U.C.C. - ARTICLE 4A - FUNDS TRANSFERS
..PART 5. MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
§ 4A-502. CREDITOR PROCESS SERVED ON RECEIVING BANK; SETOFF BY BENEFICIARY'S
BANK.
- (a) As used in this section, "creditor process" means
levy, attachment, garnishment, notice of lien, sequestration, or similar process
issued by or on behalf of a creditor or other claimant with respect to an account.
- (b) This subsection applies to creditor
process with respect to an authorized
account of the sender of a payment
order if the creditor process is
served on the receiving bank.
For the purpose of determining rights with respect to the creditor process,
if the receiving bank accepts the payment order the balance in the authorized
account is deemed to be reduced by the amount of the payment order to the
extent the bank did not otherwise receive payment of the order, unless the
creditor process is served at a time and in a manner affording the bank a
reasonable opportunity to act on it before the bank accepts the payment order.
- (c) If a beneficiary's
bank has received a payment
order for payment to the beneficiary's account
in the bank, the following rules apply:
- (1) The bank may credit the beneficiary's account.
The amount credited may be set off against an obligation owed by the beneficiary
to the bank or may be applied to satisfy creditor
process served on the bank with respect to the account.
- (2) The bank may credit the beneficiary's account
and allow withdrawal of the amount credited unless creditor
process with respect to the account is served at a time and in a manner
affording the bank a reasonable opportunity to act to prevent withdrawal.
- (3) If creditor process with
respect to the beneficiary's account
has been served and the bank has
had a reasonable opportunity to act on it, the bank may not reject the payment
order except for a reason unrelated to the service of process.
- (d) Creditor
process with respect to a payment by the originator to
the beneficiary pursuant to a funds
transfer may be served only on the beneficiary's
bank with respect to the debt owed by that bank to
the beneficiary. Any other bank served with the creditor process is not obliged
to act with respect to the process.
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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.