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Bank Draft Vs Certified Cheques

BANK DRAFTS :

A bank draft is an order to pay a sum of money on demand. It is addressed by a banker either to itself or to another banker and drawn on its head office or at a branch. It is issued and signed by two authorized signing officers of the bank; one being a “counter signature”. Once “signed”, bank drafts become a statutory obligation of the signing bank and are irrevocable.

Particulars Required for a bank draft are: The date, amount payable, and payee’s name must be typed on the draft prior to its delivery. It can be payable to a customer or creditor. On purchasing, the amount paid is placed in a special reserve account. When presented for payment, funds are withdrawn or collected from that account. The item is then collected through the ACSS. Not a Guarantee of Payment, although bank drafts are substitutes for cash, they cannot always be converted to cash immediately on deposit to a holder’s bank and are not a guarantee of payment. A collecting bank must be certain that the signatures are genuine and authorized. Funds are not realized until actual collection. The amount of the draft or the geographical distance between the place of issue and deposit, are factors that can increase/decrease the time of collection. Many devices exist for discovering counterfeit banknotes; however no corresponding devices exist for the discovery of forged or unauthorized signatures on a bank draft or certified cheque.

CERTIFIED CHEQUES:

“Certification” is the name given to the marking of a cheque by a bank to show that its customer has an existing account with sufficient funds to meet the drawn amount. Certification is demonstrated by a mark on the cheque, typically a stamp marked “certified”. It must be signed by a bank or other financial institution. Certified cheques are not a guarantee of payment; items bearing forged endorsements can be returned for up to six years.

Particulars of Payment Certified cheques are typically drawn by a bank’s regular customer and payable to a creditor or an endorsee. They are payable on demand and collected through the ACSS. The customer’s account is then debited and the amount set aside into a special suspense account. When presented for payment through the ACSS, the amount is charged to that account.

A bank may be able to refuse payment on a certified cheque, if it can be demonstrated that a payee would be unjustly enriched by payment. Certification therefore is a direct promise of a bank to pay, independent of a customer’s obligation to pay, even where a bank has mistakenly certified a cheque.

Verification is required whether funds are direct deposited by bank draft or certified cheque, there is no appreciable difference in risk in comparison to closings in the past. Remember however that financial institutions may not post funds to a trust account until the next business day and sometimes later if the other lawyer’s financial institution is not one of the major institutions, or, if a cheque is drawn on an account in another region of the country. Verification of both items is necessary as the ACSS does not guarantee payment by bank draft or certified cheque.

What is Travelers Cheques

Travelers Cheques are cheques issued by financial institution that can be used as a form of payment. These are mostly used by people who are travelling as it can be easily replaced by the issuing financial institution if lost or stolen. They are widely accepted all around the world. These are issued in various denominations such as US Dollar, Euro, Japanese Yen, Canadian Dollar, Australian Dollar, and British Pound.

At the time of purchase, the cheques are required to be signed as for the security purpose. The user has to again sign the cheque at the point of redemption so as to match both the signatures. At the time of purchase of cheques, the customer should be provided with the listing of the cheques purchased.

When using a cheque as the mode of the payment, customer provides the cheque to the merchant. He signs the cheque in presence of the merchant. Once the merchant verifies both the signatures, the applicable change is given back and the transaction is completed.

Certified Cheques or Certified Check

A certified cheque or certified check is defined as a form of cheque for which the bank verifies that the sufficient fund exists in the account to cover the cheque, and so certifies at the time the cheque is written. Those funds are then set aside in the bank’s internal account until the cheque/check is cashed or returned by the payee. Thus a certified cheque/certified check cannot bounce and in this manner, its liquidity is similar to cash, absent failure of the bank or illegal act (such as funds being based on fraudulent loan, at which point the cheque will be disavowed. )

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