BIN Syllabus
BIN Syllabus
BIN Syllabus
School of Law
Law of Banking, Insurance and Negotiable Instruments Course Syllabus
Law of Banking, Insurance and Negotiable Instruments
Course Academic Year: 2014 E.C
Information Semester: II
Class Schedule: Friday 7:30 - 11:30 AM
Student Work-
and
Load
Independent study
final Assessment
Problem-solving
Project works
Presentation
Continuous
Tutorials,
Lectures
sessions
Total
3 1 5 5
Course The Law of Banking, Insurance and Negotiable Instruments is among the financial laws
Description in Ethiopia. It governs the nature and function of negotiable instruments, banks and
insurances.
The law that governs negotiable instruments address issues relating to documents or
papers incorporating various types of rights that are transferred by mere delivery or
endorsement followed by delivery. The Ethiopian Commercial Code recognizes three
classes of documents as negotiable instruments: commercial instruments (bills of
exchange, promissory notes, checks, travellers’ checks); transferable securities (shares
or stocks, bonds); and documents of title to goods (bills of lading and other types of
way bills, ware house goods’ deposit certificates). However, the focus in this course
would be on the first class of negotiable instruments.
The course also deals with banks and banking transactions. This part covers such
banking activities as accepting money, valuable things and documents on deposit,
lending money accepted on deposit, depositing and managing securities, buying and
selling foreign exchanges, gold and silver bullions, and discounting commercial
instruments and transferable securities having a future maturity date.
This course covers also that part of financial law governing Insurance. Insurance is an
area of financial Law governing the nature and function of insurance. It basically deals
with the definition and types of insurance, the requirements for the formation of a valid
contract of insurance, the requirements for the establishment and operation of an
insurance business, the basic principles governing insurance contracts and the rights
and duties of the parties to the insurance contract. It begins with a highlight on laws
regulating the establishment and operation of the insurance business and proceeds to
sections that deal with the law determining the rights and duties of the insurer and
insured in insurance contracts as embodied in the Ethiopian Commercial Code.
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Objectives & After a successful completion of the course, students are expected to achieve basic
Competence knowledge and competence regarding:
Achieved the blue print of banks, banking transactions and major banking operations;
the legal aspects of negotiable instruments, the definition and types of
negotiable instruments;
the similarity and differences between and among bills of exchange, cheques,
and promissory notes;
the economic significance of negotiable instruments; the formal requirements
for the issuance and circulation of valid negotiable instruments; the mode of
transfer of negotiable instruments; the definition, form and effect of
endorsements;
the definition, form and effects of acceptance, acceptance for honor and
payment or acceptance by intervention or for honor of negotiable instruments;
the rights and duties of the parties to negotiable instruments; the performance
of obligations arising out of negotiable instruments; the remedies available to
holders of negotiable instruments in cases of non-performance;
the specific legal requirements for the establishment and operation of banking
business;
the economic significance of banks, the various types of banks, i.e., commercial
banks and central or national banks and their functions, the powers and duties
of central or national banks;
the various types of banking transactions or operations such as deposit of
funds, bank transfers, deposit and management of securities, lending, deposit
of valuable things and documents, discount of commercial instruments and
securities;
the rights and duties of banks and their customers;
The nature, definition and types of insurance, the requirements for the
formation of a valid contract of insurance.
The requirements for the establishment and operation of an insurance
business, the basic principles governing insurance contracts, and the rights and
duties of the parties to the contract.
the legal elements of insurance law, the establishment and operation of
insurance companies, the concept and requisites of insurable interest, the
concept of indemnity and utmost good faith, the commencement and duration
of insurance contract, and the claim and settlement of issues in relation to
insurance.
Pre-requisite None
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Week 1 Part 1 Fasil & Merhatbeb,
Chapter I: Introduction to Negotiable Instruments pp.71-78
1.1. Definition/ Meaning The Civil Code Arts.
1.2. Nature ,purpose & characteristics of Negotiable 2441, 1962, 1966-7,
Instruments 1974, 2813-2824.
1.3. Types of Negotiable Instruments The commercial Code
1.3.1. Commercial Instruments Arts.715, 716, 732, 510(3),
1.3.2. Transferable securities 912, 340-342, 429-434, 570-
1.3.3. Documents of Title to Goods 574, 579, 610, 616, 621
1.4. Forms of Negotiable Instruments
1.5. The modes of negotiation/transfer of negotiable Sen & Mitea,
instruments Commercial
1.6. The concept of endorsement and its effect Law),pp.287-292
1.7. Obligations arising out of Negotiable Richardson, PP.15-
Instruments 25. Hashim Tewfik,
1.8. Holder Vs. Debtor Senior thesis, 1988
1.9. Defenses available to persons sued on
Negotiable Instruments
1.10. Holder in due course and the limited scope
of valid defenses
Week 2 Chapter II: The Form of Bills of Exchange and the Comm. code Arts.
parties 735-745., 756--
2.1. Maturity Dates of Bills of Exchange 779, 802-810, 780-
2.2. Negotiation of Bills of Exchange 801.
2.3. Presentment for Acceptance Bills of Fasil&Merhatbeb),
Exchange PP.79-114
2.4. Presentment and Payment of Bills of Sen & Mitra,
Exchange Commercial Law,
2.5. Intervention for Honour pp.292-343
2.6. Dishonour and Right of Recourse for Richardson, PP.42-
Non-acceptance or non-payment 61
2.7. Liability of parties and available
defenses
2.8. Loss of right of recourse and alternative
remedies to a holder
Week 2 Chapter III: The form of Promissory Notes and the Comm. Code Arts.
parties 823-826.
3.1. Maturity dates Fasil &
3.2. Negotiation Merhatbeb ,pp.80
3.3. Presentment and payment of -83
promissory Notes Sen & Mitra.
3.4. Intervention for honour Commercial Law).
3.5. Recourse for non-acceptance or non- Pp 289-292.
payment
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Week 3 Chapter IV: The form of cheques and parties to it Comm.Code
4.1. Negotiation Arte. 827-886.
4.2. Certification Fasil&Merhatbeb
4.3. Crossed cheques and cheques payable ,pp.83-85
in account Sen &Mitra,
4.4. Recourse for non-payment Commercial Law,
4.5. Travelers’ Cheques pp. 294-299.
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Week 6 Chapter IV - Liability insurance in general Comm.code
The compulsory third party liability vehicle arts.675-688,
insurance Fasil & Merhatibeb/
Payment and right of substitution in pp.163-177
insurance of damages Colinvaux
Raoul,pp.283-342
Week 6 chapter V – Life insurance Colinvaux v.II.pp
Insurable interest 231-286
The nature and scope of risks insured. Fasil & Merhatibeb
Designation of beneficiaries pp.163-167
Rights and obligations of parties B.s Bodla pp. 113-
Insurance against illness and accident 129
Comm.code arts.
689-712
Amdebirhan
Ayalew, pp.180-
222.
John F.Dobbyn,
pp.7-42
Methods of Lectures, seminars, student presentations, group discussions, individual and group
Delivery tutorials, assignments and project supervisions.
References Fasil Alemayehu and Merhatebeb Teklemdhin, Law Banking, Negotiable and
Instruments and Insurance, Teaching Material, Sponsored by the Justice and
Legal System Research Institute, 2009
ገዙ አየለ፡ የኢትዮጵያ የባንክና የሚተላለፉ የንግድ ሰነዶች ሕግ፡ አዲስ አበባ፡ ኢትዮጵያ፡
2009 ዓ.ም.
Hashim Tewfik, Defenses on Negotiable Instruments under the Ethiopian
Commercial Code, senior thesis, 1988
Arun Kumar Sen&Jitendra Kummar Mitra, Commercial Law, The World
Press Private Limited, 2002
B.M. Lall Kingam, Banking Law and Practice, Vikas Publishing House Pvt Ltd,
1986
Bradford Stone, Uniform Commercial Code in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition,
West Group 1995
David Cox, Success in Elements of Banking, Fourth Ed.1988.
Dudley Richardson, Guide to Negotiable Instruments and the Bills of
Exchange Acts, London Betterworths, 7th ed., 1983
J. Milnes Holden, The law and practice of banking, Vol. 1, Banker and
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Customer, The Pitman Press, Bath, 1970
J.E. Kelly, Practice of Banking, Second Ed. 1986
M.C.kuchhal, Mercantile Law, Second Revised Ed., Vikas Publishing House,
1978
P.J.M. Fidler, Sheldon and Fidler’s Practice and Law of Banking, Eleventh
Ed., 1982
Richard E. Speidel and Steve H. Nickles, Negotiable Instruments and Check
Collection, Fourth Ed.1993
The Civil Code of the Empire of Ethiopia, Proclamation No 165/1960
The Commercial Code of the Empire of Ethiopia, Proclamation No 166/1960
Banking Business Proclamation No. 522/2008.
Amdebirhan Ayalew, Law of Insurance, Bahir Dar University, Module for
Distance Students, 2008
Awash International Bank S.C. and Awash Insurance Company S.C., 10 TH
Anniversary Special Publication, June 2005
B.S. Bodla,M.C.Garg&K.p. Singh Insurance, Fundamentals, Environment &
procedures, Deep& Deep publication Limited,2004
Colinvaux Raoul, The Law of Insurance Volume 1&II 3rd ed, Sweet
&Maxwell Limited, 1970
HailuZeleke, Insurance in Ethiopia, Historical Development, Present Status
and Future Challenges, August 2007
John, F Dobbyn, Insurance Law in a Nutshell, Third Edition, West Group,
1996.
Journal of Ethiopian Law, Volume 12 and 16
TekleGiorgisAssefa, Risk Management and Insurance, Mekelle, 2004
The Civil Code of the Empire of Ethiopia, Proclamation No 165 /1960
The Commercial Code of the Empire of Ethiopia, Proclamation No 166/1960
The Licensing and supervision of insurance Business Insurance Business
Proclamation No 521/2008
The Licensing and Supervision of Insurance Business, Insurance Business
Proclamation No 86/1994
The Maritime Code of the Empire of Ethiopia, Proclamation No 164/1960
Vehicle Insurance Against Third Party Risks Proclamation No 799/2013
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