defenses (e.g., theft).

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9
Q

Negotiation of an order instrument

A

Negotiation of an order instrument requires a transfer of possession plus the indorsement of the payee.

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10
Q

Fraudulent alteration

A

Fraudulent alteration generally discharges all parties from liability on the check. However, in the case of an incomplete instrument altered by unauthorized completion, a person who takes the instrument for value, in good faith, and without notice of the alteration may enforce the instrument according to its terms as completed.

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11
Q

Good faith

A

Look out for large discount, suspicious circumstances, hesitation on the part of the potential HDC in making the exchange.

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12
Q

Infancy defense

A

Infancy is a real defense if it would be a defense against a simple contract under state law. In Virginia, infancy is a defense in a simple contract action except when the contract is for necessaries.

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13
Q

Checks and obligations

A

A check does not discharge the obligation for which it is given, but merely suspends the obligation until paid. If a check payable to a particular person is lost or stolen and is not indorsed by the payee, the payee retains ownership of the check.

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14
Q

Stop payment orders

A

A bank customer is entitled to have its account recredited when the bank pays out over a valid stop payment order. Oral stop payment orders are valid for fourteen days; written stop payment orders are valid for six months.

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15
Q

Warranty of presentment

A

A party who breaches the warranty of presentment is liable to the drawee. The warranty of presentment warrants that the party presenting the check has title to the instrument and that the presenter is entitled to enforce the instrument.

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16
Q

What kinds of forgeries/alterations prevent HDC status?

A

Forgery of payee’s indorsement of an order will prevent the title from passing (payee’s indorsement must be authorized and valid for order paper to be negotiated).

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17
Q

Priority between two creditors with perfected security interests in an item of collateral

A

As between two creditors with perfected security interests in an item of collateral, priority goes to the first to file or perfect, whichever occurs first.

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18
Q

Attachment

A

For a security interest to be perfected, it must attach to the collateral. A security interest attaches to goods when (i) the parties agree to create a security interest evidenced by an authenticated security agreement or the secured party’s possession of the goods; (ii) the creditor gives value; and (iii) the debtor has rights in the goods.

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19
Q

Perfection

A

Security interests in most goods can be perfected by filing a financing statement. If filing occurs before attachment takes place, the security interest will be perfected upon attachment.

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20
Q

Forgery in chain of title

A

A forgery in the chain of title prevents someone from being a holder, thereby precluding HDC status.

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21
Q

Estoppel by negligence

A

A person whose negligence substantially contributes to a forgery is estopped from asserting the forgery against someone who took the instrument for value and in good faith.

22
Q

Transfer Warranties

A

A person who transfers an instrument for consideration warrants that (i) she is entitled to enforce the instrument; (ii) all signatures on the instrument are authentic and authorized; (iii) no defenses are good against her; (iv) the instrument has not be altered; and (v) she has no knowledge of any insolvency proceedings.

Warranty iii (defenses) can be negated except with respect to checks, but only by language clearly indicating that no warranty is being made.

23
Q

Indorser’s contract

A

A person who signs a note other than as a maker or acceptor incurs secondary liability as an indorser becoming obligated to pay it according to its terms if the maker does not pay. A forged signature on an instrument is deemed to be the signature of the forger.

24
Q

Requisites for negotiability

A

To be negotiable, a note must be signed by its maker and be an unconditional written promise to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest, to order or to bearer, on demand or at a definite time, without any undertaking or instruction not authorized by law.

An authorized agent can sign on behalf of a principal. Notes not stating when payable are payable on demand. Sufficient if note says “payable to X or its order.”

25
Q

Proper negotiation

A

To be properly negotiated, a note payable to a named payee must be indorsed and delivered to the holder.

26
Q

“Without recourse”

A

That language is sufficient to negate an indorser’s contract liability, i.e., an implied promise to pay, if the note is presented for payment, is dishonored, and notice of dishonor is given to the endorser. It is not sufficient to negate warranty liability.

27
Q

Who is liable for unaccepted checks?

A

Drawers are liable for unaccepted checks dishonored by a bank. A drawer’s contract liability cannot be unilaterally revoked by issuing a stop payment order. The effect of a stop payment order is merely to prohibit the drawee bank from paying the check.

28
Q

When can a bank charge an item against a customer’s account?

A

Generally, a bank can charge an item against a customer’s account only if the item is properly “payable,” which in turn, requires that the item be authorized by the customer. A check is properly payable only if it is signed by the drawer or the drawer’s authorized agent.

29
Q

Accord and satisfaction

A

In the Commonwealth, if a claim is unliquidated or subject to dispute, it can be discharged in full if the person against whom the claim is asserted in good faith tenders an instrument that conspicuously states that it is tendered in full satisfaction of the claim and the claimant obtains payment of the instrument. If the requirements are met, an accord and satisfaction are presumed.

30
Q

Alteration of “Payment in Full”

A

Virginia does not allow avoidance where the altered instrument was tendered in good faith as full payment of the disputed debt.

31
Q

Avoiding accord and satisfaction

A

One can avoid the risk of an accord and satisfaction if you tender repayment of the amount of the check within 90 days of its payment.

32
Q

Duty to read bank statements

A

A customer has a duty to the bank to examine monthly statements and exercise reasonable care to discover any unauthorized payments resulting from alteration or forgery of the drawer’s signature and to notify the bank promptly after any such discovery.

A customer is precluded from asserting an alteration or forgery of his signature if he does not notify the bank of the alteration or forgery within one year after the bank has made the instrument available to him.

Additionally, if a statement has been available to the customer for a reasonable period, more than thirty days, and he does not object to any of the signatures or alterations, the customer is estopped from demanding recredit on any other items forged by the same wrongdoer.

33
Q

Conditional

A

An instrument is conditional if it expressly states a condition for payment or states that the promise or order is subject to or governed by another writing. This renders an instrument nonnegotiable.

34
Q

Foreign currency

A

An instrument does not lose its negotiability merely because it is payable in foreign money. An instrument payable in foreign money may be paid in an equivalent amount of dollars in the current bank-offered spot rate at the place of the payment.

35
Q

Payable to order or bearer

A

A negotiable instrument must be payable “to order” or “bearer” at the time of its issuance. The words “or any other person” do not defeat negotiability. They will have the effect of making this instrument one that is in effect “bearer paper,” not payable to an identifiable person but to bearer.

36
Q

Acceleration clause

A

An instrument is payable at a definite time if it is payable: (i) on a fixed date; (ii) on the lapse of a specified period of time after sight or acceptance; or (iii) at some time readily ascertainable at the time the instrument is issued.

When an instrument calls for “earlier of” it is an acceleration clause. Any clause that accelerates the time of payment upon the occurrence of an event does not destroy negotiability.

37
Q

Interest

A

No interest will be due unless the instrument provides for the payment of interest. If the instrument says that it is payable with interest, but does not state the rate, the judgment rate (the rate on a court judgment) will be implied.

Interest is payable from the date of the instrument.

38
Q

Restrictive indorsement

A

A restrictive indorsement (i.e., an indorsement limiting payment to a particular person or otherwise prohibiting further transfer or negotiation of the instrument) is not effective to prevent further transfer or negotiation of the instrument.

39
Q

Where must a financing statement be filed?

A

For corporate debtor, state of incorporation. For individual, state where she resides.

40
Q

Attachment of a security interest

A

In order for a security interest to attach, three things must occur: first, the parties must have an agreement that the security interest attached that is evidenced by either a record authenticated (e.g., signed) by the debtor, possession, or control; second, value must be given by the secured party; third and last, the debtor must have rights in the collateral.

These three requirements must coexist but can occur in any order.

41
Q

Perfected security interests and subsequent buyers

A

Generally, a perfected security interest in collateral is good against subsequent buyers. An important exception to this rule involves buyers in the ordinary course of business. A buyer in the ordinary course of business is defined as someone who buys goods from a seller who is engaged in the business of selling goods of the kind purchased.

Under Virginia law, a buyer in the ordinary course of business who buys goods from a seller who is engaged in the business of selling goods of the kind purchased takes free of any security interest created by his seller unless: (i) he knows of the security interest and (ii) he knows that the sale is in violation of the terms of the security agreement.

42
Q

PMSI

A

A purchase money security interest (PMSI) arises when a creditor sells the goods to the debtor on credit and retains a security interest in the goods for all or part of the purchase price (creditor and seller are the same person); or when a creditor advances funds that are used by the debtor to purchase the collateral (creditor and seller are different persons). A PMSI in consumer goods is perfected automatically, no filing is necessary.

43
Q

Garage sale rule

A

This rule provides that a consumer purchaser who buys consumer goods from another consumer takes free of a perfected security interest if he buys the goods without knowledge of the security interest and before a financing statement covering the goods has been filed.

44
Q

PMSIs and Priority

A

When perfected security interests in the same collateral conflict, the secured creditor that was first to file or perfect generally has priority. There is an exception to the first to file or perfect rule for PMSIs. A PMSI in noninventory collateral, such as equipment, will have priority over other perfected security interests in the same collateral if the interest is perfected before or within 20 days after the debtor receives possession of the collateral.

45
Q

PMSI in Consumer Goods

A

A PMSI in consumer goods is automatically perfected upon attachment.

46
Q

Collateralized Instruments and Subsequent Purchasers

A

Under UCC Article 9, an HDC prevails over secured parties claiming an interest in the promissory note.

47
Q

Fixtures and security interests

A

A security interest in a fixture may be perfected only by making a fixture filing describing the real property to which the fixture is affixed. While financing statements generally must be filed with the State Corporation Commission, a fixture filing must be filed in the local office where a mortgage on real property would be filed.

48
Q

Perfection of a security interest in a motor vehicle

A

Security interests in motor vehicles are required to be titled, except those created by dealers are perfected by notation on the certificate of title. No Article 9 filing is required. Security interests created by dealers in vehicles held for sale or lease are perfected by ordinary filing under the UCC even if certificate of title covering the vehicle is outstanding. Security interests in farm tractors and special construction and forestry equipment are perfected only by filing a financing statement.

49
Q

Perfection by pledge

A

A secured party may perfect a security interest in most types of collateral simply by taking possession of it. The interest is perfected from the moment of possession and continues as long as possession is retained.

50
Q

Default with Non-Goods Collateral

A

With a non-goods collateral, such as chattel paper, if the debtor who gave a security interest in the collateral defaults, the secured party may notify the person owing money to the debtor (i.e., the account debtor) to make payment to the secured party rather than to the debtor. Upon notification, the account debtor must pay the secured party rather than the debtor.

51
Q

Incomplete terms

A

Under Article 3, an incomplete instrument may be enforced according to its incomplete terms or as augmented by authorized completion. Alteration of an instrument generally does not discharge a party unless the alteration was fraudulent.

Virginia law states that an “alteration” is an unauthorized change in an instrument that purports to modify the obligation of a party or an unauthorized addition of words or numbers relating to the obligation of a party.

52
Q

Local filing permitted

A

The Virginia Code authorizes local filing only if the collateral is a fixture, as-extracted collateral, or timber to be cut.