Commercial Law - Negotiable Instruments Law
Commercial Law - Negotiable Instruments Law
Commercial Law - Negotiable Instruments Law
JUN 28
Posted by Magz
1.
Negotiable Instruments written contracts for the payment of money; by its form,
intended as a substitute for money and intended to pass from hand to hand, to give the holder in
due course the right to hold the same and collect the sum due.
2.
a.
negotiability right of transferee to hold the instrument and collect the sum due
b.
3.
4.
Negotiable Instruments
Non-negotiable Instruments
Transferred by negotiation
transferred by assignment
Negotiable Instruments
Subject is money
subject is goods
5.
Promissory Note unconditional promise to pay in writing made by one person to anther,
signed by the maker, engaging to pay on demand or a fixed determinable future time a sum
certain in money to order or bearer. When the note is drawn to makers own order, it is not
complete until indorse by him. (Sec. 184 NIL)
Parties:
1.
2.
maker
payee
6.
Bill of Exchange unconditional order in writing addressed by one person to another, signed
by the person giving it, requiring the person to whom it is addressed to pay on demand or at a
fixed or determinable future time a sum certain in money to order or to bearer. (Sec. 126 NIL)
Parties:
1.
2.
3.
drawer
payee
drawee/ acceptor
7.
Check bill of exchange drawn on a bank and payable on demand. (Sec. 185 NIL)
8.
9.
Promissory Note
Bill of Exchange
Unconditional promise
unconditional order
Involves 2 parties
involves 3 parties
CHECK
BOE
drawn on a deposit
PN
CHECK
a promise to pay
an order to pay
certificates of deposits
b.
trade acceptances
c.
d.
e.
letters of credit
12. Trust Receipt a security transaction intended to aid in the financing of importers and
retailers who do not have sufficient funds to finance their transaction and acquire credit except to
use as collateral the merchandise imported
13. Requisites of a Negotiable Note (PN): (SUDO)
It must:
a.
b.
c.
d.
be payable to order or to bearer (Sec. 1 NIL)
14. Requisites of a Negotiable Bill (BOE): (SUDOC)
It must:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Notes on Section 1:
In order to be negotiable, there must be a writing of some kind, else there would be
nothing to be negotiated or passed from hand to hand. The writing may be in ink, print or pencil.
It may be upon parchment, cloth, leather or any other substitute of paper.
It must be signed by the maker or drawer. It may consist of mere initials or even numbers,
but the holder must prove that what is written is intended as a signature of the person sought to
be charged.
The Bill must contain an order, something more than the mere asking of a favor.
Sum payable must be in money only. It cannot be made payable in goods, wares, or
merchandise or in property.
interest
b.
in installments
c.
d.
with exchange
e.
17. General Rule: The promise or order should not depend on a contingent event. If it is
conditional, it is non-negotiable.
Exceptions:
a.
indication of particular fund from which the acceptor disburses himself after payment
b.
statement of the transaction which gives rise to the instrument. (Sec. 3 NIL)
The particular fund indicated should not be the direct source of payment, else it becomes
unconditional and therefore non-negotiable. The fund should only be the source of
reimbursement.
A statement of the transaction does not destroy the negotiability of the instrument.
Exception: Where the promise to pay or order is made subject to the terms and conditions of the
transaction stated.
18. Instrument is payable upon a determinable future time if:
a.
b.
c.
on or at a fixed date after the occurrence of an event certain to happen though the exact
If the instrument is payable upon a contingency, the happening of the event does not cure
the defect (still non-negotiable)
19. General Rule: If some other act is required other than the payment of money, it is nonnegotiable.
Exceptions:
a.
b.
confession of judgment
c.
d.
gives option to the holder to require something to be done in lieu of money (Sec. 5 NIL)
Notes of Section 5
If the choice lies with the debtor, the instrument is rendered non-negotiable.
20. The validity and negotiability of an instrument is not affected by the fact that:
1.
it is not dated
2.
does not specify the value given or that any had been given
3.
does not specify the place where it is drawn or payable
4.
bears a seal
5.
designates the kind of current money in which payment is to be made (Sec. 6 NIL)
21. Instrument is payable upon demand if:
a.
b.
c.
Where an instrument is issued, accepted or indorsed when overdue, it is, as regards to the person
so issuing, accepting, or indorsing it, payable on demand.
Notes on Section 7
if the time for payment is left blank (as opposed to being omitted), it may properly be
considered as an incomplete instrument and fall under the provisions of Sec. 14, 15, or 16
depending on how the instrument is delivered.
22. Instrument is payable to order:
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
(Sec. 8 NIL)
Notes on Section 8
The payee must be named or otherwise indicated therein with reasonable certainty.
If there is no payee, there would be no one to indorse the instrument payable to order.
Therefore useless to be considered negotiable.
Joint payees in indicated by the conjunction and. To negotiate, all must indorse.
b.
c.
payable to order of fictitious or non-existent person and this fact was known to drawer
d.
e.
fictitious person is not limited to persons having no legal existence. An existing person
may be considered fictitious depending on the intention of the maker or the drawer.
fictitious person means a person who has no right to the instrument because the maker
where the instrument is drawn, made or prepared by an agent, the knowledge or intent of
Where the agent has no authority to execute the instrument, the intent of the principal is
controlling
24. The date may be inserted in an instrument when:
1.
an instrument expressed to be payable at a fixed period after date is issued undated
2.
where acceptance of an instrument payable at a fixed period after sight is undated (Sec. 13
NIL)
Effects:
the insertion of a wrong date does not avoid the instrument in the hands of a subsequent
as to the holder in due course, the date inserted (even if it be the wrong date) is regarded
b.
c.
complete and delivered issued without consideration or a consideration consisting of a
promise which was not fulfilled (Sec 28 NIL)
26. Holder in Due Course Affected by Abnormality/Deficiency:
a.
b.
b.
It must be filled up strictly in accordance with the authority given and within a reasonable
time.
c.
If negotiated to a holder in due course, it is valid and effectual for all purpose as though it
was filled up strictly in accordance with the authority given and within reasonable time. (Sec. 14
NIL)
2. Where only a signature on a blank paper was delivered:
1.
It was delivered by the person making it in order that it may be converted into a negotiable
instrument
2.
The holder has prima facie authority to fill it up as such for any amount. (Sec. 14 NIL)
Notes on Section 14
material particular may be an omission which will render the instrument non-negotiable
(e.g. name of payee), an omission which will not render the instrument non-negotiable (e.g. date)
in the case of the signature in blank, delivery with intent to convert it into a negotiable
If the holder is a holder in due course, all prior deliveries conclusively presumed valid
c.
If instrument not in hands of drawer/maker, valid and intentional delivery is presumed until
the contrary is proven (Sec. 16 NIL)
Rules on delivery of negotiable instruments:
1)
2)
as between immediate parties or those is like cases, delivery must be with intention of
passing title
3)
an instrument signed but not completed by the drawer or maker and retained by him is
invalid as to him for want of delivery even in the hands of a holder in due course
4)
but there is prima facie presumption of delivery of an instrument signed but not completed
by the drawer or maker and retained by him if it is in the hands of a holder in due course. This
may be rebutted by proof of non-delivery.
5) an instrument entrusted to another who wrongfully completes it and negotiates it to a holder
in due course, delivery to the agent or custodian is sufficient delivery to bind the maker or
drawer.
6)
If an instrument is completed and is found in the possession of another, there is prima facie
31. General rule: an agent is not liable on the instrument if he were duly authorized to sign for
or on behalf of a principal.
Requisites:
1.
2.
3.
Notes on Section 20
if an agent does not disclose his principal, the agent is personally liable on the instrument.
32. Per Procuration operates as notice that the agent has a limited authority to sign.
Effects:
the principal in only bound if the agent acted within the limits of the authority given
the person who takes the instrument is bound to inquire into the extent and nature of the
33. General rule: Infants and corporations incur no liability by their indorsement or assignment
of an instrument. (Sec. 22 NIL)
Effects:
34. General rule: a signature which is forged or made without authority is wholly inoperative.
Effects:
1.
2.
3.
no right to retain
no right to give a discharge
no right to enforce payment can be acquired.
(Sec. 23 NIL)
Exception:
the party against whom it is sought to be enforced is precluded from setting up the forgery
or want of authority.
Notes on Section 23
impersonation
Only the signature forged or made without authority is inoperative, the instrument or
The instrument can be enforced by holders to whose title the forged signature is not
necessary
Persons who are precluded from setting up the forgery are a) those who warrant or admit
delivery c) acceptors.
if endorsers signature is forged, loss will be borne by the forger and parties subsequent
thereto
drawee bank is not conclusively presumed to know the signature of the indorser. The
responsibility falls on the bank which last guaranteed the indorsement and not the drawee bank.
Where the payees signature is forged, payments made by the drawee bank to collecting
bank is ineffective. No debtor/creditor relationship is created. An agency to collect is created
between the person depositing and the collecting bank. Drawee bank may recover from collecting
bank who may in turn recover from the person depositing.
Rules on liabilities of parties on a forged instrument
In a PN
a party whose indorsement is forged on a note payable to order and all parties prior to him
including the maker cannot be held liable by any holder
a party whose indorsement is forged on a note originally payable to bearer and all parties
prior to him including the maker may be held liable by a holder in due course provided that it was
mechanically complete before the forgery
a maker whose signature was forged cannot be held liable by any holder
In a BOE
the drawers account cannot be charged by the drawee where the drawee paid
the payee can recover from the recipient of the payment, such as the collecting bank
the collecting bank bears the loss but can recover from the person to whom it paid
if the drawee has accepted the bill, the drawee bears the loss and his remedy is to go
after the forger
if the drawee has not accepted the bill but has paid it, the drawee cannot recover from
the drawer or the recipient of the proceeds, absence any act of negligence on their part.
35. Every negotiable instrument is deemed prima facie to have been issued for a valuable
consideration. (Sec. 24 NIL)
Effects:
presumption is disputable
36. Where value has at any time been given for the instrument, the holder is deemed a holder
for value in respect to all parties who become such prior to that time. (Sec. 26 NIL)
Absence or failure of consideration may be set up against a holder not a holder in due course
(personal defense)
2.
Partial failure of consideration is a defense pro tanto (Sec 28 NIL)
Notes on Section 28
failure of consideration implies that consideration was intended by that it failed to pass
a drawee who accepts the bill cannot allege want of consideration against the drawer
38. An accommodation party is one who signs the instrument as maker, drawer, acceptor, or
indorser without receiving value therefor and for the purpose of lending his name to some other
person.
Effects:
an accommodation party is liable to the holder for value notwithstanding that such holder
knew that of the accommodation. (Sec. 28 NIL)
Notes on Section 28
an accommodation maker may seek reimbursement from a co-maker even in the absence
of any provision in the NIL; the deficiency is supplied by the New Civil Code.
he may do this even without first proceeding against the debtor provided:
a.
b.
written
on the instrument itself or upon a piece of paper attached (Sec. 31 NIL)
Notes on Section 31
the person indorsing is liable as indorser to such persons as to make title through his
It cannot apply where the instrument is payable to bearer because the only or last
indorsement is in blank.
43. A holder may strike out any indorsement which is not necessary to his title.
Effects:
All indorsers subsequent to such indorser who has been discharged are likewise relieved.
(Sec. 48 NIL)
44. Effects of a transfer without endorsement:
the transferee acquires the right to have the indorsement of the transferor
negotiation takes effect as of the time the indorsement is actually made (Sec. 49 NIL)
Effects:
b.
became a holder before it was overdue and had no notice that it had been previously
dishonored if such was the fact
c.
d.
at time he took the instrument, no notice of infirmity in instrument or defect in the title of