U.C.C. - ARTICLE 3 - NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS
..PART 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS AND DEFINITIONS
§ 3-106. UNCONDITIONAL PROMISE OR ORDER.
- (a) Except as provided in this section, for the
purposes of Section 3-104(a), a promise or order is
unconditional unless it states (i) an express condition to payment, (ii) that
the promise or order is subject to or governed by another writing, or (iii)
that rights or obligations with respect to the promise or order are stated
in another writing. A reference to another writing does not of itself make
the promise or order conditional.
- (b) A promise or order is
not made conditional (i) by a reference to another writing for a statement
of rights with respect to collateral, prepayment, or acceleration, or (ii)
because payment is limited to resort to a particular fund or source.
- (c) If a promise or order requires,
as a condition to payment, a countersignature by a person whose specimen signature
appears on the promise or order, the condition does not make the promise or
order conditional for the purposes of Section 3-104(a).
If the person whose specimen signature appears on an instrument fails
to countersign the instrument, the failure to countersign is a defense to the
obligation of the issuer, but the failure
does not prevent a transferee of the instrument from becoming a holder of the
instrument.
- (d) If a promise or order at
the time it is issued or first comes into
possession of a holder contains a statement, required by applicable statutory
or administrative law, to the effect that the rights of a holder or transferee
are subject to claims or defenses that the issuer could
assert against the original payee, the promise or order is not thereby made
conditional for the purposes of Section 3-104(a);
but if the promise or order is an instrument,
there cannot be a holder in
due course of the instrument.
previous section |
next section
overview
notes
© Copyright 2005 by The American Law Institute and the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws; reproduced, published and distributed with the permission of the Permanent Editorial Board for the Uniform Commercial Code for the limited purposes of study, teaching, and academic research.