Banking Chapter Four
Banking Chapter Four
Banking Chapter Four
Learning Objectives: After studying this lesson, students will be able to:
The relationship between a banker and a customer is primarily that of debtor and
creditor, the respective positions being determined by the existing state of account.
If the customer has a credit balance with the bank, he is the creditor and if he has a
debit balance with the bank, he is the debtor of the bank. Thus, bank does not work
as a trustee of money deposited with it by the customer because, instead of money
being set apart in a safe room, it is replaced by a debt due from the bank. When a
bank accepts the deposits from a customer, it becomes the debtor of the customer
and it will be bound to return the equivalent amount to the customer or his order on
demand. In other words, it is the obligation of the bank to honor the cheques issued
by the customer if the following conditions are fulfilled:
(a) There is sufficient balance in the account of the customer;
(b) The cheque is properly drawn and presented; and
(c) There is no legal restriction on payment.
The banker who is liable to pay the value of a cheque of a customer as per the
contract, when the amount is due from him to the customer is called “Paying
Banker” or “Drawee Bank.” The payment to be made by him has arisen due to the
contractual obligation. He is also called drawee bank as the cheque is drawn on
him.
While making payment he should be cautious. He cannot honor the cheque when
sufficient funds are not available at the credit of the customer. If he pays by
oversight he will be running the risk of making good this loss i.e., making payment
without having sufficient funds. At the same time he will also run the risk when he
dishonors cheque even when sufficient funds are available at the credit of the
customer. He is liable for damages for this wrongful dishonor. Thus in both the
cases he runs the risk. However, the customer should present the cheque at the
branch where the amount is kept and should not raise any objection if the cheque is
dishonored at branches where the customer does not hold the account. But he is at
liberty to open accounts in any number of branches and can draw cheques, when he
is having sufficient funds in each account.
Precautions
The banker’s duty to pay customer’s cheques is delicate and hence, to be handled
judiciously as well as cautiously. The banker has to take the following precautions
while honouring the cheques of his customers:
1. Proper Form: A banker should see whether the cheque is in the proper form. That
means the cheque should be in the manner prescribed under the provisions of the
commercial code. It should not contain any condition.
2. Open or Crossed Cheque: The most important precaution that a banker should
take is about crossed cheques. A banker has to verify whether the cheque is open or
crossed. He should not pay cash across the counter in respect of crossed cheques. If
the cheque is a crossed one, he should see whether it is a general crossing or special
crossing. If it is a general crossing, the holder must be asked to present the cheque
through some banker. It should be paid to a banker. If the cheque bears a special
crossing, the banker should pay only the bank whose name is mentioned in then
crossing. If it is an open cheque, a banker can pay cash to the payee or the holder
across the counter. If the banker pays against the instructions as indicated above, he
is liable to pay the amount to the true owner for any loss sustained. Further, a
banker loses statutory protection in case of forged endorsement.
For example, Madras Bank Ltd. Vs South India Match Factory Ltd., a cheque was
issued by a purchaser in favour of the official liquidator of a company towards the
purchase price of certain properties. The bank paid the amount of the crossed
cheque to the liquidator across the counter. The liquidator mis-appropriated the
amount. The court held that the banker committed breach of statutory duty and was
negligent in paying direct to the liquidator over the counter and hence, was not
entitled to legal protection.
If it is a ‘Not Negotiable’ crossing, the paying banker has to verify the genuineness of
all the endorsements. If it is an ‘Account Payee’ crossing, the banker can credit the
account of the payee named in the cheque and not that of any other person.
Bank of India Vs Official Liquidator: In this case, it was held that if customer has an
account in a bank which has several branches, the branches at which he has no
account are justified in refusing to honour his cheques.
4. Date of the Cheque: The paying banker has to see the date of the cheque. It must
be properly dated. It should not be either a post-dated cheque or a stale-cheque. If a
cheque carries a future date, it becomes a post-dated cheque. If the cheque is
presented on the date mentioned in the cheque, the banker need not have any
objection to honour it. If the banker honours a cheque before the date mentioned in
the cheque, he loses statutory protection. If the drawer dies or becomes insolvent or
countermands payment before the date of the cheque, he will lose the amount. The
undated cheques are usually not honoured.
A stale cheque is one which has been in circulation for an unreasonably long period.
The custom of bankers in this respect varies. Generally, a cheque is considered stale
when it has been in circulation for more than six months. Banker does not honour
such cheques. However, banker may get confirmation from the drawer and honour
cheques which are in circulation for a long time. So, verification of date is very
important.
5. Mutilated Cheque: The banker should be careful when mutilated cheques are
presented for payment. A cheque is said to be mutilated when it has been cut or
torn, or when a part of it is missing. Mutilation may be either accidental or
intentional.
If it is accidental, the banker should get the drawer’s confirmation before honouring
it. If it is intentional, he should refuse payment. The cheque is to be returned with a
remark ‘Mutilated cheque’ or ‘Mutilation Requires Confirmation’. In Scholey Vs
Ramsbottom, the banker was held liable for wrong payment of a cheque which was
dirty and bore visible marks of mutilation.”
6. Words and Figures: The amount of the cheque should be expressed in words, or
in words and figures, which should agree with each other. When the amount in
words and figures differ, the banker should refuse payment. However, there is
difference between the amount in words and figures; the amount in words is the
amount payable. If the banker returns the cheque, he should make a remark ‘amount
in words and figures differ.
7. Alterations and Overwritings: The banker should see whether there is any
alteration or over-writing on the cheque. If there is any alteration, it should be
confirmed by the drawer by putting his full signature. The banker should not pay a
cheque containing material alteration without confirmation by the drawer. The
banker is expected to exercise reasonable care for the detection of such alterations.
Otherwise, he has to take risk. Material alterations make a cheque void.
9. Sufficiency of Funds: The banker should see whether the credit balance in the
customer’s account is sufficient to pay the cheque or not. If there is an overdraft
agreement, he should see that the limit is not exceeded. The banker should not make
part-payment of the cheque. He should pay either full amount or refuse payment. In
case of insufficiency of funds, the banker should return the cheque with the remark
‘No Funds’ or ‘Not Sufficient Funds’.
1. Due Care and Diligence in the Collection of Cheques: The collecting banker is
bound to show due care and diligence in the collection of cheques presented to him.
In case a cheque is entrusted with the banker for collection, he is expected to show it
to the drawee banker within a reasonable time. A cheque is not presented for
payment within a reasonable time of its issue, and the drawer or person in whose
account it is drawn had the right, at the time when presentment ought to have been
made, as between himself and the banker, to have the cheque paid and suffers actual
damage, through the delay, he is discharged to the extent of such damage, that is to
say, to the extent to which such drawer or person is a creditor of the banker to a
large amount than he would have been if such cheque had been paid.
In case a collecting banker does not present the cheque for collection through proper
channel within a reasonable time, the customer may suffer loss. In case the
collecting banker and the paying banker are in the same bank or where the
collecting branch is also the drawee branch, in such a case the collecting banker
should present the cheque by the next day. In case the cheque is drawn on a bank in
another place, it should be presented on the day after receipt.
3. Agent for Collection: In case a cheque is drawn on a place where the banker is not
a member of the ‘clearing-house’, he may employ another banker who is a member
of the clearing-house for the purpose of collecting the cheque. In such a case the
banker becomes a substituted agent. An agent, holding an express or implied
authority to name another person to act in the business of the agency has
accordingly named another person, such a person is a substituted agent. Such an
agent shall be taken as the agent of a principal for such part of the work as is
entrusted to him.
From the above discussion, there is no doubt to say that the banker is acting as a mere
agent for collection and not in the capacity of a banker. If the customer allows his
banker to use the collecting money for its own purpose at present and to repay an
equivalent amount on a fixed date in future the contract between the banker and the
customer will come to an end.
Activity 4.1
Assume you are a banker (Aksum University model bank), what things need to be
considered just to honour the cheque that your customer brought to you for payment to
be effected?
4.3 Holder In Due Course
Thus, a person who is in possession of the instrument may or may not be a holder.
For example, a finder of lost instrument or a thief cannot be a holder. Similarly, a
beneficiary or an agent in possession of an instrument will not be a holder. But legal
representatives of deceased holder or official assignee or official receiver would be
treated as holders of the instruments. It is only the holder and no other person, who
can give a valid discharge for the instrument.
In English Law, a holder in due course is known as “bonafide holder for value
without notice.” A holder in due course is a person who acquires a promissory note,
bill or cheque bonafide for value and maturity. Section 9 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act defines a holder in due course as “any person who for
consideration became the possessor of a negotiable instrument if payable to bearer;
or the payee or endorsee thereof, if payable to order, before the amount mentioned
in it becomes payable, and without having sufficient cause to believe that any defect
existed in the title of the person from whom he derived his title.” In other words, a
holder in due course is a person who takes the instrument in good faith and for
value.
Thus, a holder in due course must satisfy the following conditions:
(a) He must have obtained the instrument for valuable consideration or value.
Consideration must not be void or illegal. The consideration must be valuable and
lawful. So, the donee of a negotiable instrument is not a holder in due course.
(b) He must have become a holder of the instrument before the date of its maturity.
(c) He must have become a holder of the instrument in good faith.
(d) He must have taken the instrument complete and regular on the face of it.
It is thus obvious that every holder is not a holder in due course. A holder of a
negotiable instrument will not be a holder in due course, if:
3. Before and after Maturity: A holder may get the instrument even after it has
become payable. But a holder in due course must get the possession of the
instrument before its maturity.
4. Title: A holder does not acquire good title, if the title of any of the prior parties
was defective. But a holder in due course acquires good title even though there was
defect in the title of any prior parties, provided he had no notice of the defect. His
title is free from defects.
5. Presumption: Every holder in due course is a holder, but every holder may not be
a holder in due course.
7. Privileges: A holder does not enjoy any special privileges, but a holder in due
course enjoys certain special privileges.
Activity 4.2
Hey students! Just play a role as if you are a holder and a holder in due course of the
cheque in class or in lab.
Summary
The banker who is liable to pay the value of a cheque of a customer as per the
contract, when the amount is due from him to the customer is called “Paying
Banker” or “Drawee Bank.”
In case a cheque is entrusted with the banker for collection, he is expected to show it
to the drawee banker within a reasonable time. A cheque is not presented for
payment within a reasonable time of its issue, and the drawer or person in whose
account it is drawn had the right, at the time when presentment ought to have been
made, as between himself and the banker, to have the cheque paid and suffers actual
damage, through the delay, he is discharged to the extent of such damage, that is to
say, to the extent to which such drawer or person is a creditor of the banker to a
large amount than he would have been if such cheque had been paid.
Review Questions
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS: