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#1980870 - 12/03/14 11:42 PM Altered Check Liability
Patrick Lee Offline
Junior Member
Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 25
Rosemead, CA
A business customer contacted us that a check was paid on the account which was altered. The check was paid on 11/21/14 and it has passed the deadline to return the item. I like to know if the liability is within the paying bank? Or as a paying bank is there any way to recover from the depository bank? Thank you!

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Deposits and Payments
#1980951 - 12/04/14 03:22 PM Re: Altered Check Liability Patrick Lee
John Burnett Offline
10K Club
John Burnett
Joined: Oct 2000
Posts: 40,086
Cape Cod
First, the paying bank is generally liable to its customer for paying the altered item. It's properly payable only as issued (allowing for completion, if issued with payee or amount missing). Alteration of the payee or amount (and some would say date) is sufficient for your customer to ask for reimbursement for the full amount of the check (in the case of an alteration of the payee) or the difference between the amount of the check as paid and the amount as issued (in the case of an altered amount). There is no stated time period in the UCC by which you have to make the adjustment.

But the paying bank that's received such a claim should get an affidavit concerning the alteration, so that the paying bank can enter a warranty claim (without entry) directly against the depositary bank for breach of the depositary bank's presentment warranty under UCC 4-207 that the check wasn't altered.

Your customer has one year under 4-406 to make his claim of alteration against your bank (a shorter period may apply in some states or if the deposit contract provides for a shorter period). There is a three-year statute of limitations on your claim against the depositary bank (shorter in some states).

You may have defenses against your customer's claim of alteration. One such defense is lack of timeliness, although that would not apply in your situation. Another is contributory negligence (such as leaving so much blank space on the check as to facilitate the alteration). The repeat wrongdoer rule in 4-406(d)(2) can also limit your liability to your customer in the case of multiple altered checks. And you are generally protected from your customer's claim of an altered amount if the check was issued with the amount omitted, and it was completed with an unauthorized amount.

The depositary bank is generally protected from your warranty claim against it if you had a defense against your own customer and failed to exercise it.

You'll find The Check Book, available at http://www.bankersonline.com/tools/training/ucc3_4trng_ge.html in the BOL Banker Store for free download, a valuable resource for information on who's responsible for check problems like this one.
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John S. Burnett
BankersOnline.com
Fighting for Compliance since 1976
Bankers' Threads User #8

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#1982039 - 12/10/14 02:10 AM Re: Altered Check Liability John Burnett
Patrick Lee Offline
Junior Member
Joined: Jul 2014
Posts: 25
Rosemead, CA
Thank you John for the useful information! I have already obtained the affidavit from my customer, and she did proof to me that the check was issued with a payee and an amount which both were altered. I think the only thing I can do at this time is to submit a claim with the depository bank to see what the result maybe. I will definitely download The Check Book for future references. Again greatly appreciated your answer and thank you!

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