The Contract After the Agreement.

The recent sequence of Blogs began with one of the most fundamental, pervasive and important cornerstones of the Uniform Commercial Code: What is the contract between the parties? Our analysis began with section 1-201(b)(12) which states the basic definition of a “contract” under the Uniform Commercial Code:

“Contract”…means the total legal obligation that results from the parties agreement as determined by [the Uniform Commercial Code] as supplemented by any other applicable rules of law.  Section 1-201(b)(12)

The past three Blogs have focused on the first element: the parties agreement:  defined as:

…[T]he bargain of the parties in fact, as found in their language or inferred from other circumstances, including course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade as provided in Section 1-303.

The importance and potential impact ‘of  language, course of performance, and usage of trade’ have been demonstrated. Reported cases overwhelmingly support the importance of these concepts.  It must be remembered however, that these are listed as examples of ‘inferences from other circumstances’ are thus illustrative, not exclusive.  To the extent a favorable ‘inference’ can be made from ‘other circumstances’, the advocate has a vehicle to introduce evidence which can establish that result.

The basics of ‘agreement’ are now in place.  However, it is clear from a reading of Section 1-201(b)(12), that this is only one of three elements which must be looked at in determining what the ‘contract’ is:

The other two involve:

  1. The application of the laws of the Uniform Commercial Code to the ‘agreement’;
  2. Supplemental rules of law which may be applicable.

As will be seen in subsequent entries, both of the foregoing can have extraordinary and far reaching impact on what the end result of the ‘agreement’ is in reality.  The potential for favorable drafting of contracts, timely intermediate actions, and creative strategies for litigation will be interwoven into these discussions.

www.ucc-madeeasy.com

The Uniform Commercial Code – Business owners you need to know this code

The Uniform Commercial Code creates the legal foundation and structure of American business transactions.  Everyone engaging in commercial transactions in the United States, on any level, is directly impacted by the Code.  The Uniform Commercial Code was written by some of the best legal minds in the history of the United States legal system.  Their expertise, and the resulting statutory scheme, was greatly enhanced by direct input from leaders in the business and banking communites, thereby insuring that this law would reflect the reality of the business world.

The Uniform Commercial Code governs virtually every phase of a commercial transaction in goods, at the wholesale or retail level: the Code governs all sales and leases of tangible personal property; negotiable instruments such as checks, promissory notes, and bank drafts; the relationship between a bank and its customer; electronic funds transfers; letters of credit; movement of goods in commerce; the sale of commodity paper; and secured financing of goods.

In addition to the 29.4 million small businesses in America whose daily activities are governed and regulated by the UCC, every purchasing consumer in America consistently interacts with the Uniform Commercial Code.

Anyone engaged in business in the United States needs a solid working knowledge of the Uniform Commercial Code.  Such a base of information will increase efficiency, minimize exposure, and generally create a smoother business operation.  This flows from the fact that the UCC incorporates many standard methods of doing business within its text, and creates vehicles whereby new methods can be integrated within the statutory framework of the Code.

www.ucc-madeeasy.com

 

Uniform Commercial Code Article 4 – Bank Deposits and Collections

BANK DEPOSITS AND COLLECTIONS (Excerpts from The Uniform Commercial Code Made Easy www.ucc-madeeasy.com)

Article 4 and Bank Collections: Characterization of the Banks Involved

At the outset it is important to distinguish the manner in which a particular bank is characterized for Article 4 purposes, for oftentimes different duties and liabilities will attend this classification. In fact, Article 4 is roughly broken down into various subparts based upon such classifications. In the instant case, East Dade Bank was a depository, collecting, and presenting bank; ‘depository’ since it was the first bank to which the check was taken for collection;  ‘collecting’ since it was a bank handling the item for collection (and was not the payor bank),  and finally as a ‘presenting bank’  since it presented the item for payment and was not the payor bank.  South Dade Bank, as the drawee, was the ‘payor bank’.

Activities of the Depository-Collecting Bank

      1. Provisional credits
      2. Cash Withdrawals
      3. Timely Action

(more…)