Negotiable Instruments Flashcards
What are the two types of debt?
Debts fall into two broad categories:
1) Demand debts
⁃ A debt which is payable on demand (i.e. whenever the creditor wishes)
⁃ A typical demand debt is an overdrawn bank account - the bank is entitled to reclaim the sum due on demand.
2) Term debts
⁃ A term debt is one which is payable on a term expiry.
⁃ A typical term debt is a secured finance to buy a house.
Can you sell debts?
Yes - If you have a term debt this means you are owed money in the future. However you may want cash now. So the holder of the term debt can sell the debt to receive cash now.
What are the two ways you can sell debts?
In selling debts you can do so in one of two ways:
⁃ 1) Sub participation
⁃ 2) Assignation
What is Sub participation?
E.g. A lent money to B over 10 years. A wants cash now. A sells the debt to a financier who pays cash to A. In sub participation, B has no idea that A has entered into this transaction with the financier - B continues under an obligation to pay A and only A. The financier has given cash subject to an undertaking from A that when B pays, A will transmit that payment on to the financier.
What are the risks of sub-participation to the financier?
There are two main risks
⁃ 1) A goes insolvent
⁃ If this happens the financier ends up with a personal right under the contract to get payment in the insolvency of A, but all the payments are still due to A and will be paid into the liquidation. And typically A will have more creditors than just the financier.
⁃ So what does the financier do to protect their position?
⁃ In invoice discounting in Scotland, the financier requires the seller of the debts to hold the payments in trust. So A must become a trustee for the financier as beneficiary. The advantage of this arrangement is that if you have a beneficial interest in the asset that takes priority over unsecured creditors in the insolvency of the trustee (A) because the trust asset is held in a separate patrimony.
⁃ [NB the trust will contain two types of property: the proceeds when they are paid and rights to payment (as incorporeal property).]
⁃ 2) B goes insolvent
⁃ The risk that B goes insolvent is something that the financier will take into account when deciding how much to pay for the debt.
⁃ The reduction in the face value of the debt to the amount that is paid is called the discount - this is often known as invoice discounting and is often used by businesses that have cash flow problems.
How can you sell debts by assignation?
This is the ‘orthodox’ practice - but will almost never be used in practice because it is so complicated (because intimation to every debtor would be required of the financier). As a result, sub-participation will be used instead.
What are the disadvantages of the assignation of debts?
There are also disadvantages to the assignee in this situation:
⁃ The principle assignatus utitur jure auctoris broadly means that the assignee steps into the shoes of the creditor and therefore any defences good against the original creditor are also good against the assignee (this means any defences to payment of the debt will also bind the buyer of the debt). The buyer of the debt does have some protection because of the warrandice debutum subesse between the assignor and the assignee (a guarantee that the debt is still legally payable, but there is no implied guarantee that the debt will actually be paid).
⁃ As a result of these disadvantages, this is why negotiability was introduced.
What is a negotiable instrument?
“An instrument is a document of title to money. … [I]t is the physical embodiment of the payment obligation, and its possession (with any necessary indorsement in favour of the possessor) is the best evidence of entitlement to the money it represents. The right to receive payment belongs to the holder for the time being, is exercised by production of the instrument to the oblige or his authorized agent and is transferred by delivery, with any requisite indorsement.”
An instrument is corporeal document which contains (houses or embodies) an obligation (an incorporeal right from the creditors point of view). [Similar to the abstract theory of transfer in property law - whether or not there are problems with the underlying contract is irrelevant, it it the conveyance itself which is important.] Although there is no all encompassing definition of negotiable - for an instrument to be negotiable it must have two key features ⁃ 1) be capable of simple transfer ⁃ 2) be able to be transferred free from equities (defects in title of its predecessor)
What does it mean when we say a negotiable instrument is a document embodying a debt distinct from an underlying obligation?
As a bill of exchange is a document embodying a debt that is readily transferable it can have an abstract existence from the initial reason for an underlying obligation arising.
⁃ For example, Alf wishes to buy 1,000 widgets from Bert. Bert sells the widgets and agrees to accept payment in the form of a negotiable instrument from Alf. Bert and Alf have certain mutual obligations arising under the Sale of Goods Act 1979. However, liability there is distinct from the Alf’s liability under the negotiable instrument. It is sometimes helpful, therefore, to consider the liability on the negotiable instrument as being wholly distinct from any underlying agreements between the parties (Although as we will later see this is something of an oversimplification).
How do bills operate in practice?
⁃ They typically arise in relation to international trade like in CIF contracts are ‘cost, insurance and freight’ contracts.
⁃ In these contracts the seller agrees to sell the goods, arrange for the transportation of the goods and arrange insurance of the goods. Because the seller is incurring all these upfront costs in relation to insurance etc will want a way to try to obtain their cash as quickly as possible. So from the seller’s perspective they want a negotiable instrument. They will draw up a bill of exchange for the buyer to pay them [the seller]. The buyer will accept and sign the bill of exchange [but in practice, only on condition that they get the insurance documents assigned to them and the carriage documents (bill of lading)]. The moment the seller has this bill of exchange they will sell it on a financial market because this will give them cash now. From the perspective of the financier, it is attractive for them to buy because they know that they don’t need to worry about any underlying contract - the bill of exchange will be paid regardless.
What are the three types of negotiable instrument?
Under the Bills of Exchange Act 1882 there are 3 broad types of bills of exchange:
(1) Promissory note
⁃ A two party bill of exchange - where one party promises to make payment to X. (e.g. a bank note).
⁃ The person who incurs the note is called the ‘maker’ of the note. The person to whom payment is made is the ‘payee’.
(2) Bill of exchange - drafts.
⁃ In theory a three party document. One person gives an order for payment (drawer) to be made to another person who is ordered to make payment (drawee). That person who is ordered to make payment is ordered to make payment to an identified individual (payee).
⁃ The drawer, the drawee and the payee remain constant throughout the entire transaction - they do not change as the bill of exchange is sold from one person to another. They are the people who are identified on the bill of exchange at the start when it is written.
(3) Cheque (sometimes).
⁃ Three party bills of exchange where the person who writes the cheque (the drawer) are giving an instruction to their bank (the drawee) to make payment to a payee.
How can bills of exchange loans be divided?
In the same way that loans can be divided into term and demand loans, bills of exchange can be divided into time bills and demand bills.
What is a time bill?
A time bill is a bill which is payable after the passage of a period of time. Also known as tenor bills or usance bills.
⁃ Sometimes time bills will tell you exactly what day to pay on
⁃ Sometimes time bills will tell you to pay in X number of days, or X number of days ‘after sight[ When a time bill provides that it is to be payable after sight, it is providing that the date on which the bill becomes payable is to be determined by the date on which the drawee accepts the bill.]’
What is a demand bill?
A demand bill
⁃ A demand bill is a bill of exchange which is payable on demand. Sometimes known as a sight bill. If no date is mentioned then it is a demand bill.
⁃ Bank notes are demand promissory notes.
What is a Bill of Exchange?
Bills of exchange are defined in the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, s 3(1):
⁃ ‘A Bill of Exchange is an 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 and determinable future time a sum certain in money to or to the order of a specified person, or to bearer’.