The most common type of negotiable instruments regulated by the Uniform Commercial Code.
Checks
Concerns bank deposits and collection as well as bank-customer relationships. Also regulates the realtionships of banks with one another as they process checks for payment, and it establishes a framework for deposit and checking agreements between a bank and it customers.
UCC Article 4
A special type of draft that is drawn on a bank, ordering the bank to pay a fixed amount of funds on demand.
Check
A person engaged in the business of banking, including a savings bank, savings loan association, credit union or trust company.
Bank
A person who writes a check. A depositor in the bank on which the check is drawn.
Drawer
The person to whom the check is payable.
Payee
The bank or financial institution on which the check is drawn.
Drawee
Special Types of Checks
A check drawn by a bank on itself.
Cashier’s Check
Except in very limited circumstances, the issuing bank must honor its cashier’s checks when they are presented for payment,
Dishonoring Cashier’s Checks
A check that is payable on demand, drawn on or payable through a financial institution, and designated as a traveler’s check.
Traveler’s Checks
A check that has been accepted in writing by the bank on which it is drawn. By certifying (accepting) the check, the bank promises to pay the check at the time it is presented.
Certified Check
3 Types of Bank-Customer Relationships
Created between the customer and the bank when, for example, the customer makes cash deposits into a checking account. When a customer makes a deposit, the customer becomes a creditor, and the bank a debtor, for the amount deposited.
Creditor-Debtor Relationship
Arises between a customer and the bank when the customer writes a check on his or her account.
Agency Relationship
When a bank-customer relationship is established, certain contractual rights and duties arise. The contractual rights and duties of the bank and its customer depend on the nature of the transaction.
Contractual Relationship
Agrees to honor the checks written by its customers, with the usual stipulation that the account must have sufficient funds available to pay each check.
Bank’s Duty to Honor Checks
It is liable to its customer for damages resulting form its refusal to pay. The customer does not have to prove that the bank breached its contractual committment or was negligent.
When a Drawee Bank Wrongfully Fails to Honor a Check
Includes a general obligation to keep sufficient funds on deposit to cover all checks written.
Customer’s Agreement with the Bank
It has no liability to the customer. The bank may rightfully refuse payment ona customer’s check in other circumstances as well.
When a Bank Properly Dishonors a Check for Insufficient Funds
A check that is paid by a bank when the checking account on which the check is written contains insufficient funds to cover the check.
Overdraft
A bank can expressly agree with a customer to accept overdrafts through this. If such an agreement is formed, any failure of the bank to honor a check because it would create an overdraft breaches this agreement and is treated as a wrongful dishonor.
Overdraft Protection Agreement
A bank may charge this against a customer’s account, unless the customer notifies the bank, in a timely manner, not to pay the check until the stated date.
Postdated Checks
A check, other than a certified check, that is presented for payment more than 6 months after its date.
Stale Checks