Lawrence On Negotiable Instruments

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UNDERSTANDING NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS AND PAYMENT SYSTEMS
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Understanding
Negotiable Instruments
and Payment Systems

William H. Lawrence
Professor of Law
University of San Diego, School of Law
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UNDERSTANDING NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS AND PAYMENT SYSTEMS
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data


Lawrence, William H.
Understanding negotiable instruments and payments systems/ by
William H. Lawrence.
p. cm. -- (Understanding series)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8205-4671-2 (softbound)
1. Negotiable instruments--United States. 2. Payment--United States. I. Title. II.
Understanding series(New York,N.Y)
KF957.L394
346.73’096--dc21
2002034135

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Chapter 1, Introduction to Instruments, is reproduced
from Understanding Negotiable Instruments and
Payment Systems by William H. Lawrence, Professor of
Law, University of San Diego School of Law. Copyright
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UNDERSTANDING PROPERTY LAW
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Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION TO INSTRUMENTS

§ 1.01 Distinguishing Instruments from Other Personal


Property
Although this treatise deals primarily with negotiable instruments, a
wider perspective is taken here at the outset. A brief examination of the
entire range of personal property for purposes of the Uniform Commercial
Code (U.C.C. or Code) demonstrates where instruments fit within the array.
Although the law governing negotiable instruments is derived from multi-
ple sources, most of it is codified in the U.C.C. The various subjects
governed by the articles of the Code are neither a comprehensive nor a
random selection of concepts relevant to commercial transactions; and
certain fundamental principles flow through them and serve as unifying
themes that bind the articles together. 1 Placing negotiable instruments
within the context of the other forms of personal property shows that these
instruments are a discrete subject within a broad and integrated code.
Personal property can be divided into three overarching categories: goods,
indispensable paper, and intangibles. Goods and intangibles essentially
cover opposite ends of the spectrum that runs from tangible to intangible
personal property. Goods are moveable, tangible property whose value
depends upon its physical characteristics; the definitions of goods exclude
any of the property that comprises the intangible and indispensable paper
categories. 2 Intangibles are comprised of choses in action, like accounts and
other contract rights, and certain miscellaneous rights, such as informa-
tional rights and rights protected by patent, trademark, and copyright law. 3
Neither the legal nor the business community recognizes any single
physical embodiment as representative of the property rights associated
with pure intangibles. Even when there is a writing that shows the
existence of the right, its value is purely evidentiary; that is, that paper
need not be delivered for a transfer of the right to be effective. Pure
intangibles are transferred using the common-law assignment mechanism,
and the assignee need not receive any physical totem in order to enforce
its rights.
The category of indispensable paper occupies a middle ground between
goods and intangibles. The right itself, such as an obligation to pay money,
1 Concepts like the rule of derivative rights, negotiability, agency, priority, loss allocation,

and the hierarchy of buyer, bona fide purchaser, and buyer in the ordinary course of business
permeate most of the U.C.C. articles. The general provisions of Article 1, which apply to all
transactions under each article, further demonstrate that the U.C.C. is a unified code.
2 U.C.C. §§ 2-105(1); 9-102(a)(44).
3 U.C.C. § 9-102(a)(42).

1
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2 INTRODUCTION TO INSTRUMENTS CH. 1

is intangible; but with these types of property the right is reified, meaning
that it is embodied in a writing. The writing itself is tangible, of course,
but its value does not lie in its physical characteristics. Rather, its value
is in the rights embodied in the paper. Because the writing is recognized
as the single embodiment of those rights, the mechanism used to transfer
the rights is physical delivery to the transferee of the paper itself. Because
the transferee needs the paper to enforce the rights, the paper is referred
to as “indispensable.”
Another characteristic that joins the various types of indispensable paper
is that they are the only property on which our legal system will confer
full-fledged attributes of negotiability. This concept, which is covered in
detail in the next chapter, 4 essentially enables a qualifying transferee to
attain greater rights in the transferred property than were possessed by
the transferor. This attribute of negotiability operates as a significant
exception to the doctrine of derivative rights, a general rule governing
property transfers which limits the rights of a transferee to precisely those
possessed by the transferor.
Indispensable paper consists of three major categories: negotiable docu-
ments of title, negotiable instruments, and chattel paper. The most common
forms of negotiable documents of title are bills of lading issued by a carrier
upon shipment of goods and warehouse receipts issued by a warehouseman
upon storage of goods. 5 All documents of title, whether negotiable or nonne-
gotiable, represent the right to possession of the covered goods. The issuer
of a negotiable document will not release the goods to anyone without
surrender of the document, so a person wanting to take delivery of the goods
will need to be in possession of the document. Negotiable documents of title
are sometimes referred to as “goods paper” because they represent title to
the goods that have been shipped or stored. This means that the owner of
these goods can sell them and transfer title by transferring the document.
Two basic types of instruments 6 are governed by the Code. The first type,
certificated securities, can be called “investment paper.” They are an
interest in property commonly dealt in as a medium for investment. 7 Paper
constituting stock or a bond is valuable because of the investment share
that it represents, which can be traded or redeemed. The owner of 100
shares of stock represented by a certificated security can effectuate a sale
by delivery of the security to the buyer. Similarly, the owner of a bond can
sell the right to enforce the bond by delivery.
The other type of instrument is the primary subject matter of this text.
Negotiable instruments, also known as commercial paper, can be readily
identified as “money paper,” because this form of indispensable paper
4 See § 2.02 infra.
5 U.C.C. §§ 1-201(15); 7-201(2).
6
Article 9 also identifies a third type of instrument — one that is nonnegotiable — for certain
transactions that are beyond the scope of this work. See U.C.C. § 9-102(a)(47).
7 U.C.C. § 8-102(a)(4).
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§ 1.02 SCOPE — § 3-102 3

derives its value from obligations to pay money that are indicated on the
paper. 8 The basic forms of negotiable instruments are notes and drafts. 9
Chattel paper is a form of personal property created when a debtor signs
a writing (or writings) that evidences an obligation to pay money coupled
with a security interest in or lease of specific goods. 10 The monetary
obligation is sometimes represented by a negotiable instrument. Chattel
paper functions like indispensable paper in certain respects and like a pure
intangible in others. Specialized provisions of Article 9 govern this form
of property and a detailed analysis is beyond the scope of this book.

§ 1.02 Scope — § 3-102


Article 3 “applies to negotiable instruments.” 11 The term “instrument”
is used extensively throughout Article 3 and for purposes of this Article
means “negotiable instrument.” 12 The requisites for a negotiable instru-
ment under Article 3, discussed in detail in the next chapter, 13 are codified
in section 3-104(a). They essentially describe a writing creating the uncondi-
tional right to the payment of a fixed amount of money. Writings that meet
the requisites for a negotiable instrument, and that are not otherwise
excluded, are within the scope of Article 3. Writings for the payment of
money that do not fall within its scope generally are governed under
ordinary contract law.
Article 3 includes a specific provision that limits its scope. The provision
excludes money, payment orders that are part of an Article 4A funds
transfer (as opposed to payment orders that are drafts within the scope of
Article 3), and investment securities. 14 Even though money 15 may techni-
cally meet the requirements of section 3-104(a) on negotiability, it is
excluded from Article 3 because of inherent differences. Money is negotiable
at common law or under different statutes, but Article 3 does not apply to
it. The mutual exclusivity of Articles 3 and 4A is made apparent by Article
3’s exclusion of payment orders that are part of an Article 4A funds transfer
and Article 4A’s definition of “payment order” specifically excluding drafts
governed by Article 3. 16
8 U.C.C. § 3-104(a).
9
U.C.C. § 3-104(e). Notes include certificates of deposit and drafts include checks. See § 2.03
infra.
10 U.C.C. § 9-102(a)(11).
11 U.C.C. § 3-102(a).
12 U.C.C. § 3-104(b).
13 See § 2.02 infra.
14 U.C.C. § 3-102(a).
15
“ ‘Money’ means a medium of exchange authorized or adopted by a domestic or foreign
government and includes a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental
organization or by agreement between two or more nations” U.C.C. § 1-201(24).
16 U.C.C. § 4A-103(a)(1)(iii). For an explanation of payment orders that are part of an Article

4A funds transfer, see § 15.04[B] infra.


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4 INTRODUCTION TO INSTRUMENTS CH. 1

Investment securities also are excluded from Article 3. The original


uniform codification on the law of negotiable instruments, the Negotiable
Instruments Law (N.I.L.), did not distinguish between instruments in-
tended for investment and instruments that created money paper. The
distinction was unnecessary at the time of the codification because the
securities market was not active then. The N.I.L., however, proved to be
a burden on the subsequent development of the bond market. Marketability
depended upon the bonds being negotiable, but negotiability required that
the payment obligation of the corporate issuer not be subject to conditions.
Bond obligations had to be subject to conditions in other writings, however,
so an impasse was created. The problem was resolved by the Uniform
Commercial Code, which separated the treatment of investment securities
and commercial paper. Any instrument that qualifies under section 8-
102(1)(a) is governed exclusively by that Article, even if it also technically
satisfies the section 3-104(a) definition of a negotiable instrument.
Section 3-102(b) provides that the provisions of Article 9 control the provi-
sions of Article 3 in the event of conflict. Negotiable instruments often play
an important role in secured transactions, and the two Articles are rela-
tively well coordinated (more so with the 1998 revision of Article 9 than
its predecessor). Nevertheless, conflicts do occur, and a mechanism for re-
solving them is a necessity.
Section 3-102(b) also provides that the provisions of Article 4 control the
provisions of Article 3. 17 Article 4 becomes applicable whenever an instru-
ment is introduced into the bank-collection process. 18 Instruments often
fulfill their intended purposes without entering bank collection. Many
promissory notes and drafts are transferred and paid outside of bank
collection, so none of the transactions affecting them ever invoke Article
4. Because checks are by definition orders to pay drawn upon a bank, checks
inevitably enter the bank-collection process, and as soon as they do, Article
4 applies. In addition, ordinary drafts that are payable through a bank and
notes that are payable at a bank 19 come within the scope of Article 4 once
they enter the bank-collection process. Many similar transactions are
governed by Articles 3 and 4, making conflict between the two articles
likely. If Article 4 is silent on a point covered in Article 3, the latter Article
governs. 20 In the event of conflicting provisions, however, Article 4 con-
trols. 21
17
The same hierarchy is recognized in section 4-102(a).
18
The bank collection process is used for the collection of instruments in addition to
negotiable instruments covered by Article 3. Article 4 thus is written in terms of items. “ ‘Item’
means an instrument or a promise or order to pay money handled by a bank for collection
or payment.” Article 4A payment orders, as well as credit and debit card slips, are excluded.
U.C.C. § 4-104(a)(9).
19 U.C.C. § 4-106(a),(b).

20 U.C.C. § 4-102(a).

21 See, e.g., Available Iron & Metal Co. v. First Nat’l Bank, 56 Ill. App. 3d 516, 371 N.E.2d

1032, 23 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 694 (1977) (even though notice of dishonor may be oral under Article
3, it is not sufficient for a bank under Article 4).
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§ 1.03 HISTORICAL CONTEXT 5

As a study on payment systems, many of which center around the use


of negotiable instruments, this text focuses extensively on the provisions
of Article 3 and on Article 4 to the extent that it governs bank collection
of negotiable instruments. Article 3, however, is not a comprehensive
codification of the law of negotiable instruments. Consequently, provisions
within the Article must be examined for their intended scope, and when
a particular problem falls outside that scope, reference must be made to
common law. 22 Furthermore, the Code in general is far from comprehensive
in its treatment of payment systems. Payments by means of negotiable
instruments are governed by Articles 3 and 4. Article 4A on wholesale fund
transfers was promulgated in 1989 and has been adopted by most states.
Other payment systems, including cash, credit card, and electronic funds
transfers, are not governed by the Code at all. An explanation of the law
governing these payment methods requires an examination of both common
law and other statutory sources. 23

§ 1.03 Historical Context


Fourteenth-century merchants developed the use of the draft, or bill of
exchange, as a means to conduct their transactions while avoiding the risk
associated with the transport of large sums of money. A merchant in Italy
desiring to place funds into the hands of someone in London could accom-
plish the objective by means of a draft. Having made prior arrangements
with a party in London, the Italian merchant would issue a written order
to that party to pay the person designated in the draft to receive payment.
The party in London upon whom the order was drawn would make the
payment when the designated person presented the paper. The party in
London might have agreed to make the payment because doing so dis-
charged a debt that the party owed to the Italian merchant for goods sold
or for money lent. Alternatively, the party in London might have agreed
because the Italian merchant also agreed to honor the party’s drafts drawn
on him.
Another mechanism could be used to achieve the same result. Rather
than drawing a draft upon someone in London, the Italian merchant might
have used a local money changer. The merchant would pay the money
changer, who in turn would draw a draft on another money changer in
London with whom an account was maintained. The designated payee on
the draft would receive payment from the London money changer upon
presenting the draft.
The modern banking role in England did not develop until the seven-
teenth century. Before that time, London merchants typically deposited
their valuables for safekeeping with the King’s mint in the Tower of London.
After Charles I, in 1640, unilaterally borrowed 200,000 pounds from their
deposits, merchants increasingly took their business to goldsmiths who
22 See U.C.C. § 1-103.
23 For discussion of the alternative payment systems, see Chapters 13-15 infra.
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6 INTRODUCTION TO INSTRUMENTS CH. 1

offered the service of safekeeping valuables in addition to trading in gold


and silver plate. The goldsmiths began to make arrangements with their
depositors to make loans with the money on deposit, thereby converting
the relationship from bailor-bailee to that of creditor-debtor. That is, rather
than holding the bailed property in specie, the goldsmith became a debtor
of the merchant. The goldsmiths also began to honor orders drawn on them
by their depositors ordering them to pay designated persons. Checks,
patterned on the form of drafts, evolved as the instrument by which a
depositor ordered payment.
In addition to instruments that served as a safe and convenient means
to transmit funds, commercial practice in the seventeenth century also
developed instruments of credit. The time draft was the initial development.
This type of draft allowed a stated period of time before payment was due.
A seller of goods could draw such a draft on the buyer, who would then
sign it. By signing the draft, the buyer engaged to pay it when it became
due. 24 If the seller did not want to finance the sale by holding the draft
until the due date, the seller could transfer it to a lender for less than its
face value (i.e., at a discount). The lender would then be paid the face
amount of the draft by presenting it to the buyer for payment on the matu-
rity date. The time draft thus served both as a credit instrument and an
instrument to transmit funds.
When the credit function alone was desired, the promissory note became
the instrument of choice. The debtor signed a writing promising to make
payment to a lender (or to the bearer of the note) on a specified date in
the future. The lender could hold the note and await payment at maturity,
or, as with the time draft, the lender could discount the note to someone
else. The note provided written evidence of the borrower’s obligation to pay
money.
The law merchant was the original source of the law of negotiable instru-
ments. It was not law per se, but rather a body of commercial custom that
evolved as merchants in England entered into more commerce with mer-
chants on the continent. Drafts, checks and notes were governed originally
by the custom of merchants that developed concerning the transmission of
funds and evidence of credit. Rather than recourse through the courts,
special tribunals of merchants were used to enforce these customs.
Eventually, the law merchant was absorbed into the English common
law, but the process was quite difficult. The common-law courts under-
standably were resistant to the acceptance of principles that evolved outside
their purview and often from foreign sources. The common-law doctrine on
the nonassignability of choses in action also posed a formidable barrier. By
the early eighteenth century, however, drafts had come to be seen as freely
transferable, but the same attribute was denied to promissory notes. 25
24 The signing of a draft by the drawee is called an “acceptance,” a concept that is described

in detail in § 4.02[B] infra.


25 Buller v. Crips, 6 Mod Rep. 29, 87 Eng. Rep. 793 (1704).
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§ 1.03 HISTORICAL CONTEXT 7

Parliament stepped in at this point, however, and with the passage of the
Statute of Anne, 26 made promissory notes freely transferable as well.
Throughout all of the eighteenth century, England did not have any
official paper currency, and several denominations of gold and silver coins
were in short supply. 27 Increasing mercantile activities forced merchants
to adopt money substitutes. Consequently, drafts and notes came to be
circulated widely though several hands before ultimately being presented
for payment or acceptance. Lord Mansfield decided two major cases that
helped assure the acceptability of instruments as money substitutes. 28 His
rulings that a holder of a negotiable instrument who acquires it in good
faith and for value takes free of the claim of a prior owner of the instrument
state the fundamental principle of negotiability. 29
Since 1882, negotiable-instrument transactions in England have been
governed by the Bills of Exchange Act. It served as a model for the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL), which
promulgated the Uniform Negotiable Instruments Law (N.I.L.) in 1896. All
of the states adopted the law by 1924. The American Bankers Association
drafted the Bank Collection Code, which was adopted in about twenty states.
The law of negotiable instruments and bank collections was revised and
modernized through Articles 3 and 4 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The
Code was promulgated in 1952 through the joint efforts of NCCUSL and
the American Law Institute.
By the 1980s, changing commercial practices and technological innova-
tions in the handling of negotiable instruments again created an impetus
for change in the codification scheme. Draft revisions on Articles 3 and 4
were completed by 1990, and the revisions have now been widely enacted.
A new Article 4A on wholesale fund transfers was also promulgated and
has been enacted by most states. 30 Congress also passed legislation that
preempted certain aspects of Article 4 check collections and empowered the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to enact regulations that
preempt substantial portions of Articles 3 and 4. 31 The initial incursion
by the Board is Regulation CC, which implements the preemption required
by this legislation and also exercises some of the discretion authorized by
it. 32 All of this modernized law of negotiable instruments and alternative
payment systems is explained in this text.
26 3 & 4 Anne, ch. 9, § 1 (1704).
27 Bank of England notes did not become legal tender until 1833.
28
Miller v. Race, 97 Eng. Rep. 398 (K.B. 1758); Peacock v. Rhodes, 99 Eng. Rep. 402 (K.B.
1781).
29 For discussion of these cases, see § 2.01[C][2] infra.
30 For discussion of Article 4A, see § 15.04 infra.
31
Expedited Funds Availability Act, Pub. L. No. 100-86, 101 Stat. 552, 12 U.S.C. §§ 4001–
4010.
32 12 C.F.R. Part 229. For discussion of the legislation and Regulation CC, see §§ 11.01[B],

11.04 infra.

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