U.C.C. - ARTICLE 4A - FUNDS TRANSFERS
..PART 2. ISSUE AND ACCEPTANCE OF PAYMENT ORDER
§ 4A-205. ERRONEOUS PAYMENT ORDERS.
- (a) If an accepted payment
order was transmitted pursuant to a security
procedure for the detection of error and the payment order (i) erroneously
instructed payment to a beneficiary not
intended by the sender, (ii) erroneously
instructed payment in an amount greater than the amount intended by the sender,
or (iii) was an erroneously transmitted duplicate of a payment order previously
sent by the sender, the following rules apply:
- (1) If the sender proves that
the sender or a person acting on behalf of the sender pursuant to Section 4A-206 complied
with the security procedure and
that the error would have been detected if the receiving
bank had also complied, the sender is not obliged to pay the order
to the extent stated in paragraphs (2) and (3).
- (2) If the funds transfer is
completed on the basis of an erroneous payment
order described in clause (i) or (iii) of subsection (a), the sender is
not obliged to pay the order and the receiving
bank is entitled to recover from the beneficiary any
amount paid to the beneficiary to the extent allowed by the law governing
mistake and restitution.
- (3) If the funds transfer is
completed on the basis of a payment
order described in clause (ii) of subsection (a), the sender is
not obliged to pay the order to the extent the amount received by the beneficiary is
greater than the amount intended by the sender. In that case, the receiving
bank is entitled to recover from the beneficiary the excess amount
received to the extent allowed by the law governing mistake and restitution.
- (b) If (i) the sender of
an erroneous payment order described
in subsection (a) is not obliged to pay all or part of the order, and (ii)
the sender receives notification from the receiving
bank that the order was accepted by the bank or
that the sender's account was debited with respect to the order, the sender
has a duty to exercise ordinary care, on the basis of information available
to the sender, to discover the error with respect to the order and to advise
the bank of the relevant facts within a reasonable time, not exceeding 90 days,
after the bank's notification was received by the sender. If the bank proves
that the sender failed to perform that duty, the sender is liable to the bank
for the loss the bank proves it incurred
as a result of the failure, but the liability of the sender may not exceed
the amount of the sender's order.
- (c) This section applies to amendments to payment
orders to the same extent it applies to payment orders.
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© 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.