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Q:
The agent's duty not to use or disclose confidential information about the principal's business continues after the agency ends.
Q:
The legal relations between agent and subagent closely parallel the legal relations between principal and agent.
TRUE
Q:
A subagent is an agent of an agent.
Q:
Authority is an agent's ability to handle the legal issue of a principal.
Q:
The agency relationship may be formed even if the parties do not subjectively intend to create it.
Q:
A principal is always liable for the acts of his agent.
Q:
Joe is the personnel manager for the BFG Corporation. Joe hires employees for BFG. Joe hires Suzy as a management trainee. Suzy is BFG's subagent.
Q:
Because they serve for free, gratuitous agents have no authority to bind their principals.
Q:
The time period within which a customer must report unauthorized customer signatures to the bank to get his account recredited is:
A. fourteen days.
B. six months.
C. one year.
D. three years.
Q:
Which of the following is true of check collection?
A. Checks and other drafts collected through the banking system usually have two partiesthe drawer and the drawee bank.
B. If the payee deposits the check at a bank other than the drawee bank, the latter will take a series of steps necessary to reflect the deposit as a credit to the payee's account.
C. If the payee deposits the check at the same bank as the drawee bank, the depositary bank will make the ledger entry showing the deposit as a credit to the payee's account.
D. If the drawee and depositary banks are in the same town or county, the depositary bank will indorse the check and deliver it to the drawee bank for payment.
Q:
Checks and other drafts collected through the banking system usually have all of the following EXCEPT:
A. bank.
B. payee.
C. drawer.
D. employee.
Q:
Under the Expedited Funds Availability Act, customers can draw upon checks deposited in their checking account within:
A. the second business day following deposit, if the drawee bank is in the same Federal Reserve check-processing region as the depositary bank.
B. one week following deposit, if the drawee bank is in a different Federal Reserve check-processing region than the depositary bank.
C. three days after the deposit, in the case of checks drawn on the U.S. Treasury.
D. five days of deposit in the case of cashier's checks.
Q:
Agency is a two-party relationship in which the agent is authorized to act on behalf of the principal.
Q:
Prof. Bob DeSlob writes a check on his Big Bank checking account for $1 payable to "Department of Business Law Coffee Club" to pay for his weekly membership and gives it to his colleague Carol. Bob does not place a decimal point after the "1" nor does he complete the line ending in "dollars." Carol, knowing that Bob can well afford it, prints in block letters the words "One Hundred" on the line ending in "dollars." Carol then gives the check to Dot, the Department secretary who is in charge of the Coffee Club. Dot presents the check to Big Bank for payment, and Big Bank charges $100 from Bob's account. Which of the following statements is most accurate?
A. Bob's account must be recredited $99.
B. Bob's account must be recredited $100.
C. Bob contributed to the alteration and may be barred from claiming forgery.
D. Bob had a duty to place a stop-payment order on the check.
Q:
Tom wrote a check to Mary for $10. Tom was careful and not negligent in the way he wrote the check. Nevertheless, Mary cleverly altered the check to read $1,000. Tom's bank cashed this check and deducted that amount from his account. Which of the following is correct?
A. Tom is liable on this check, but only for $10.
B. Tom is liable on this check for $1,000.
C. Tom is liable on this check for nothing.
D. Tom must reimburse the bank for any losses it suffers related to this check.
Q:
Jane wrote a check for $10. She wrote this check in a careless and negligent manner, making alteration easy. Ben altered this check to read $1,000. His alteration was crude and obvious to anyone paying attention. Ben cashed the check at Jane's bank. The bank was negligent in accepting this check, but it deducted $1,000 from Jane's account. Jane sued the bank, and the jury determined that Jane's negligence contributes 50 percent to the loss and the bank's negligence contributes 50 percent. How much is Jane entitled to recover from her bank?
A. Nothing, because she was negligent.
B. Half the loss.
C. The entire loss.
D. The entire loss plus her court costs.
Q:
Which of the following statements is true concerning multiple forgeries and alterations?
A. A customer cannot hold the bank responsible for paying, in good faith, any altered checks after he/she receives the statement of account.
B. A bank will be held liable for honoring altered checks which were presented to the bank multiple times.
C. A customer bears the responsibility for any forgeries and subsequent forgeries that take place, even if he/she has notified the bank.
D. A bank will be held liable even if it proves that it suffered a loss due to the customer's failure to examine his/her statement and notify the bank.
Q:
What section of the UCC mandates that a bank signature must appear on a certified check?
A. 1-103
B. 3-409
C. 3-223
D. 6-105
Q:
Which of the following is most true regarding checks whose amount has been altered?
A. The bank may not pay such checks as altered in all cases.
B. The bank may pay such checks as altered where the alteration is due to the customer's negligence and the alteration is not obvious.
C. The bank must pay such checks as originally drawn.
D. The bank cannot ever pay such checks.
Q:
In case a check is altered so skillfully that a bank is unable to detect the alteration, which of the following stands true?
A. The bank should honor only those checks for which it receives a notice from the drawer.
B. The bank is allowed to charge to the account the amount for which the check originally was written.
C. The bank will be liable to recredit the drawer's account for negligence.
D. The bank will hold the drawer responsible for contributing to the alteration of the check.
Q:
Which of the following is true in case of death or incompetence of a customer?
A. A bank cannot pay checks of a deceased customer until it has notice of the customer's death.
B. If a bank knows of a customer's death, it can pay checks written by the customer prior to his/her death, for a period of 30 days.
C. The deceased person's heirs or other persons claiming an interest in the account can order the bank to stop payment.
D. A bank can declare checks signed by the customer while he/she was alive, as null and void.
Q:
A check on which one bank is the drawer and another bank is a drawee is a:
A. cashier's check.
B. antedated check.
C. certified check.
D. teller's check.
Q:
Which of the following do a certified check and a cashier's check have in common?
A. The bank is primarily liable on each.
B. The bank is secondarily liable on each.
C. Both are drawn by the bank on itself.
D. Technically, the bank is not liable to a holder of either kind of check.
Q:
Mendel had his car repaired by Harry's Garage (HG). He paid by check drawn on ABZ Bank when he collected his car. On the drive home, Mendel realized that the repair had not been made. He immediately called ABZ on his cell phone and told the bank to stop payment on the check. Three days later, HG negotiated the check to Amy, a holder in due course. When Amy went to cash the check, ABZ Bank refused to honor it. What is Mendel's liability on this check?
A. Mendel is not liable to anyone because he stopped the check in time.
B. Mendel is liable to Amy because the stop payment order was made through a phone call.
C. Mendel is not liable to Amy because she took the check from HG.
D. Mendel is liable to Amy because he is the drawer of the check.
Q:
In which of the following cases will a drawer and any persons who previously indorsed the check be discharged of their liability on the check?
A. By certification of a check.
B. By drawing a cashier's check.
C. By drawing a teller's check.
D. By death or incompetence after signing a check.
Q:
A check on which one bank is both the drawer and the drawee is called a:
A. certified check.
B. cashier's check.
C. teller's check.
D. uncertified check.
Q:
Which of the following is most true about stop-payment orders?
A. Their validity is only for 14 days.
B. Their validity is only for six months.
C. They must give the bank 14 days to act on the order.
D. They can be oral or written.
Q:
Which of the following defeats a bank's liability for failing to observe a stop-payment order?
A. That the order was oral rather than written.
B. That the bank was not given 14 days to obey the order.
C. That the bank paid a person against whom the customer did not have a defense.
D. That the bank has the customer sign a disclaimer holding the bank harmless for its failure to exercise ordinary care and good faith regarding its handling of stop-payment orders.
Q:
Shawn purchases a computer from Adelaide Electronics, and writes them a check of $1,000. However, after Shawn brought the computer home, it abruptly stopped working due to a virus attack. Shawn calls his bank ordering a stop-payment on the check. Adelaide Electronics gave the check to Jack Enterprises, their creditor. Shawn's bank honored the check when Jack presented it. Which of the following is true in this case?
A. The bank is liable to recredit Shawn's account, since the bank did not follow Shawn's instructions.
B. Shawn will be able to show that he sustained losses since the bank honored the check to Jack.
C. The bank is not liable to recredit Shawn's account, since Shawn did not send the stop-payment order well in advance.
D. Shawn cannot have his account recredited because he will not be able to show that he sustained any loss.
Q:
Abyss handed over a $500 check to Howard Brothers for building him a terrace garden. The next day, Abyss notices that one part of the garden has not been finished. He calls his bank to order a stop-payment on the check. When Howard Brothers presents the check next week, the bank honors it. Which of the following is true in this case?
A. Since Abyss did not give the bank enough time to process a stop-payment order, the bank is not liable for this loss.
B. The bank is liable to recredit Abyss's account, since Abyss has suffered a loss by the bank's payment.
C. Abyss will not be able to show that he sustained any losses, hence cannot have his account recredited.
D. The bank is not liable for honoring any checks in good faith that are signed by the drawer-depositor.
Q:
Edith purchases what is represented to be a new DVD player from Big Al's Electronic Emporium, by giving Al a check for $200 drawn on Big Bank. Edith then discovers that the DVD player is a used model and calls Big Bank to place a stop-payment order on the check. Big Al negotiates the check to John who qualifies as a holder in due course. John presents the check to Big Bank the next day, and Big Bank pays the check. Which of the following statements is most accurate?
A. For recourse, Edith would have to pursue Big Al on her misrepresentation claim.
B. Edith may use her personal defense of misrepresentation to have her account recredited by Big Bank.
C. Edith may pursue both Big Bank and John for the amount taken from her account.
D. If Big Bank had refused to pay the check, John would have had no recourse against Edith.
Q:
Jim gave a postdated check dated December 30 to one of his creditors on December 22. However, the check was presented to Jim's bank on December 24, and the bank honored it. As a result, there was not enough money in his account to cover for another check he had written for December 27, and hence, the check bounced. The bank charged Jim a $20 fee for the bounced check. What is the bank's liability regarding this bounced check?
A. The bank has no liability.
B. The bank must compensate Jim for any losses that result from this bounced check.
C. The bank is liable, but only for the $20 bank charge related to the bounced check.
D. The bank is liable, but only for the immediate, direct damages that result from the bounced check.
Q:
Hailey wrote a check for Marsha, her landlady, on July 7 and dated it for August 1. Hailey notified her bank to not honor the check before August 1. However, the bank honored the check when Marsha presented it on July 29. Due to insufficient funds, the bank turned down the check and charged $50 to Hailey's account. Marsha terminated Hailey's rental contract for writing her a bad check. Which of the following is true of this situation?
A. The bank is not liable for any damages to Hailey since it has the right to honor a postdated check if presented earlier.
B. Hailey can file a lawsuit against Marsha for presenting a postdated check earlier than instructed and causing her loss.
C. Hailey is liable to pay damages to Marsha, in addition to the rent, and a $50 fine to the bank for lack of funds.
D. The bank is liable to pay Hailey damages for honoring the check before the date mentioned in the notice.
Q:
A drawer's written stop-payment order is valid for:
A. six months, unless the drawer extends it in writing.
B. only 14 days, and can be extended if the drawer sends a written order.
C. one year, unless it is renewed in writing.
D. a check of $500 and above.
Q:
A stop-payment order is authorized by the:
A. bearer.
B. creditor.
C. drawer.
D. drawee.
Q:
Which of the following is true for a stop-payment order to be effective?
A. The order can come up to an hour after the check has been honored.
B. The bank must receive the order in a way that gives the bank a reasonable opportunity to act.
C. The bank can receive the order after it has certified the check.
D. The order must be in a written format for the bank to be able to recognize it as the check corresponding to the stop-payment order.
Q:
Checks that are more than six months old are called:
A. postdated checks.
B. altered checks.
C. stale checks.
D. antedated checks.
Q:
Sal brings a stale check to his bank on June 1, 2003. The check is dated September 1, 2002. The bank:
A. owes a duty to honor the check.
B. must honor the check if it is otherwise properly payable.
C. can honor the check while acting in good faith.
D. cannot honor the check, since it is more than six months old.
Q:
A bank's right or duty to charge a depositor's account for a check can be terminated when a:
A. stop-payment order from the depositor after the bank has certified a check.
B. depositor files a bankruptcy petition.
C. notice of garnishment of the account by the depositor.
D. creditor of the depositor files a bankruptcy petition after the notified cut-off hour on the banking day after the check is received.
Q:
_____ is a financial management tool offered by banks and by third-party, Internet-based companies.
A. Account management
B. Check management
C. Account aggregation
D. Check scraping
Q:
Under the recent amendments to Article 4, postdated checks:
A. are now invalid and create no obligation to pay on the drawee bank's part.
B. are not properly payable by the drawee bank until the date on the check.
C. may be paid by the drawee bank before the date on the check unless the customer has given notice to the contrary.
D. may be paid by the drawee bank unless the customer gives notice of the postdating in a way that at least partially describes the check.
Q:
In case of honoring checks, a bank:
A. is liable to the customer for damages the customer suffers, if a bank fails to honor a check because of a mistake on its part.
B. has a liability to the holder of the check, whether the check is certified or notified.
C. is not under a duty to honor all checks drawn by its customers in presence of sufficient funds in the customers' accounts.
D. cannot charge the customer's account if it creates an overdraft.
Q:
While receiving a properly drawn and payable check on a person's account, which of the following circumstances make it a necessity for the bank to honor the check?
A. When the check is stale.
B. When there are sufficient funds in the account.
C. When there is a stop payment order.
D. When a postdated check is presented before the date of the check.
Q:
When there are insufficient funds in a drawer's account, and a check is presented to be honored, the bank can:
A. honor the check, and charge the customer on the next deposit.
B. return the check, and charge a penalty.
C. hold the check and payment, even if the holder suffers a loss against the drawer.
D. charge a fee to the holder in due course and to the drawer.
Q:
"Check 21" is the popular name for a federal law that enables banks to process checks electronically.
Q:
Unlike many other federal consumer protection measures, the Electronic Funds Transfer Act does not require disclosure of important terms to the consumer.
Q:
The Federal Reserve operates a domestic wire transfer system known as Fedwire.
Q:
The Electronic Funds Transfer Act governs "check conversion" transactions.
Q:
Which of the following is true of the drawer-drawee relationship?
A. The drawer becomes the creditor when the drawee bank pays more than the drawer has on deposit.
B. The drawer becomes a debtor and the drawee bank the creditor at the time of opening a checking account.
C. The drawer becomes the insured and the drawee bank the insurer at the time of opening a checking account.
D. The drawer becomes the creditor and the drawee bank the debtor at the time of opening an account.
Q:
If a customer does not discover a forged check and report it to the bank within one year from the time of the statement containing the check, the bank is not obligated to recredit his account for the amount of the forged check.
Q:
Banks are not required to disclose their funds availability policy to all of their customers.
Q:
Wire transfer is used for transfer of funds across the country or around the world. This service is generally used by large business and financial institutions.
Q:
A drawer can claim alteration as a reason for not charging a particular check to his account, even if the drawer has contributed to the alteration in some way.
Q:
When both the bank and the customer failed to use ordinary care to prevent alteration or forgery of checks then a comparative negligence is used to determine liability for damages.
Q:
A stop order must be made so a bank is given a reasonable opportunity to act on the order.
Q:
The main difference between a certified check and a cashier's check is that the bank is primarily liable on a certified check, but only secondarily liable on a cashier's check.
Q:
A teller's check is a check on which a bank is both the drawer and the drawee.
Q:
A deceased person's heirs have no power to order a bank to stop payment on checks written by the deceased prior to his death.
Q:
Lakeland Bank certifies a check that subsequently is cashed by Pine Federal Credit Union. Pine Federal Credit Union is not liable for any damages associated with the check.
Q:
Boston Bank receives one of their payable checks made to the order of the Same Sex Alliance organization of Massachusetts for $1000. The check comes from a valid account and there are funds in that account to cover the check. The CEO of Boston Bank does not agree with the mission of the Same Sex Alliance so Boston Bank refuses to honor the check. Boston Bank is within its power as a bank to do this.
Q:
A bank is not authorized to pay a postdated check before the date on the check and charge the amount to the customer's account, unless the customer has given notice to the bank.
Q:
A bank will be liable if it charges a customer for a check that is postdated and the bank was given prior notice of the postdate.
Q:
An oral stop-payment order normally is good for 14 days.
Q:
A drawer whose bank paid checks over a stop-payment order may not be entitled to have his account recredited, if he is unable to show he suffered any loss.
Q:
A bank may, but need not, pay any checks that are more than six months old.
Q:
The relationship between a depositor and a bank are governed by a deposit agreement and Articles 3 & 4 of the UCC.
Q:
Laura gets a statement and a pile of paid checks from her bank on June 1. Within the pile of checks, is one check with a forged drawer's signature. Laura does not notify the bank about the forged check until the next month, July 1. Does this delay remove the bank's obligation to recredit Laura's account?
Q:
Ben, a Big Bank checking account customer, wrote a check for $1,000 to Mia. At the time that Mia presents the check for payment at Big Bank, Ben has $1,500 in his account. However, the clerk mistakenly refuses to pay the check and stamps it NSF. Mia then goes to the local prosecutor, and Ben is later arrested for writing a bad check. Ben could recover from Big Bank the damages involved in his arrest, such as attorney's fees.
Q:
On June 1, Dave Drawer writes a check to Pete Payee. The check is postdated to July 1. Nonetheless, Pete presents the check for payment at Dave's bank on June 15, and receives payment on that date. After Dave learns of this, he screams bloody murder, arguing that the check was not properly payable and that the bank should recredit his account. Is Dave right? Assume that the check is otherwise properly payable, and that Dave never told the bank about it before Pete presented it.
Q:
Due to Susan Sharp's many fraudulent misstatements, Nelly Nice buys Susan's car. Nelly writes Susan a check for $5,000 in payment. Susan immediately negotiates the check to Patty Proper, who qualifies as a holder in due course. In the meantime, Nelly discovers that the car is junk and makes a timely and proper stop-payment order to her bank. However, when Patty presents the check for payment, the bank pays it anyway. Is the bank required to recredit Nelly's account?
Q:
Mike buys a new $25,000 turbocharged Dodge Vampire for cash. The dealer requires a certified check for that amount, so Mike gets his bank to certify his check for $25,000. One day later, the bank goes bankrupt. Rather than trying to recover in bankruptcy, the dealer pursues Mike. One of the dealer's theories is that Mike is secondarily liable on the check, and that the bank's default makes Mike liable on the instrument. Is the bank right?
Q:
Adams wrote a check to Jimmy for $5,000. After three days, he met with an accident and died. Now Jimmy wants to collect money from the bank and so he deposited the check. However, the bank is refusing to pay. Is he entitled to get his money?
Q:
Banks can retain the legible copy of check for a period of:
A. seven months.
B. thirty days.
C. seven years.
D. thirty weeks.
Q:
Which of the following is true of the Check 21 Act?
A. It allows banks to handle limited number of checks electronically.
B. It has made it mandatory for banks to return the canceled checks to the customers.
C. It authorizes banks to transform information they receive in electronic form back into a paper copy of the check.
D. It requires that banks keep the customers' original checks for a specified period of time.
Q:
_____ is a process which begins with the buyer giving the seller a check, and the seller using the information on that check to name itself as the payee and forwarding it for collection through an automated clearing house.
A. Source documentation
B. Check conversion
C. Account aggregation
D. Check truncation
Q:
Under the Electronic Funds Transfer Act how many days do operators of EFT systems have to investigate errors or provisionally recredit a consumer's account?
A. 10 working days
B. 60 days
C. 14 working days
D. 90 days
Q:
A transfers a negotiable note to B, who in turn transfers it to C. Under what conditions has A made a transfer warranty to C?
Q:
Penny draws a check for $25.00 on her Big Bank checking account payable to the order of Carol. Carol puts a "5" in front of the 2, raising the check to $525.00, and indorses it. She then negotiates the check to Mel. Mel then presents the check for payment to Big Bank, which pays her $525 and charges Penny's account that amount. Penny asks Big Bank to recredit her account for $500.00, and Big Bank does so. What recourse does the Bank have and against whom?
Q:
Jones, a purchasing manager at the XYZ Corporation, has authority to make and sign checks drawn on the corporation's account. Jones completes a fake check to the Smith Supply Company for $100,000, signs it for XYZ, indorses it in Smith's name, and sells it to Hirsch, who takes it in good faith. Has the check been negotiated to Hirsch? Assume that the check is a negotiable instrument.
Q:
Which of the following is an EXCEPTION to the mandatory availability schedules of the expedited Funds Availability Act?
A. Cashier's checks
B. Teller's checks
C. Electronic payments
D. New accounts