Assignment Cheque
Assignment Cheque
Assignment Cheque
forgery. The bank can debit Lilys account for the amount of the cheque.
Under section 60, it is not liable to Tina who is the true owner of the cheque.
Another protection is afforded to paying bankers in section 82 of the
Bills of Exchange Act 1949. The paying banker is protected if he pays a
cheque which is not indorsed or is irregularly indorsed in good faith and in the
ordinary course of business.
The other protection is available to a paying banker is given under
section 80 of the act. However, this protection is limited to crossed cheques
only. In other words if the paying bankers pays a crossed cheque in good
faith, without negligence and according to the crossing, he is not liable. For
example Ani draws a cheque on Maybank in favour of Ati in order to repay a
friendly loan. On receiving the cheque, Ati crosses it generally. The cheque is
stolen by Yana who goes into BSN and pretending to be Ati, opens an account
in Atis name. BSN presents the cheque to Maybank who pays in good faith
and without negligence. Maybank is not liable to Ati by virtue of section 80 of
the act.
The example case is Slingsby v District Bank. The plaintiff requested
their solicitor, Cumberbirch a partner in M/S Cumberbirch & Potts, to draw a
cheque on their account on the defendants bank payable to M/S John Prust &
Co. the cheque was drawn with a gap between the payees name and the
words or order. After it was signed by the plaintiffs, Cumberbirch inserted the
words per Cumberbirch & Potts. Cumberbirch indorsed the cheque
Cumberbirch & Potts and obtained payment. The court held that the
indorsement was not in accordance with the mandate (the proper indorsement
should have been John Prust & Co per Cumberbirch & Potts) , and the bank
could not therefore rely on the protection given in the Bills of Exchange Act
1949.
10
Exchange Ordinance 1949, and were liable to the plaintiffs for damages for
conversion of the cheque.
12
apparent alteration
non-apparent alteration
If a cheque has been materially altered without the drawers authority the
drawer will be discharge from liability. This means that if the bank pays on a
cheque which has been materially altered, the bank cannot debit the drawers
account for the amount of the cheque. Examples of materials alteration are
alteration on the date, amount, name of payee or any crossing or any change
which alters the business effect of the cheque.
According to section 84(2), in particular the following alterations are
material namely any alteration of the date, the sum payable, the time of
payment, the place of payment, and where a bill has been accepted generally,
the addition of a place of payment without the acceptor assent. In section
64(1), state that where the bill of acceptance is materially altered without the
assent of all parties liable on the bill, the bill is avoided except as against a
party who has himself made, authorize or assented to the alteration, and
subsequence indorses which provide that where a bill has been materially
altered, but the alteration is not apparent, and the bill is in the hands of the
holder in due course, such holder may avail himself of the bill as if it had not
been altered, and may enforce payment of it according to its original tenor. In
other words, where the material alteration is apparent, the parties liable on the
bill at the time of such alteration will be discharge. However where the person
who made, authorize or assented to the alteration and all subsequence
parties who took it will be bound by it as altered.
On the other hand, where the material alteration is not apparent, the
holder in due course can enforce payment of the cheque according to its
original tenor. It is part of the implied contract between banker and customer
that a customer must exercise due care in drawing cheque so as not to
facilitate fraud. Thus, in due to the customers negligence, dishonours holder
alters the amount in the cheque and obtains a greater sum from the bank
without the alteration being apparent, the banker is protected and can debit
the customers account for the full amount of the cheque.
13
The relevant case is the case of London Joint Stock Bank v Macmillan and
Arthur, the fact of the case is a partner in a firm drew a cheque for 2 sterling
pounds payable to bearer. The sum was stated in figures but not in words. A
clerk of the firm misappropriated the cheque and altered the figures to read
120 sterling pounds and wrote in the appropriate words before cashing the
cheque at the bank. The court held that the bank could debit the firms
account with the 120 pounds. The partner had neglected to take all
precautions. By leaving blank the space where the amount should have been
stated and also by leaving blank space on either side of the figure 2 there
was a clear breach of duty which the customer owed to the banker.
14
The customer, for his part, owes the bank a duty of care in the way he
draws the cheque. Where the amount of a cheque is altered and the cheque
is met by the bank, the position will be, if the alteration was apparent, the
bank must bear the loss. If the alteration was not apparent but was not
facilitated by negligence on the part of the customer in drawing the cheque,
then the customer will be chargeable with the original amount but the bank
must bear the excess. So far, the position is comparable to the general rule of
bills of exchange. However, if the alteration was not apparent and was made
possible through the careless way in which the customer drew the cheque,
then the loss will fall on the customer.
In London Joint Stock Bank v. Macmillan & Arthur (1918), a bearer
cheque was drawn for 2 in figures, but with sufficient space for this to be
changed to 120 without the alteration being apparent, and without the
amount being written in words at all, so that a fraudulent clerk was able to
write in one hundred and twenty pounds. It was held that the customer had
to accept the full charge of 120 when the cheque was met. The case of
Slingsby v. District Bank (1931) may also be noted in this context. The drawer
left a gap between the inserted name of the payee and the printed words or
order, into which gap one Cumberbitch inserted the words per Cumberbitch
and Potts. He then endorsed the cheque and obtained payment. It was held
that this did not constitute negligence on the part of the drawer so that the
bank had to bear the loss.
Acting in excess of authority created by the relationship can give rise to
criminal liability, as in the case of R. v. Charles (1976). C had authority to
overdraw his account up to 100 and he also had a cheque card which
contained an undertaking by the bank that any cheque not exceeding 30
would be honoured subject to the usual conditions. In the course of one
evening at a gambling club, C drew 25 cheques for a total of 750. He was
convicted under the Theft Act 1968 of dishonestly obtaining a pecuniary
advantage for himself by deception. In the course of judgement it was said
that, where the holder of a cheque card presents the card together with a
cheque made out in accordance with the conditions of the card, it is open to
the court to infer that a representation has been made by the drawer that he
has the authority as between himself and the bank to use the card in order to
15
oblige the bank to honour the cheque. If that representation is false and the
payee has been induced to accept the cheque by reason of that false
representation, the drawer has thereby obtained a pecuniary advantage by
deception.
Greenwood v. Martins Bank Ltd (1933) illustrates how the bank will be
protected in the event of the customers negligence. Greenwoods wife had
been drawing money from his account by forging his signature on his
cheques. In order to protect his wife, he did not inform the bank. The wife later
committed suicide and he then decided to sue the bank for the return of the
money. It was held that the husband was under a duty to disclose what had
happened, and as he had failed to do so his conduct precluded him from
alleging the forgery. An important case showing the limit of the customers
duty to his bank was decided by the Privy Council in Tai Hing Cotton Mill v.
Ling Chong Hing Bank (1985), where the bank had over a period of time paid
out on cheques that had been forged by an employee of the appellant
company. The total involved was in excess of $5 million and the fraud had
continued for some considerable time. The bank argued that the appellant
customer company had been negligent because they had received bank
statements over the period which showed that the bank had been paying out
on the forged cheques.
REFERENCES
16
17