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SDE - BANKING LAW AND PRACTICE - BU - Bcom
SDE - BANKING LAW AND PRACTICE - BU - Bcom
B.Com.
Third Year
BHARATHIAR UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF DISTANCE EDUCATION
COIMBATORE – 641 046
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(SYLLABUS)
UNIT – I
Definition of banker and customer – Relationships between banker and
customer – Relationships between banker and customer – special feature of
RBI, Banking regulation Act 1949. RBI credit control Measure – Secrecy of
customer Account.
UNIT – II
Opening of account – special types of customer – types of deposit – Bank Pass
book – collection of banker – banker lien.
UNIT – III
Cheque – features essentials of valid cheque – crossing – making and
endorsement – payment of cheques statutory protection duties to paying
banker and collective banker – refusal of payment cheques Duties holder id
due course.
UNIT – IV
Loan and advances by commercial bank lending policies of commercial bank –
Forms of securities – lien pledge hypothecation and advance against the
documents of title to goods – mortgage.
UNIT – V
Position of surety – Letter of credit – Bills and supply bill. Purchase and
discounting bill Traveling cheque, credit card, Teller system.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
CONTENT
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
UNIT- I
CONTENTS
1.0 Objectives
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Banker
1.3 Customer
1.4 Relationship between the Banker and the Customer
1.4.1 General relationship
1.4.2 Special Relationship
1.4.3 Other special features of the Relationship between Banker and customer
1.5 Special Features of Reserve bank of India
1.5.1 Local board
1.6 Banking Regulation Act, 1949
1.7 Reserve Bank of India credit control measure
1.0 OBJECTIVE
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Banks play an important role in the economic development of every country. Besides
the traditional function, modern commercial banks render multi various services to their
customers. There is no unanimous view regarding the origin of the world ‘bank’. The
word bank is said to have derived from the French word “Banco” or “Bancus” or
“Banc” or “Banque” which means a bench. In fact the early jews in Lombardly
transacted their banking business by sitting on benches. When their business failed, the
benches were broken and hence the word “bankrupt” came into use. According to
another common held view, the word bank might be originated from the German word
“back” which means a joint stock fund. In due course, it was Italianised into “banco”
Frenchised into “bank” and finally analicised into “bank”. This view is widely prevalent
even today.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
1.2 BANKER
A banker may be a person who is doing the banking business. But, on account of the
numerous functions performed by modern bankers, it is very difficult to define the term
banker. Some of the definitions of the term banker are reproduced to gain insight into
the meaning of the term banker.
Dr. Herbert L. Hart defined a banker as “one who in the ordinary course of business
honours cheques drawn upon him by person from and for whom he receives money on
current account”. Dr.Hart has conveyed only a few functions of banks namely accepting
deposits of money and paying money by honouring cheques but failed to cover the
bending business banks. According to Sir John Paget, “no person or body corporate or
otherwise can be banker who does not take deposit accounts, take current accounts, issue
and pay cheques and collect cheques crossed and uncrossed for his customers”.
This definition pinpoints that bankers should take deposit accounts, take current
accounts, issue and pay cheques and collect cheques crossed and uncrossed for their
customers. In India, Banking regulation Act 1949 gave more precise description.
According to Sec(B) of the Act, Banking company is “a company which transacts the
business of banking in India”. The same Act defined the term Banking as “accepting for
the purpose of lending investment, of deposits of money from the public repayable on
demand, order or otherwise and withdraw able by cheque, draft, order or otherwise”.
Although the money lenders lend money which is one of the functions of a banker, they
can’t be called bankers because they are not accepting deposits from the public. They
rely upon their own resources. In SAMYUKTHA SAMAJAM Vs GOLI KALYANI, it
was held that the firm lending money out of its own capital was not a bank. Moreover,
their main business is not banking. Money lenders combine banking with trading. In
another case, STAFFORD Vs HENRY, it was held that carrying on banking business as
a part of any business would not entitle a firm to be called a bank. Further, the money
lenders do not issue, and honour cheques which are essential functions of a banker.
Hence, money lenders cannot be called bankers.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
1.3 CUSTOMER
The term customer of a Bank is not defined in law. Different views have been expressed
at different times. Some of the widely accepted views are discussed below:
In GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY Co., Vs LONDON AND COUNTY BANK, it was
held that there must be some sort of Account – either a deposit or current account or
some similar relation to make a man a customer of a bank. According to Sir John papet,
to constitute a customer, “there must be some recognizable course or habit of dealing in
the nature of regular banking business”. This definition of a customer of a bank gives
importance to the time element i.e., duration of the dealings between banker and
customer and is therefore called the “duration theory”. The same view was expressed in
the case of “MATHEWS Vs WILLIAMS BROWN AND Co. The dealings with the
banker must be related to the business of banking in order to constitute a customer.
With the passage of time the duration of the dealings, however, became unimportance
and even a single transaction can constitute a person a customer.
Thus, to constitute a person a customer of the bank,
1. He must have some sort of an account
2. He may have a single transaction
3. He may have frequency of transactions but is not compulsory
4. The transactions must be of a banking nature.
The relationship between a banker and a customer may be studied under two categories,
namely general relationship and special relationship.
There are four types of general relationship between the banker and the customer. They
are:
i. Debtor Creditor Relationship
ii. Agent Principal Relationship
iii. Bailor Bailee Relationship
iv. Trustee Beneficiary Relationship
Debtor Creditor Relationship: Sir John Page was of the view that the relation of a
banker and a customer is primarily that a Debtor and Creditor, the respective position
being determine by the existing state of account. Which a person opens an account with
the banker there arises a contractual relationship. He is not a depository because he is
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not going to return the same coins and currency notes deposited by the customer.
Instead he is required to give the same amount only.
In FOLEY Vs HILL, it was held that money when paid into bank ceases altogether to be
the money of the principal; it is their the money of the banker who is bond to return an
equivalent by paying a similar amount to that deposited with him when he is asked for it.
The money paid to the banker is money of the principal to be placed there for the
purpose of being under the control of the banker, it is there the banker’s money, he is
known to deal with it as his own, he makes what profit he can. Thus banker is neither a
depository nor an agent, but a debtor.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
A banker becomes a bailee when receives gold ornaments and important documents for
safe custody. In that case he cannot make use of them to his last advantage because he is
bond to return the identical articles on demand. A banker does not pay any interest on
these articles. It is only the customer who has to pay rent for the safe custody services.
Hence a banker acts as a bailee only when he receives articles for safe custody and not
when he receives money on deposit account.
When money is deposited for a specific purpose, banker becomes trustee for that money
till the purpose is fulfilled. Similarly, when a cheque is given for collections, till the
proceeds are collected, he holds the cheque as a trustee.
Besides the general relationship there exists some special which are discussed below:
a) There must be sufficient funds of the drawer(customer) in the hands of the drawee
(banker)
b) All the required particulars like the name of the payee, the account in words and
figures, date, signature of the drawer, etc., must be correctly filled in
c) The cheque must be drawn on a printed form supplied by the banker and it should
not combine any request to pay the amount.
d) The cheque must be honoured only when the funds are meant for its
payment.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
e) The cheque must be presented at the branch where the account is kept and during
the banking hours. If the cheques are presented after 6 months from the ostensible
date of issue, they will be regarded as stale cheque and they will not be honoured.
f) There should not be any legal heir like garnishee order attaching the
customer account.
Consequences of wrongful dishonor (or overriding the obligation to honour cheques)
If a banker wrongfully dishonours a cheque, he becomes liable to compensate the
customer for any loss or damage caused to the customer by such dishonour.
(MARZETTI Vs WILLIAMS) The words loss or damage do not merely refer to the
pecuniary loss that a customer may suffer; it also includes the loss of credit or business
reputation. In other words, a customer whose cheque is wrongfully dishonoured is
entitled to claim compensation from the banker for injury to his credit although he
suffers no pecuniary loss.
When a cheque is wrongfully dishonoured, a banker is liable only to his customer who
happens to be the drawer of the cheque in question and he is not at all liable to any other
parties.
It may be noted that the words loss pre damage does not depend upon the actual amount
of the cheque but upon the damage or loss to one’s credit or reputation. That is why the
smaller the amount of cheque the greater the damage, principle of adopted. In fact, the
customer suffers more loss of credit when a cheque for a small amount is dishonoured.
In NEW CENTRAL HALL Vs UNITED COMMERCIAL BANK LTD, it was held that
a trader could get special damage as the dishonour of a cheque would affect his major
asset, namely his credit and a non-trader could claim only nominal damages.
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customer’s financial position and the nature of details of his account. The obligation to
keep the state of customer’s account secret was a long observed practice; it was legally
imposed upon him only by the decision in TOURNER Vs NATIONAL PROVINCIAL
AND UNION BANK OF ENGLAND. According to that decision, a banker should not
disclose the condition of his customer’s account except on reasonable and proper
occasions.
The banker is legally justified in disclosing the state of his customer’s account in the
following occasions;
a) Under the compulsion of law;
b) In the interest of the public;
c) In the interest of the bank;
d) Under the express or implied consent of the customer
However, great care should be exercised while disclosing the state of the account of the
customer. If the banker is careless, he is liable to pay damages:
a) To his customer who suffers damage due to unreasonable disclosure.
b) To a third party who incurs loss relying upon the information which is untrue and
misleading.
Another important special feature of the relationship between a banker his customer is
that a banker can exercise the right of lien on all goods and securities entrusted to him as
banker,
Lien is the right of a person (creditor) to retain the goods in his possession belonged to
the debtor settled. For instance, if X owes, Rs.1000 to Y has in his possession some
articles belonging to X, Y can retain those articles with him until repays the money that
is due to him. This right of Y to retain the goods of X until the amount due to him has
been paid is called lien.
Lien is of two kinds, namely particular lien and general lien. Particular lien gives the
right to retain the goods in connection with which particular debt arose. For example, a
tailor has a lien over the shirt till the stitching charges for the laid shirt due from the
owner of the shirt are paid to him.
General lien, on the other hand, gives the right to banker to retain not only the goods in
respect of a particular debt but also in respect of the general balance due from the owner
of the goods to the person exercising the right of lien.
A Banker’s lien is always a general lien. His general lien confers upon him the right to
retain the securities in respect of the general balance due from the customer. In
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
BRANDO Vs BARNETT, it was held that bankers have a general lien on all securities
deposited with them as bankers by a customer unless there is an express contract.
Circumstances for exercising lien:
A banker can exercise his right of lien only when the following conditions are fulfilled.
a) There must not be any agreement inconsistent with the right of lien
b) The property must come into the laws of the Banker in his capacity as banker
c) The possession should be lawfully obtained in his capacity as a banker.
d) The property should not be entrusted to the banker for a specific purpose.
In every country there is one bank which acts as the leader of the money market. It
improvises controls and regulates the activities of commercial banks and other financial
institutions. It is in close touch with the Government as its banker, agent and adviser. It
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
issues currency notes on behalf of the Government. This bank is known as the central
bank of the country and in India, the central bank is called the Reserve Bank of India.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was originally set up as a shareholder’s bank by the
Government of India in April, 1935 with share capital of Rs.Five crores, divided into
five lakh shares of 100 each fully paid up. The entire share capital was contributed by
private shareholders with the exception of the nominal value of Rs.2.2lakhs subscribed
by the central Government. The bank was nationalized in 1949.
Management :
The management of RBI is vested with the Central Board of Directors comprising 20
members. They are
a) One Governor and four Deputy Governors appointed by the Central Government.
b) Four Directors nominated by the Central Government one from each of the Local
Board.
c) Ten Directors nominated by the Central Government.
d) One Government official nominated by the Central Government.
The Governor and Deputy Governors hold office for 5 years and are eligible for
reappointment. They are full time officers of the bank. The 10 directors nominated by
the Central Government hold office for 4 years. The term of 4 directors appointed from
Local Boards is related to their membership in the Local Board. The Governor is the
chief executive of the Bank and the chairman of the Board of Directors. In the absence
of the Governor, the Deputy Governor nominated by them would exercise his powers.
The Central Board must meet at least six times in a year and not less than once in a
quarter.
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2. Banker to the Government: RBI acts as a Banker to the Central and State
Governments. It undertakes to accept money, makes payments and also
carried out their exchange remittance and other banking operations free of cost
including the management of public debt. RBI makes wage and means
advances to the Government for 90 days.
3. Adviser to the Government: RBI advises the Government on all monetary and
banking issues like floating of loans, agricultural and industrial and international
finance, legislation affecting banking and credit, financial aspects of planning and
so on. A fairly large research and statistical organization has been built up by the
Bank for performing this function.
4. Banker to the Banker and lender of his last resort: RBI acts as a banker to all
banks. It is because of the fact that every scheduled bank is required to maintain
with the RBI a specified amount of cash balance and also allowed to borrow from
RBI on the basis of the eligible securities. The banks can also get financial
accommodation in times of need or stringency by rediscounting the bills of
exchange. Hence RBI is not only the banker’s bank, but also the lender of the last
resort.
5. Controller of credit: RBI acts as a controller of credit. It can control credit
through changing the Bank Rate or through open market operation. RBI can ask
any particular Bank the whole Banking system not to lend to particular group of
persons or on the basis of certain securities. Thus it control credit.
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The Banking Regulation Act was passed in 1949 but was amended several times to
insert provisions and to amend the existing ones to suit the needs of changing
circumstances and to plug the loopholes in the main legislation.
The basic purpose of this Act is to control, monitor and direct the banking companies, to
prevent them from wrong and fraudulent practices and ultimately protect the interests of
the deposits. Accordingly, every aspect of a banking company is governed by the
provisions of the Act of 1949. The Act defines in clear terms the business of Banking
and also lays down clearly the main functions and the subsidiary functions to be
performed by banking companies in India. It also specifies the business that can’t be
undertaken by a banking company.
a) Bank Rate has been defined by Section 49 of the RBI Act as “the standard rate at
which the Bank is prepared to buy or discount bills of exchange or other
commercial papers eligible for purchase under this Act” whenever the RBI
increases the Bank Rate, the interest rate prevailing in the market should be
changed immediately resulting in control of credit.
b) Open market operations refer to the purchase and sale by the central bank, of a
variety of assets such as gold, Government securities, foreign exchange and even
company shares. But, on practice, they are confined to the purchase and sale of
Government securities only, whenever the RBI sells securities, the cash base of
the commercial banks will be decreased and whenever the RBI buys securities, the
cash base of the banks will be increased. In this way, the open market operations
have been used in the course of monetary policy. They are also used as an
instrument of public debt management.
c) Variable Reserve Ratio: The scheduled commercial banks are required to maintain
a specified minimum cash balance with the RBI. By varying the reserve, banks
could undertake quantitative credit control effectively.
Selective Credit Control: The quantitative Credit Control weapons, discussed so far, are
designed to reduce the volume of credit. But, there is every possibility of credit being
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flow into some undesirable activities such as speculation, hoarding etc., To discourage
such activities and to direct the available resources to essential and productive sectors,
selective or qualitative credit controls are employed.
This chapter discusses the important role being played by Banks in the economic
development of every country. Besides the traditional function, modern commercial
banks render multi various services to their customers. It defines the term customer and
banker and their relationship. The role of RBI and its measures to control credit.
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UNIT- II
BANK ACCOUNT
CONTENTS
2.0 Objectives
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Opening and running a bank account
2.2.1 Saving Account
2.2.2 Current Account
2.2.3 Fixed Deposit Account
2.2.4 Recurring Deposit Account
2.3 Documents for opening a bank account
2.4 Running a bank account
2.5 Overdraft
2.6 Personal loans
2.7 Main types of saving products
2.8 Main types of Investment products
2.9 Data field
2.10 Deposit
2.10.1 Deposit payment types
2.11 how to open a Savings bank Account
2.12 Procedures for opening a Savings Bank account
2.13 Pass Book
2.14 Duties of the Collecting bank toits customers
2.15 Lien
2.15.1 principles Governing Banker’s Lien
2.15.2 Relation between lien and set-off
2.16 What you have learnt
2.17 Exercise
2.18 Activity for you
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
2.0 OBJECTIVES
2.1 INTRODUCTION
Bank deposits serve different purposes for different people. Some people cannot save
regularly; they deposit money in the bank only when they have extra income. The
purpose of deposit then is to keep money safe for future needs. Some may want to
deposit money in a bank for as long as possible to earn interest or to accumulate savings
with interest so as to buy a flat, or to meet hospital expenses in old age, etc. Some,
mostly businessmen, deposit all their income from sales in a bank account and pay all
business expenses out of the deposits. Keeping in view these differences, banks offer the
facility of opening different types of deposit accounts by people to suit their purpose and
convenience. On the basis of purpose they serve, bank deposit accounts may be
classified as follows:
a. Savings Bank Account
b. Current Deposit Account
c. Fixed Deposit Account
d. Recurring Deposit Account.
Let us briefly note the nature of the above accounts.
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allowed to close the account before its maturity and get back the money along with the
interest till that period. The account can be opened by a person individually, or jointly
with another, or by the guardian in the name of a minor. The rate of interest allowed on
the deposits is higher than that on a savings bank deposit but lower than the rate
allowed on a fixed deposit for the same period. Recurring Deposit Accounts may be of
different types depending on the purpose underlying the deposit. Some of these are as
follows:
i. Demand Deposit
Here money is not deposited for a specific time period. Investor can withdraw money at
any time. Bank is responsible to return the money on customer’s demand. This account
allows you to demand your money at any time.
overdraft facility as an added features with fixed deposits. Term deposits is a safe
investment and it is therefore a very good option for conservative, low-risk investors.
iii. Recurring Deposit
This is another type of fixed deposit in with investor pay a small amount every month
for a specific time period. For example pay Rs.1000/- every month for a period of 5
years. After 5 years he will get the principle with interest accumulated. A Recurring
Bank Deposit is a good option for regular savings.
Your bank will give you information on how to run or manage your account. Account
features differ, but typical procedures and documents you'll use or receive may include:
Documents/cards
• a cheque book and/or cash or debit card to make payments or get cash
• paying-in slips to pay in cash or cheques
• monthly, quarterly or yearly bank statements
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Automated procedures
• you can set up direct debits or standing orders (automatic transfer arrangements)
to pay bills and make other regular payments
• you can set up BACS (Bankers' automated clearing service) payments to receive
regular payments, like salary, pension, benefits or investment income direct into
your account
• you may be able to use telephone banking or internet banking to pay bills or
move money between accounts
Debit cards and credit cards - the difference
When you buy goods or get cash with a debit card the money is taken from your bank
account right away. With a credit card you get a monthly a bill. If you don't repay the
amount owed in full on a credit card, or if you take out cash, the charges are very high.
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If you don’t have an overdraft agreement, or you exceed the agreed limit, your bank may
allow the payment to go through but you’ll usually pay much higher fees than if you had
an agreed overdraft.
2.5 OVERDRAFTS
Overdrafts are like a 'safety net' on your current account; they allow you to borrow up to
a certain limit when there's no money in your account and can be useful to cover short
term cashflow problems.
Some bank accounts have a free overdraft built in. If yours doesn't, you'll have to ask
your bank for an authorised overdraft facility. Their decision will be based on your bank
record and you may have to pay a fee to set it up. You don't have to use an authorised
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overdraft, but it's there if you need it and you won't pay extra charges for accidentally
going overdrawn.
You have to pay back your overdraft plus interest. Rates differ between banks and can
be fixed or variable. There may also be an arrangement fee and monthly charges.
Unauthorised overdrafts
If you go overdrawn without your banks authorisation, the charges are likely to be high.
Your bank may also bounce (refuse to pay) cheques you write or refuse to pay direct
debits and charge fees for each refused transaction. They may also charge additional
administration fees.
• Overdrafts - learn more on the Financial Services Authority (FSA) website Opens
new window
With a personal loan you borrow an agreed sum and pay it back with interest over a
certain length of time (usually one to five years). Interest rates can be fixed or variable.
You normally have to stick to a payment schedule. Personal loans can be handy for
covering large expenses like buying a car or equipment.
An 'unsecured' loan means the lender relies on your promise to pay it back. They're
taking a bigger risk than with a 'secured' loan, where they can take whatever you've
secured the loan against (like property) if you don't repay it. So interest rates for
unsecured loans tend to be higher.
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Credit Unions
Credit Unions are mutual financial organisations which are owned and run by their
members for their members who can save with them. Once you've established a record
as a reliable saver they will also lend you money but only what they know you can
afford to repay. Members have a common bond, such as living in the same area, a
common workplace, membership of a housing association or similar.
Follow the link below to find a Credit Union near you or by looking in the Yellow Pages
under 'Credit Unions'.
• FSA information on Credit Unions Opens new window
• Credit Unions - find one near you Opens new window
Shares
When you buy shares you buy a stake in a company. If the company does well the value
of the shares may rise and you may be able to sell them at a profit. You may also get a
share of the profits through income payments called dividends. If the company doesn't
do well, you may not get any dividends and the value of the shares could fall or, in some
cases, cease to have any value at all.
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Some deposit types are income from a specific transaction. Enter one of the following:
Billing Record -- The deposit covers one Billing Record.
Payment Receipt-- The deposit comes from one Payment Receipt.
Rental Transaction-- The deposit covers one Rental Transaction.
Sale-- The check covers one Sale transaction.
Allowance-- Enter a specific Allowance that this deposit pays for. Available only for
Projects.
Change Order-- Enter a specific Change Order that this deposit pays for. Available
only for Projects.
Chargeback-- This deposit covers the "charge against" half of a Chargeback.
Equity Transfer-- Enter a specific Equity Transfers which this payment covers.
Available only for Owners.
HINT-- To deposit more than one transaction at a time, use a breakdown.
REFUNDS
Some deposits come from an expense transaction that is a credit or return (negative
balance):
Material Refund-- The check will cover one Material Purchase transaction that has a
negative balance.
Other Cost Refund-- The check will cover one Other Cost transaction that has a
negative balance.
Payroll Refund-- The check will cover one Payroll Record transaction that has a
negative balance.
Subcontractor Refund-- The check will cover one Subcontractor Cost transaction that
has a negative balance.
C. Simple Deposits
To deposit a payment from one sale or billing record, follow these steps:
1. Enter the type of transaction into the Payment Type field.
2. Enter the specific transaction being paid into the Transaction field.
NOTE-- To view the transaction or transactions that are being paid, choose Detail
Transaction from the View menu.
Deposits Paid On Account
If the deposit does not reference a specific transaction, enter Received On Account into
the Payment Type field. Goldenseal will add the deposit amount to the "on account"
balance for the payer.
Payment Breakdown
Create a Payment breakdown to enter a deposit for one or more Sales, Billing Records or
Rental Transactions.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
Goldenseal automatically creates deposits with a Payment breakdown when you use the
Deposit Funds command.
You can also enter a Payment breakdown like this:
1. Open a Checking Transaction.
2. Click the New button, or choose New Record from the Edit menu.
3. Enter Deposit into the Type popup at the top of the window.
4. Enter Customer into the Received From field.
5. Enter Payment into the Breakdown field.
6. Enter a customer into the Account field.
7. Goldenseal automatically fills in all unpaid Sales for this customers. Turn on the
checkmarks for the ones the customer is paying for now.
8. If the customer is only paying for part of a sale, enter the amount into the Amount
Paid cell.
9. Click in the Paid By column and enter the payment method for each item.
10. Deposits Status Field
11. The following types of bank transaction status are available:
Entered-- The transaction has been entered, but not yet cleared.
Cleared-- The transaction has cleared the bank. This status is entered
automatically after you enter something into the reconcile field.
Canceled-- If you make a transfer between two bank accounts, then delete one of
the transactions, then the other is automatically given the Canceled status.
Job Cost Only-- For past transactions that have been entered for job costing only.
They will not affect the account balance.
Planned-- For planned future transactions. They will not affect the account
balance.
Void-- For canceled transactions.
12. Deposit Posting
13. When you receive payments or make deposits, Goldenseal automatically "posts"
the action to the transactions that are included in the deposit.
If you include sale, billing record or rental transactions in a payment receipt
transaction, Goldenseal changes their status to Paid. Paid transactions will no
longer appear as a part of Accounts Receivable.
14. If you include sale, billing record or rental transactions in a deposit, Goldenseal
changes their status to Deposited.
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20.
A) Which of the following statements are true and which are false?
i. Deposits made in savings bank account serve to meet present as well as future
needs.
ii. A fixed amount is required to be deposited in a Fixed Deposit Account every
month
iii. The rate of interest on deposits made in a Recurring Deposit Account is relatively
higher than on savings bank deposits.
iv. Current Deposit Account can be opened only by businessmen, not by an
educational institution.
v. Home Construction Saving Deposit Account is a type of recurring deposit
account.
vi. The rate of interest allowed on fixed deposit depends on the length of the period
for which the deposit is made.
vii. In the case of savings bank account withdrawal of money is allowed only to the
account-holder.
viii. Banks do not pay interest on the balance of current deposit account.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
To open a savings bank account in a commercial bank, you have to first decide what
amount of money you would like to deposit initially. You may enquire and find out from
the nearest bank the minimum amount to be deposited while opening a savings bank
account. You have to deposit at least that amount or more, if you want. On entering a
bank (any branch of a bank) you will find a counter for enquiry (or a counter with:
‘May I help you’ board). Having known the minimum amount to be deposited, you
should ask for a form of application for opening Savings Bank Account. You are not
required to pay anything for it. You should then take the following steps:
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
Once you have opened the account, you must also know how to operate the account. In
other words, you have to know the procedure to be followed for further deposits to be
made in the account and for withdrawing money from the account.
How will you deposit money in your account? You have already used a ‘Pay-in-slip’ for
deposit of the initial amount while opening your account. It is a printed form, which you
get in the bank. Each ‘pay-in-slip’ has two parts divided by perforation, the right-hand
part known as ‘foil’ and the left-hand part known as ‘counter-foil’. The slip has to be
filled up while depositing cash or a cheque. Separate pay-in-slip form will have to be
filled up while depositing both cash and cheques. Suppose you have to deposit cash in
your account. The pay-in-slip has to be filled giving the date of deposit, your name or
account-holder’s if you deposit money in somebody’s account, account number, and the
amount deposited in figures and words. Besides you have to enter on the slip, in the
place indicated, how many currency notes of different denominations (Rs. 5, 10, 20, 50,
100, etc.) are being deposited along with the amount against the types of notes. The
32
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
bank will have a counter for cash receipts. You have to sign and present the pay-in-slip
there and also hand over the amount of cash. The receiver will keep the foil (right hand
part) of the pay-in- slip while the left-hand part (counter-foil) will be rubber-stamped,
signed by him, and returned to you.
Specimen of pay-in-slip
Ac.
DELHI NET WEB SERVICES PVT. LTD. 0 0 2 9 0 5 0 0 0 7 7 1
No.
BANK BRANCH CHEQUE NO. CASH DEPOSIT Rs. Ps.
Your Bank's Your's Branch's Your's Cheque 500 X No. of
Total Amount .
Name Name No. Pieces
100 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
50 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
20 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
10 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
5 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
2 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
1 X No. of
. . . Total Amount .
Pieces
. . . COINS . .
FOR OFFICE
USE
RUPEES (in words) TOTAL Grand Total .
Deposited Amount in Words
TRAN. ID.
JO (Your Signature)
SIGNATURE OF DEPOSITOR
33
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
Instead of cash, suppose you have to deposit cheque, which you have got in payment of
your salary from the office in which you are employed. You may like to deposit it in
your bank account instead of going to another bank to encash it. Your bank will collect
the amount of the cheque and record it as a deposit in your savings bank account.
Todeposit the cheque you have to use the pay-in-slip again, filling in particulars like the
date of deposit, the account number, name of the account-holder, the serial number and
date of the cheque, name and address of the bank on which the cheque is drawn, and the
amount of the cheque in figures and words. After signing the slip, you have to attach the
cheque with the foil by an awl pin, and present the slip at the counter for cheque receipt.
The person at the counter will keep the foil with the cheque attached, and return to you
the counter-foil with bank rubber stamp and his signature. In some banks, there is a box
kept near the counter. The bank rubber stamp
is also available at the counter. The depositor is to put the rubber stamp on the foil and
counter- foil. Then after separating the counter-foil, the cheque along with the foil is to
be dropped in the box through a slit.
a) Withdrawal form
b) Cheque
c) ATM card
a. Withdrawal Form: Every bank has printed withdrawal forms, which can be used by
account- holders to withdraw cash from deposit accounts.
Specimen of withdrawal form
The form has to be filled in, mentioning the date of withdrawal, account number, amount
to the withdrawn (in figures and words) and the signature of the account holder. You
have to produce it along with your passbook at the counter at which your account is
handled. At the counter the officer concerned generally passes the form for payment
after checking the balance in the account and the signature on the form against the
specimen signatures on record. The amount of withdrawal is recorded in the passbook,
and payment is made at the counter if the amount is within a certain limit
34
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(say, Rs. 5,000), otherwise a disc or token is given which bears a number. This has to be
presented at the cash payment counter for receiving the amount withdrawn.
b. Cheque: As an account-holder you can withdraw cash from your savings bank
account either by filling in and signing a withdrawal form or by issuing a cheque.
Withdrawal forms can be used only by the account-holder, no one else.
………....2008
Pay……................................................................................................................................
……...................................................................................................................... or Bearer
Rupees………………………………………………
……………………………………………………
In manual teller counters banks generally allow withdrawal of money from the savings
accounts for amount upto a limit (which may be from Rs. 5,000 to Rs. 10,000). The
cheque or withdrawal form is presented at the counter and payment is made after
verifying the balance in the account, and tallying the specimen signature of the account
holder. In automatic teller counters ATMs are installed to handle cash transactions 24
hours without any break. There is no need to appoint any body to verify your balance,
compare the specimen signature or hand over or take over the cash. Let us learn how an
ATM machine operates. When a bank installs ATMs, it gives a magnetic card along
with a secret code number to every accountholder. This code number is called Personal
Identification Number (PIN). When a cardholder wants to withdraw or deposit money,
first he has to establish his identity to operate the ATM by mentioning his PIN. When an
ATM card is inserted into the machine it asks for the PIN. The PIN can be entered either
by using the keyboard or touching the screen of the machine. Once the identity is
established then money can either be deposited or withdrawn simply by following the
instruction given by the machine. For deposit of cash it is required to keep the amount in
a special envelop, which is available at the ATM center. After sealing the envelope and
writing the necessary information on it, the envelope will be kept near a slit. Then on
pressing the deposit button the envelope will automatically be entered into the machine.
The bank officials will collect those envelops at regular interval and credit the amount
in the respective accounts. Similarly, withdrawal of money can be made by pressing or
touching the withdrawal button and then mentioning the amount of money required. The
exact amount of money will be made available to you instantly through the outlet.
India's banks also have consumer protection for its banking customers. However the
catch is that the maximum protection is, to the best of my knowledge, only Rupees one
lakh. That works out to less than $2500 per account. Compare that with the $100,000
coverage provided by the US and Canadian banks.
The agency that provided deposit insurance for Indian banks is called The Deposit
Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation (DICGC)
If you have a bank account in India and want to check if your Indian bank account is
covered by the DICGC you can do so by using the links provided below:
36
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
2.13 PASSBOOK
GENERAL :
(i) The legal relationship between a banker and its customer, so far as bills are
concerned is that of an agent and principal respectively.
(ii) A Bill of Exchange is an instrument in writing, containing an unconditional order,
signed by the maker (drawer), directing a certain person (drawee) to pay a certain
sum of money only to a certain person (Payee) or to his order or bearer.
(iii) Further, a cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker and not
expressed to be payable otherwise than on demand.
37
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(iv) As per the above description, cheques and hundies will be treated as bills of
exchange.
(v) A bill of exchange involves three parties, viz. the drawer, drawee and payee.
Banks act as collecting agents on behalf of these parties.
(vi) Section 131 of Negotiable Instruments Act gives protection to the collecting
banker, if the crossed instruments are collected on behalf of a customer who is
properly introduced and in good faith and without negligence.
While collecting cheques as agents for collection on behalf of customers, the collecting
bank should take care of the following :-
(i) Cheques must be presented to the drawee banks for payment with care and
diligence. Negligence in selection of agents for collection, where the Bank has no
branch, may result in a loss to the customer and consequent liability to the Bank.
(ii) Notice of dishonour should be given to the customer if any cheque is not paid on
presentation.
(iii) Notice of dishonour should also be given where cheques are returned unpaid for
other reasons, such as for want of endorsements etc., which can be attended to by
the Bank for representation of cheques.
(iv) Cheques drawn on the branch and received for collection should either be paid or
returned on the same day.
(v) Cheques drawn on other local banks received from upcountry branches for
collection should be presented to the drawee banks without loss of time.
a. Statutory protection :
(i) To get protection under Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881,
cheques should be crossed by the customers before they are tendered to the Bank
for collection. Affixing the Bank's crossing stamp on cheques at the time of
receiving the cheques or thereafter would not suffice for claiming protection under
the Act.
Branches should, therefore, ensure that only crossed cheques are accepted for collection.
For this, customer should be educated/advised to cross the cheques before tendering for
collections.
38
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(ii) Cheques should be collected only for properly introduced account holders of the
Bank. It is possible that the branches may be having introduced savings bank
accounts, in which case sufficient care must be exercised to ensure that the
cheques are accepted for collection only after the accounts are introduced.
Further, cheques favouring only account holders should be collected in savings
bank accounts. No third party cheques should be accepted in savings bank
accounts. Cheques/instruments payable jointly to two or more persons should not
be collected for credit of the proceeds in single account of one of the payees or in
another joint account wherein name of one of the account holders is mentioned as
payee but the name of other account holder is not mentioned in the instrument.
(iii) Cheques should be accepted and collected without negligence.
b. Negligence :
The following acts would generally constitute negligence :
(i) To collect cheques which contain irregular endorsement. It is the duty of the Bank
to verify the correctness of endorsements on a cheque and to satisfy that the
cheques are in order in all respects without any reason to doubt the title of the
lodger.
(ii) To collect cheques for customers, whose accounts are not properly introduced.
(iii) To collect cheques crossed "A/c Payee" for an account other than that of the
payee. However, there may be exceptional circumstances when a banker can
collect a cheque crossed "A/c Payee" for an account other than that of the payee.
The "A/c Payee" crossing on a cheque does not deprive it of its attributes of
negotiability and transferability. The paying banker is not concerned with "A/c
Payee" crossing. The "A/c Payee" crossing is a direction to the collecting banker
for appropriation in terms of the crossing. Generally, if a banker collects a bearer
or order cheque crossed "A/c Payee" on account of a third party, who has no title
to it, the banker would be guilty of negligence and, therefore, of conversion and
would lose the protection under Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,
1881. The bank would be liable to the true owner of the cheque and not to the
drawer of the cheque. The true owner of the cheque is the payee or the endorsee,
when it is properly endorsed. A forged endorsement would not convey any title to
the endorsee. When a customer draws a cheque, he wishes his banker to pay the
cheque to its payee or any other person to the payee's order. So long as the banker
pays the cheque in due course (vide Section 10 of the Negotiable Instruments Act,
1881) he is completely discharged. It, therefore, follows that the true owner of a
cheque is the person to whom the drawer wishes it to be paid, i.e. the first payee or
the second payee (may be subsequent payees) according to the order of the first
payee. But the collecting banker should be cautious of collecting such cheques,
unless the payee and/or endorsee are very well known to him.
39
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
40
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(e) Protection under Section 131 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 is
available only for collection of cheques and drafts. Analogous instruments, such
as orders on a bank with receipt attached, orders on Government departments,
postal orders, interest and dividend warrants not drawn in the form of a cheque
should be collected only for the account of a payee.
(f) Cheques/instruments drawn on private bankers or non-banking agencies other
than those permitted under Section 49(a) of the Banking Regulation
(Amendment) Act, 1949, should be accepted for collection only from well-
known clients and at their risk and responsibility. In the event of a defective title
in such a cheque, the Bank will not get protection under Section 131 of the
Negotiable Instruments Act as such an instrument is not deemed to be a cheque.
(g) A cheque drawn payable to a particular payee only (i.e. "Pay to 'A' only) should
be collected only to payee's account.
(i) Bills, like cheques, should be collected only for customers whose accounts are
properly introduced. Bills should be made out or endorsed in favour of the Bank
or its order.
(ii) Hundies and bills drawn in vernacular, other than the regional language, should
be accompanied by translation memos giving full particulars of bills, viz. date,
name of the drawee, address, amount etc. The translation memo should be
prepared by the branch sending the bill for collection.
(iii) Branches should act in strict accordance with the instructions given by their
customers while collecting various types of bills as agents for collection. To
avoid any embarrassment and to safeguard the interests of customers, branches
should obtain request letter containing specific instructions from customers
tendering bills for collection/purchase/discount.
41
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(iv) In case bills covering shares and blank transfer deeds, share certificates and
transfer deeds should be sent separately by registered post on two consecutive
working days. If a customer gives instruction in writing to send both of them
together at his risk and responsibility and indemnifies the Bank for doing so, the
documents may be sent by the same mail, but in two different packets.
Government promissory notes should be cut into two halves and sent separately
by registered insured post on two consecutive working days.
(v) Branches should accept for collection bills accompanied by consignee's copies of
MTRs and not the other copies.
42
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
to the concerned bank even if we have a branch at the centre. In all other cases, the bills
should be sent for collection to banks with whom reciprocal arrangements exist or to any
nationalised/scheduled bank. As per H.O. instructions vide circular dated 20-01-2005
w.e.f. 15th February 2005, as the bank has entered into an arrangement with H.D.F.C.
Bank Ltd; New Delhi to collect our O.B.Cs. through our New Delhi branch, all branches
are advised to forward their O.B.Cs., drawn on any bank, to our New Delhi Panchkuian
road branch for collection, if the instrument is drawn on any of the center of the
H.D.F.C. Bank Ltd; as per list supplied with the circular.
43
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
44
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(c) The person should also furnish a letter stating that the Bank may send the lottery
ticket by post at his risk for collection of the proceeds. He should also give his
consent that in case the lottery ticket is lost, misplaced, intercepted, wrongly
delivered or delivered late, he would not hold the Bank responsible to make good
the loss to in other than that for which the post office compensates the Bank.
(d) The person should also declare that the lottery ticket lodged by him/her for
collection was purchased by him/her or purchased by another person for giving
benefit to him/her and he/she is entitled to receive payment of the ticket. The
collecting branch should preserve these undertakings/declarations carefully and
send the lottery ticket for collection.
(e) The lottery ticket must be received for collection personally by the Branch
Manager/Joint Manager who should sign the counterfoil/acknowledgement.
(f) The lottery ticket must be kept in a cover which should be sealed in the presence
of the Branch Manager and another officer.
(g) The cover should be insured with the post office upto the amount of prize money
or the maximum insurance cover that is available from the post office, whichever
is lower. Alternatively the cover may be insured with an insurance company upto
the full value of the prize money, if the customer so desires. The premium should
be recovered in advance from the accountholder.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
the Indian Law, such an agreement is implied by the terms of Section 171 of the Indian
Contract Act, 1872 so long as the same is not expressly excluded .In order that the lien
should arise the following requirements are to be fulfilled:
(1) the property must come into the hands of the banker in his capacity as a banker in
the ordinary course of business ;
(2) there should be no entrustment for a special purpose inconsistent with the lien
(3) the possession of the property must be lawfully obtained in his capacity as a
banker; and
(4) There should be no agreement inconsistent with the lien.
Banker’s lien is a general lien recognized by law. The general lien on the banker is
regarded as something more than an ordinary lien; it is an implied pledge. This right
coupled with rights u/s 43 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881 permits bills, notes
and cheques, of the banker, being regarded as a holder for value to the extent of the sum
in respect of which the lien exists can realize them when due; but in the case of the other
negotiable instruments e.g. bearer bonds, coupons, and share warrants to bearer, coming
into the banker’s hands and thus becoming liable to the lien, the character of a pledge
enables the banker to sell them on default, if a time is fixed for the payment of the
advance ,or, where no time is fixed ,after request for repayment and reasonable notice of
intention to sell and apply the proceeds in liquidation of the amount due to him .The
right of sale extends to all properties and securities belonging to a customer in the hands
of a banker ,except title deeds of immovable property which obviously cannot be sold.
The law gives inter alia, a general lien to the bankers - Lloyds Bank v. Administrator
General of Burma, AIR 1934 Rangoon 66. To claim a lien, the banker must be
functioning qua banker under Section 6 of the Banking Regulation Act-State Bank of
Travencore v. Bhargavan ,1969 Kerela .572.
It is now well settled that the Banker lien confers upon a banker the right to retain the
security, in respect of general balance account. The term general balance refers to all
sums presently due and payable by the customer, whether on loan or overdraft or other
credit facility.(Re European Bank (1872) 8 Ch App 41) In other words ,the lien extends
to all forms of securities deposited ,which are not specifically entrusted or to be
appropriated.
Case Laws
In the matter of Firm Jaikishen Dass Jinda Ram v. Central Bank of India Ltd. AIR 1960
Punj.1, two partnership firms with the same set off partners had two separate accounts
with the Bank. The Court held that the bank was entitled to appropriate the monies
belonging to a firm for payment of an overdraft of another firm. Because although two
47
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
separate firms are involved they are not two separate legal entities and cannot be
‘distinguished from the members who compose them. Mutual demands existed between
the bank on the one hand and the persons constituting firm on the other. Nor it could be
said that these demands did not exist between the parties in the same right.
The court can interfere in the exercise of the Bank’s Lien. In the matter of Purewal &
Associates and another v/s Punjab National Bank and others (AIR 1993 SC 954) where
the debtor failed to pay dues of the bank which resulted in denial of bank’s services to
him, the Supreme Court of India ordered that the bank shall allow the operation of one
current account which will be free from the incidence of the Banker’s lien claimed by
the bank so as to enable the debtor to carry on its day to day business transactions etc.
and the liberty was given to bank to institute other proceedings for the recovery of its
dues.
State Bank of India v/s Javed Akhtar Hussain and others it was held by the Court that the
action of the bank in keeping lien over the TDR and RD accounts was unilateral and
high handed and even it is not befitting the authorities of the State Bank of India .The
court relied on the ruling Union Bank of India v/s K.V.Venugopalan where it was held
by the court that the fixed deposit money lodged with the bank is strictly a loan to the
bank. The banker in connection with the FD is a debtor .The depositor would
accordingly cease to be the owner of the money in fixed deposit .The said money
becomes money of the bank, enabling the bank to do as it likes, that however, with the
obligation to repay the debt on maturity .In the same ruling it was further held that the
bank being a debtor in respect of the money in FD, had no right to pass into service the
doctrine of banker’s lien and the money in Fixed Deposit.
In the case State Bank of India Kanpur v/s Deepak Malviya (AIR 1996 All 165) it has
been held that section 174 of the Act contemplates that in the absence of a contract to the
contrary the Pawnee is under an obligation to return the goods pledged for any debt or
compromise for which the goods were pledged. This is a general provision providing for
the relationship of a pawnee and a pawner in respect of pledged goods. Section 171 of
the Act, providing for banker’s lien, is a specific provision, which has an overriding
effect on this general provision, as such, the banker’s lien is also extended to the pledged
goods.
48
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
49
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
(vi) Where the valuables or documents of title are left in the bankers hands,
inadvertently.
(vii) Where the banker has only a contingent debt .A contingent debt is that "no amount
would be due on the date when he wants to exercise lien" Tannans banking Law.
(viii) Where the account is in respect of a trust.
Banker’s Lien is not available against Term Deposit Receipt in Joint Names when the
debt is due only from one of the depositors
In the matter of State Bank of India v. Javed Akhtar Hussain and others, AIR 1993
Bom.87, the appellant bank obtained a decree from against applicant and non-applicant
who stood as a surety to the non-applicant No.1 .After a decree was passed, the non-
applicant No.2 deposited a sum of Rs.32,793/-in TDR No.856671 with the appellants in
joint names of himself and his wife in another branch of the same bank. They were also
having RD account. The applicant bank kept lien on both these accounts without
exhausting, any remedy against non-applicant No.1.The Court held that the action of
keeping lien was a sort of suo muto act exercised by the Bank even without giving notice
to the non-applicant No.2 and his wife. The applicant could have moved the court for
passing orders in respect of the amounts invested in TDR and RD accounts. However the
action of the appellant in keeping lien over both these accounts was unilateral and high-
handed.
Syndicate Bank v.Vijay Kumar and Others, AIR 1992 SC 1066
The Supreme Court upheld the right of bankers’ lien and right of set-off, holding that
these are of mercantile custom and are judiciously recognised.
Facts
In the present matter the bank at the request of the judgment debtor had agreed to furnish
the bank guarantee in favour of the High Court of Delhi on the condition that that
judgment Debtor should deposit the entire sum of Rs.90,000 in favour of the Registrar of
the High Court of Delhi .This was done and the partner of the judgement debtor firm
deposited two FDRS of Rs. 65,000 and 25,000 respectively after duly discharging them
by signing on the reverse of each FDR.
The two FDR s were duly discharged by signing on the reverse of each of them by the
judgment debtor and were handed over along with two covering letters on the bank’s
usual printed forms on 17.9.1980 at the time of obtaining the guarantee. The relevant
clause of the letter read as under:
"The Bank is at liberty to adjust from the proceeds covered the aforesaid Deposit Receipt
/Certificate or from proceeds of other receipts /certificates issued in renewal thereof at
any time without any reference to us ,to the said loan/OD account. We agree that the
above deposit and renewals shall remain with the said bank so long as any account is due
to the bank from us for the said M/s Jullundur Body Builders singly or jointly with
others."
50
B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
Held That
The bank has general lien over all forms of securities or negotiable instruments
deposited by or on behalf of the customer in the ordinary course of banking business and
that the general lien is valuable right of the banker judicially recognised and in the
absence of an agreement to the contrary, a Banker has a general lien over such securities
or bills received from a customer in the ordinary course of banking business and has a
right to use the proceeds in respect of any balance that may be due from the customer by
way of a reduction of customer’s debit balance. In case the bank gave a guarantee on the
basis of the two FDRs it cannot be said that a banker had only a limited particular lien
and not a general lien on the two FDRs.It was hence held that what is attached is the
money in deposit amount. The banker as a garnishee, when an attachment notice is
served has to go before the court and obtain suitable directions for safeguarding its
interest.
What is set-off?
The right of set off is also known as the right of combination of accounts .A bank has a
right to set off a debt owing to a customer against a debt due from him.
"A legal set-off is “where there are mutual debts between the plaintiff and defendant, or
if either party sue or be sued as executor or administrator one debt may be set against the
other "(S.13 Insolvent Debtors Relied Act 1728)
From a commercial standpoint, a right of set-off is a form of security (right) for a lender.
It is an attractive security because its realization does not involve the sale of an asset to a
third party.
A set-off must be in the form of a cross claim for a liquidated amount and it can be
pleaded only in respect of a liquidated claim. Both the claim and the set-off must be
mutual debts, due from and to the same parties, under the same right A claim by a
person in a representative capacity cannot be set off against a personal claim. Even a
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
claim against the estate of a deceased customer cannot be set off against a debt, which
was due to the customer from his banker, during the former’s lifetime, whether the
accounts are with one or more offices of the banker, it does not materially affect the
position in any way.
A banker’s right of set off cannot be exercised after the money in his hands has been
validly assigned or in any case after he has been notified of the fact of an assignment.
(Official Liquidator, Hanuman Bank Ltd. v. K.P.T. Nadar and Others 26 Comp.Cas .81)
Judgments indicating certain essentials to the exercising of the right to set off.
Punjab National Bank v. Arunamal Durgadas ,AIR 1960 Punj.632 State Bank of India v.
Javed Akhtar Hussain ,AIR 1993 Bombay ,87 where it has been established that : (1)
Mutuality is essential to the validity of a right of exercising set-off
(2) It must be between the same periods.
Bank deposits serve different purposes for different people. Keeping in view these
differences, banks offer the facility of opening different types of deposit accounts by
people to suit their convenience and purposes, as follows:
- Savings Bank Account
- Current Deposit Account
- Fixed Deposit Account
- Recurring Deposit Account
There are different types of Recurring Deposit Accounts, like Home Safe Account,
Cumulative-cum-Sickness Deposit Account, House construction Deposit Account, etc.
To open a Savings Deposit Account in a commercial bank, you have to take the
following steps:
Fill up an application form;
ii. Arrange proper introduction on the form by a person known to the bank or an
account-holder of the bank;
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
iii. Put your specimen signatures on the application form and on a separate card;
iv. Deposit the minimum amount of cash or more at the counter with a pay-in-slip
filled in and signed by you;
v. Having got the account number allotted on your application form, make a request
for a cheque book, if you want. Operating the saving bank account involves
deposit and withdrawal of money. Money can be deposited in cash or cheques by
using pay in-slips. Money can be withdrawn by using withdrawal slip, cheques or
ATM card. To facilitate quick transaction banks provide teller counters for
withdrawal of money. There are two types of teller counters, one, automatic and
other manual. In automatic counters Automated Teller machine is installed to
facilitate withdrawal and deposit of cash any time.
Intext Questions
I. Which of the following statements are true and which are false?
(i) Pay-in-slip is required to be used while opening a savings bank account.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
Questions:
1. Describe the procedure of opening a savings bank account in a bank.
2. State the procedure for depositing cash in the savings bank account.
3. What procedure will you follow for depositing a cheque in your savings bank
account?
4. Describe the use of withdrawal form for operating savings bank account.
5. What particulars do you have to fill in the form of application while opening a
savings bank account?
6. State how will you withdraw cash from your savings bank account.
7. Describe briefly the use of pay-in-slips for depositing cash or cheques into the
savings bank account.
8. What is pay-in-slip? State its utility.
9. Can you withdraw an amount in excess of the balance in your savings bank
account? Give reason in support of your answer.
10. What is ATM? How does it help the customers of the bank?
11. While opening a savings bank account, why is it necessary to arrange introduction
of the applicant by a person known to the bank?
12. What are the different methods of withdrawing money from the saving bank
account?
13. Apart from safe-keeping of money why does a businessman need to have a current
account?
14. Describe the procedure of withdrawal and deposit of money through ATM.
15. Explain the utility of Automated Teller Machine.
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B.Com-Banking Law and Practice
B) a. Minimum
b. Higher
c. Current
d. Cheque
e. Lower
16.2 I
i. True
ii. False
iii. False
iv. True
v. True
vi. True
vii. True
viii. True
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i. Go to the nearest branch of any bank and collect a pay-in-slip form used for
depositing money. Try to fill it with the help of imaginary figures.
ii. Collect information about
a. Minimum amount required to open various deposit accounts;
b. Rate of interest payable on savings bank, recurring and fixed deposit accounts;
Instead of cash, suppose you have to deposit cheque, which you have got in payment of
your salary from the office in which you are employed. You may like to deposit it in
your bank account instead of going to another bank to encash it. Your bank will collect
the amount of the cheque and record it as a deposit in your savings bank account. To
deposit the cheque you have to use the pay-in-slip again, filling in particulars like the
date of deposit, the account number, name of the account-holder, the serial number and
date of the cheque, name and address of the bank on which the cheque is drawn, and the
amount of the cheque in figures and words. After signing the slip, you have to attach the
cheque with the foil by an awl pin, and present the slip at the counter for cheque receipt.
The person at the counter will keep the foil with the cheque attached, and return to you
the counter-foil with bank rubber stamp and his signature. In some banks, there is a box
kept near the counter. The bank rubber stamp is also available at the counter. The
depositor is to put the rubber stamp on the foil and counter- foil. Then after separating
the counter-foil, the cheque along with the foil is to be dropped in the box through a slit.
Withdrawal by issue of cheque requires the same procedure to be followed as that for
withdrawal by filling in and signing the withdrawal form explained above. In both cases
the amount of withdrawal is recorded in the books of the bank in the relevant savings
bank account. Interest allowed on the balance of deposit is also recorded in the relevant
accounts maintained in the books of account of the bank. These are also entered in the
Pass Book as and when presented by the account-holder to the bank.
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UNIT- III
CHEQUE
CONTENTS
3.0 Introduction
3.1 Essential of Valid Cheque
3.2 Types of Cheque in United states
3.3 Alternatives of Cheque
3.4 Fraud via cheques
3.5 Crossing of Cheques
3.5.1 Types of crossing of cheque
3.6 Endrosement
3.7 Paying Banker
3.8 Collecting Banker
3.8.1 Collecting banker duty of care
3.9 Holder in due course
3.9.1 An overview: Holder due course
3.0 INTRODUCTION
(However, draft in the U.S. Uniform Commercial Code today means any bill of
exchange, whether payable on demand or at a later date; if payable on demand it is a
"demand draft", or if drawn on a financial institution, a cheque.)
The ancient Romans are believed to have used an early form of cheque known as
praescriptiones in the first century BC. During the 3rd century AD, banks in Persia and
other territories in the Persian Empire under the Sassanid Empire issued letters of credit
known as βakks.
Cheques generally contains place of issue, cheque number, date of issue, payee, amount
of currency, signature of the drawer.
Routing / account number in MICR format - in the U.S., the routing number is a nine-
digit number in which the first 4 digits identifies the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank's
cheque-processing center. This is followed by digits 5 through 8, identifying the specific
bank served by that cheque-processing center. Digit 9 is a verification digit, computed
using a complex algorithm of the previous 8 digits. The account number is assigned
independently by the various banks.
1. fractional routing number (U.S. only) - also known as the transit number, consists
of a denominator mirroring the first 4 digits of the routing number. And a
hyphenated numerator, also known as the ABA number, in which the first part is a
city code (1-49), if the account is in one of 49 specific cities, or a state code
(50-99) if it is not in one of those specific cities; the second part of the hyphenated
numerator mirrors the 5th through 8th digits of the routing number with leading
zeros removed.
A cheque is generally valid indefinitely or for six months after the date of issue unless
otherwise indicated; this varies depending on where the cheque is drawn[citation needed]. In
Australia, for example, it is fifteen months. Legal amount (amount in words) is also
highly recommended but not strictly required.
In the USA and some other countries, cheques contain a memo line where the purpose of
the cheque can be indicated as a convenience without affecting the official parts of the
cheque. This is not used in Britain where such notes are often written on the reverse side.
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In the United States, cheques are governed by Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial
Code.
• An order check — the most common form in the United States — is payable only
to the named payee or his or her endorsee, as it usually contains the language "Pay
to the order of (name)."
• A bearer check is payable to anyone who is in possession of the document: this
would be the case if the cheque does not state a payee, or is payable to "bearer" or
to "cash" or "to the order of cash", or if the cheque is payable to someone who is
not a person or legal entity, e.g. if the payee line is marked "Happy Birthday".
• A counter check is a bank cheque given to customers who have run out of cheques
or whose cheques are not yet available. It is often left blank, and is used for
purposes of withdrawal.
• Crossed Cheque = Cheque is to be collected by a banker only.
• crossed cheque : two parallel lines are made in corner of cheque. it can be
endorsed in fovour of any other person. e.g. A issued crossed cheque in the name
of B. now, B can endorse this cheque in favour of C by writing and signing on its
back and C can get money into his a/c even cheque is in name of B.
A/c Payee Crossing = Proceeds must credited to the bank a/c of the payee.
• a/c payee : in between those parralel lines, "account payee" is also written. in
above example, if cheque is a/c payee, B cannot endorse in favour of any other
person. money will go into B's a/c only.
A/c payee crosing does not restrict negotiability. It can still be transfered by
endorsement and delivery.
Only if the cheque is crossed as "Not Negotiable", the cheque can not be further
transfered.
In the United States, the terminology for a cheque historically varied with the type of
financial institution on which it is drawn. In the case of a savings and loan association it
was a negotiable order of withdrawal; if a credit union it was a share draft. Checks as
such were associated with chartered commercial banks. However, common usage has
increasingly conformed to more recent versions of Article 3, where check means any or
all of these negotiable instruments. Certain types of cheques drawn on a government
agency, especially payroll cheques, may also be referred to as a payroll warrant.A
cheque is a cheque no matter how small the amount.
Parties to regular cheques generally include a maker or drawer, the depositor writing a
cheque; a drawee, the financial institution where the cheque can be presented for
payment; and a payee, the entity to whom the maker issues the cheque. The drawer
drafts or draws a cheque, which is also called cutting a cheque, especially in the United
States.
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Ultimately, there is also at least one endorsee which would typically be the financial
institution servicing the payee's account, or in some circumstances may be a third party
to whom the payee owes or wishes to give money.
A payee that accepts a cheque will typically deposit it in an account at the payee's bank,
and have the bank process the cheque. In some cases, the payee will take the cheque to a
branch of the drawee bank, and cash the cheque there. If a cheque is refused at the
drawee bank (or the drawee bank returns the cheque to the bank that it was deposited at)
because there are insufficient funds for the cheque to clear, it is said that the cheque has
bounced. Once a cheque is approved and all appropriate accounts involved have been
credited, the cheque is stamped with some kind of cancellation mark, such as a "paid"
stamp. The cheque is now a cancelled cheque. Cancelled cheques are placed in the
account holder's file. The account holder can request a copy of a cancelled cheque as
proof of a payment.
This is known as the cheque clearing cycle. Cheques are losing favour, as they can be
lost or go astray within the cycle, or be delayed if further verification is needed in the
case of suspected fraud. A cheque may thus bounce some time after it has been
deposited.
Following a report by a working group of the Office of Fair Trading in 2006 [10]
maximum times for the cheque clearing cycle for most banks will be introduced in UK
from November 2007.[11] The date the credit appears on the recipient's account (usually
the day of deposit) will be designated 'T'. At 'T + 2' (2 business days afterwards) the
value will count for calculation of credit interest or overdraft interest on the recipient's
account. At 'T + 4' one will be able to withdraw funds (though this will often happen
earlier, at the bank's discretion). 'T + 6' is the last day that a cheque can bounce without
the recipient's permission - this is known as 'certainty of fate'. Before the introduction of
this standard, the only way to know the 'fate' of a cheque has been 'Special Presentation',
which would probably involve a fee, where the drawee bank contacts the payee bank to
see if the payee has that money at that time. 'Special Presentation' needs to be stated at
the time of depositing in the cheque.
When a maker directs the maker's bank to deduct the funds for the amount of a cheque
from the maker's account, thus guaranteeing funds will be available for the cheque to
clear, and the bank indicates this fact by making a notation on the face of the cheque
(technically called an acceptance), the instrument is then referred to as a certified
cheque.
In Europe, in the few countries where cheques are still being used, and in the past also in
other European countries, (but this has stopped some 20 years ago), a drawer could
present a cheque guarantee card with the cheque when paying a retailer. If the retailer
wrote the card number on the back of the cheque, the cheque was signed in the retailer's
presence, and the retailer verifies the signature on the cheque against the signature on the
card, then the cheque cannot be cancelled and payment cannot be refused. Those
guarantee cards are out of use in Central Europe for about 15 years.
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A cheque used to pay wages due is referred to as a payroll cheque. Payroll cheques
issued by the military to soldiers, or by some other government entities to their
employees, beneficiants, and creditors, are referred to as warrants.
A traveller's cheque is designed to allow the person signing it to make an unconditional
payment to someone else as a result of paying the account holder for that privilege.
Traveller's cheques can usually be replaced if lost or stolen, they are often used by
people on vacation instead of cash. The use of credit or debit cards has, however, begun
to replace the traveller's cheque as the standard for vacation money, with an increase in
usage by spenders due to ease of use, and an increase of businesses preferring transfers
of this kind over traveller's cheques. This has resulted in some businesses to no longer
accepting traveller's cheques as currency.
• A cheque sold by a post office or merchant such as a grocery for payment by a
third party for a customer is referred to as a money order or postal order.
• A cheque issued by a bank on its own account for a customer for payment to a
third party is called a cashier's cheque, a treasurer's cheque, a bank cheque, or a
bank draft. A cheque issued by a bank but drawn on an account with another
bank is a teller's cheque.
• In addition to issuing cashier's and teller's cheques, banks often sell money orders,
and traveller's cheques are usually purchased from banks.
• Some public assistance programs such as the Special Supplemental Nutrition
Program for Women, Infants and Children, or Aid to Families with Dependent
Children make vouchers available to their beneficiaries, which are good up to a
certain monetary amount for purchase of grocery items deemed eligible under the
particular programme. The voucher can be deposited like any other cheque by a
participating supermarket or other approved business.
• Paper cheques have a major advantage to the maker over debit card transactions in
that the maker's bank will release the money several days later. Paying with a
cheque and making a deposit before it clears the maker's bank is called "kiting" or
"floating" and is generally illegal in the United States, but rarely enforced unless
the maker uses multiple chequing accounts with multiple institutions to increase
the delay or to steal the funds.
Industry trend
Cheques have been in decline for many years, both for point of sale transactions (for
which credit cards and debit cards are increasingly preferred) and for third party
payments (e.g. bill payments), where the decline has been accelerated by the emergence
of telephone banking and online banking. Being paper-based, cheques are costly for
banks to process in comparison to electronic payments, so banks in many countries now
discourage the use of cheques, either by charging for cheques or by making the
alternatives more attractive to customers. The rise of automated teller machines (ATMs)
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has led to an era of easy access to cash, which make the necessity of writing a cheque to
someone because the banks were closed a thing of the past.
Western Europe
In most European countries, cheques are now very rarely used, even for third party
payments. In these countries, it is standard practice for businesses to publish their bank
details on invoices in order to facilitate the receipt of payments. Even before the
introduction of online banking, it has been possible in some countries to make payments
to third parties using ATMs. One of the essential procedural differences is that with a
cheque, the onus is on the payee to initiate the payment in the banking system, whereas
with a bank transfer, the onus is on the payer to effect the payment.
In Germany and Austria, as well as in the Netherlands, Belgium and Scandinavia,
cheques have almost completely vanished in favour of direct bank transfer and electronic
payment. Direct bank transfer using so-called Giro accounts (current accounts) has been
standard procedure since the 1950s to send and receive regular payments like rent and
wages, even mail-order invoices. In the Netherlands, Austria and Germany, all kinds of
invoices are commonly accompanied by so-called acceptgiro's (Netherlands) or
Überweisungen (German), which are essentially standardized bank transfer order forms
preprinted with the payee's account details and the amount payable. The payer fills in his
account details and hands the form to a clerk at his bank, which will then transfer the
money. Also, it is very common to allow the payee to automatically withdraw the
requested amount from the payer's account (Lastschrifteinzug (German) or Incasso
(machtiging) (Netherlands)). Though similar to paying by cheque, the payee only needs
the payer's bank and account number. Since the early 1990s this method of payment has
also been available to merchants. Due to this, credit cards are rather uncommon in
Germany and Austria and are mostly used for the credit function rather than for cashless
payment. Debit cards, however, are widespread in these countries since virtually all
Austrian and German banks issue debit cards instead of simple ATM cards for use on
current accounts. Acceptance of cheques has been further diminished since the late
1990s, because of the abolition of the Eurocheque. Cashing a foreign bank cheque is
possible, but usually very expensive.
In Finland, banks stopped issuing personal cheques in about 1993. All Nordic countries
have used an interconnected international Giro system since the 1950s, and in Sweden
cheques are now totally abandoned. Also electronic payments across the European
Union are now fast and low-cost.
In the United Kingdom, Ireland and France, there is still a heavy reliance on cheques by
some sectors of the population, partly because cheques remain free of charge to personal
customers, but bank-to-bank transfers are increasing in popularity. Since 2001,
businesses in the United Kingdom have made more electronic payments than cheque
payments [3]. In a bid to discourage cheques, most utilities in the United Kingdom
charge higher prices to customers who choose to pay by a means other than direct debit,
even if the customer pays by another electronic method. Many shops in the United
Kingdom and France no longer accept cheques as a means of payment. An example of
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this is when Shell announced in September 2005 that it would no longer accept cheques
in its UK petrol stations. More recently this has been followed by other major fuel
retailers such as Texaco, BP, and Total. ASDA announced in April 2006 that it would
stop accepting cheques, initially as a trial in the London area, and Boots announced in
September 2006 that it would stop accepting cheques, initially as a trial in Sussex and
Surrey. Currys (and other stores in the DSGi group) and WH Smith also no longer
accept cheques. Cheques are now widely predicted to become a thing of the past in the
United Kingdom, or at most a niche product used to pay friends, relatives, private
individuals or the few businesses that don't or can't easily accept electronic payment (e.g.
very small shops, child's football lessons, piano teacher, driving instructor, etc.).
North America
The United States still relies heavily on cheques, caused by the absence of a high volume
system for low value electronic payments. About 70 billion cheques were written
annually in the USA by 2001 though almost 25% of Americans do not have bank
accounts at all. When sending a payment by online banking in the United States at some
banks, the sending bank mails a cheque to the payee's bank or to the payee rather than
sending the funds electronically. Certain companies with whom a person pays with a
cheque will turn that cheque into an ACH or electronic transaction. Banks try to save
time processing cheques by sending them electronically between banks. Many utilities
and most credit cards will also allow customers to pay by providing bank information
and having the payee draw payment from the customer's account (direct debit).
Canada's usage of cheques is slightly less than that of the United States. The Interac
system, which allows instant fund transfers via magnetic strip and PIN, is widely used
by merchants to the point that very few brick and mortar merchants accept cheques
anymore. Many merchants accept Interac debit payments but not credit card payments,
even though most Interac terminals can support credit card payments. Financial
institutions also facilitate transfers between accounts within different institutions with
the Email Money Transfer service.
Cheques are still widely used for government cheques, payroll, rent and utility bill
payments, though direct account deposits and online/telephone bill payments are also
widely offered.
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Alternatives to cheques
1. Wire/bank transfer (local and international)
2. EU payment
3. Direct debit (initiated by payee)
4. Direct credit (initiated by payer), ACH in the USA
5. Online card payment
6. Third party online payment services (for example PayPal)
7. Postal payments (different names in different countries)
8. Cash (at the counter)
9. POS payments (at the counter)
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sued for libel after returning a cheque with the words "Insufficient Funds" after making
an error - the court ruled that as there were sufficient funds the statement was
demonstrably false and damaging to the reputation of the person issuing the cheque.
Cashier's cheques & banker's drafts
Cashier's cheques and banker's drafts are cheques issued against the funds of a financial
institution rather than an individual account holder, decreasing the likelihood the cheque
will bounce. Typically, cashier's cheques are used in the USA and banker's drafts are
used in the UK. Though similar, they differ in their mechanics.
Cashier's cheques are issued by a bank cashier or head teller (or even by a major
company). They are paid from the financial institution's funds immediately, without any
clearing period. The financial institution then later takes the value of the cheque from the
drawer. Cashier's cheques are perceived to be as good as cash but they are still a cheque,
a misconception often exploited by scam artists.
The funds behind a banker's draft are paid when the draft is first drawn and are held by
the issuing bank until the draft is cashed. Thus the funds of a banker's draft has been
allocated and verified before the document is issued, providing a guarantee it will not be
dishonoured due to insufficient funds. However, a lost or stolen banker's draft can be
stopped like any other cheque so payment is not completely guaranteed.
Certified cheque
When a certified cheque is drawn, the bank operating the account verifies there are
currently sufficient funds in the drawer's account to honour the cheque. A hole is
punched through the MICR numbers so the certified cheque will not be processed as an
ordinary cheque when it is deposited, and a bank official signs the cheque face to
indicate it is certified. Although the face of the cheque is crowded, the back of the
cheque is blank and the cheque can be deposited and routed through the banking system
like an ordinary cheque.
While certified cheques guarantee there are sufficient funds to honour them at the time
the cheque is drawn, they cannot guarantee there will be sufficient funds when the
cheque is finally cleared for payment.
Warrants
Warrants look like cheques and clear through the banking system like cheques, but are
not drawn against cleared funds in a demand deposit account. Instead they are drawn
against "available funds" so that the issuer can collect interest on the float. In the U.S.,
warrants are issued by government entities such as the military and state and county
governments. Warrants are issued for payroll to individuals and for accounts payable to
vendors. A cheque differs from a warrant in that the warrant is not necessarily payable
on demand and may not be negotiable. Deposited warrants are routed to a collecting
bank which processes them as collection items like maturing treasury bills and presents
the warrants to the government entity's treasury department for payment each business
day
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Blank cheque
A blank cheque (blank check, carte blanche), in the literal sense, is a cheque that has
no numerical value written in, but is already signed. In the figurative or metaphoric
sense, it is used (especially in politics) to describe a situation in which an agreement had
been made that is open-ended or vague, and therefore subject to abuse, or in which a
party is willing to consider any expense in the pursuance of their goals
Cheque users are normally advised to specify the amount of the cheque before signing it.
If created accidentally, blank cheque can be extremely dangerous for their owner,
because whoever obtains the cheque could write in any amount of money, and would be
able to cash it (to the extent that the chequeing account contains such funds, also
depending on the laws in the specific country). The 1994 film Blank Check plays on
such a situation.
One might give a blank cheque to a trusted agent for the payment of a debt where the
writer of the cheque does not know the amount required, and it is not convenient or
possible for the writer to enter the amount when it becomes known. In many cases, it is
possible to annotate a cheque with a notional limit with a statement such as "amount not
to exceed $1000". In theory, the bank should refuse to process a cheque in excess of the
stated amount.
A traveler's cheque (also traveller's cheque, travellers cheque, traveler's check, or
travelers check) is a preprinted, fixed-amount cheque designed to allow the person
signing it to make an unconditional payment to someone else as a result of having paid
the issuer for that privilege.
Usage
As a traveler's cheque can usually be replaced if lost or stolen (if the owner still has the
nota, issued together with the purchase of the cheque), they are often used by people on
vacation in place of cash. The use of credit cards has, however, rendered them less
important than they previously were; there are few places that do not accept credit cards
(especially international ones such as Mastercard and American Express) but do accept
traveler's cheques – in fact, many places now do not accept the latter. As a result,
Travelex now also sells "traveller's cheque cards" which are used like credit cards. In
contrast, American Express discontinued their own traveler's cheque cards, announcing
they would no longer honor the cards effective October 31, 2007.
Traveler's cheques are available in several currencies such as U.S. dollars, Canadian
dollars, pounds sterling, Japanese yen, and euro; denominations usually being 20, 50, or
100 (x100 for Yen) of whatever currency, and are usually sold in pads of five or ten
cheques, e.g., 5 x €20 for €100. Traveler's cheques do not expire so unused cheques can
be kept by the purchaser to spend at any time in the future. The purchaser of a supply of
traveler's cheques effectively gives an interest-free loan to the issuer, which is why it is
common for banks to sell them "commission free" to their customers. The commission,
where it is charged, is usually 1-2% of the total face value sold.
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American Express was the first company to develop a large-scale traveller's cheque
system in 1891, and is still the largest issuer of traveler's cheques today by volume.
American Express's introduction of traveler's cheques is traditionally attributed to
employee Marcellus Flemming Berry, after company president J.C. Fargo had problems
in smaller European cities obtaining funds with a letter of credit.
However, traveler's cheques were first issued on 1 January 1772 by the London Credit
Exchange Company for use in ninety European cities, and in 1874 Thomas Cook was
issuing 'circular notes' that operated in the manner of traveler's cheques
Legal terms for the parties to a traveler's cheque are the obligor or issuer, the
organization that produces it; the agent, the bank or other place that sells it; the
purchaser, the natural person who buys it, and the payee, the entity to whom the
purchaser writes the cheque for goods and/or services. For purposes of clearance, the
obligor is both maker and drawee.
Security concerns
It is a reasonable security procedure for the payee to ask to inspect the purchaser's
picture ID; a driving licence or passport should suffice, and doing so would most
usefully be towards the end of comparing the purchaser's signature on the ID with those
on the cheque. The best first step, however, that can be taken by any payee who has
concerns about the validity of any traveler's cheque, is to contact the issuer directly; a
negative finding by a third-party cheque verification service based on an ID check may
merely indicate that the service has no record about the purchaser (to be expected,
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Black market
One of the main advantage travellers cheques provide, is the replacement if lost or
stolen. This feature has also created a black market, where swindlers buy travellers
cheques, sell them at 50% of their value to other people (eg travellers, ...) and falsely
report their travellers cheque stolen with the company where the cheque has been
obtained. As such, they get back the value of the travellers cheque and made 50% of the
value as profit. [5]
Loss or theft
Loss or theft of traveler's cheques should be reported immediately to the issuer and to
the local police authority. The receipt issued when the cheques were purchased will
expedite the refund process
On the dishonour of a cheque, one can file a suit for recovery of the cheque amount
along with the cost & interest under order XXXVII of Code of Civil Procedure 1908
( which is a summary procedure and) can also file a Criminal Complaint u/s 138 of
Negotiable Instrument Act for punishment to the signatory of the cheque for haring
committed an offence. However, before filing the said complaint a statutory notice is
liable to be given to the other party.
On the dishonour of cheque by the company you can file a suit for recovery of the
amount under Order XXXVII of CPC. As you have stated that cheques were
dishonoured few months back and you have issued no notice to the company bringing to
their knowledge the dishonour of cheques and the life of the cheque is still valid which
is usually six months from the date of issue. You please present the cheque again and on
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receipt of the information about the dishonour of the cheque you immediately issue
notice within 30 days from the receipt of the information of dishonour of cheque to the
company. If the company does not pay the amount within 30 days from the receipt of the
notice, you can file complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiatble Instrument Act.
The said complaint is to be filed within one month on the expiry of 30 days period of
notice.
When you have informed the person about the dishonour of the cheque, in case the
information is given within 30 days from the dishonour of the cheque, you can file a
Complaint under Section 138 of Negotiable Instrument Act within one month after the
expiry of notice period of 30 days. The Complaint for cheating is not maintainable
legally. However, in certain cases the police have been registering cases of cheating
against the accused.
You should fill the cheques and present for encashment. The Partnership Firm as well
as partners are personally liable and even after dissolution also the firm and partners
are liable. Once the cheques are dishonoured you have to file a suit for recovery of the
said amount under the summary procedure provided in Order 37 of Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908. You should also file a complaint under Section 138 of the Negotiable
Instruments Act. For this you will have to first give a notice, within 30 days of the
dishonouring of the cheques. Then if payment is not made within 30 days of receipt of
notice a complaint has to be filed within 30 days thereafter.
Is it true that cheques are only valid for six months?
It is common banking practice to reject cheques that are over six months old to protect
the payer, on the basis that payment may already have been made by some other means
or the cheque may have been lost or stolen. However, this is at the discretion of
individual banks. It should not be assumed that cheques in excess of six months old
would automatically be rejected - the only certain way to cancel a cheque is to request
that a stop be placed on it.
Cheques backed by a Cheque Guarantee Card cannot be stopped.
It is recommended that, if possible, customers in possession of cheques that are over six
months old obtain a replacement. In case of disputes, a cheque remains legally valid to
use to prove a debt for six years.
Crossing affects the mode of payment of the cheque. The cheque is no more payable to
the payee or holder at the counter of the bank. The payment of a crossed cheque can be
obtained only through a banker.
Thus, crossing is a mode of assuring that only the rightful holder gets payment. Even if
some wrongful person secures payment it can be traced, because he can receive payment
only through an account with a bank.
Restrictive crossing: `A/c Payee only' crossing is also called as restrictive crossing since
it has the effect of restricting further transfers. It is a directive to the paying bank that the
proceeds be released for the account of payee only. But, it is the collecting bank which
has to ensure that the proceeds are credited to the account of payee only and no other.
If the collecting banker allows the proceeds of the cheque so crossed to be credited to
any other account, he may be held guilty of negligence in the event of an action for
wrongful conversion of funds being brought against him.
Not-negotiable crossing: Crossing whether `general' or `special' may be accompanied by
words `not negotiable'.
The effect of inclusion of such words will be not to render the cheques `non-
transferable'. Such cheques can very well be transferred by endorsement and delivery.
But as per Section 130, a person who takes such a cheque shall not have and shall not be
capable of giving a better title to the cheque than that which the person, from whom he
took it in the first instance, had.
What is a restrictive crossing on a cheque
Restrictive crossing is usually done on the left hand corner of cheques, a/c payee only
being written in between the lines. Basically what this does is that it ensures that the
money is not obtained at the counter as a crossed cheque can only be drawn from bank
to bank or by a banker.
Open Cheque
An open cheque is a cheque which is payable at the counter of the drawee bank on
presentation of the cheque.
Crossed Cheque
A crossed cheque is a cheque which is payable only through a collecting banker and not
directly at the counter of the bank. Crossing ensures security to the holder of the cheque
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as only the collecting banker credits the proceeds to the account of the payee of the
cheque.
When two parallel transverse lines, with or without any words, are drawn generally, on
the left hand top corner of the cheque. A crossed cheque does not effect the negotiability
of the instrument. It can be negotiated the same way as any other negotiable instrument.
General Crossing
General crossing is a cheque which bears across it’s face tow parallel transverse lines
without any words as (‘and company’ ‘or & Co.’) written in between these two lines, it
is called general crossing. In general crossing the name of the banker is not mentioned.
Special Crossing
When a cheque bears across its face an addition of the name of the banker, either with or
without the ‘not negotiable’ that addition shall be deemed a crossing, and the cheque
shall be deemed to be crossed to that banker. Where a cheque is crossed specially, the
banker on whom it is drawn shall not pay it otherwise than to the banker to whom it is
crossed or his agent for collection.
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i.e the transferee of such a crossed cheque cannot get a better title than that of the
transferor (cannot become a holder in due course) and cannot covey a better title to his
own transferee, though the instrument remains transferable
3.6 ENDORSEMENT
When the marker or holder of an negotiable instrument signs the same, otherwise than as
such maker, for the purpose of negotiation, one the back or face thereof or on a slip of
paper annexed thereto, or so signs for the same purpose a stamped paper intended to be
completed as a negotiable instrument, he is said to indorse the same, and is called the
endorser
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In case a bank pays a raised cheque, who is liable for the loss? (a) Can the bank charge
amount paid to their customers' account, or (b) can they recover from the bank to which
they paid it, or (c) from payee, who is a minor?
Answer. - The bank can only charge its customer with the original amount of the cheque,
unless in drawing it he has neglected to take reasonable and ordinary precautions against
forgery. It was held by the House of Lords in Macmillan v. London Joint Stock Bank,
that if, owing to the neglect of such precautions, it is put into the power of any dishonest
person to increase the amount by forgery, the customer must bear the loss as between
himself and the banker. (b) Yes - (c) Yes, and they can take criminal action if he did the
raising.
which he or she purports to be. Whilst bankers should constantly guard against
offending potential new clients, the latter should reasonably expect a thorough probe
into their financial affairs (see the Kwamashu case above). When dealing with existing
clients wishing to open new accounts, the position is somewhat different. In this instance
the bank need not repeat the enquiry process unless there are compelling circumstances
justifying such enquiry. A bank would be under a duty to make enquiries where it is put
on enquiry or where a transaction is out of the ordinary. The bank is not however
required to cross-examine the client to determine whether the customer is lying, nor need
the bank enquire as to the source of the client's funds in the absence of compelling
reasons to do so
(Columbus Joint Venture v Absa Bank Ltd
2000 (2) SA 491 (W)).
In terms of section 1 of the Apportionment of Damages Act, 1956 (the "Act"), a
plaintiff's claim must be reduced in accordance with his own degree of fault. The
concept of "fault" within this context has given rise to uncertainty and it is presently
unclear whether section 1 is applicable to intentional or negligent conduct. The South
African Law Commission has supported the view that "fault" in section 1 of the Act
means "negligence", and has made certain recommendations in this regard. Fault does
however include vicarious liability. A party may therefore be held strictly liable for the
wrongful conduct of an employee or agent committed in the course and scope of the
latter's employment or mandate
As long as the incidence of cheque theft and fraud remains high in our country and while
banks remain the most realistic source for a victim to recover its loss, claims against
collecting banks will continue to burden our courts. Up until 1992 the collecting
banker’s liability was quite controversial in our law. In Indac Electronics v Volkskas
Bank Limited 1992 (1) SA 783 (A) our Appellant Division brought matters to a head
and recognised the existence of a legal duty on the part of the collecting bank to the true
owner of a lost or stolen cheque to avoid causing economic loss by negligently dealing
with such cheque.
In the as yet unreported case of FJS Painting CC v Absa Bank Limited (judgment
delivered by the SCA on 28 May 2004) the court had to consider the liability of Absa
(the collecting bank). The sole member of FJS Painting CC (“the CC”) was a Mr
Beytell. The CC carried on business as a contractor doing mainly painting work. One of
the CC’s main clients was Sappi. Before October 1994 Mr Beytell began living with Ms
Craythorne. Ms Craythorne was the CC’s bookkeeper and on occasion collected or
delivered items for the CC.
On 22 October 1994 Mr Beytell was involved in an accident and he passed away. On 1
November 1994 Ms Craythorne opened an account at Absa’s Springs branch in the name
of “the sole owner FJS Painting Sheeting”. Ms Craythorne then communicated with
Sappi’s commercial manager and represented that she had a 50% interest in the CC.
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Thereafter four cheques were issued by Sappi in favour of FJS Painting Sheeting and
Labour Hire Contractor CC. Ms Craythorne took delivery of these cheques. All four
cheques were crossed and marked “Not Transferrable For Account Payee Only”.
Despite the crossing, Absa collected all four cheques for the credit of the account that
Ms Craythorne had opened in the name of “the sole owner FJS Painting Sheeting”. Ms
Craythorne subsequently passed away and there was no credit balance in the account
that she had opened nor were there assets in her estate at the time of her death.
The CC alleged that it was the true owner of each of the cheques and that in breach of
the legal duty which Absa owed it, Absa had negligently collected the cheques for the
credit of the account opened by Ms Crawthorne and as a result, it suffered a loss in the
amount of each of the cheques, totalling R132 864.26.
The Supreme Court of Appeal found that the CC was not the true owner of the cheques
and therefore was not entitled to the relief claimed. The Court reiterated that in order for
ownership of a cheque to be transferred there must be delivery of the cheque by the
transferor to the transferee and there must be an intention on the part of the transferor to
transfer ownership and an intention on the part of the transferee to receive ownership.
The court found that while Sappi delivered all four cheques to Ms Craythorne and did so
with the intention of transferring ownership to the CC, Ms Craythorne had no intention
of receiving the cheques for the CC. She intended to acquire the cheques for herself.
Since the court found that the CC was not the true owner of the cheques, the court
dismissed the claim against Absa.
In my view the most interesting aspect about this case is an alternative submission made
by the counsel for the CC that the legal duty of the collecting bank not to act negligently
ought to be extended to a named payee of the cheque, even if the payee is not the owner
of the cheque. In a previous decision by the Appellate Division in First National Bank
of SA Limited v Quality Tyres (1970) (Pty) Limited 1995 (3) SA 556 (A) at 570B a
similar submission was rejected as being “manifestly without merit”. In making this
suggestion the CC’s counsel referred to Strydom NO v Absa Bank Bpk 2001 (3) SA 185
(T). In that case, even though the court held that ownership of the cheque was an
essential ingredient of the action, the court suggested that the requirement of ownership
may well become the subject of debate in the future.
In the FJS Painting CC case, the Supreme Court of Appeal chose not to resolve the
debate about whether or not the collecting banker’s duty should be extended to the
named payee and stated the following: “The extension of a collecting banker’s liability
in this way could have far-reaching and possibly inappropriate consequences, none of
which were debated before us. However, on the facts of the present case it is
unnecessary to become embroiled in such a debate.” I suspect that if the claim had been
pleaded differently by the CC and if in the pleadings the CC had in the alternative
alleged that even if it was found not to be the true owner, the collecting bank owed it a
duty of care, the Court would have been forced to consider whether the duty of the
collecting banker should be extended.
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In the Indac Electronics case, the court highlighted five considerations that are pertinent
to the question of whether a collecting bank owes a duty of care to the owner of a lost or
stolen cheque: Firstly, courts guard against creating limitless or indeterminate liability
in respect of pure economic loss. The court, however, found that the extent of the
potential loss is finite (being the face value of the cheque) and the potential claimants are
easily predictable and limited to the drawer or the payee of the cheque. By extending
the liability of the collecting banker to the party that suffers the loss, I do not believe that
the courts will be creating limitless liability, because the party that will suffer the loss
will be the drawer of the cheque, the payee of the cheque or, in certain instances, the
drawee bank (where the drawee bank acts pursuant to a fraudulent signature).
Secondly, in the Indac Electronics case the court recognised that there is constantly a
risk that payment of a cheque may be obtained with relative ease by an unlawful
possessor and therefore recognised that there is a need for the true owner of the cheque
to be protected. In my view there is no reason why this protection should be limited to
the true owner and not extended to the drawer, payee or the drawee bank that may suffer
the loss.
The third consideration that motivated the court in the Indac Electronics case is the fact
that a collecting bank should be aware that its failure to exercise reasonable care may
result in loss to the true owner of the cheque. The court recognised that the collecting
bank is able to reduce, if not avoid, loss to the owner by exercising reasonable care in
the collection of the cheque. This consideration can apply equally to motivate why the
duty of the collecting banker should be extended to the payee, drawer or the drawee
bank, whoever suffers loss.
Fourthly, in the Indac Electronics case the court highlighted that the collecting bank is
the only party capable of knowing whether the cheque is being collected on behalf of the
person who is entitled to receive payment. The drawee bank has to rely on the collecting
bank to ascertain whether payment is being collected on behalf of the person who is so
entitled. This consideration also does not require the collecting bankers’ liability to be
limited to the true owner of the cheque and could be used to motivate an extension of the
collecting banker’s duty to the payee, drawee bank or the drawer, whoever suffers the
loss.
In the Indac Electronics case, the court also pointed out that the drawer or owner of the
cheque is unable to take steps to protect itself from the loss it will suffer if the collecting
bank negligently collects payment on behalf of a person who is not entitled to the
cheque, but the collecting bank who acts negligently and is consequently held liable to
pay damages to the owner will always have a claim for reimbursement against its
customer who deposited the cheque for collection. In my view this consideration too
does not require the liability of the collecting banker to be limited to the true owner of
the cheque and could apply equally to motivate the recognition of a duty on the part of
the collecting banker to the payee, drawer or the drawee bank, whoever suffers the loss.
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I expect that it will not be in the too distant future that the question, whether the
collecting banker’s duty should be extended to the party that suffers the loss, will be
debated before our courts. In order to determine whether the duty should be extended, a
value judgment embracing all relevant facts and involving considerations of policy
would have to be made by our courts. If one has regard to the factors that were taken
into account in the Indac Electronics case to recognise the duty of the collecting banker
to the true owner of the cheque, it will not surprise me if the court finds that the
collecting banker’s duty is not only owed to the true owner of the cheque, but also to the
drawer, the payee, or the drawee bank, whoever suffers the loss.
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Legal term for an original or any subsequent holder of a negotiable instrument (check,
draft, note, etc.) who has accepted it in good-faith and has exchanged something
valuable for it. For example, anyone who accepts a third-party check is a holder in due
course. He or she has certain legal rights, and is presumed to be unaware that (if such
were the case) the instrument was at any time overdue, dishonored when presented for
payment, had any claims against it, or the party required to pay it has valid reason for
not doing so. Also called protected holder party who becomes the good faith holder of a
negotiable instrument (such as a check, note, or draft), for value received, without
knowledge of any claims against it, or that the instrument was dishonored when
presented for payment, or in any way defective. Under the Uniform Commercial Code
(UCC) the body of law governing legal contracts, the person holding a check endorsed
by another is the presumed legal owner, and can sue in his or her own name. A person
accepting a third party check is a holder in due course, and holds legal title to the
instrument, regardless of any prior claims. By contrast, a good faith buyer of an asset
does not necessarily acquire title; for example, an innocent buyer of a stolen car never
gains title to the car.
A bank acquiring installment loan contracts, as a holder in due course, from a retailer or
other lender, can be held liable in some cases for any claims by the original borrower
against the seller of the note. This is the Federal Trade Commission's holder in due
course rule, intended to prevent abusive credit practices. The rule, issued in 1976,says
the holder of a note must honor warranties of the original seller. This means a consumer
cannot be required to make payments in situations where the seller of the note refused to
honor a manufacturer's guarantee on merchandise that turned out to be defective, or the
seller refused to perform work, such as home improvements, financed by an installment
note.
3.9.1 Holder In Due Course: An Overview
Holder in Due Course (HDC): A holder who
(1) acquires a negotiable instrument for value,
(2) in good faith, and
(3) without notice that the instrument
(a) is overdue,
(b) has been dishonored,
(c) is subject to a valid claim or defense by any person,
(d) is part of a series against at least one instrument of which exists uncured default,
(e) contains alterations or unauthorized signatures, or
(f) is so irregular or incomplete as to call into question its authenticity.
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1) What is Holder in Due course and explain its status in the global context?
2) Explain VALUE AND GOOD FAITH
3) Who is a Collecting banker and explain the duties of collecting banker?
4) What are the alternative instruments to cheque?
5) What is Crossing and explain Types of Crossing
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UNIT- IV
LOAN
CONTENTS
4.0 Introduction
4.1 Types of loans
4.2 Pledge Meaning and definition
4.3 Hypothecation
4.3.1 Hypothecation of securities in capital markets
4.3.2 Uses of Hypothecation
4.3.3 Procedures for pledge and hypothecation
4.4 Mortgage
4.4.1 Mortgage lender
4.4.2 Borrower
4.4.3 Types of mortgage Instrument
4.5 Reverse Mortgage
4.5.1 Types of Reverse Mortgage
4.6 Commercial Mortgage
4.6.1 Types of Commercial Mortgage
4.0 INTRODUCTION
A loan is a type of debt. This article focuses exclusively on monetary loans, although, in
practice, any material object might be lent. Like all debt instruments, a loan entails the
redistribution of financial assets over time, between the lender and the borrower.
The borrower initially does receive an amount of money from the lender, which they pay
back, usually but not always in regular installments, to the lender. This service is
generally provided at a cost, referred to as interest on the debt. A loan is of the annuity
type if the amount paid periodically (for paying off and interest together) is fixed.
A borrower may be subject to certain restrictions known as loan covenants under the
terms of the loan.
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Acting as a provider of loans is one of the principal tasks for financial institutions. For
other institutions, issuing of debt contracts such as bonds is a typical source of funding.
Legally, a loan is a contractual promise between two parties where one party, the
creditor, agrees to provide a sum of money to a debtor, who promises to return the
money to the creditor either in one lump sum or in parts over a fixed period in time. This
agreement may include providing additional payments of rental charges on the funds
advanced to the debtor for the time the funds are in the hands of the debtor (interest).
4.1.1 Secured
A secured loan is a loan in which the borrower pledges some asset (e.g. a car or
property) as collateral for the loan.
A mortgage loan is a very common type of debt instrument, used by many individuals to
purchase housing. In this arrangement, the money is used to purchase the property. The
financial institution, however, is given security — a lien on the title to the house — until
the mortgage is paid off in full. If the borrower defaults on the loan, the bank would
have the legal right to repossess the house and sell it, to recover sums owing to it.
In some instances, a loan taken out to purchase a new or used car may be secured by the
car in much the same way as a mortgage is secured by housing. The duration of the loan
period is considerably shorter — often corresponding to the useful life of the car. There
are two types of auto loans, direct and indirect. A direct auto loan is where a bank gives
the loan directly to a consumer. An indirect auto loan is where a car dealership acts as an
intermediary between the bank or financial institution and the consumer.
A type of loan especially used in limited partnership agreements is the recourse note.A
stock hedge loan is a special type of securities lending whereby the stock of a borrower
is hedged by the lender against loss, using options or other hedging strategies to reduce
lender risk A pre-settlement loan is a non-recourse debt, this is when a monetary loan is
given based on the merit and awardable amount in a lawsuit case. Only certain types of
lawsuit cases are eligible for a pre-settlement loan. This is considered a secured non-
recourse debt due to the fact if the case reaches a verdict in favor of the defendant the
loan is forgiven.
4.1.2 Unsecured
Unsecured loans are monetary loans that are not secured against the borrowers assets.
These may be available from financial institutions under many different guises or
marketing packages:
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5. Interest paid to the lender is included in the lender’s gross income. Interest
paid represents compensation for the use of the lender’s money or property and
thus represents profit or an accession to wealth to the lender. Interest income can
be attributed to lenders even if the lender doesn’t charge a minimum amount of
interest.
6. Interest paid to the lender may be deductible by the borrower. In general,
interest paid in connection with the borrower’s business activity is deductible,
while interest paid on personal loans are not deductible. The major exception here
is interest paid on a home mortgage.
4.1.6 Personal loans:Personal loans are simply those retail loans which are provided for
the purpose of fulfillment of personal needs and expenses of individuals (prospective
loan borrowers). The personal loans in India primarily are provided under five major
categories. Though the loan amount and the rate of interest vary from bank to bank, but
the purposes of providing these loans are same. Apart from the personal purposes, if
someone possess the desire to establish his own business then also the Indian banks
always welcome by providing the business start-up loans. Here, we will discuss about
these kinds of loans.
4.1.7 Consumer Durable Loans : - These kinds of loans are being provided for
purchasing consumer durable products like television, music system, washing machines
and so on. These are one of the unique kind of loans that are provided by the Indian
banks to attract more and more people towards them. Under this category of personal
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loan, you will get an amount ranging from Rs.10,000 to Rs.1,00,000. But there are
several banks which provides a minimum amount of Rs.5,000 and the maximum amount
of Rs.2,00,000 under this loan. Banks provide this loan for maximum of a time period of
5 years.
4.1.8 Festival Loans: - This kind of personal loan is provided to help people to fulfill
their personal and family's desire during the festival time. Usually, leading banks of
India provide this loan on the festive season at cheaper or discounted rate. This is the
best type of loan for those people who want to avail a small amount of loan. Under this
category of loan, banks do provide an minimum amount of Rs.5.000 and you can get an
maximum amount of Rs.50,000 under this type of loan. But the festival loan is restricted
up to 12 months. Repayment is to be done by equated monthly installments (EMI). The
rate of interest on this loan varies from bank to bank.
4.1.9 Marriage Loans: - Nowadays, this type of personal loan is equally getting popular
among the people of urban and rural sectors. The loan amount depends on various
factors including age of the applicant, security pledged by the applicant (if secured loan),
repayment capacity of the applicant etc. Under the marriage loan, the rate of interest is
governed by the prevailing market rate at the time when the loan is disbursed.
4.1.10 Pension Loans: - There are several banks in India which take care of the old
aged people as well. That's why the people who have retired from their jobs will also be
able to avail personal loans. This type of loan is called a Pension loan. Under this kind of
loan, the banks provide the maximum amount which is up to 7 to 10 times of the amount
which was received as the last pension.
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4.1.12 The Indian scenario : There are some times in people's life when they need
money, may be for purchasing a new car, for preparing a new house, expanding the
business or for some personal reason, but they doesn't have the required money. But in a
country like India, that is not a problem at all. Because of the lots of financial institutions
in India, getting loan is not an issue now. Such easy availability of loans is one of the
reason for booming Indian economy. Now Indian Governments also encourages people
and financial institutions for taking loans. With the increasing of strict competition both
private and public sector banks are coming out with the innovative loan plans.
There are various types of loans are being provided by Indian banks. The primary
categories are Car loans, Cash Rental Loans, Commercial or Business loans, Equipment
loans, Real Estate loans, Student loans, Home loans, Mortgage loans and travel loans.
One of the top demanding loans nowadays is the loan for business. These loans are now
provided by almost all Banks. The primary motto of providing this kind of loan is to
help businessmen, traders and professionals to commence a new business or to expand
their existing business. Loans to the self-employed professional such as Architect,
Chattered Accountant, Doctors are fall in this category. Like other loans, this kind of
loans can be of secured type and non-secured type. Under Secure business loans the
Banks takes something as security against the loan amount, where in unsecured the
entrepreneur doesn't have to keep any security to the Banks. Business loans are mainly
categorised into two part, professional loans and trade loans.
Self-employed professionals like accountants, Interior Decorators, Architects, Company
Secretary can take professional loans. This kind of loans offers very lucrative interest
rates, though these are unsecured in nature. The amount of loans are varies in different
banks. It depends on the financial condition, his/her repayment capacity and tenure of
the loan. Generally, Indian Banks provide amount of Rs.25000 to Rs.25 lakhs under
these loans. The most popular banks of providing professional loans are Bank of Baroda
with Baroda Professional Loan, HDFC Bank with Self employed (Professionals)
Scheme, Corporation Bank with Corp Professional, Union Bank of India with loans to
professionals etc.
On the other hand, banks provides trade loans to the business persons to expand their
business or set up a new business. Under this category of loans the minimum amount
provides is Rs. 25,000/- and one can take up to Rs.10 lakhs. The amount of this kind of
loans depends on the financial condition of the borrower, age of the borrower, his/her
ability to repay the amount etc. another major condition of these loans is, one can take
maximum five years to repay the loan amount. Some of the most popular banks of
providing trade loans are United Bank of India with Trade Credit Scheme, HDFC Bank
with Loan For Private Companies & Partnership Firms, Standard Chartered with Trade
Services, State Bank of India with Trade & Service Sector Loan, Union Bank of India
with Retail Traders, Bank of Baroda with Baroda Traders Loan etc.
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Nowadays India is in a better position for upcoming business entrepreneurs to get a loan.
The primary reason is the easy availability of business loans in India. Indian government
is too taking multiple steps to make easy availability of business loans. According to a
report of the World-Bank, Indian is now on the 36th position in the World for getting
business loans. Except providing funds Indian Bank also provides letters of credit or a
guarantee on behalf of the customer to the government departments ,suppliers for the
procurement of goods and services on credit.
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4.3 HYPOTHECATION
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Mortgage. You loan money to purchase a house. The loan is secured by the house. If he
doesn't pay the mortgage, you get the house.
Hypothecation. Where you pledge an asset as security to borrow money. If you have
$1,000 in a bank CD that matures in 1 year, you don't want to withdraw the money and
pay a penalty. You borrow $400 and pledge the CD as security. If you don't pay the debt,
the lender gets part of your CD..
4.4. MORTGAGE
A mortgage is the transfer of an interest in property (or in law the equivalent - a charge)
to a lender as a security for a debt - usually a loan of money. While a mortgage in itself
is not a debt, it is lender's security for a debt. It is a transfer of an interest in land (or the
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equivalent), from the owner to the mortgage lender, on the condition that this interest
will be returned to the owner of the real estate when the terms of the mortgage have been
satisfied or performed. In other words, the mortgage is a security for the loan that the
lender makes to the borrower.
The term comes from the Old French "dead pledge," apparently meaning that the pledge
ends (dies) either when the obligation is fulfilled or the property is taken through
foreclosure.[1]
In most jurisdictions mortgages are strongly associated with loans secured on real estate
rather than other property (such as ships) and in some jurisdictions only land may be
mortgaged. Arranging a mortgage is seen as the standard method by which individuals
and businesses can purchase residential and commercial real estate without the need to
pay the full value immediately. See mortgage loan for residential mortgage lending, and
commercial mortgage for lending against commercial property.
4.4.2 Borrower
Mortgagor is the legal term for the borrower, who owes the obligation secured by the
mortgage, and may be multiple parties. Generally, the debtor must meet the conditions
of the underlying loan or other obligation and the conditions of the mortgage. Otherwise,
the debtor usually runs the risk of foreclosure of the mortgage by the creditor to recover
the debt. Typically the debtors will be the individual home-owners, landlords or
businesses who are purchasing their property by way of a loan.
Most buyers of real property would have difficulty saving enough money to make an
outright purchase of real estate. The use of debt increases a buyer's ability to buy through
a combination of down payment and debt. As a result a real estate transaction seldom
occurs without buyers relying on borrowed funds.
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History
At common law, a mortgage was a conveyance of land that on its face was absolute and
conveyed a fee simple estate, but which was in fact conditional, and would be of no
effect if certain conditions were met – usually, but not necessarily, the repayment of a
debt to the original landowner. Hence the word "mortgage" (a legal term in French
meaning "Dead Pledge"). The debt was absolute in form, and unlike a "live pledge" was
not conditionally dependent on its repayment solely from raising and selling crops or
livestock or simply giving the crops and livestock raised on the mortgaged land. The
mortgage debt remained in effect whether or not the land could successfully produce
enough income to repay the debt. In theory, a mortgage required no further steps to be
taken by the creditor, such as acceptance of crops and livestock in repayment.
The difficulty with this arrangement was that the lender was absolute owner of the
property and could sell it or refuse to reconvey it to the borrower, who was in a weak
position. Increasingly the courts of equity began to protect the borrower's interests, so
that a borrower came to have an absolute right to insist on reconveyance on redemption.
This right of the borrower is known as the "equity of redemption".
This arrangement, whereby the lender was in theory the absolute owner, but in practice
had few of the practical rights of ownership, was seen in many jurisdictions as being
awkwardly artificial. By statute the common law's position was altered so that the
mortgagor would retain ownership, but the mortgagee's rights, such as foreclosure, the
power of sale, and the right to take possession, would be protected.
In the United States, those states that have reformed the nature of mortgages in this way
are known as lien states. A similar effect was achieved in England and Wales by the
Law of Property Act 1925, which abolished mortgages by the conveyance of a fee
simple.
borrower remains responsible for any remaining debt, through a deficiency judgment. In
some jurisdictions, first mortgages are non-recourse loans, but second and subsequent
ones are recourse loans.
Specific procedures for foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged property almost always
apply, and may be tightly regulated by the relevant government. In some jurisdictions,
foreclosure and sale can occur quite rapidly, while in others, foreclosure may take many
months or even years. In many countries, the ability of lenders to foreclose is extremely
limited, and mortgage market development has been notably slower.
At the start of 2008, 5.6% of all mortgages in the United States were delinquent. By the
end of the first quarter that rate had risen, encompassing 6.4% of residential properties.
This number did not include the 2.5% of homes in foreclosure.
Mortgages in the United States
The mortgage
In all but a few states, a mortgage creates a lien on the title to the mortgaged property.
Foreclosure of that lien almost always requires a judicial proceeding declaring the debt
to be due and in default and ordering a sale of the property to pay the debt.
Security Deed
The deed to secure debt is a mortgage instrument used in the state of Georgia. Unlike a
mortgage, however, a security deed is an actual conveyance of real property in security
of a debt. Upon the execution if such a deed, title passes to the grantee or beneficiary
(usually lender), however the grantor (debtor) maintains equitable title to use and enjoy
the conveyed land subject to compliance with debt obligations.
Security deeds must be recorded in the county where the land is located. Although there
is no specific time within which such deeds must be filed, the failure to timely record the
deed to secure debt may affect priority and therefore the ability to enforce the debt
against the subject property.
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Most "mortgages" in California are actually deeds of trust. The effective difference is
that the foreclosure process can be much faster for a deed of trust than for a mortgage,
on the order of 3 months rather than a year. Because the foreclosure does not require
actions by the court the transaction costs can be quite a bit less.
Deeds of trust to secure repayments of debts should not be confused with trust
instruments that are sometimes called deeds of trust but that are used to create trusts for
other purposes, such as estate planning. Though there are superficial similarities in the
form, many states hold deeds of trust to secure repayment of debts do not create true
trust arrangements.
Reverse mortgages are powerful tools that help eligible homeowners obtain a tax-free
cash flow. Over two hundred thousand people have already used Reverse mortgages to
enhance their retirement. A reverse mortgage is a government sponsored and insured
loan that requires no payments during the period of time you live in your home. Reverse
mortgages enable eligible homeowners to access the money they have built up as equity
in their homes.
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• Your home must be: A single-family residence, buildings with 1-4 Units, Condos,
and Mobile homes built on a permanent foundation after July 1976. Coops do not
qualify, except in parts of New York & Los Angeles.
• Counseling by a HUD approved counselor is required, prior to or after completing
a HUD application.
Benefits of a reverse mortgage:
• Retain the ownership of your home for life. The remaining equity will be passed
on to your heirs.
• Proceeds from reverse mortgages are tax-free. Proceeds could be used for: In-
home care, Home repairs & improvements, paying off an existing mortgage,
Education of grandchildren, Hospital & health care costs, paying off taxes and
credit card debt, buying a second home, and Travel. Let your home pay you
back!
• No loan repayment or payments as long as you live in your home.
• No income, medical or credit requirements.
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Huge real estate requirements in India and their subsequent development have fueled its
growth. The mortgage industry of India could break open from its age old image of
being housing mortgage facilitator only. Today, the types of mortgage that are being
accepted as collateral are varied and not confined to residential property only. The types
of mortgage accepted as collateral security for facilitating mortgage loans in India are as
follows -
• Amusement parks
• Bowling centers
• Casinos
• Auto care centers
• Auto dealerships
• Car washes
• Parking garage
• Truck terminal
• Conveniences stores
• Distribution centers
• Fitness centers
• Franchises
• Funeral homes
• Gas stations
• Golf courses
• Malls
• Retail (anchored, single tenant, unanchored)
• Mobile home arks
• Movie theaters
• Resort
• Restaurants
• Hotels
• Motels
• Hospitals
• Medical clinics
• Medical offices
• Nursing homes
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• Rehabilitation facilities
• Skilled nursing facility
• Special purpose property
• Child care centers
• Independent living facilities
• Mixed use properties
• Single family
• Offices (multi-tenant, single tenant)
• Warehouse
• Industrial parks
• Industrial buildings
• Land developments
• Mini warehouses
• Office buildings
• Outlet centers
• Educational institutions
• Training institutions
The following types of rates are prevalent in the Indian mortgage market -
• Fixed Mortgage Rate - in this case the rate of interest remains fixed throughout the
loan term. The mortgage rates do not vary according to market conditions. In other
words, the rate of interest is pre-fixed during the process of borrowing and it
generally varies between 12.5% and 25 %.
• Flexible Mortgage Rate - is one in which the interest rate varies according to
market movements. This type of interest rate is called 'adjusting' or 'floating' rates.
The risk factor is high in this type of interest rates.
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The seller accepted your offer and the mortgage lender approved your home loan
application. So what type of residential mortgage do you pick given the choices
available in the market today? There are quite a few considerations: What is your future
earning potential, how long do you plan to keep the house and where do you think
mortgage interest rates are going. Finally, how big should your mortgage loan be? The
basic rule is the annual upkeep of your property (mortgage payments, utilities and
insurance) should not exceed 30% of your gross annual income. Read on to find which
home loan is the best mortgage suited for you.
periods could be for 3, 5, 7 or 10 years. After this period expires, the mortgage interest
rate becomes adjustable.
A popular ARM home loan is the 5 1 ARM Mortgage. Five denotes that the period and
the borrowing rate are initially fixed for 5 years. After the fifth year, the mortgage rate
becomes adjustable.
Conversion Options: Some ARM home loans come with options to convert them to a
fixed rate mortgage based on a pre-determined formula, during a given time period.
Example: the 1-year treasury bill adjustable may be converted to a fixed mortgage rate
during the first five years on the adjustment date. Meaning, you have the option to
convert during the 13th, 25th, 37th, 49th and 61st months of the mortgage loan.
Components of an ARM Adjustable Rate Mortgage
There are several components that go into calculating the adjustable rate of an ARM
mortgage.
Index: This is the market derived interest rate which is used as a base to set future rates
of the ARM mortgage loan. Depending on the index chosen, the home borrowing rate
could be adjusted monthly, quarterly, semi-annually or annually. The index could be
pegged to the following: Treasury Bill Rates, The Prime Rate, Libor and 6 month CD.
These indexes are usually published in the newspaper.
Margin: This is the spread added to the index to determine the actual rate charged to the
mortgage borrower. Example: Index is based on One Year Treasury Bills 3%. The
margin is 2%. The mortgage rate the borrower pays is 5%. Rate = Index Rate + Margin
Adjustment Period: This is the duration for which the mortgage interest rate is fixed. If
the adjustment period is one year, then the interest rate will remain fixed for one year,
after which time it will adjust.
Adjustment Cap: This is the maximum the interest rate can adjust either up or down for
each adjustment period. Example: The adjustment cap is 1 point. The index based
interest rates since the last adjustment period went up 1.5 points. The most you will be
paying would be 1 point due to the cap.
Lifetime Cap: The maximum mortgage interest rate charged over the duration of the
arm mortgage loan. The cap can be as high as 6%. The cap is based on the interest rate
from the first year adjustment period. The rate is 5%. The highest the mortgage interest
rate can go is 11% (Base Rate + Lifetime Cap).
The Advantages
Teaser Rate: This is the starting interest rate of the arm adjustable rate mortgage. It is
usually referred to as the teaser rate, since it is lower than the fully indexed rate. The
initial low mortgage rate is used to attract people. An arm mortgage is ideal for people
who intend to stay in their homes for no more than 5 to 7 years. The benefits of an arm
are realized at the beginning.
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Affordability: If current mortgage rates and housing prices are high, this may be the
only home loan option available to you. You may have a better chance of getting the
home loan since the lender incorporates the gross monthly income and the monthly loan
payment amount to determine how much you qualify. The monthly amount will be less
with a lower interest rate so you might qualify for more.
Interest rates have peaked: By going with an adjustable rate mortgage arm at the peak
of the interest rate cycle, the successive rates will be lower as interest rates go down.
Your monthly home mortgage payments will be lower.
The Disadvantages
Complicated to understand: Unlike a fixed rate mortgage that is simple to understand,
there are many variables that go into calculating adjustable rate mortgage loans.
Interest rates have bottomed out: By going with an adjustable rate mortgage arm at
the bottom of the interest rate cycle, successive borrowing rates will likely go higher as
interest rates go down. Your monthly mortgage payments will become less affordable.
Uncertainty: If you plan to be at your property for more than 7 years, you will be
dealing with the uncertainty associated with an ARM mortgage. After each adjustment
period, you will bet getting new mortgage payments.
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The Advantages
Lower mortgage payments: The lower monthly mortgage payments let you purchase a
home where a fixed mortgage loan would not. You get to jump on the housing
bandwagon
Free up cash to invest the money elsewhere: Instead of using the cash to pay down
your mortgage principal, you can invest in other vehicles such as stocks and mutual
funds to generate a superior return.
The Disadvantages
Income Risks: There are no assurances that your income will rise fast enough to cover
the higher monthly mortgage payments.
Property Risks: Instead of the property rising fast enough to pay off your interest only
home mortgage, it could stay at current levels or even drop. As a result, you might
require another loan just settle the interest only mortgage loans.
No guarantee of getting superior returns in other investments: If you used the
money to generate returns in investments such as equities and mutual funds, there is no
guarantee you’ll make money.
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ARM mortgage. This type of residential mortgage is less risky than a mortgage ARM
initially since the adjustment interval is longer.
The best feature of an FHA loan is the low downpayment. The down payment mortgage
can be as low as 2% but you will be required to pay pmi private mortgage insurance.
FHA loans are also assumable so you can take over from the property seller if you
qualify. This could save you significant amounts of money and hassles. The FHA
mortgage loan amounts are determined by the median prices of different cities within a
specific region.
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UNIT - V
SURETY
CONTENTS
5.0 Introduction
5.1 Letter of credit
5.1.1 Documents called for under a DC
5.1.2 Legal Basis for LC
5.1.3 Risks involved in a DC translation
5.1.4 Format for Letter of Credit
5.2 Bill of exchange
5.2.1 Drafts or Bill of Change
5.3 Credit Card
5.3.1 Benefits to Customers
5.3.2 Prepaid Credit card
5.3.3 Collectable Credit card
5.4 Automated Teller Machine
5.4.1 Hard ware
5.4.2 Soft ware
5.4.3 Relative devices
5.0 INTRODUCTION
A surety is a person who agrees to be responsible for the debt or obligation of another.
Furthermore, a surety is also a "security against loss or damage or for the fulfillment of
an obligation, the payment of a debt, etc.; a pledge, guaranty, or bond."[1]
The situation in which a surety is most typically required is when the ability of the
primary obligor or principal to perform its obligations under a contract is in question, or
when there is some public or private interest which requires protection from the
consequences of the principal's default or delinquency. In most common law
jurisdictions, a contract of suretyship is subject to the statute of frauds (or its equivalent
local laws) and is only enforceable if recorded in writing and signed by the surety and
the principal.
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If the surety is required to pay or perform due to the principal's failure to do so, the law
will usually give the surety a right of subrogation, allowing the surety to "step into the
shoes of" the principal and use his contractual rights to recover the cost of making
payment or performing on the principal's behalf, even in the absence of an express
agreement to that effect between the surety and the principal.
The act of becoming a surety is also called a guarantee. Traditionally a guarantee was
distinguished from a surety in that the surety's liability was joint and primary with the
principal, whereas the guaranty's liability was ancillary and derivative, but many
jurisdictions have abolished this distinction.
In the United States, under Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, a person who
signs a negotiable instrument as a surety is termed an accommodation party; such a party
may be able to assert defenses to the enforcement of an instrument not available to the
maker of the instrument
Usage
There are several uses of the word "guarantee" in today's parlance, however the
following should be used in legal documents. Guaranty is the actual document
containing language of assurance. Guarantor is the entity giving the guaranty and
guarantee is the entity receiving the guaranty. Following conventional English spelling
rules, therefore, the plural of guaranty or verb usage of the word should be guaranties, as
in "The seller (guarantor) guaranties something to the buyer (guarantee)."
Example
A guarantee should be absolute with no chance of ambiguity or rebuttal. An example: I
spoke with Jesse this morning and he gave me the "guarantee" that the game was on at
1:00pm. The comment that the game is on at 1:00pm is an absolute, which can be
verified, therefore making Jesse's "guarantee" irrefutable. A guarantee should be based
on fact, which can be relied upon by others to make decisions; and not an opinion that
requires interpretation.
A surety bond is a contract among at least three parties:
• The principal - the primary party who will be performing a contractual obligation
• The obligee - the party who is the recipient of the obligation, and
• The surety - who ensures that the principal's obligations will be performed.
Through this agreement, the surety agrees to uphold—for the benefit of the obligee—the
contractual promises (obligations) made by the principal if the principal fails to uphold
its promises to the obligee. The contract is formed so as to induce the obligee to contract
with the principal, i.e., to demonstrate the credibility of the principal and guarantee
performance and completion per the terms of the agreement. Contract bonds guarantee a
specific contract. Examples include performance, bid, supply, maintenance and
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subdivision bonds. Commercial bonds guarantee per the terms of the bond form.
Examples include license & permit, union bonds, etc.
Individual Surety Bonds are the original form of suretyship. The earliest known record
of a contract of suretyship is a Mesopotamian tablet written around 2,750 BC. There is
evidence of Individual Surety Bonds in the Code of Hammurabi and in Babylon, Persia,
Assyria, Rome, Carthage, the ancient Hebrews and later England.
It wasn't until 1837 that the first Corporate Surety was organized, The Guarantee Society
of London.
In 1865, the Fidelity Insurance Company became the first US Corporate Surety
company, but the venture soon failed.
Surety bonds are also used in other situations, for example, to secure the proper
performance of fiduciary duties by persons in positions of private or public trust.
A key term in nearly every surety bond is the penal sum. This is a specified amount of
money which is the maximum amount that the surety will be required to pay in the event
of the principal's default. This allows the surety to assess the risk involved in giving the
bond; the premium charged is determined accordingly.
If the principal defaults and the surety turns out to be insolvent, the purpose of the bond
is rendered nugatory. Thus, the surety on a bond is usually an insurance company whose
solvency is verified by private audit, governmental regulation, or both.
The principal will pay a premium (usually annually) in exchange for the bonding
company's financial strength to extend surety credit. In the event of a claim, the surety
will investigate it. If it turns out to be a valid claim, the surety will pay it and then turn to
the principal for reimbursement of the amount paid on the claim and any legal fees
incurred.
A bail bond is a type of surety bond used to secure the release from custody of a person
charged with a criminal offense. Under such a contract, the principal is the accused, the
obligee is the government, and the surety is the bail bondsman, and if the accused fails to
appear, a fugitive recovery agent is the surety.
Surety defined. A surety is one who, at the request of another and for the
purpose of securing to the latter a benefit, becomes responsible for the performance by
the latter of some act in favor of a third person or hypothecates property as security
therefor. Surety appearing as principal may show status as surety - Exception. One
who appears to be a principal, whether by the terms of a written instrument or otherwise,
may show that the person in fact is a surety except as against persons who have acted on
the faith of that person's apparent character of principal. Limitations on liability of
surety. A surety cannot be held beyond the express terms of the surety's contract and if
such contract prescribes a penalty for its breach, the surety cannot be liable in any case
for more than the penalty. Interpreting contract of suretyship. In interpreting the terms
of a contract of suretyship, the same rules are to be observed as in the case of other
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contracts. Suretyship survives judgment. A surety still occupies the position of surety
even though a creditor recovers a judgment against the surety. Exoneration of surety -
Methods. A surety is exonerated:
1. In like manner with a guarantor;
2. By performance of the principal obligation or tender of such performance duly
made as provided in this code;
3. To the extent to which the surety is prejudiced by any act of the creditor which
would naturally prove injurious to the remedies of the surety or inconsistent with
the surety's rights, or which lessens the surety's security; or
4. To the extent to which the surety is prejudiced by an omission of the creditor to
do anything when required by the surety which it is the creditor's duty to do.
Rights of surety same as rights of guarantor. A surety has all the rights of a
guarantor whether the surety becomes personally responsible or not. Surety may
require creditors to proceed against principal. A surety may require the
surety's creditor to proceed against the principal or to pursue any other remedy in
the creditor's power which the surety cannot pursue and which would lighten the
surety's burden. If the creditor neglects to do so, the surety is exonerated to the
extent to which the surety is prejudiced by such neglect. Surety may compel
principal to perform obligation when due. A surety may compel the surety's
principal to perform the obligation when due. Reimbursement of surety by
principal - Claims for reimbursement against others. If a surety satisfies the
principal obligation, or any part thereof, with or without legal proceedings, the
principal is bound to reimburse the surety for what the surety has disbursed,
including necessary costs and expenses. A surety has no claim, however, for
reimbursement against other persons though they may have been benefited by the
surety's act, except as prescribed by section 22-03-11. Remedies of surety -
Contribution from cosureties. A surety, upon satisfying the obligations of the
principal, is entitled to enforce every remedy which the creditor then has against
the principal, to the extent of reimbursing what the surety has expended, and
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complying with the terms and conditions of the LC, the applicable UCP and
international standard banking practice, the issuing bank or confirming bank, if any, is
obliged to honour irrespective of any instructions from the applicant to the contrary. In
other words, the obligation to honour (usually payment) is shifted from the applicant to
the issuing bank or confirming bank, if any. Non-banks can also issue letters of credit,
however beneficiaries must balance the potential risk of payment default.
The LC can also be the source of payment for a transaction, meaning that redeeming the
letter of credit will pay an exporter. Letters of credit are used primarily in international
trade transactions of significant value, for deals between a supplier in one country and a
customer in another. They are also used in the land development process to ensure that
approved public facilities (streets, sidewalks, stormwater ponds, etc.) will be built. The
parties to a letter of credit are usually a beneficiary who is to receive the money, the
issuing bank of whom the applicant is a client, and the advising bank of whom the
beneficiary is a client. Almost all letters of credit are irrevocable, i.e., cannot be
amended or canceled without prior agreement of the beneficiary, the issuing bank and
the confirming bank, if any. In executing a transaction, letters of credit incorporate
functions common to giros and Traveler's cheques. Typically, the documents a
beneficiary has to present in order to receive payment include a commercial invoice, bill
of lading, and documents proving the shipment was insured against loss or damage in
transit. However, the list and form of documents is open to imagination and negotiation
and might contain requirements to present documents issued by a neutral third party
evidencing the quality of the goods shipped, or their place of origin.
Terminology
The English name “letter of credit” derives from the French word “accreditation”, a
power to do something, which in turn is derivative of the Latin word “accreditivus”,
meaning trust. S.‘The Application of the Letter of Credit Form of Payment in
International Business Transactions’ (2001) 10 Int’l Trade L.J. p. 37. In effect, this
reflects the modern understanding of the instrument. When a seller agrees to be paid by
means of a letter of credit, the creditor/seller is looking at a reliable bank that has an
obligation to pay the amount stipulated in the credit notwithstanding any defence
relating to the underlying contract of sale. This is as long as the seller performs their
duties to an extent that meets the requirements contained in the LC.
How it works
A business called the InCosmetika from time to time imports goods from a business
called BLISS, which banks with the ABC Bank. InCosmetika holds an account at the
Commonwealth Bank. InCosmetika wants to buy $500,000 worth of merchandise from
BLISS, who agrees to sell the goods and give InCosmetika 60 days to pay for them, on
the condition that they are provided with a 90-day LC for the full amount. The steps to
get the letter of credit would be as follows:
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Availability
• DC being an irrevocable undertaking of the issuing bank makes available the
Proceeds, to the Beneficiary of the Credit provided, stipulated documents strictly
complying with the provisions of the DC, UCP 600 and other international
standard banking practices, are presented to the issuing bank , then :
• i.if the Credit provides for sight payment – by payment at sight against compliant
presentation
• ii.if the Credit provides for deferred payment – by payment on the maturity
date(s) determinable in accordance with the stipulations of the Credit; and of
course undertaking to pay on due date and confirming maturity date at the time of
compliant presentation
• iii.a.if the Credit provides for acceptance by the Issuing Bank – by acceptance of
Draft(s) drawn by the Beneficiary on the Issuing Bank and payment at maturity of
such tenor draft, or
• iii.b. if the Credit provides for acceptance by another drawee bank – by
acceptance and payment at maturity Draft(s)drawn by the Beneficiary on the
Issuing Bank in the event the drawee bank stipulated in the Credit does not accept
Draft(s) drawn on it, or by payment of Draft(s) accepted but not paid by such
drawee bank at maturity;
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• iv. if the Credit provides for negotiation by another bank – by payment without
recourse to drawers and/or bona fide holders, Draft(s) drawn by the Beneficiary
and/or document(s) presented under the Credit, (and so negotiated by the
nominated bank )
• Negotiation means the giving of value for Draft(s) and/or document(s) by the bank
authorized to negotiate, viz the nominated bank. Mere examination of the
documents and forwarding the same to DC issuing bank for reimbursement,
without giving of value / agreed to give, does not constitute a negotiation.
5.1.1 Some of the Documents Called for under a DC
• Financial Documents
Bill of Exchange, Co-accepted Draft
• Commercial Documents
Invoice, Packing list
• Shipping Documents
Transport Document, Insurance Certificate, Commercial, Official or Legal
Documents
• Official Documents
License, Embassy legalization, Origin Certificate, Inspection Cert , Phyto-sanitary
Certificate
• Transport Documents
Bill of Landing (ocean or multi-modal or Charter party), Airway bill, Lorry/truck
receipt, railway receipt, CMC Other than Mate Receipt, Forwarder Cargo Receipt,
Deliver Challan...etc
• Insurance documents
Insurance policy, or Certificate but not a cover note.
Guidance on Preparation of Documents under a Letter of Credit
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Customs and Practices (UCP) issued by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC)
in Paris. The ICC has no legislative authority, rather, representatives of various industry
and trade groups from various countries get together to discuss how to revise the UCP
and adapt them to new technologies. The UCP are quoted according to the publication
number the ICC gives them. The UCP 600 are ICC publication No. 600 effective July 1,
2007. The previous revision was called UCP 500 and became effective 1993. Since the
UCP are not laws, parties have to include them into their arrangements as normal
contractual provisions. It is interesting to see that in the area of international trade the
parties do not rely on governmental regulations, but rather prefer the speed and ease of
auto-regulation
International Trade Payment methods
• Advance payment (most secure for seller)
Where the buyer parts with money first and waits for the seller to forward the
goods
• Documentary Credit (more secure for seller as well as buyer)
subject to ICC's UCP 600, where the bank gives an undertaking (on behalf of
buyer and at the request of applicant ) to pay the shipper ( beneficiary ) the value
of the goods shipped if certain docs are submitted and if the stipulated terms and
conditions are strictly complied.
• Here the buyer can be confident that the goods he is expecting only will be
received since it will be evidenced in the form of certain docs called for meeting
the specified terms and conditions while the supplier can be confident that if he
meets the stipulations his payment for the shipment is guaranteed by bank, who is
independent of the parties to the contract.
• Documentary collection (more secure for buyer and to a certain extent to seller)
subject to ICC's URC 525, sight and usance, for delivery of shipping documents
against payment or acceptances of draft, where shipment happens first, then the
title documents are sent to the [collecting bank] buyer's bank by seller's bank
[remitting bank], for delivering documents against collection of
payment/acceptance
• Direct payment (most secure for buyer)
Where the supplier ships the goods and waits for the buyer to remit the bill
proceeds, on open account terms
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Fraud Risks
• The payment will be obtained for nonexistent or worthless merchandise against
presentation by the Beneficiary of forged or falsified documents.
• Credit itself may be forged.
Sovereign and Regulatory Risks
• Performance of the Documentary Credit may be prevented by government action
outside the control of the parties.
Legal Risks
• Possibility that performance of a Documentary Credit may be disturbed by legal
action relating directly to the parties and their rights and obligations under the
Documentary Credit
Force Majeure and Frustration of Contract
• Performance of a contract – including an obligation under a Documentary Credit
relationship – is prevented by external factors such as natural disasters or armed
conflicts
Risks to the Applicant
• Non-delivery of Goods
• Short Shipment
• Inferior Quality
• Early /Late Shipment
• Damaged in transit
• Foreign exchange
• Failure of Bank viz Issuing bank / Collecting Bank
Risks to the Issuing Bank
• Insolvency of the Applicant
• Fraud Risk, Sovereign and Regulatory Risk and Legal Risks
Risks to the Reimbursing Bank
• no obligation to reimburse the Claiming Bank unless it has issued a
reimbursement undertaking.
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Revocable - A letter of credit that can be canceled or altered by the drawee (buyer) after
it has been issued by the drawee's bank.
Time Draft - A letter of credit that states payment is due within a certain time (usually
30, 60, 90, or 180 days), in other terms allows credit to the buyer.
The Issuer shall have ninety (90) days from the receipt of said notice to effect a cure by
procuring completion of construction and/or installation of the aforesaid public
improvements in accordance with the specifications of the County of Warren, Virginia,
and thereby receive a refund of any sum paid in default.
10. Addresses:
Issuer: __[ name of Issuer ]
__[ street address ]
__[ city, state, zip ]
Customer: __[ name of Customer ]
__[ street address ]
__[ city, state, zip ]
Beneficiary:
11. Termination: This is a continuing agreement and shall remain in full force and
effect until written notice is received by the County of Warren that it has been
terminated and revoked.
12. Miscellaneous: This Letter of Credit and the terms hereof shall be binding upon
the respective parties, heirs, executors, administrators, successors and assigns.
None of the terms of this agreement or its provisions may be waived, altered,
modified or amended except in writing signed by the Beneficiary and the Issuer.
By: ______________________
Seen: ______________________
Customer
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upon presentation to us, and we shall pay the amount of the draft directly to you, as
Director of the Division or in accordance
with your instructions.
This letter of credit is subject to the most recent edition of the Uniform Customs and
Practice for Documentary Credits,
published by the International Chamber of Commerce of the Uniform Commercial Code.
Sincerely,
[Signature(s) and title(s) of official(s) or issuing institution] [Date]
This letter must be submitted to:
Denny Jackson, Program Manager
Georgia Environmental Protection Division
Solid Waste Permitting Program
4244 International Parkway, Suite 104
Atlanta, Georgia 30354
ST
A bill of exchange or "Draft" is a written order by the drawer to the drawee to pay
money to the payee. The most common type of bill of exchange is the cheque (check in
American English), which is defined as a bill of exchange drawn on a banker and
payable on demand. Bills of exchange are used primarily in international trade, and are
written orders by one person to his bank to pay the bearer a specific sum on a specific
date sometime in the future.Prior to the advent of paper currency, bills of exchange were
a more significant part of trade. They are a rather ancient form of instrument.
Bills of exchange may be defined as a commitment subscribed by your customer to pay
a certain amount on a given date upon presentation of the bill of exchange. They can be
used to materialize installment payments.
For example, you have accepted that your customer pays the invoice amount in 3
monthly installments of 1000 USD each. You will issue 3 bills of exhange of 1000 usd
each and maturing in month in month m, m+1 and m+2. The bills of exchange will be
sent to your customer for acceptance(customer signs them).
Once accepted they will be returned to you. You will have to post accounting entries.
But note that even though the accepted bills of exchange can be considered as payment,
you cannot clear the outstanding customer invoice until the bills are effectively paid at
maturity date. You then have to post the bills of exchange as a special GL transaction.
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Again once you have received the bills of exchange you may decide to discount them
right away with your bank and this is done with or without recourse. Depending on the
option choosen, accounting entries are different. by discounting the bills you receive
payment of the bill and this can be used to clear the outstanding customer invoice.
But note that until the bill is finally paid by the customer at maturity date you remain
liable. You account for this liability by making postings which will show the discounted
bills of exchange as a contingent liability. They do not show in the balance sheet itself
but appear in an appendix of the balance sheet.
In brief, a "bill of exchange" or a "Hundi" is a kind of legal negotiable instrument used
to settle a payment at a future date. It is drawn by a drawer on a drawee wherein drawee
accepts the payment liability at a date stated in the instrument. The Drawer of the Bill of
Exchange draw the bill on the drawee and send it to him for his acceptance. Once
accepted by the drawee, it becomes a legitimate negotiable instrument in the financial
market and a debt against the drawee. The drawer may, on acceptance, have the Bill of
Exchange discounted from his bank for immediate payment to have his working capital
funds. On due date, the bill is again presented to the drawee for the payment accepted by
him, as stated therein the bill.
Letter of Credit (LC) is a declaration of financial soundness and commitment, by a bank
for its client, for the amount stated in the LC document, to the other party (beneficiary)
named therein. The LCs may or may not be endorse-able. In case of default of payment
by the party under obligation to pay, the LC issuing Bank undertakes to honour the
payment - with or without conditions. Normally, there may be sight LCs or DA LCs
containing a set of conditions in both the cases. There "may be" Bills of Exchange(s)
drawn under the overall limits of the LC amount for payment later on.
In the Westminster system (and, colloquially, in the United States), a money bill or
supply bill is a bill that solely concerns taxation or government spending (also known as
appropriation of money), as opposed to changes in public law.
Purchasing and discounting of bills of exchange is another short term method of
profitable instrument of banks funds. Bills of exchange can be discounted on rebate
before its due date. The rebate or discount is earning of the bank. The bills of exchange
usually mature within 90 days. In case a bill, say of rupees 2000 due 90 days hence is
discounted today at 20 percent per annum, the borrower is paid rupees 1900. the bank
however collects the full amount of rupees 2000 of the bill from drawer on maturity. The
drawer or maker of the bill is expected to pay the bill on maturity.
The bank by discounting the clean or documentary bill advances the amount to the
payee. On maturity of the bill the amount is collected from the drawer. The discount is
the safe earning of the bank because the bill of exchange is a negotiable instrument. If at
any time the bill is dishonoured the payee is responsible to make the full payment of the
bill to the bank. On the maturity of the bill there is certainly of payment to the bank. It is
thus a short term advance with certainly of payment. As the date of payment to the bank
is sure the short term advance is quite liquid
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A credit card is part of a system of payments named after the small plastic card issued
to users of the system. The issuer of the card grants a line of credit to the consumer (or
the user) from which the user can borrow money for payment to a merchant or as a cash
advance to the user. A credit card is different from a charge card, where a charge card
requires the balance to be paid in full each month. In contrast, credit cards allow the
consumers to 'revolve' their balance, at the cost of having interest charged. Most credit
cards are issued by local banks or credit unions, and are the same shape and size as
specified by the ISO 7810 standard.
Credit cards are issued after an account has been approved by the credit provider, after
which cardholders can use it to make purchases at merchants accepting that card.
When a purchase is made, the credit card user agrees to pay the card issuer. The
cardholder indicates his/her consent to pay, by signing a receipt with a record of the card
details and indicating the amount to be paid or by entering a Personal identification
number (PIN). Also, many merchants now accept verbal authorizations via telephone
and electronic authorization using the Internet, known as a 'Card/Cardholder Not
Present' (CNP) transaction.
Electronic verification systems allow merchants to verify that the card is valid and the
credit card customer has sufficient credit to cover the purchase in a few seconds,
allowing the verification to happen at time of purchase. The verification is performed
using a credit card payment terminal or Point of Sale (POS) system with a
communications link to the merchant's acquiring bank. Data from the card is obtained
from a magnetic stripe or chip on the card; the latter system is in the United Kingdom
and Ireland commonly known as Chip and PIN, but is more technically an EMV card.
Other variations of verification systems are used by e Commerce merchants to determine
if the user's account is valid and able to accept the charge. These will typically involve
the cardholder providing additional information, such as the security code printed on the
back of the card, or the address of the cardholder.
Each month, the credit card user is sent a statement indicating the purchases undertaken
with the card, any outstanding fees, and the total amount owed. After receiving the
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statement, the cardholder may dispute any charges that he or she thinks are incorrect (see
Fair Credit Billing Act for details of the US regulations). Otherwise, the cardholder must
pay a defined minimum proportion of the bill by a due date, or may choose to pay a
higher amount up to the entire amount owed. The credit provider charges interest on the
amount owed if the balance is not paid in full (typically at a much higher rate than most
other forms of debt). Some financial institutions can arrange for automatic payments to
be deducted from the user's bank accounts, thus avoiding late payment altogether as long
as the cardholder has sufficient funds.
Interest charges
Credit card issuers usually waive interest charges if the balance is paid in full each
month, but typically will charge full interest on the entire outstanding balance from the
date of each purchase if the total balance is not paid.
For example, if a user had a $1,000 transaction and repaid it in full within this grace
period, there would be no interest charged. If, however, even $1.00 of the total amount
remained unpaid, interest would be charged on the $1,000 from the date of purchase
until the payment is received. The precise manner in which interest is charged is usually
detailed in a cardholder agreement which may be summarized on the back of the
monthly statement. The general calculation formula most financial institutions use to
determine the amount of interest to be charged is APR/100 x ADB/365 x number of days
revolved. Take the Annual percentage rate (APR) and divide by 100 then multiply to the
amount of the average daily balance (ADB) divided by 365 and then take this total and
multiply by the total number of days the amount revolved before payment was made on
the account. Financial institutions refer to interest charged back to the original time of
the transaction and up to the time a payment was made, if not in full, as RRFC or
residual retail finance charge. Thus after an amount has revolved and a payment has
been made, the user of the card will still receive interest charges on their statement after
paying the next statement in full (in fact the statement may only have a charge for
interest that collected up until the date the full balance was paid...i.e. when the balance
stopped revolving).
The credit card may simply serve as a form of revolving credit, or it may become a
complicated financial instrument with multiple balance segments each at a different
interest rate, possibly with a single umbrella credit limit, or with separate credit limits
applicable to the various balance segments. Usually this compartmentalization is the
result of special incentive offers from the issuing bank, to encourage balance transfers
from cards of other issuers. In the event that several interest rates apply to various
balance segments, payment allocation is generally at the discretion of the issuing bank,
and payments will therefore usually be allocated towards the lowest rate balances until
paid in full before any money is paid towards higher rate balances. Interest rates can
vary considerably from card to card, and the interest rate on a particular card may jump
dramatically if the card user is late with a payment on that card or any other credit
instrument, or even if the issuing bank decides to raise its revenue.
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Grace period
A credit card's grace period is the time the customer has to pay the balance before
interest is charged to the balance. Grace periods vary, but usually range from 20 to 40
days depending on the type of credit card and the issuing bank. Some policies allow for
reinstatement after certain conditions are met.
Usually, if a customer is late paying the balance, finance charges will be calculated and
the grace period does not apply. Finance charges incurred depend on the grace period
and balance; with most credit cards there is no grace period if there is any outstanding
balance from the previous billing cycle or statement (i.e. interest is applied on both the
previous balance and new transactions). However, there are some credit cards that will
only apply finance charge on the previous or old balance, excluding new transactions.
Benefits to merchants
For merchants, a credit card transaction is often more secure than other forms of
payment, such as checks, because the issuing bank commits to pay the merchant the
moment the transaction is authorized, regardless of whether the consumer defaults on the
credit card payment (except for legitimate disputes, which are discussed below, and can
result in charges back to the merchant). In most cases, cards are even more secure than
cash, because they discourage theft by the merchant's employees and reduce the amount
of cash on the premises. Prior to credit cards, each merchant had to evaluate each
customer's credit history before extending credit. That task is now performed by the
banks which assume the credit risk.
For each purchase, the bank charges the merchant a commission (discount fee) for this
service and there may be a certain delay before the agreed payment is received by the
merchant. The commission is often a percentage of the transaction amount, plus a fixed
fee. In addition, a merchant may be penalized or have their ability to receive payment
using that credit card restricted if there are too many cancellations or reversals of
charges as a result of disputes. Some small merchants require credit purchases to have a
minimum amount (usually between $5 and $10) to compensate for the transaction costs,
though this is strictly prohibited by credit card companies and must be reported to the
consumer's credit card issuer.
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In some countries, for example the Nordic countries, banks guarantee payment on stolen
cards only if an ID card is checked and the ID card number/civic registration number is
written down on the receipt together with the signature. In these countries merchants
therefore usually ask for ID. Non-Nordic citizens, who are unlikely to possess a Nordic
ID card or driving license, will instead have to show their passport, and the passport
number will be written down on the receipt, sometimes together with other information.
Some shops use the card's PIN for identification, and in that case showing an ID card is
not necessary.
Parties involved
• Cardholder: The holder of the card used to make a purchase; the consumer.
• Card-issuing bank: The financial institution or other organization that issued the
credit card to the cardholder. This bank bills the consumer for repayment and
bears the risk that the card is used fraudulently. American Express and Discover
were previously the only card-issuing banks for their respective brands, but as of
2007, this is no longer the case.
• Merchant: The individual or business accepting credit card payments for products
or services sold to the cardholder
• Acquiring bank: The financial institution accepting payment for the products or
services on behalf of the merchant.
• Independent sales organization: Resellers (to merchants) of the services of the
acquiring bank.
• Merchant account: This could refer to the acquiring bank or the independent sales
organization, but in general is the organization that the merchant deals with.
• Credit Card association: An association of card-issuing banks such as Visa,
MasterCard, Discover, American Express, etc. that set transaction terms for
merchants, card-issuing banks, and acquiring banks.
• Transaction network: The system that implements the mechanics of the electronic
transactions. May be operated by an independent company, and one company may
operate multiple networks. Transaction processing networks include: Cardnet,
Nabanco, Omaha, Paymentech, NDC Atlanta, Nova, TSYS, Concord EFSnet, and
VisaNet.
• Affinity partner: Some institutions lend their names to an issuer to attract
customers that have a strong relationship with that institution, and get paid a fee or
a percentage of the balance for each card issued using their name. Examples of
typical affinity partners are sports teams, universities, charities, professional
organizations, and major retailers.
The flow of information and money between these parties — always through the card
associations — is known as the interchange, and it consists of a few steps.
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Transaction steps
• Authorization: The cardholder pays for the purchase and the merchant submits
the transaction to the acquirer (acquiring bank). The acquirer verifies the credit
card number, the transaction type and the amount with the issuer (Card-issuing
bank) and reserves that amount of the cardholder's credit limit for the merchant.
An authorization will generate an approval code, which the merchant stores with
the transaction.
• Batching: Authorized transactions are stored in "batches", which are sent to the
acquirer. Batches are typically submitted once per day at the end of the business
day. If a transaction is not submitted in the batch, the authorization will stay valid
for a period determined by the issuer, after which the held amount will be returned
back to the cardholder's available credit (see authorization hold). Some
transactions may be submitted in the batch without prior authorizations; these are
either transactions falling under the merchant's floor limit or ones where the
authorization was unsuccessful but the merchant still attempts to force the
transaction through. (Such may be the case when the cardholder is not present but
owes the merchant additional money, such as extending a hotel stay or car rental.)
• Clearing and Settlement: The acquirer sends the batch transactions through the
credit card association, which debits the issuers for payment and credits the
acquirer. Essentially, the issuer pays the acquirer for the transaction.
• Funding: Once the acquirer has been paid, the acquirer pays the merchant. The
merchant receives the amount totaling the funds in the batch minus the "discount
rate," which is the fee the merchant pays the acquirer for processing the
transactions.
• Chargebacks: A chargeback is an event in which money in a merchant account is
held due to a dispute relating to the transaction. Chargebacks are typically initiated
by the cardholder. In the event of a chargeback, the issuer returns the transaction
to the acquirer for resolution. The acquirer then forwards the chargeback to the
merchant, who must either accept the chargeback or contest it.
Secured credit cards
A secured credit card is a type of credit card secured by a deposit account owned by the
cardholder. Typically, the cardholder must deposit between 100% and 200% of the total
amount of credit desired. Thus if the cardholder puts down $1000, they will be given
credit in the range of $500–$1000. In some cases, credit card issuers will offer incentives
even on their secured card portfolios. In these cases, the deposit required may be
significantly less than the required credit limit, and can be as low as 10% of the desired
credit limit. This deposit is held in a special savings account. Credit card issuers offer
this because they have noticed that delinquencies were notably reduced when the
customer perceives something to lose if the balance is not repaid.
The cardholder of a secured credit card is still expected to make regular payments, as
with a regular credit card, but should they default on a payment, the card issuer has the
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option of recovering the cost of the purchases paid to the merchants out of the deposit.
The advantage of the secured card for an individual with negative or no credit history is
that most companies report regularly to the major credit bureaus. This allows for
building of positive credit history.
Although the deposit is in the hands of the credit card issuer as security in the event of
default by the consumer, the deposit will not be debited simply for missing one or two
payments. Usually the deposit is only used as an offset when the account is closed, either
at the request of the customer or due to severe delinquency (150 to 180 days). This
means that an account which is less than 150 days delinquent will continue to accrue
interest and fees, and could result in a balance which is much higher than the actual
credit limit on the card. In these cases the total debt may far exceed the original deposit
and the cardholder not only forfeits their deposit but is left with an additional debt.
Most of these conditions are usually described in a cardholder agreement which the
cardholder signs when their account is opened.
Secured credit cards are an option to allow a person with a poor credit history or no
credit history to have a credit card which might not otherwise be available. They are
often offered as a means of rebuilding one's credit. Secured credit cards are available
with both Visa and MasterCard logos on them. Fees and service charges for secured
credit cards often exceed those charged for ordinary non-secured credit cards, however,
for people in certain situations, (for example, after charging off on other credit cards, or
people with a long history of delinquency on various forms of debt), secured cards can
often be less expensive in total cost than unsecured credit cards, even including the
security deposit.
Sometimes a credit card will be secured by the equity in the borrower's home. This is
called a home equity line of credit (HELOC).
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Prepaid credit cards are sometimes marketed to teenagers for shopping online without
having their parents complete the transaction.
Because of the many fees that apply to obtaining and using credit-card-branded prepaid
cards, the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada describes them as "an expensive way
to spend your own money". The agency publishes a booklet, "Pre-paid cards", which
explains the advantages and disadvantages of this type of prepaid card.
Features
As well as convenient, accessible credit, credit cards offer consumers an easy way to
track expenses, which is necessary for both monitoring personal expenditures and the
tracking of work-related expenses for taxation and reimbursement purposes. Credit cards
are accepted worldwide, and are available with a large variety of credit limits, repayment
arrangement, and other perks (such as rewards schemes in which points earned by
purchasing goods with the card can be redeemed for further goods and services or credit
card cash back).
Some countries, such as the United States, the United Kingdom, and France, limit the
amount for which a consumer can be held liable due to fraudulent transactions as a result
of a consumer's credit card being lost or stolen.
Security
Credit card security relies on the physical security of the plastic card as well as the
privacy of the credit card number. Therefore, whenever a person other than the card
owner has access to the card or its number, security is potentially compromised.
Merchants often accept credit card numbers without additional verification for mail
order purchases. They however record the delivery address as a security measure to
minimize fraudulent purchases. Some merchants will accept a credit card number for in-
store purchases, whereupon access to the number allows easy fraud, but many require
the card itself to be present, and require a signature. Thus, a stolen card can be cancelled,
and if this is done quickly, will greatly limit the fraud that can take place in this way. For
internet purchases, there is sometimes the same level of security as for mail order
(number only) hence requiring only that the fraudster take care about collecting the
goods, but often there are additional measures. The main one is to require a security PIN
with the card, which requires that the thief have access to the card, as well as the PIN.
The PCI DSS is the security standard issued by The PCI SSC (Payment Card Industry
Security Standards Council). This data security standard is used by acquiring banks to
impose cardholder data security measures upon their merchants.
Problems
A smart card, combining credit card and debit card properties. The 3 by 5 mm security
chip embedded in the card is shown enlarged in the inset. The contact pads on the card
enable electronic access to the chip.
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The low security of the credit card system presents countless opportunities for fraud.
This opportunity has created a huge black market in stolen credit card numbers, which
are generally used quickly before the cards are reported stolen.
The goal of the credit card companies is not to eliminate fraud, but to "reduce it to
manageable levels". This implies that high-cost low-return fraud prevention measures
will not be used if their cost exceeds the potential gains from fraud reduction.
Most internet fraud is done through the use of stolen credit card information which is
obtained in many ways, the simplest being copying information from retailers, either
online or offline. Despite efforts to improve security for remote purchases using credit
cards, systems with security holes are usually the result of poor implementations of card
acquisition by merchants. For example, a website that uses SSL to encrypt card numbers
from a client may simply email the number from the web server to someone who
manually processes the card details at a card terminal. Naturally, anywhere card details
become human-readable before being processed at the acquiring bank, a security risk is
created. However, many banks offer systems where encrypted card details captured on a
merchant's web server can be sent directly to the payment processor.
Controlled Payment Numbers which are used by various banks such as Citibank (Virtual
Account Numbers), Discover (Secure Online Account Numbers, Bank of America (Shop
Safe), 5 banks using eCarte Bleue and CMB's Virtualis in France, and Swedbank of
Sweden's eKort product are another option for protecting one's credit card number.
These are generally one-time use numbers that front one's actual account (debit/credit)
number, and are generated as one shops on-line. They can be valid for a relatively short
time, for the actual amount of the purchase, or for a price limit set by the user. Their use
can be limited to one merchant if one chooses. The effect of this is the users real account
details are not exposed to the merchant and its employees. If the number the merchant
has on their database is compromised, it would be useless to a thief after the first
transaction and will be rejected if an attempt is made to use it again.
The same system of controls can be used on standard real plastic as well. For example if
a consumer has a chip and pin (EMV) enabled card they can limit that card so that it be
used only at point of sale locations (i.e restricted from being used on-line) and only in a
given territory (i.e only for use in Canada). There are many other controls too and these
can be turned on and off and varied by the credit card owner in real time as
circumstances change (ie, they can change temporal, numerical, geographical and many
other parameters on their primary and subsidiary cards). Apart from the obvious benefits
of such controls: from a security perspective this means that a customer can have a chip
and pin card secured for the real world, and limited for use in the home country
assuming it is totally chip and pin. In this eventuality a thief stealing the details will be
prevented from using these overseas in non chip and pin (EMV)countries). Similarly the
real card can be restricted from use on-line so that stolen details will be declined if this
tried. Then when the card user shops online they can use virtual account numbers. In
both circumstances an alert system can be built in notifying a user that a fraudulent
attempt has been made which breaches their parameters, and can provide data on this in
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real time. This is the optimal method of security for credit cards, as it provides very high
levels of security, control and awareness in the real and virtual world. Furthermore it
requires no changes for merchants at all and is attractive to users, merchants and banks,
as it not only detects fraud but prevents it.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation and U.S. Postal Inspection Service are responsible
for prosecuting criminals who engage in credit card fraud in the United States, but they
do not have the resources to pursue all criminals. In general, federal officials only
prosecute cases exceeding US $5000 in value. Three improvements to card security have
been introduced to the more common credit card networks but none has proven to help
reduce credit card fraud so far. First, the on-line verification system used by merchants is
being enhanced to require a 4 digit Personal Identification Number (PIN) known only to
the card holder. Second, the cards themselves are being replaced with similar-looking
tamper-resistant smart cards which are intended to make forgery more difficult. The
majority of smartcard (IC card) based credit cards comply with the EMV (Europay
MasterCard Visa) standard. Third, an additional 3 or 4 digit code is now present on the
back of most cards, for use in "card not present" transactions. See CVV2 for more
information.
The way credit card owners pay off their balances has a tremendous effect on their credit
history. All the information is collected by credit bureaus. The credit information stays
on the credit report, depending on the jurisdiction and the situation, for 1, 2, or even 10
years after the debt is repaid.
Profits and losses
In recent times, credit card portfolios have been very profitable for banks, largely due to
the booming economy of the late nineties. However, in the case of credit cards, such
high returns go hand in hand with risk, since the business is essentially one of making
unsecured (uncollateralized) loans, and thus dependent on borrowers not to default in
large numbers.
Costs
Credit card issuers (banks) have several types of costs:
Interest expenses
Banks generally borrow the money they then lend to their customers. As they receive
very low-interest loans from other firms, they may borrow as much as their customers
require, while lending their capital to other borrowers at higher rates. If the card issuer
charges 15% on money lent to users, and it costs 5% to borrow the money to lend, and
the balance sits with the cardholder for a year, the issuer earns 10% on the loan. This 5%
difference is the "interest expense" and the 10% is the "net interest spread".
Operating costs
This is the cost of running the credit card portfolio, including everything from paying the
executives who run the company to printing the plastics, to mailing the statements, to
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running the computers that keep track of every cardholder's balance, to taking the many
phone calls which cardholders place to their issuer, to protecting the customers from
fraud rings. Depending on the issuer, marketing programs are also a significant portion
of expenses.
Charge offs
When a consumer becomes severely delinquent on a debt (often at the point of six
months without payment), the creditor may declare the debt to be a charge-off. It will
then be listed as such on the debtor's credit bureau reports (Equifax, for instance, lists
"R9" in the "status" column to denote a charge-off.) The item will include relevant dates,
and the amount of the bad debt.
A charge-off is considered to be "written off as uncollectable." To banks, bad debts and
even fraud are simply part of the cost of doing business.
However, the debt is still legally valid, and the creditor can attempt to collect the full
amount for the time periods permitted under state law, which is usually 3 to 7 years. This
includes contacts from internal collections staff, or more likely, an outside collection
agency. If the amount is large (generally over $1500–$2000), there is the possibility of a
lawsuit or arbitration.
In the US, as the charge off number climbs or becomes erratic, officials from the Federal
Reserve take a close look at the finances of the bank and may impose various operating
strictures on the bank, and in the most extreme cases, may close the bank entirely.
Rewards
Many credit card customers receive rewards, such as frequent flier points, gift
certificates, or cash back as an incentive to use the card. Rewards are generally tied to
purchasing an item or service on the card, which may or may not include balance
transfers, cash advances, or other special uses. Depending on the type of card, rewards
will generally cost the issuer between 0.25% and 2.0% of the spread. Networks such as
Visa or MasterCard have increased their fees to allow issuers to fund their rewards
system. Some issuers discourage redemption by forcing the cardholder to call customer
service for rewards. On their servicing website, redeeming awards is usually a feature
that is very well hidden by the issuers. Others encourage redemption for lower cost
merchandise; instead of an airline ticket, which is very expensive to an issuer, the
cardholder may be encouraged to redeem for a gift certificate instead. With a fractured
and competitive environment, rewards points cut dramatically into an issuer's bottom
line, and rewards points and related incentives must be carefully managed to ensure a
profitable portfolio. Unlike unused gift cards, in whose case the breakage in certain US
states goes to the state's treasury, unredeemed credit card points are retained by the
issuer.
Fraud
The cost of fraud is high; in the UK in 2004 it was over £500 million. When a card is
stolen, or an unauthorized duplicate made, most card issuers will refund some or all of
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the charges that the customer has received for things they did not buy. These refunds
will, in some cases, be at the expense of the merchant, especially in mail order cases
where the merchant cannot claim sight of the card. In several countries, merchants will
lose the money if no ID card was asked for, therefore merchants usually require ID card
in these countries. Credit card companies generally guarantee the merchant will be paid
on legitimate transactions regardless of whether the consumer pays their credit card bill.
Revenues
Offsetting costs are the following revenues:
Interchange fee
In addition to fees paid by the card holder, merchants must also pay interchange fees to
the card-issuing bank and the card association. For a typical credit card issuer,
interchange fee revenues may represent about a quarter of total revenues..
These fees are typically from 1 to 6 percent of each sale, but will vary not only from
merchant to merchant (large merchants can negotiate lower rates, but also from card to
card, with business cards and rewards cards generally costing the merchants more to
process. The interchange fee that applies to a particular transaction is also affected by
many other variables including the type of merchant, the merchant's total card sales
volume, the merchant's average transaction amount, whether the cards are physically
present, if the card's magnetic stripe is read or if the transaction is hand-keyed or entered
on a website, the specific type of card, when the transaction is settled, and the authorized
and settled transaction amounts.
Interchange fees may consume over 50 percent of profits from card sales for some
merchants (such as supermarkets) that operate on slim margins. In some cases,
merchants add a surcharge to the credit cards to cover the interchange fee, enouraging
their customers to instead use cash, debit cards, or even cheques.
History
The concept of using a card for purchases was described in 1887 by Edward Bellamy in
his utopian novel Looking Backward. Bellamy used the term credit card eleven times in
this novel.
The modern credit card was the successor of a variety of merchant credit schemes. It was
first used in the 1920s, in the United States, specifically to sell fuel to a growing number
of automobile owners. In 1938 several companies started to accept each other's cards.
Western Union had begun issuing charge cards to its frequent customers in 1914.[citation
needed]
Some charge cards were printed on paper card stock, but were easily counterfeited.
The Charge-Plate was an early predecessor to the credit card and used during the 1930s
and late 1940s. It was a 2 1/2" x 1 1/4" rectangle of sheet metal, similar to a military dog
tag, that was embossed with the customer's name, city and state (no address). It held a
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small paper card for a signature. It was laid in the imprinter first, then a charge slip on
top of it, onto which an inked ribbon was pressed.[26] Charga-Plate was a trademark of
Farrington Manufacturing Co. Charga-Plates were issued by large-scale merchants to
their regular customers, much like department store credit cards of today. In some cases,
the plates were kept in the issuing store rather than held by customers. When an
authorized user made a purchase, a clerk retrieved the plate from the store's files and
then processed the purchase. Charga-Plates speeded back-office bookkeeping that was
done manually in paper ledgers in each store, before computers.
The concept of paying different merchants using the same card was invented in 1950 by
Ralph Schneider and Frank X. McNamara, founders of Diners Club, to consolidate
multiple cards. The Diners Club, which was created partially through a merger with
Dine and Sign, produced the first "general purpose" charge card, and required the entire
bill to be paid with each statement. That was followed by Carte Blanche and in 1958 by
American Express which created a worldwide credit card network.
Bank of America created the BankAmericard in 1958, a product which, with its overseas
affiliates, eventually evolved into the Visa system. MasterCard came to being in 1966
when a group of credit-issuing banks established Master Charge; it received a significant
boost when Citibank merged its proprietary Everything Card, launched in 1967, into
Master Charge in 1969. The fractured nature of the U.S. banking system meant that
credit cards became an effective way for those who were traveling around the country to
move their credit to places where they could not directly use their banking facilities. In
1966 Barclaycard in the UK launched the first credit card outside of the U.S.
There are now countless variations on the basic concept of revolving credit for
individuals (as issued by banks and honored by a network of financial institutions),
including organization-branded credit cards, corporate-user credit cards, store cards and
so on.
In contrast, although having reached very high adoption levels in the US, Canada and the
UK, it is important to note that many cultures were much more cash-oriented in the latter
half of the twentieth century, or had developed alternative forms of cash-less payments,
such as Carte bleue or the Eurocard (Germany, France, Switzerland, and others). In these
places, the take-up of credit cards was initially much slower. It took until the 1990s to
reach anything like the percentage market-penetration levels achieved in the US,
Canada, or the UK. In many countries acceptance still remains poor as the use of a credit
card system depends on the banking system being perceived as reliable.
In contrast, because of the legislative framework surrounding banking system overdrafts,
some countries, France in particular, were much faster to develop and adopt chip-based
credit cards which are now seen as major anti-fraud credit devices.
The design of the credit card itself has become a major selling point in recent years. The
value of the card to the issuer is often related to the customer's usage of the card, or to
the customer's financial worth. This has led to the rise of Co-Brand and Affinity cards -
where the card design is related to the "affinity" (a university, for example) leading to
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higher card usage. In most cases a percentage of the value of the card is returned to the
affinity group.
by Senator Levin who said that he intends to keep the spotlight on credit card companies
and that legislative action may be necessary to purge the industry.
In the United States, some have called for Congress to enact additional regulations on
the industry; to expand the disclosure box clearly disclosing rate hikes, use plain
language, incorporate balance payoff disclosures, and also to outlaw universal default.
At a congress hearing around March 1, 2007, Citibank announced it would no longer
practice this, effective immediately. Opponents of such regulation argue that customers
must become more proactive and self-responsible in evaluating and negotiating terms
with credit providers. Some of the nation's influential top credit card issuers, who are
among the top fifty corporate contributors to political campaigns, successfully opposed
it.
Hidden costs
In the United Kingdom, merchants won the right through The Credit Cards (Price
Discrimination) Order 1990 to charge customers different prices according to the
payment method. As of 2007, the United Kingdom was one of the world's most credit-
card-intensive country, with 2.4 credit cards per consumer.
In the United States, until 1984 federal law prohibited surcharges on card transactions.
Although the federal Truth in Lending Act provisions that prohibited surcharges expired
that year, a number of states have since enacted laws that continue to outlaw the
practice; California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Kansas, Massachusetts, Maine,
New York, Oklahoma, and Texas have laws against surcharges. As of 2006, the United
States probably had one of the world's if not the top ratio of credit cards per capita, with
984 million bank-issued Visa and MasterCard credit card and debit card accounts alone
for an adult population of roughly 220 million people. The credit card per US capita
ratio was nearly 4:1 (as of 2003) and as high as 5:1 (as of 2006).
Redlining
Credit Card redlining is a spatially discriminatory practice among credit card issuers of
providing different amounts of credit to different areas, based on their ethnic-minority
composition, rather than on economic criteria, such as the potential profitability of
operating in those areas.
Credit card numbering
The numbers found on credit cards have a certain amount of internal structure, and share
a common numbering scheme.
The card number's prefix, called the Bank Identification Number, is the sequence of
digits at the beginning of the number that determine the bank to which a credit card
number belongs. This is the first six digits for MasterCard and Visa cards. The next nine
digits are the individual account number, and the final digit is a validity check code.
In addition to the main credit card number, credit cards also carry issue and expiration
dates (given to the nearest month), as well as extra codes such as issue numbers and
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security codes. Not all credit cards have the same sets of extra codes nor do they use the
same number of digits.
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purchasing mobile cell phone prepaid credit. ATMs are known by various other names
including automated banking machine, money machine, bank machine, cash machine,
hole-in-the-wall, cashpoint, Bancomat (in various countries in Europe and Russia),
Multibanco (after a registered trade mark, in Portugal), and Any Time Money (in India
The first mechanical cash dispenser was developed and built by Luther George Simjian
and installed in 1939 in New York City by the City Bank of New York, but removed
after 6 months due to the lack of customer acceptance.
Thereafter, the history of ATMs paused for over 25 years, until De La Rue developed
the first electronic ATM, which was installed first in Enfield Town in North London,
United Kingdom on 27 June 1967 by Barclays Bank. This instance of the invention is
credited to John Shepherd-Barron, although various other engineers were awarded
patents for related technologies at the time. Shepherd-Barron was awarded an OBE in
the 2005 New Year's Honours List. The first person to use the machine was the British
variety artist and actor Reg Varney. The first ATMs accepted only a single-use token or
voucher, which was retained by the machine. These worked on various principles
including radiation and low-coercivity magnetism that was wiped by the card reader to
make fraud more difficult. The machine dispensed pre-packaged envelopes containing
ten pounds sterling. The idea of a PIN stored on the card was developed by the British
engineer James Goodfellow in 1965.
In 1968 the networked ATM was pioneered in Dallas, Texas, by Donald Wetzel who
was a department head at an automated baggage-handling company called Docutel. In
1995 the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History recognised Docutel and
Wetzel as the inventors of the networked ATM.[citation needed]
ATMs first came into wide UK use in 1973; the IBM 2984 was designed at the request
of Lloyds Bank. The 2984 CIT (Cash Issuing Terminal) was the first true Cashpoint,
similar in function to today's machines; Cashpoint is still a registered trademark of
Lloyds TSB in the U.K. All were online and issued a variable amount which was
immediately deducted from the account. A small number of 2984s were supplied to a US
bank. Notable historical models of ATMs include the IBM 3624 and 473x series,
Diebold 10xx and TABS 9000 series, and NCR 5xxx series.
Location
ATMs are placed not only near or inside the premises of banks, but also in locations
such as shopping centers/malls, airports, grocery stores, petrol/gas stations, restaurants,
or any place large numbers of people may gather. These represent two types of ATM
installations: on and off premise. On premise ATMs are typically more advanced, multi-
function machines that complement an actual bank branch's capabilities and thus more
expensive. Off premise machines are deployed by financial institutions and also ISOs (or
Independent Sales Organizations) where there is usually just a straight need for cash, so
they typically are the cheaper mono-function devices. In Canada, when an ATM is not
operated by a financial institution it is known as a "White Label ATM".
In North America, banks often have drive-thru lanes providing access to ATMs.
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Many ATMs have a sign above them indicating the name of the bank or organization
owning the ATM, and possibly including the list of ATM networks to which that
machine is connected. This type of sign is called a topper.
Financial networks
Most ATMs are connected to interbank networks, enabling people to withdraw and
deposit money from machines not belonging to the bank where they have their account
or in the country where their accounts are held (enabling cash withdrawals in local
currency). Some examples of interbank networks include PULSE, PLUS, Cirrus, Interac
and LINK.
ATMs rely on authorization of a financial transaction by the card issuer or other
authorizing institution via the communications network. This is often performed through
an ISO 8583 messaging system.
Many banks charge ATM usage fees. In some cases, these fees are charged solely to
users who are not customers of the bank where the ATM is installed; in other cases, they
apply to all users. Many people[who?] oppose these fees because ATMs are actually less
costly for banks than withdrawals from human tellers.[citation needed]
In order to allow a more diverse range of devices to attach to their networks, some
interbank networks have passed rules expanding the definition of an ATM to be a
terminal that either has the vault within its footprint or utilizes the vault or cash drawer
within the merchant establishment, which allows for the use of a scrip cash dispenser.
ATMs typically connect directly to their ATM Controller via either a dial-up modem
over a telephone line or directly via a leased line. Leased lines are preferable to POTS
lines because they require less time to establish a connection. Leased lines may be
comparatively expensive to operate versus a POTS line, meaning less-trafficked
machines will usually rely on a dial-up modem. That dilemma may be solved as high-
speed Internet VPN connections become more ubiquitous. Common lower-level layer
communication protocols used by ATMs to communicate back to the bank include SNA
over SDLC, TC500 over Async, X.25, and TCP/IP over Ethernet.
In addition to methods employed for transaction security and secrecy, all
communications traffic between the ATM and the Transaction Processor may also be
encrypted via methods such as SSL.
Global use
There are no hard international or government-compiled numbers totaling the complete
number of ATMs in use worldwide. Estimates developed by ATMIA place the number
of ATMs in use at over 1.5 million as of August 2006.
For the purpose of analyzing ATM usage around the world, financial institutions
generally divide the world into seven regions, due to the penetration rates, usage
statistics, and features deployed. Four regions (USA, Canada, Europe, and Japan) have
high numbers of ATMs per million people and generally slowing growth rates. Despite
the large number of ATMs, there is additional demand for machines in the Asia/Pacific
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area as well as in Latin America. ATMs have yet to reach high numbers in the Near
East/Africa.
The world's most northerly installed ATM is located at Longyearbyen, Svalbard,
Norway.
The world's most southerly installed ATM is located at McMurdo Station, Antarctica.
While ATMs are ubiquitous on modern cruise ships, ATMs can also be found on some
US Navy ships.
In the United Kingdom, an ATM may be colloqually referred to as a "Cashpoint", named
after the Lloyds Bank ATM brand, or "hole-in-the-wall", an expression. after which the
equivalent Barclays brand was later named. In Scotland the term Cashline has become a
generic term for an ATM, based on the branding from the Royal Bank of Scotland.
In the Republic of Ireland, an ATM is commonly referred to as a "Banklink", named
after the Allied Irish Bank brand of machines. The slang term "Drink-link" is used to
describe ATMs as they are very often used on nights out when extra cash is called for.
5.4.1 Hardware
An ATM is typically made up of the following devices:
• CPU (to control the user interface and transaction devices)
• Magnetic and/or Chip card reader (to identify the customer)
• PIN Pad (similar in layout to a Touch tone or Calculator keypad), often
manufactured as part of a secure enclosure.
• Secure cryptoprocessor, generally within a secure enclosure.
• Display (used by the customer for performing the transaction)
• Function key buttons (usually close to the display) or a Touchscreen (used to
select the various aspects of the transaction)
• Record Printer (to provide the customer with a record of their transaction)
• Vault (to store the parts of the machinery requiring restricted access)
• Housing (for aesthetics and to attach signage to)
Recently, due to heavier computing demands and the falling price of computer-like
architectures, ATMs have moved away from custom hardware architectures using
microcontrollers and/or application-specific integrated circuits to adopting a hardware
architecture that is very similar to a personal computer. Many ATMs are now able to use
operating systems such as Microsoft Windows and Linux. Although it is undoubtedly
cheaper to use commercial off-the-shelf hardware, it does make ATMs vulnerable to the
same sort of problems exhibited by conventional computers.
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Business owners often lease ATM terminals from ATM service providers such as United
Cash Solutions.
Vaults
The vault of an ATM is within the footprint of the device itself and is where items of
value are kept. Scrip cash dispensers do not incorporate a vault.
Mechanisms found inside the vault may include:
• Dispensing mechanism (to provide cash or other items of value)
• Deposit mechanism, including a Cheque Processing Module and Batch Note
Acceptor (to allow the customer to make deposits)
• Security sensors (Magnetic, Thermal, Seismic)
• Locks: (to ensure controlled access to the contents of the vault)
ATM vaults are supplied by manufacturers in several grades. Factors influencing vault
grade selection include cost, weight, regulatory requirements, ATM type, operator risk
avoidance practices, and internal volume requirements.
Industry standard vault configurations include Underwriters Laboratories UL-291
"Business Hours" and Level 1 Safes, RAL TL-30 derivatives, and CEN EN 1143-1:2005
- CEN III/VdS and CEN IV/LGAI/VdS.
ATM manufacturers recommend that vaults be attached to the floor to prevent theft.
5.4.2 Software
With the migration to commodity PC hardware, standard commercial "off-the-shelf"
operating systems and programming environments can be used inside of ATMs. Typical
platforms used in ATM development include RMX, OS/2, and Microsoft operating
systems (such as MS-DOS, PC-DOS, Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP
Professional, or Windows XP Embedded). Java, Linux and Unix may also be used in
these environments.
Linux is also finding some reception in the ATM marketplace. An example of this is
Banrisul, the largest bank in the south of Brazil, which has replaced the MS-DOS
operating systems in its ATMs with Linux. Banco do Brasil is also migrating ATMs to
Linux.
Common application layer transaction protocols, such as Diebold 911 or 912, IBM
PBM, and NCR NDC or NDC+ provide emulation of older generations of hardware on
newer platforms with incremental extensions made over time to address new
capabilities, although companies like NCR continuously improve these protocols issuing
newer versions (latest NCR Aptra Advance NDC Version 3.x.y (Where x.y are
subversions). Most major ATM manufacturers provide software packages that
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implement these protocols. Newer protocols such as IFX have yet to find wide
acceptance by transaction processors.
With the move to a more standardized software base, financial institutions have been
increasingly interested in the ability to pick and choose the application programs that
drive their equipment. WOSA/XFS, now known as CEN XFS (or simply XFS), provides
a common API for accessing and manipulating the various devices of an ATM.
J/XFS is a Java implementation of the CEN XFS API.
While the perceived benefit of XFS is similar to the Java's "Write once, run anywhere"
mantra, often different ATM hardware vendors have different interpretations of the XFS
standard. The result of these differences in interpretation means that ATM applications
typically use a middleware to even out the differences between various platforms.
Notable XFS middleware platforms include Triton PRISM, Diebold Agilis, CR2
BankWorld, KAL Kalignite, NCR Corporation Aptra Edge, Phoenix Interactive
VISTAatm, and Wincor Nixdorf Protopas.
With the move of ATMs to industry-standard computing environments, concern has
risen about the integrity of the ATM's software stack.
Security
Security, as it relates to ATMs, has several dimensions. ATMs also provide a practical
demonstration of a number of security systems and concepts operating together and how
various security concerns are dealt with.
Physical
Early ATM security focused on making the ATMs invulnerable to physical attack; they
were effectively safes with dispenser mechanisms. A number of attacks on ATMs
resulted, with thieves attempting to steal entire ATMs by ram-raiding. Since late 1990s,
criminal groups operating in Japan improved ram-raiding by stealing and using a truck
loaded with a heavy construction machinery to effectively demolish or uproot an entire
ATM and any housing to steal its cash.
Another attack method is to seal all openings of the ATM with silicone and fill the vault
with a combustible gas or to place an explosive inside, attached, or near the ATM.[29]
This gas or explosive is ignited and the vault is opened or distorted by the force of the
resulting explosion and the criminals can break in.
Modern ATM physical security, per other modern money-handling security,
concentrates on denying the use of the money inside the machine to a thief, by means of
techniques such as dye markers and smoke canisters.
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State Department of Banking for not following through on safety inspections of ATMs
in high crime areas.
Critics of ATM operators assert that the issue of customer security appears to have been
abandoned by the banking industry; it has been suggested that efforts are now more
concentrated on deterrent legislation than on solving the problem of forced withdrawals.
At least as far back as July 30, 1986, critics of the industry have called for the adoption
of an emergency PIN system for ATMs, where the user is able to send a silent alarm in
response to a threat. Legislative efforts to require an emergency PIN system have
appeared in Illinois, Kansas and Georgia, but none have succeeded as of yet.
Alternative uses
Although ATMs were originally developed as just cash dispensers, they have evolved to
include many other bank-related functions. In some countries, especially those which
benefit from a fully integrated cross-bank ATM network (e.g.: Multibanco in Portugal),
ATMs include many functions which are not directly related to the management of one's
own bank account, such as:
o Lottery tickets
o Train tickets
o Concert tickets
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Increasingly banks are seeking to use the ATM as a sales device to deliver pre approved
loans and targeted advertising using products such as ITM (the Intelligent Teller
Machine) from CR2 or Aptra Relate from NCR. ATMs can also act as an advertising
channel for companies to advertise their own products or third-party products and
services.
In Canada, ATMs are called guichets automatiques in French and sometimes "Bank
Machines" in English. The Interac shared cash network does not allow for the selling of
goods from ATMs due to specific security requirements for PIN entry when buying
goods. CIBC machines in Canada, are able to top-up the minutes on certain pay as you
go phone's.
• Biometrics, where authorization of transactions is based on the scanning of a
customer's fingerprint, iris, face, etc. Biometrics on ATMs can be found in Asia.
• Cheque/Cash Acceptance, where the ATM accepts and recognise cheques and/or
currency without using envelopes Expected to grow in importance in the US
through Check 21 legislation.
• Bar code scanning
• On-demand printing of "items of value" (such as movie tickets, traveler's cheques,
etc.)
• Dispensing additional media (such as phone cards)
• Co-ordination of ATMs with mobile phones
• Customer-specific advertising
• Integration with non-banking equipment
Reliability
Before an ATM is placed in a public place, it typically has undergone extensive testing
with both test money and the backend computer systems that allow it to perform
transactions. Banking customers also have come to expect high reliability in their ATMs,
which provides incentives to ATM providers to minimize machine and network failures.
Financial consequences of incorrect machine operation also provide high degrees of
incentive to minimize malfunctions.
ATMs and the supporting electronic financial networks are generally very reliable, with
industry benchmarks typically producing 98.25% customer availability for ATMs[63] and
up to 99.999% availability for host systems. If ATMs do go out of service, customers
could be left without the ability to make transactions until the beginning of their bank's
next time of opening hours.
Of course, not all errors are to the detriment of customers; there have been cases of
machines giving out money without debiting the account, or giving out higher value
notes as a result of incorrect denomination of banknote being loaded in the money
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cassettes. Errors that can occur may be mechanical (such as card transport mechanisms;
keypads; hard disk failures); software (such as operating system; device driver;
application); communications; or purely down to operator error.
To aid in reliability, some ATMs print each transaction to a roll paper journal that is
stored inside the ATM, which allows both the users of the ATMs and the related
financial institutions to settle things based on the records in the journal in case there is a
dispute. In some cases, transactions are posted to an electronic journal to remove the cost
of supplying journal paper to the ATM and for more convenient searching of data.
Improper money checking can cause the possibility of a customer receiving counterfeit
banknotes from an ATM. While bank personnel are generally trained better at spotting
and removing counterfeit cash, the resulting ATM money supplies used by banks
provide no absolute guarantee for proper banknotes, as the Federal Criminal Police
Office of Germany has confirmed that there are regularly incidents of false banknotes
having been dispensed through bank ATMs. Some ATMs may be stocked and wholly
owned by outside companies, which can further complicate this problem. Bill validation
technology can be used by ATM providers to help ensure the authenticity of the cash
before it is stocked in an ATM; ATMs that have cash recycling capabilities include this
capability.
Fraud
As with any device containing objects of value, ATMs and the systems they depend on
to function are the targets of fraud. Fraud against ATMs and people's attempts to use
them takes several forms.
The first known instance of a fake ATM was installed at a shopping mall in Manchester,
Connecticut in 1993. By modifying the inner workings of a Fujitsu model 7020 ATM, a
criminal gang known as The Bucklands Boys were able to steal information from cards
inserted into the machine by customers.
In some cases, bank fraud could occur at ATMs whereby the bank accidentally stocks
the ATM with bills in the wrong denomination, therefore giving the customer more
money than should be dispensed.[69] The result of receiving too much money may be
influenced on the card holder agreement in place between the customer and the bank.
In a variation of this, WAVY-TV reported an incident in Virginia Beach of September
2006 where a hacker who had probably obtained a factory-default admin password for a
gas station's white label ATM caused the unit to assume it was loaded with $5 USD bills
instead of $20s, enabling himself—and many subsequent customers—to walk away with
four times the money they said they wanted to withdraw.
ATM behavior can change during what is called "stand-in" time, where the bank's cash
dispensing network is unable to access databases that contain account information
(possibly for database maintenance). In order to give customers access to cash,
customers may be allowed to withdraw cash up to a certain amount that may be less than
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their usual daily withdrawal limit, but may still exceed the amount of available money in
their account, which could result in fraud.
Card fraud
In an attempt to prevent criminals from shoulder surfing the customer's PINs, some
banks draw privacy areas on the floor.
For a low-tech form of fraud, the easiest is to simply steal a customer's card. A later
variant of this approach is to trap the card inside of the ATM's card reader with a device
often referred to as a Lebanese loop. When the customer gets frustrated by not getting
the card back and walks away from the machine, the criminal is able to remove the card
and withdraw cash from the customer's account.
Another simple form of fraud involves attempting to get the customer's bank to issue a
new card and stealing it from their mail.
Some ATMs may put up warning messages to customers to not use them when it detects
possible tampering
The concept and various methods of copying the contents of an ATM card's magnetic
stripe on to a duplicate card to access other people's financial information was well
known in the hacking communities by late 1990.
In 1996 Andrew Stone, a computer security consultant from Hampshire in the UK, was
convicted of stealing more than £1 million (at the time equivalent to US$1.6 million) by
pointing high definition video cameras at ATMs from a considerable distance, and by
recording the card numbers, expiry dates, etc. from the embossed detail on the ATM
cards along with video footage of the PINs being entered. After getting all the
information from the videotapes, he was able to produce clone cards which not only
allowed him to withdraw the full daily limit for each account, but also allowed him to
sidestep withdrawal limits by using multiple copied cards. In court, it was shown that he
could withdraw as much as £10,000 per hour by using this method. Stone was sentenced
to five years and six months in prison.
By contrast, a newer high-tech modus operandi involves the installation of a magnetic
card reader over the real ATM's card slot and the use of a wireless surveillance camera
or a modified digital camera to observe the user's PIN. Card data is then cloned onto a
second card and the criminal attempts a standard cash withdrawal. The availability of
low-cost commodity wireless cameras and card readers has made it a relatively simple
form of fraud, with comparatively low risk to the fraudsters.
In an attempt to stop these practices, countermeasures against card cloning have been
developed by the banking industry, in particular by the use of smart cards which cannot
easily be copied or spoofed by un-authenticated devices, and by attempting to make the
outside of their ATMs tamper evident. Older chip-card security systems include the
French Carte Bleue, Visa Cash, Mondex, Blue from American Express and EMV '96 or
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EMV 3.11. The most actively developed form of smart card security in the industry
today is known as EMV 2000 or EMV 4.x.
EMV is widely used in the UK (Chip and PIN) and other parts of Europe, but when it is
not available in a specific area, ATMs must fallback to using the easy to copy magnetic
stripe to perform transactions. This fallback behaviour can be exploited. However the
fallback option has been removed by several UK banks, meaning if the chip is not read,
the transaction will be declined.
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