Accounting
Anthropology
Archaeology
Art History
Banking
Biology & Life Science
Business
Business Communication
Business Development
Business Ethics
Business Law
Chemistry
Communication
Computer Science
Counseling
Criminal Law
Curriculum & Instruction
Design
Earth Science
Economic
Education
Engineering
Finance
History & Theory
Humanities
Human Resource
International Business
Investments & Securities
Journalism
Law
Management
Marketing
Medicine
Medicine & Health Science
Nursing
Philosophy
Physic
Psychology
Real Estate
Science
Social Science
Sociology
Special Education
Speech
Visual Arts
Question
Check Cashing Business. Susan owns and operates a check cashing business. A customer, Bob, claiming to be Sam, comes in and cashes a $2,000 check issued by ABC Trucking to Sam. The day after Susan cashed the check, she received a notice from ABC Trucking that some checks had been stolen. It was later discovered that the customer had forged Sam's name on the check issued by ABC Trucking. At the time she took the ABC Trucking check, Susan was very busy with several customers in line. She simply glanced at the check and cashed it. A reasonable examination would have revealed that the check had been materially altered and changed from the amount of $200 to $2,000. Susan decided that she needed to hire some people to help her because she also had a problem with another check. On the same day that she took the ABC Trucking check, she took a check from another customer, Maurice. It was later discovered that the check from Maurice, which was four months old, was the subject of a dispute between Maurice and the issuer of the check for whom Maurice had done some work. The issuer claimed that the work was improperly done. Both ABC Trucking and the issuer of the check to Maurice stopped payment on the checks. Susan claims that she was entitled to the status of holder in due course and was entitled to payment on both checks. What is the effect of the alteration of the check on Susan's status as a holder in due course?
A. The alteration has no effect because a holder is not charged with examining an instrument presented for payment.
B. The alteration will likely prohibit her from being a holder in due course.
C. The alteration will affect her status as a holder in due course only if she had been put on notice of prior criminal behavior in the past on the part of Bob.
D. The alteration will affect her status as a holder in due course only if the issuer can establish that it was not negligent in allowing a thief to gain access resulting in the alteration.
E. The alteration will affect her status as a holder in due course because it involved over $500; otherwise, based on the purpose of the law to protect holders, the alteration would have had no effect.
Answer
This answer is hidden. It contains 149 characters.
Related questions
Q:
Which is not an intention tort against one's economic interest?
A. Disparagement
B. Intentional interference with a contract
C. Unfair competition
D. Fraudulent misrepresentation
E. Conversion
Q:
Under which of the following situations does the tort of trespass to realty occur?
A. When a person causes an object to be placed on the land of another without the landowner's permission.
B. When a person stays on the land of another when the owner tells him to depart.
C. When a person refuses to remove something he placed on the property that the owner of the property asked him remove.
D. When a person causes an object to be placed on the land of another without the landowner's permission, when a person stays on the land of another when the owner tells him to depart, and when a person refuses to remove something he placed on the property that the owner of the property asked him remove.
E. None of these because a person does not commit trespass to realty unless it can be established that the person initially entered the land of another without permission.
Q:
Which of the following gives immunity to providers of interactive computer services for liability they might otherwise incur on account of material disseminated by them but created by others?
A. The Internet Communications Act of 2000.
B. The Interactive Computer Services Protection Act of 2004.
C. The Communications Decency Act of 1996.
D. The Internet Communications Protection Act of 1998.
E. The Blog Protection Act of 2001.
Q:
Robby calls Bobby on the telephone and threatens to come over and break his nose. Which of the following is true?
A. Robby's conduct constitutes a battery.
B. Robby's conduct constitutes an assault.
C. Robby's conduct constitutes both a battery and an assault.
D. Robby's conduct does not constitute an assault because there is no question of immediate bodily harm.
E. Robby's conduct does not constitute an assault because contact has not yet happened.
Q:
In which of the following is a category into which intentional torts are divided?
A. Torts against persons, property, and animals.
B. Torts against property, economic interests, and roadways.
C. Torts against persons, economic interests, and strict liability.
D. Torts against persons, property, and economic interests.
E. None of these.
Q:
Which of the following is true regarding the intent needed for an intentional tort?
A. The intent at issue is not intent to harm but, rather, is intent to engage in a specific act, which ultimately results in an injury, physical or economic, to another.
B. The intent at issue is not intent to harm but, rather, is intent to engage in a specific act, which ultimately results in a physical, not merely economic, injury to another.
C. The intent at issue is intent to harm that results in an injury, physical or economic, to another.
D. The intent at issue is intent to harm that results in physical, not merely economic, injury to another.
E. The intent at issue is not intent to harm and is not intent to engage in a specific act. Instead, negligence will suffice.
Q:
Define the term "criminal fraud" and discuss the three elements generally involved in establishing criminal fraud.
Q:
List the elements the government must prove in order to establish bribery of a public official under the federal statute criminalizing that offense.
Q:
Masked Bandit. Barry, who owned a small convenience store, was robbed when a masked bandit entered his store and demanded his cash while pointing a gun at him. As the bandit ran out of the store, Barry grabbed his own gun and shot the bandit in the leg. When the police arrived, Barry was arrested along with the thief. Barry claimed that no charges should be brought against him because his action in shooting the robber was justified. After the arrest, the officers searched his store and found marijuana. When Barry complained about the arrest and search, the officer in charge told him that since the state police were involved, federal constitutional rights were waived. Barry is attempting to obtain legal representation in an attempt to get out of jail, but cannot afford a lawyer because he just spent all his funds buying the illegal drugs for resale that have now been confiscated by the police. Sam, another inmate, asks Barry if the officers explained his rights to him; but Barry only recalls being arrested, hustled into the police cruiser, and whisked off to jail. The bandit will likely be charged with a(n) _____ offense.
A. felony
B. misdemeanor
C. petty
D. absolute
E. strict liability
Q:
Divorce Fallout. Dr. Fred, following a messy divorce, has encountered significant financial difficulties. Dr. Fred has a friend named Slick Slim who tells Dr. Fred that he has been making lots of money by selling people a wristband that allegedly places pressure on a nerve that signals hunger resulting in a lack of appetite. Slick Slim tells Dr. Fred that, although the device does not really work, people who want to lose weight and look good in their bathing suits will do anything and that it sells like hotcakes. Slick Slim tells Dr. Fred that he will pay Dr. Fred five dollars for every band that Dr. Fred can sell to his patients. Dr. Fred proceeds to mail letters to patients suggesting the use of the band for weight loss. He also uses UPS to mail samples of the band to some patients along with letters encouraging purchase of the bands. Dr. Fred then proceeds to bill Medicare for office consultations he has with patients when they come in to purchase the bands. The scheme is wildly successful. Dr. Fred is able to entirely satisfy his alimony obligations within just a few months. Unfortunately, as patients begin to see that they are not having any weight loss, he has been receiving numerous complaints, and a friend of his told him that he could even be facing some criminal prosecution. Which of the following offenses, if any, did Dr. Fred commit when he used UPS to send correspondence and samples of the bands to patients?
A. False pretenses
B. False entry
C. Defalcation
D. Mail fraud
E. None of these. He is possibly guilty of some state law offense, but mail fraud requires the use of the U.S. mails.
Q:
First Amendment protections do not apply to corporations.
Q:
The privileges and immunities clause give the federal government the authority to collect taxes.
Q:
Federal laws include rules passed by federal administrative agencies.
Q:
Congress has the power to enact legislation, but the president can veto a law that Congress passes.
Q:
The U.S. Constitution allocates power of the federal government between the executive and judiciary branches.
Q:
Which of the following are rules regarding the internal operations of an agency?
A. Procedural
B. Interpretive
C. Legislative
D. Adjudicative
E. Judicial
Q:
Congress created federal administrative agencies Congress through passage of what type of legislation?
A. Administrative
B. Enabling
C. Statutory
D. Agency
E. Interstate
Q:
Which type of agency is generally defined as any body created by the legislative branch to carry out specific duties?
A. An administrative agency
B. A legal agency
C. A quasi-legal agency
D. A procedural agency
E. A regulatory agency
Q:
Administrative law involves:
A. applications.
B. licenses.
C. decision making.
D. applications and licenses.
E. applications, licenses, and decision-making.
Q:
The primary type of rule making used by administrative agencies is informal rule making.
Q:
The Administrative Procedures Act provides specific guidelines on rule making by agencies.
Q:
There are two types of administrative agencies, executive and independent.
Q:
Independent agencies are governed by a senate committee appointed by the president.
Q:
If a statute is drafted in a manner that is ambiguous with respect to the type of agency rule making that is required, a court will interpret the rule as requiring formal rule making.
Q:
Administrative agencies have legislative, executive, and judicial powers.
Q:
Set forth the steps involved in formal rule making.
Q:
Disappointed Applicant. Polly, who had a regular driver's license to operate an automobile, decided that she really wanted to drive a tractor-trailer truck. She thought that it would be nice to earn money while seeing the country. Polly had all applicable training and went to her state's department of motor vehicle office to take the test required in order to obtain a license to drive a tractor-trailer truck. While taking the test, in an effort to relieve stress, Polly was stretching her neck and looking around at the other nervous test takers. The proctor for the exam saw her and accused her of stretching and straining to look at the exam answers of other test takers. Her application to drive a tractor-trailer was denied. The local agency department head was also furious with Polly and proceeded to revoke her regular automobile driver's license as well. Applicable statutes provide as follows: (1) "the DMV may suspend or revoke the privilege of any person to operate a motor vehicle upon any of the grounds which authorize the refusal to issue a license"; (2) "the DMV may refuse to issue a license to any person who has "committed any fraud in any application." Polly hears that you have just finished business law and asks for advice. She says that she had decided that she does not really want to drive a tractor-trailer truck because of her neck problems but that she really would like to have her license to operate a regular automobile reinstated. The statutes setting forth the authority of the agency are called ______ statutes.
A. enabling
B. authorization
C. enforcement
D. dedicated
E. final
Q:
Four Paws Protection. Congress set up a new agency to more closely regulate testing of personal and cosmetic products on animals. Legislation was passed naming the agency the "Animal Protection Commission," and setting forth the function of the agency and its specific powers. Congress provided the agency with the power to make rules, investigate violations, and adjudicate charges of wrongdoing. The agency proceeded to properly give notice and issue rules. The rules provided for civil as well as for criminal penalties. Agency personnel issued an order for Fluffy Shampoo Corporation to attend a hearing regarding its animal testing and to bring to the hearing all company documents pertaining to animal testing. Fluffy Shampoo resisted on the basis that the agency had no power to compel its attendance at a hearing or to require it to provide any documents. Fluffy Shampoo also claimed that criminal penalties may not flow from violation of agency rules. The agency proceeded to issue a ruling that Fluffy Shampoo cease all activity based upon its refusal to cooperate. Which of the following is the correct term for legislation passed by Congress specifying the name, functions, and specific powers of the Animal Protection Commission?
A. Enabling legislation
B. Enacting legislation
C. Approving legislation
D. Administrative regulation
E. Agency regulation
Q:
DUI Charge. Monique was licensed to train massage therapists. A new federal agency, the Aesthetic and Massage Commission, took very seriously its role of enforcing the statute enabling the Commission to do its work and providing that licensed massage therapists must refrain from "any act or conduct indicating bad faith, incompetence, dishonesty, or improper dealing." Monique, while driving home late one night from a party, was stopped by the police and arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. She pled guilty to the offense. When the Aesthetic and Massage Commission discovered the offense, the officials of the agency met, decided that Monique might drink on the job, and that she might pose a danger to students. Accordingly, her license to teach massage therapy was revoked. Monique threatened to sue to retain her license and was told by the agency head that she had no right to appeal to court because of the nature of the Aesthetic and Massage Commission and that in any event, action by an agency is always upheld. Which of the following would have reached the decision at her hearing before the administrative agency?
A. An adjudicative law judge
B. An administrative law judge
C. A federal court judge
D. A superior court judge
E. A jury
Q:
DUI Charge. Monique was licensed to train massage therapists. A new federal agency, the Aesthetic and Massage Commission, took very seriously its role of enforcing the statute enabling the Commission to do its work and providing that licensed massage therapists must refrain from "any act or conduct indicating bad faith, incompetence, dishonesty, or improper dealing." Monique, while driving home late one night from a party, was stopped by the police and arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. She pled guilty to the offense. When the Aesthetic and Massage Commission discovered the offense, the officials of the agency met, decided that Monique might drink on the job, and that she might pose a danger to students. Accordingly, her license to teach massage therapy was revoked. Monique threatened to sue to retain her license and was told by the agency head that she had no right to appeal to court because of the nature of the Aesthetic and Massage Commission; and that, in any event, action by an agency is always upheld. Which of the following is true regarding the statement of the agency that Monique had no right to appeal to court?
A. The agency representative was wrong; and if Monique cannot resolve the issue within the agency, she may appeal to court for judicial review.
B. Because the agency was set up to protect the safety of the public, the agency representative is correct unless Monique can establish that she entered into a separate contractual arrangement with the agency when she was hired that gave her the right to appeal decisions to court.
C. Further information is needed regarding whether the agency was an executive agency or an independent agency because while actions of an independent agency may be appealed to court, actions of an executive agency may not be appealed to court.
D. Further information is needed regarding whether the agency was an executive agency or an independent agency because while actions of an executive agency may be appealed to court, actions of an independent agency may not be appealed to court.
E. Because the agency was set up to protect the safety of the public, the agency representative is correct; and Monique has no right to a court action and no right to enter into a contractual agreement with the agency regarding appeal rights.