BILLS OF EXCHANGE ACT, 1961 (ACT
55)
As amended by
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
Section
PART I—BILLS OF EXCHANGE
Form and Interpretation
1. Bill of Exchange Defined.
2. Inland and Foreign Bills.
3. Effect where Different Parties
to Bill are the Same Person.
4. Address to Drawee.
5. Certainty Required as to Payee
6. What Bills are Negotiable.
7. Sum Payable.
8. Bill Payable on Demand.
9. Bill Payable at a Future Time.
10. Omission of Date in bill
Payable After Date.
11. Ante-dating and Post-dating.
12. Computation of Time of
Payment.
13. Case of Need.
14. Optional Stipulations by
Drawer or Indorser.
15. Definition and Requisites of
Acceptance.
16. Time for Acceptance.
17. General and Qualified
Acceptances.
18. Inchoate Instruments.
19. Delivery.
Capacity and Authority of Parties
20. Capacity of Parties.
21. Signature Essential to
Liability.
22. Forged or Unauthorised
Signature.
23. Procuration Signatures.
24. Person Signing as Agent or in
Representative Capacity.
The Consideration for a Bill
25. Value and Holder for Value.
26. Accommodation Bill or Party.
27. Holder in Due Course.
28. Presumption of Value and Good
Faith.
Negotiation of Bills
29. Negotiation of Bill.
30. Requisites of a Valid
Indorsement.
31. Conditional Indorsement.
32. Indorsement in Blank and
Special Indorsement.
33. Restrictive Indorsement.
34. Negotiation of Overdue or
Dishonoured Bill.
35. Negotiation of Bill to Party
Already Liable Thereon.
36. Rights of the Holder.
General Duties of the Holder
37. When Presentment for
Acceptance is Necessary.
38. Time for Presenting Bill
Payable After Sight.
39. Rules as to Presentment for
Acceptance, and Excuses for
Non-presentment.
40. Non-acceptance.
41. Dishonour by Non-acceptance
and its Consequences.
42. Duties as to Qualified
Acceptances.
43. Rules as to Presentment for
Payment.
44. Excuses for Delay or
Non-presentment for Payment.
45. Dishonour by Non-payment.
46. Notice of Dishonour and Effect
of Non-notice.
47. Rules as to Notice of
Dishonour.
48. Excuses for Non-notice and
Delay.
49. Noting or Protest of Bill.
50. Duties of Holder as Regards
Drawee or Acceptor.
Liabilities of Parties
51. Funds in Hands of Drawee.
52. Liability of Acceptor.
53. Liability of Drawer or
Indorser.
54. Stranger Signing Bill Liable
as Indorser.
55. Measure of Damages Against
Parties to Dishonoured Bill.
56. Transferor by Delivery and
Transferee.
Discharge of Bill
57. Payment in Due Course.
58. Banker Paying Demand Draft
Whereon Indorsement is Forged.
59. Sufficient Authority to pay
Draft on Bankers without Proof of
Indorsement.
60. Acceptor the Dolder at
Maturity.
61. Express Waiver.
62. Cancellation.
63. Alteration of Bill.
Acceptance and Payment for Honour
64. Acceptance for Honour Supra
Protest.
65. Liability of Acceptor for
Honour.
66. Presentment to Acceptor for
Honour.
67. Payment for Honour Supra
Protest.
Lost Instruments
68. Holder's Right to Duplicate of
Lost Bill.
69. Action on Lost Bill.
Bill in a Set
70. Rules as to Sets.
Conflict of Laws
71. Rules Where Laws Conflict.
PART II—CHEQUES AND SIMILAR
INSTRUMENTS
Cheques on a Banker
72. Cheque Defined.
73. Presentment of Cheque for
Payment.
74. Revocation of Banker's
Authority.
Crossed Cheques
75. General and Special Crossings
Defined.
76. Crossing by Drawer or After
Issue.
77. Crossing a Material Part of
Cheque.
78. Duties of Banker as to Crossed
Cheques.
79. Protection to Banker and
Drawer Where Cheque is Crossed.
80. Effect of Crossing on Holder.
81. Protection to Collecting
Banker.
Other Instruments
82. Application of Sections 75 to
81 to Other Instruments.
PART III—PROMISSORY NOTES
83. Promissory Note Defined.
84. Delivery Necessary.
85. Joint and Several Notes.
86. Note Payable on Demand.
87. Presentment of Note for
Payment.
88. Liability of Maker.
89. Application of Part I to
Notes.
PART IV—SUPPLEMENTARY
90. Good Faith.
91. Signature.
92. Computation of Time.
93. Business and non-business
Days.
94. When Noting Equivalent to
Protest.
95. Protest When Notary not
Accessible.
96. Savings.
97. Interpretation.
98. Statutes Ceasing to Apply.
99. Repeal.
SCHEDULES
First Schedule—Form of Protest
Second Schedule—Statutes Ceasing
to Apply
THE FIFTY-FIFTH
ACT OF THE PARLIAMENT OF THE
REPUBLIC OF GHANA
ENTITLED
THE BILLS OF EXCHANGE ACT, 1961
AN ACT to re-enact, with minor
modifications, the Bills of
Exchange Ordinance (Cap. 195), and
to extend its provisions to the
whole of Ghana.
DATE OF ASSENT: 24th May, 1961
BE IT ENACTED by the President and
the National Assembly in this
present Parliament assembled as
follows:—
PART I—BILLS OF EXCHANGE
Form and Interpretation
Section 1—Bill of Exchange
Defined.
(1) A bill of exchange is an
unconditional order in writing,
addressed by one person to
another, signed by the person
giving it, requiring the person
to whom it is addressed to pay on
demand or at a fixed or
determinable future time a sum
certain in money to or to the
order of a specified person, or to
bearer.
(2) An instrument which does not
comply with these conditions, or
which orders any act to be done in
addition to the payment of money,
is not a bill of exchange.
(3) An order to pay out of a
particular fund is not
unconditional within the meaning
of this section; but an
unqualified order to pay, coupled
with (a) an indication of a
particular fund out of which the
drawee is to reimburse himself, or
a particular account to be debited
with the amount, or (b) a
statement of the transaction which
gives rise to the bill, is
unconditional.
(4) A bill is not invalid by
reason—
(a) that it is not dated;
(b) that it does not specify the
value given, or that any value has
been given therefor;
(c) that it does not specify the
place where it is drawn or the
place where it is payable.
Section 2—Inland and Foreign
Bills.
(1) An inland bill is a bill which
is or on the face of it purports
to be (a) both drawn and payable
within Ghana, or (b) drawn within
Ghana upon some person resident
therein. Any other bill is a
foreign bill.
(2) Unless the contrary appear on
the face of the bill the holder
may treat it as an inland bill.
Section 3—Effect where Different
Parties to a Bill are the Same
Person.
(1) A bill may be drawn payable
to, or to the order of, the
drawer, or it may be drawn payable
to, or to the order of, the
drawee.
(2) Where in a bill the drawer and
the drawee are the same person, or
where the drawee is a fictitious
person or a person not having
capacity to contract, the holder
may treat the instrument, at his
option, either as a bill of
exchange or as a promissory note.
Section 4—Address to Drawee.
(1) The drawee must be named or
otherwise indicated in a bill with
reasonable certainty.
(2) A bill may be addressed to two
or more drawees, whether they are
partners or not, but an order
addressed to two drawees in the
alternative, or to two or more
drawees in succession, is not a
bill of exchange.
Section 5—Certainty Required as to
Payee.
(1) Where a bill is not payable to
bearer the payee must be named or
otherwise indicated therein with
reasonable certainty.
(2) A bill may be made payable to
two or more payees jointly, or it
may be made payable in the
alternative to one of two, or one
or some of several payees. A bill
may also be made payable to the
holder of an office for the time
being.
(3) Where the payee is a
fictitious or non-existing person
the bill may be treated as payable
to bearer.
Section 6—What Bills are
Negotiable.
(1) When a bill contains words
prohibiting transfer or indicating
an intention that it should not be
transferable, it is valid as
between the parties thereto, but
is not negotiable.
(2) A negotiable bill may be
payable either to order or to
bearer.
(3) A bill is payable to bearer
which is expressed to be so
payable or on which the only or
last endorsement is an endorsement
in blank.
(4) A bill is payable to order
which is expressed to be so
payable or which is expressed to
be payable to a particular person,
and does not contain words
prohibiting transfer or indicating
an intention that it should not be
transferable.
(5) Where a bill either originally
or by endorsement is expressed to
be payable to the order of a
specified person, and not to him
or his order, it is nevertheless
payable to him or his order at his
option.
Section 7—Sum Payable.
(1) The sum payable by a bill is a
sum certain within the meaning of
this Act, although it is required
to be paid—
(a) with interest;
(b) by stated instalments;
(c) by stated instalments, with a
provision, that upon default in
payment of any instalment the
whole shall become due;
(d) according to an indicated rate
of exchange or according to a rate
of exchange to be ascertained as
directed by the bill.
(2) Where the sum payable is
expressed in words and also in
figures, and there is a
discrepancy between the two, the
sum denoted by the words is the
amount payable.
(3) Where a bill is expressed to
be payable with interest, unless
the instrument otherwise provides,
interest runs from the date of the
bill, and if the bill is undated
from the issue thereof.
Section 8—Bill Payable on Demand.
(1) A bill is payable on demand—
(a) which is expressed to be
payable on demand or at sight or
on presentation; or
(b) in which no time for payment
is expressed.
(2) Where a bill is accepted or
endorsed when it is overdue it
shall, as regards the acceptor who
so accepts or any endorser who so
endorses it, be deemed a bill
payable on demand.
Section 9—Bill Payable at a Future
Time.
(1) A bill is payable at a
determinable future time within
the meaning of this Act which is
expressed to be payable—
(a) at a fixed period after date
or sight;
(b) on or at a fixed period after
the occurrence of a specified
event which is certain to happen,
though the time of happening may
be uncertain.
(2) An instrument expressed to be
payable on a contingency is not a
bill, and the happening of the
event does not cure the defect.
Section 10—Omission of Date in
Bill Payable After Date.
Where a bill expressed to be
payable at a fixed period after
date is issued undated, or where
the acceptance of a bill payable
at a fixed period after sight is
undated, any holder may insert
therein the true date of issue or
acceptance, and the bill shall be
payable accordingly:
Provided that—
(a) where the holder in good faith
and by mistake inserts a wrong
date, and
(b) in every case where a wrong
date is inserted, if the bill
subsequently comes into the hands
of a holder in due course,
the bill shall not be avoided
thereby, but shall operate and be
payable as if the date so inserted
had been the true date.
Section 11—Ante-dating and
Post-dating.
(1) Where a bill or an acceptance
or any endorsement on a bill is
dated the date shall, unless the
contrary be proved, be deemed to
be the true date of the drawing,
acceptance, or endorsement, as the
case may be.
(2) A bill is not invalid by
reason only that it is ante-dated
or post-dated, or that it bears
date on a Sunday.
Section 12—Computation of Time of
Payment.
Where a bill is not payable on
demand, the day on which it falls
due is determined as follows—
(a) Three days called days of
grace are, in every case where the
bill itself does not otherwise
provide, added to the time of
payment as fixed by the bill, and
the bill is due and payable on the
last day of grace:
Provided that—
(i)
when the last day of grace falls
on Sunday, Christmas Day, or Good
Friday, the bill is, except in the
case hereinafter provided for, due
and payable on the preceding
business day;
(ii) when the last day of grace
falls on any other non-business
day, or when the last day of grace
is a Sunday and the second day of
grace is also a non-business day,
the bill is due and payable on the
succeeding business day.
(b) Where a bill is payable at a
fixed period after date, after
sight, or after the happening of a
specified event;, the time of
payment is determined by excluding
the day from which the time is to
begin to run and by including the
day of payment.
(c) Where a bill is payable at a
fixed period after sight the time
begins to run from the date of the
acceptance if the bill be accepted
and from the date of noting or
protest if the bill be noted or
protested for non-acceptance or
for non-delivery.
(d) The term "month" in a bill
means calendar month.
Section 13—Case of Need.
The drawer of a bill and any
endorser may insert therein the
name of a person to whom the
holder may resort in case of need,
that is to say, in case the bill
is dishonoured by non-acceptance
or non-payment. Such person is
called the referee in case of
need. It is in the option of the
holder to resort to the referee in
case of need or not as he may
think fit.
Section 14—Optional Stipulations
by Drawer or Endorser.
The drawer of a bill and any
endorser may insert therein an
express stipulation—
(a) negativing or limiting own
liability to the holder;
(b) waiving as regards himself
some or all of the holder's
duties.
Section 15—Definition and
Requisites of Acceptance.
(1) The acceptance of a bill is
the signification by the drawee of
his assent to the order of the
drawer.
(2) An acceptance is invalid
unless it complies with the
following conditions, namely
(a) It must be written on the bill
and be signed by the drawee. The
mere signature of the drawee
without additional words is
sufficient.
(b) It must not express that the
drawee will perform his promise by
any other means than the payment
of money.
Section 16—Time for Acceptance.
(1) A bill may be accepted—
(a) before it has been signed by
the drawer or while otherwise
incomplete;
(b) when it is overdue or after it
has been dishonoured by a previous
refusal to accept or by
non-payment.
(2) When a bill payable after
sight is dishonoured by
non-acceptance and the drawee
subsequently accepts it the holder
in the absence of any different
agreement is entitled to have the
bill accepted as of the date of
first presentment to the drawee
for acceptance.
Section 17—General and Qualified
Acceptance.
(1) An acceptance is either (a)
general or (b) qualified.
(2) A general acceptance assents
without qualification to the order
of the drawer. A qualified
acceptance in express terms varies
the effect of the bill as drawn.
In particular an acceptance is
qualified which is—
(a) conditional, that is to say,
which makes payment by the
acceptor dependent on the
fulfilment of a condition therein
stated;
(b) partial, that is to say, an
acceptance to pay part only of the
amount for which the bill is
drawn;
(c) local, that is to say, an
acceptance to pay only at a
particular specified place: an
acceptance to pay at a particular
place is a general acceptance
unless it expressly states that
the bill is to be paid there only
and not elsewhere;
(d) qualified as to time;
(e) the acceptance of some one or
more of the drawees, but not of
all.
Section 18—Inchoate Instrument.
(1) Where a simple signature on a
blank stamped paper is delivered
by the signer in order that it may
be converted into a bill, it
operates as a prima facie
authority to fill it up as a
complete bill for any amount the
stamp will cover, using the
signature for that of the drawer,
or the acceptor, or an endorser;
and, in like manner, when a bill
is wanting in any material
particular, the person in
possession of it has a prima facie
authority to fill up the omission
in any way he thinks fit.
(2) In order that any such
instrument when completed may be
enforceable against any person who
became a party thereto prior to
its completion, it must be filled
up within a reasonable time, and
strictly in accordance with the
authority given. Reasonable time
for this purpose is a question of
fact:
Provided that if any such
instrument after completion is
negotiated to a holder in due
course it shall be valid and
effectual for all purposes in his
hands, and he may enforce it as if
it had been filled up within a
reasonable time and strictly in
accordance with the authority
given.
Section 19—Delivery.
(1) Every contract on a bill,
whether it be the drawer's, the
acceptor's, or an endorser's, is
incomplete and revocable, until
delivery of the instrument in
order to give effect thereto:
Provided that where an acceptance
is written on a bill, and the
drawee gives notice to or
according to the directions of the
person entitled to the bill that
he has accepted it, the acceptance
then becomes complete and
irrevocable.
(2) As between immediate parties,
and as regards a remote party
other than a holder in due course,
the delivery—
(a) in order to be effectual must
be made either by or under the
authority of the party drawing,
accepting, or endorsing, as the
case may be;
(b) may be shown to have been
conditional or for a special
purpose only, and not for the
purpose of transferring the
property in the bill. But if the
bill be in the hands of a holder
in due course a valid delivery of
the bill by all parties prior to
him so as to make them liable to
him is conclusively presumed.
(3) Where a bill is no longer in
the possession of a party who has
signed it as drawer, acceptor, or
endorser, a valid and
unconditional delivery by him is
presumed until the contrary is
proved.
Capacity and Authority of Parties
Section 20—Capacity of Parties.
(1) Capacity to incur liability as
a party to a bill is co-extensive
with capacity to contract:
Provided that nothing in this
section shall enable a corporation
to make itself liable as a drawer,
acceptor, or endorser of a bill
unless it is competent to it so to
do under the law for the time
being in force relating to
corporations.
(2) Where a bill is drawn or
endorsed by an infant, or
corporation having no capacity or
power to incur liability on a
bill, the drawing or endorsement
entitles the holder to receive
payment of the bill, and to
enforce it against any other party
thereto.
Section 21—Signature Essential to
Liability.
No person is liable as drawer,
endorser, or acceptor of a bill
who has not signed it as such:
Provided that—
(a) where a person signs a bill in
a trade or assumed name, he is
liable thereon as if he had signed
it in his own name;
(b) the signature of the name of a
firm is equivalent to the
signature by the person so signing
of the names of all persons liable
as partners in that firm.
Section 22—Forged or Unauthorised
Signature.
Subject to the provisions of this
Act, where a signature on a bill
is forged or placed thereon
without the authority of the
person whose signature it purports
to be, the forged or unauthorised
signature is wholly inoperative,
and no right to retain the bill or
to give a discharge therefor or to
enforce payment thereof against
any party thereto can be acquired
through or under that signature,
unless the party against whom it
is sought to retain or enforce
payment of the bill is precluded
from setting up the forgery or
want of authority:
Provided that nothing in this
section shall affect the
ratification of an unauthorised
signature not amounting to a
forgery.
Section 23—Procuration Signatures.
A
signature by procuration operates
as notice that the agent has but a
limited authority to sign, and the
principal is only bound by such
signature if the agent in so
signing was acting within the
actual limits of his authority.
Section 24—Person Signing as Agent
or in Representative Capacity.
(1) Where a person signs a bill as
drawer, endorser, or acceptor, and
adds words to his signature,
indicating that he signs for or on
behalf of a principal, or in a
representative character, he is
not personally liable thereon; but
the mere addition to his signature
of words describing him as an
agent, or as filling a
representative character, does not
exempt him from personal
liability.
(2) In determining whether a
signature on a bill is that of the
principal or that of the agent by
whose hands it is written, the
construction most favourable to
the validity of the instrument
shall be adopted.
The Consideration for a Bill
Section 25—Value and Holder for
Value.
(1) Valuable consideration for a
bill may be constituted by—
(a) any consideration sufficient
to support a simple contract;
(b) an antecedent debt or
liability. Such a debt or
liability is deemed valuable
consideration whether the bill is
payable on demand or at a future
time.
(2) Where value has at any time
been given for a bill the holder
is deemed to be a holder for
value as regards the acceptor and
all parties to the bill who become
parties prior to such time.
(3) Where the holder of a bill has
a lien on it arising either from
contract or by implication of law,
he is deemed to be a holder for
value to the extent of the sum for
which he has a lien.
Section 26—Accommodation Bill or
Party.
(1) An accommodation party to a
bill is a person who has signed a
bill as drawer, acceptor, or
endorser, without receiving value
therefor, and for the purpose of
lending his name to some other
person.
(2) An accommodation party is
liable on the bill to a holder for
value; and it is immaterial
whether, when such holder took the
bill, he knew such party to be an
accommodation party or not.
Section 27—Holder in Due Course.
(1) A holder in due course is a
holder who has taken a bill,
complete and regular on the face
of it, under the following
conditions, namely—
(a) that he became the holder of
it before it was overdue, and
without notice that it had been
previously dishonoured, if such
was the fact; [As amended by Bills
of Exchange (Amendment) Decree,
1966 (NLCD 120)].
(b) that he took the bill in good
faith and for value, and that at
the time the bill was negotiated
to him he had no notice of any
defect in the title of the person
who negotiated it.
(2) In particular the title of a
person who negotiates a bill is
defective within the meaning of
this Act when he obtains the bill,
or the acceptance thereof, by
fraud, duress, or force and fear,
or other unlawful means, or for an
illegal consideration, or when he
negotiates it in breach of faith,
or under such circumstances as
amount to a fraud.
(3) A holder (whether for value or
not), who derives his title to a
bill through a holder in due
course, and who is not himself a
party to any fraud or illegality
affecting it, has all the rights
of that holder in due course as
regards the acceptor and all
parties to the bill prior to that
holder.
Section 28—Presumption of Value
and Good Faith.
(1) Every party whose signature
appears on a bill is prima facie
deemed to have become a party
thereto for value.
(2) Every holder of a bill is
prima facie deemed to be a holder
in due course; but if in an action
on a bill it is admitted or proved
that the acceptance, issue, or
subsequent negotiation of the bill
is affected with fraud, duress, or
force and fear, or illegality, the
burden of proof is shifted unless
and until the holder proves that,
subsequent to the alleged fraud or
illegality, value has in good
faith been given for the bill.
Negotiation of Bills
Section 29—Negotiation of Bill.
(1) A bill is negotiated when it
is transferred from one person to
another in such a manner as to
constitute the transferee the
holder of the bill.
(2) A bill payable to bearer is
negotiated by delivery.
(3) A bill payable to order is
negotiated by the endorsement of
the holder completed by delivery.
(4) Where the holder of a bill
payable to his order transfers it
for value without endorsing it,
the transfer gives the transferee
such title as the transferor had
in the bill, and the transferee in
addition acquires the right to
have the endorsement of the
transferor.
(5) Where any person is under
obligation to endorse a bill in a
representative capacity, he may
endorse the bill in such terms as
to negative personal liability.
Section 30—Requisites of a Valid
Endorsement.
An endorsement in order to operate
as a negotiation must comply with
the following conditions, namely—
(a) It must be written on the bill
itself and be signed by the
endorser. The simple signature of
the endorser on the bill, without
additional words, is sufficient.
An endorsement written on an
allonge, or on a "copy" of a bill
issued or negotiated in a country
where "copies" are recognised, is
deemed to be written on the bill
itself.
(b) It must be an endorsement of
the entire bill. A partial
endorsement, that is to say, an
endorsement which purports to
transfer to the endorsee a part
only of the amount payable, or
which purports to transfer the
bill to two or more endorsees
severally does not operate as a
negotiation of the bill.
(c) Where a bill is payable to the
order of two or more payees or
endorsees who are not partners,
all must endorse, unless the one
endorsing has authority to endorse
for the others.
(d) Where, in a bill payable to
order, the payee or endorsee is
wrongly designated or his name is
mis-spelt, he may endorse the bill
as therein described, adding, if
he thinks fit, his proper
signature.
(e) Where there are two or more
endorsements on a bill each
endorsement is deemed to have been
made in the order in which it
appears on the bill, until the
contrary is proved.
(f) An endorsement may be made in
blank or special. It may also
contain terms making it
restrictive.
Section 31—Conditional
Endorsement.
Where a bill purports to be
endorsed conditionally the
condition may be disregarded by
the payer, and payment to the
endorsee is valid whether the
condition has been fulfilled or
not.
Section 32—Endorsement in Blank
and Special Endorsement.
(1) An endorsement in blank
specifies no endorsee, and a bill
so endorsed becomes payable to
bearer.
(2) A special endorsement
specifies the person to whom, or
to whose order, the bill is to be
payable.
(3) The provisions of this Act
relating to a payee apply with the
necessary modifications to an
endorsee under a special
endorsement.
(4) When a bill has been endorsed
in blank, any holder may convert
the blank endorsement into a
special endorsement by writing
above the endorser's signature a
direction to pay the bill to or to
the order of himself or some other
person.
Section 33—Restrictive
Endorsement.
(1) An endorsement is restrictive
which prohibits the further
negotiation of the bill or which
expresses that it is a mere
authority to deal with the bill as
thereby directed, and not a
transfer of the ownership thereof,
as, for example, if a bill be
endorsed "Pay D. only," or Pay D.
for the account of X.," or "Pay D.
or order for collection."
(2) A restrictive endorsement
gives the endorsee the right to
receive payment of the bill and to
sue any party thereto that his
endorser could have sued, but
gives him no power to transfer his
rights as endorsee unless it
expressly authorises him to do so.
(3) Where a restrictive
endorsement authorises further
transfer, all subsequent endorsees
take the bill with the same rights
and subject to the same
liabilities as the first endorsee
under the restrictive endorsement.
Section 34—Negotiation of Overdue
or Dishonoured Bill.
(1) Where a bill is negotiable in
its origin it continues to be
negotiable until it has been (a)
restrictively endorsed, or (b)
discharged by payment or
otherwise.
(2) Where an overdue bill is
negotiated, it can only be
negotiated subject to any defect
of title affecting it at its
maturity, and thenceforward no
person who takes it can acquire or
give a better title than that
which the person from whom he took
it had.
(3) A bill payable on demand is
deemed to be overdue within the
meaning and for the purposes of
this section when it appears on
the face of it to have been in
circulation for an unreasonable
length of time. What is an
unreasonable length of time for
this purpose is a question of
fact.
(4) Except where an endorsement
bears date after the maturity of
the bill, every negotiation is
prima facie deemed to have been
effected before the bill was
overdue.
(5) Where a bill which is not
overdue has been dishonoured any
person who takes it with notice of
the dishonour takes it subject to
any defect of title attaching
thereto at the time of dishonour,
but nothing in this subsection
shall affect the rights of a
holder in due course.
Section 35—Negotiation of Bill to
Party Already Liable Thereon.
Where a bill is negotiated back to
the drawer, or to a prior
endorser, or to the acceptor, such
party may, subject to the
provisions of this Act, re-issue
and further negotiate the bill,
but he is not entitled to enforce
payment of the bill against any
intervening party to whom he was
previously liable.
Section 36—Rights of the Holder.
The rights and powers of the
holder of a bill are as follows—
(a) He may sue on the bill in his
own name.
(b) Where he is a holder in due
course, he holds the bill free
from any defect of title of prior
parties, as well as from mere
personal defences available to
prior parties among themselves,
and may enforce payment against
all parties liable on the bill.
(c) Where his title is defective (i)
if he negotiates the bill to a
holder in due course, that holder
obtains a good and complete title
to the bill, and (ii) if he
obtains payment of the bill the
person who pays him in due course
gets a valid discharge for the
bill.
General Duties of the Holder
Section 37—When Presentments
Acceptance is Necessary
(1) Where a bill is payable after
sight, presentment for acceptance
is necessary in order to fix the
maturity of the instrument.
(2) Where a bill expressly
stipulates that it shall be
presented for acceptance, or where
a bill is drawn payable elsewhere
than at the residence or place of
business of the drawee, it must be
presented for acceptance before it
can be presented for payment.
(3) In no other case is
presentment for acceptance
necessary in order to render
liable any party to the bill.
(4) Where the holder of a bill,
drawn payable elsewhere than at
the place of business or residence
of the drawee, has not time, with
the exercise of reasonable
diligence, to present the bill for
acceptance before presenting it
for payment on the day that it
falls due, the delay caused by
presenting the bill for acceptance
before presenting it for payment
is excused, and does not discharge
the drawer and the endorsers.
Section 38—Time for Presenting
Bill Payable After Sight.
(1) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, when a bill payable
after sight is negotiated, the
holder must either present it for
acceptance or negotiate it within
a reasonable time.
(2) If he does not do so, the
drawer and all endorsers prior to
the holder are discharged.
(3) In determining what is a
reasonable time within the meaning
of this section, regard shall be
had to the nature of the bill, the
usage of trade with respect to
similar bills, and the facts of
the particular case.
Section 39—Rules as to Presentment
for Acceptance, and Excuses for
Non-presentment.
(1) A bill is duly presented for
acceptance which is presented in
accordance with the following
rules—
(a) the presentment must be made
by or on behalf of the holder to
the drawee or to some person
authorised to accept or refuse
acceptance on his behalf at a
reasonable hour on a business day
and before the bill is overdue;
(b) where a bill is addressed to
two or more drawees, who are not
partners, presentment must be made
to them all, unless one has
authority to accept for all, then
presentment may be made to him
only;
(c) where the drawee is dead
presentment may be made to his
personal representative;
(d) where the drawee is insolvent
presentment may be made to him or
to his trustee;
(e) where authorised by agreement
or usage, a presentment through
the post office is sufficient.
(2) Presentment in accordance with
these rules is excused, and a bill
may be treated as dishonoured by
non-acceptance—
(a) where the drawee is dead, or
insolvent, or is a fictitious
person, or a person not having
capacity to contract by bill;
(b) where, after the exercise of
reasonable diligence, such
presentment cannot be effected;
(c) where, although the
presentment has been irregular,
acceptance has been refused on
some other grounds.
(3) The fact that the holder has
reason to believe that the bill on
presentment will be dishonoured
does not excuse presentment.
Section 40—Non-acceptance.
When a bill is duly presented for
acceptance and is not accepted
within the customary time, the
person presenting it must treat it
as dishonoured by non-acceptance.
If he does not the holder shall
lose his right of recourse against
the drawer and endorsers.
Section 41—Dishonour by
Non-acceptance and Its
Consequence.
(1) A bill is dishonoured by
non-acceptance—
(a) when it is duly presented for
acceptance, and such an acceptance
as is prescribed by this Act is
refused or cannot be obtained; or
(b) when presentment for
acceptance is excused and the bill
is not accepted.
(2) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, when a bill is
dishonoured by non-acceptance, an
immediate right of recourse
against the drawer and endorsers
accrues to the holder, and no
presentment for payment is
necessary.
Section 42—Duties as to Qualified
Acceptances.
(1) The holder of a bill may
refuse to take a qualified
acceptance, and if he does not
obtain an unqualified acceptance
may treat the bill as dishonoured
by non-acceptance.
(2) Where a qualified acceptance
is taken, and the drawer or an
endorser has not expressly or
impliedly authorised the holder to
take a qualified acceptance, or
does not subsequently assent
thereto, such drawer or endorser
is discharged from his liability
on the bill.
The provisions of this subsection
do not apply to a partial
acceptance, whereof due notice has
been given. Where a foreign bill
has been accepted as to part, it
must be protested as to the
balance.
(3) When the drawer or endorser of
a bill receives notice of a
qualified acceptance, and does not
within a reasonable time express
his dissent to the holder he shall
be deemed to have assented
thereto.
Section 43—Rules as to Presentment
for Payment.
(1) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, a bill must be duly
presented for payment. If it be
not so presented the drawer and
the endorsers shall be discharged.
(2) A bill is duly presented for
payment which is presented in
accordance with the following
rules
(a) Where the bill is not payable
on demand, presentment must be
made on the day it falls due.
(b) Where the bill is payable on
demand, then, subject to the
provisions of this Act,
presentment must be made within a
reasonable time after its issue in
order to render the drawer liable,
and within a reasonable time after
its endorsement, in order to
render the endorser liable.
In determining what is a
reasonable time, regard shall be
had to the nature of the bill, the
usage of trade with regard to
similar bills, and the facts of
the particular case.
(c) Presentment must be made by
the holder or by some person
authorised to receive payment on
his behalf at a reasonable hour on
a business day, at the proper
place as hereinafter defined,
either to the person designated by
the bill as payer, or to some
person authorised to pay or refuse
payment on his behalf if with the
exercise of reasonable diligence
such person can there be found.
(d) A bill is presented at the
proper place -
(i)
Where a place of payment is
specified in the bill and the bill
is there presented.
(ii) Where no place of payment is
specified, but the address of
drawee or acceptor is given in the
bill, and the bill is there
presented.
(iii) Where no place of payment is
specified and no address given,
and the bill is presented at the
drawee's or acceptor's place of
business if known, and, if not, at
his ordinary residence if known.
(iv) In any other case if
presented to the drawee or
acceptor wherever he can be found,
or if presented at his last known
place of business or residence.
(e) Where a bill is presented at
the proper place, and after the
exercise of reasonable diligence
no person authorised to pay or
refuse payment can be found there,
no further presentment to the
drawee or acceptor is required.
(f) Where a bill is drawn upon, or
accepted by two or more persons
who are not partners, and no place
of payment is specified,
presentment must be made to them
all.
(g) Where the drawee or acceptor
of a bill is dead, and no place of
payment is specified, presentment
must be made to a personal
representative, if such there be,
and with the exercise of
reasonable diligence he can be
found.
(h) Where authorised by agreement
or usage a presentment through the
post office is sufficient.
Section 44—Excuses for Delay or
Non-presentment for Payment.
(1) Delay in making presentment
for payment is excused when the
delay is caused by circumstances
beyond the control of the holder,
and not imputable to his default,
misconduct, or negligence. When
the cause of delay ceases to
operate presentment must be made
with reasonable diligence.
(2) Presentment for payment is
dispensed with—
(a) Where after the exercise of
reasonable diligence presentment,
as required by this Act, cannot be
effected. The fact that the holder
has reason to believe that the
bill will, on presentment, be
dishonoured, does not dispense
with the necessity for
presentment.
(b) Where the drawee is a
fictitious person.
(c) As regards the drawer where
the drawee or acceptor is not
bound, as between himself and the
drawer, to accept or pay the bill,
and the drawer has no reason to
believe that the bill would be
paid if presented.
(d) As regards an endorser, where
the bill was accepted or made for
the accommodation of that
endorser, and he has no reason to
expect that the bill would be paid
if presented.
(e) By waiver of presentment,
express or implied.
Section 45—Dishonour by
Non-payment.
(1) A bill is dishonoured by
non-payment (a) when it is duly
presented for payment and payment
is refused or cannot be obtained,
or (b) when presentment is excused
and the bill is overdue and
unpaid.
(2) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, when a bill is
dishonoured by non-payment, an
immediate right or recourse
against the drawer and endorsers
accrues to the holder.
Section 46—Notice of Dishonour and
Effect of Non-notice.
Subject to the provisions of this
Act, when a bill has been
dishonoured by non-acceptance or
by non-payment, notice of
dishonour must be given to the
drawer and each endorser, and any
drawer or endorser to whom such
notice is not given is discharged:
Provided that—
(a) Where a bill is dishonoured by
non-acceptance, and notice of
dishonour is not given, the rights
of a holder in due course
subsequent to the omission, shall
not be prejudiced by the omission.
(b) Where a bill is dishonoured by
non-acceptance, and due notice of
dishonour is given, it shall not
be necessary to give notice of a
subsequent dishonour by
non-payment unless the bill shall
in the meantime have been
accepted.
Section 47—Rules as to Notice of
Dishonour.
Notice of dishonour in order to be
valid and effectual must be given
in accordance with the following
rules—
(a) The notice must be given by or
on behalf of the holder, or by or
on behalf of an endorser who, at
the time of giving it, is himself
liable on the bill.
(b) Notice of dishonour may be
given by an agent either in his
own name or in the name of any
party entitled to give notice
whether that party be his
principal or not.
(c) Where the notice is given by
or on behalf of the holder, it
enures for the benefit of all
subsequent holders and all prior
endorsers who have a right of
recourse against the party to whom
it is given.
(d) Where notice is given by or on
behalf of an endorser entitled to
give notice as hereinbefore
provided, it enures for the
benefit of the holder and all
endorsers subsequent to the party
to whom notice is given.
(e) The notice may be given in
writing or by personal
communication, and may be given in
any terms which sufficiently
identify the bill, and intimate
that the bill has been dishonoured
by non-acceptance or non-payment.
(f) The return of a dishonoured
bill to the drawer or an endorser
is, in point of form, deemed a
sufficient notice of dishonour.
(g) A written notice need not be
signed, and an insufficient
written notice may be supplemented
and validated by verbal
communication. A mis-description
of the bill shall not vitiate the
notice unless the party to whom
the notice is given is in fact
misled thereby.
(h) Where notice of dishonour is
required to be given to any
person, it may be given either to
the party himself, or to his agent
in that behalf.
(i)
Where the drawer or endorser is
dead, and the party giving notice
knows it, the notice must be given
to a personal representative if
such there be, and with the
exercise of reasonable diligence
he can be found.
(j) Where the drawer or endorser
is insolvent, notice may be given
either to the party himself or to
the trustee.
(k) Where there are two or more
drawers or endorsers who are not
partners, notice must be given to
each of them, unless one of them
has authority to receive such
notice for the others.
(l) The notice may be given as
soon as the bill is dishonoured
and must be given within a
reasonable time thereafter.
In the absence of special
circumstances notice is not deemed
to have been given within a
reasonable time unless—
(i)
Where the person giving and the
person to receive notice reside in
the same place, the notice is
given or sent off in time to reach
the latter on the day after the
dishonour of the bill.
(ii) Where the person giving and
the person to receive notice
reside in different places, the
notice is sent off on the day
after the dishonour of the bill,
if there be a post at a convenient
hour on the day, and if there be
no such post on that day then by
the next post thereafter.
(m) Where a bill when dishonoured
is in the hands of an agent, he
may either himself give notice to
the parties liable on the bill, or
he may give notice to his
principal. If he gives notice to
his principal, he must do so
within the same time as if he were
the holder, and the principal upon
receipt of such notice has himself
the same time for giving notice as
if the agent had been an
independent holder.
(n) Where a party to a bill
receives due notice of dishonour,
he has after the receipt of such
notice the same period of time for
giving notice to antecedent
parties that the holder has after
the dishonour.
(o) Where a notice of dishonour is
duly addressed and posted, the
sender is deemed to have given due
notice of dishonour,
notwithstanding any miscarriage by
the post office.
Section 48—Excuses for Non-notice
and Delay.
(1) Delay in giving notice of
dishonour is excused where the
delay is caused by circumstances
beyond the control of the party
giving notice, and not imputable
to his default, misconduct, or
negligence. When the cause of
delay ceases to operate the notice
must be given with reasonable
diligence.
(2) Notice of dishonour is
dispensed with—
(a) when, after the exercise of
reasonable diligence, notice as
required by this Act cannot be
given to or does not reach the
drawer or endorser sought to be
charged;
(b) by waiver express or implied.
Notice of dishonour may be waived
before the time of giving notice
has arrived, or after the
omission to give due notice;
(c) as regards the drawer in the
following cases, namely
(i)
where drawer and drawee are the
same person;
(ii) where the drawee is a
fictitious person or a person not
having capacity to contract;
(iii) where the drawer is the
person to whom the bill is
presented for payment;
(iv) where the drawee or acceptor
is as between himself and the
drawer under no obligation to
accept or pay the bill;
(v) where the drawer has
countermanded payment;
(d) as regards the endorser in the
following cases, namely—
(i)
where the drawee is a fictitious
person or a person not having the
capacity to contract and the
endorser was aware of the fact at
the time he endorsed the bill;
(ii) where the endorser is the
person to whom the bill is
presented for payment;
(iii) where the bill was accepted
or made for his accommodation.
Section 49—Noting or Protest of
Bill.
(1) Where an inland bill has been
dishonoured it may, if the holder
thinks fit, be noted for
non-acceptance or non-payment, as
the case may be; but it shall not
be necessary to note or protest
any such bill in order to preserve
the recourse against the drawer or
endorser.
(2) Where a foreign bill,
appearing on the face of it to be
such, has been dishonoured by
non-acceptance it must be duly
protested for non-acceptance, and
where such a bill, which has not
been previously dishonoured by
non-acceptance, is dishonoured by
non-payment it must be duly
protested for non-payment. If it
be not so protested the drawer and
endorsers are discharged. Where a
bill does not appear on the face
of it to be a foreign bill,
protest thereof in case of
dishonour is unnecessary.
(3) A bill which has been
protested for non-acceptance may
be subsequently protested for
non-payment.
(4) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, when a bill is noted or
protested, it may be noted on the
day of its dishonour and must be
noted not later than the next
succeeding business day. When a
bill has been duly noted, the
protest may be subsequently
extended as of the date of the
noting.
(5) Where the acceptor of a bill
becomes insolvent or suspends
payment before it matures, the
holder may cause the bill to be
protested for better security
against the drawer and endorsers.
(6) A bill must be protested at
the place where it is dishonoured:
Provided that—
(a) when a bill is presented
through the post office, and
returned by post dishonoured, it
may be protested at the place to
which it is returned and on the
day of its return if received
during business hours, and if not
received during business hours,
then not later than the next
business day;
(b) when a bill drawn payable at
the place of business or residence
of some person other than the
drawee, has been dishonoured by
non-acceptance it must be
protested for non-payment at the
place where it is expressed to be
payable, and no further
presentments for payment to, or
demand on, the drawee is
necessary.
(7) A protest must contain a copy
of the bill, and must be signed by
the notary making it, and must
specify—
(a) the person at whose request
the bill is protested;
(b) the place and date of protest,
the cause or reason for protesting
the bill, the demand made, and the
answer given, if any, or the fact
that the drawee or acceptor could
not be found.
(8) Where a bill is lost or
destroyed, or is wrongly detained
from the person entitled to hold
it, protest may be made on a copy
or written particulars thereof.
(9) Protest is dispensed with by
any circumstances which would
dispense with notice of dishonour.
Delay in noting or protesting is
excused when the delay is caused
by circumstances beyond the
control of the holder, and not
imputable to his default,
misconduct, or negligence. When
the cause of delay ceases to
operate the bill must be noted or
protested with reasonable
diligence.
Section 50—Duties of Holder as
Regards Acceptor.
(1) When a bill is accepted
generally presentment for payment
is not necessary in order to
render the acceptor liable.
(2) When by the terms of a
qualified acceptance presentment
for payment is required, the
acceptor, in the absence of an
express stipulation to that
effect, is not discharged by the
omission to present the bill for
payment on the day it matures.
(3) In order to render the
acceptor of a bill liable it is
not necessary to protest it, or
that notice of dishonour should be
given to him.
(4) Where the holder of a bill
presents it for payment, he shall
exhibit the bill to the person
from whom he demands payment, and
when a bill is paid the holder
shall forthwith deliver it up to
the party paying it.
Liabilities of Parties
Section 51—Funds in Hands of
Drawee.
A
bill, of itself, does not operate
as an assignment of funds in the
hands of the drawee available for
the payment thereof, and the
drawee of a bill who does not
accept as required by this Act is
not liable on the instrument.
Section 52—Liability of Acceptor.
The acceptor of a bill by
accepting it—
(a) engages that he will pay it
according to the tenor of his
acceptance;
(b) is precluded from denying to a
holder in due course—
(i)
the existence of the drawer, the
genuineness of his signature, and
his capacity and authority to draw
the bill;
(ii) in the case of a bill payable
to drawer's order the then
capacity of the drawer to endorse,
but not the genuineness or
validity of his endorsement;
(iii) in the case of a bill
payable to the order of a third
person, the existence of the payee
and his then capacity to endorse,
but not the genuineness or
validity of his endorsement.
Section 53—Liability of Drawer or
Endorser.
(1) The drawer of a bill by
drawing it—
(a) engages that on due
presentment it shall be accepted
and paid according to its tenor,
and that if it be dishonoured he
will compensate the holder or any
endorser who is compelled to pay
it, provided that the requisite
proceedings on dishonour be duly
taken;
(b) is precluded from denying to a
holder in due course the
existence of the payee and his
then capacity to endorse.
(2) The endorser of a bill by
endorsing it—
(a) engages that on due
presentment it shall be accepted
and paid according to its tenor,
and that if it be dishonoured he
will compensate the holder or a
subsequent endorser who is
compelled to pay it, provided that
the requisite proceedings on
dishonour be duly taken;
(b) is precluded from denying to a
holder in due course the
genuineness and regularity in all
respects of the drawer's signature
and all previous endorsements;
(c) is precluded from denying to
his immediate or a subsequent
endorsee that the bill was at the
time of his endorsement a valid
and subsisting bill, and that he
had then a good title thereto.
Section 54—Stranger Signing Bill
Liable as Endorser.
Where a person signs a bill
otherwise than as drawer or
acceptor, he thereby incurs the
liabilities of an endorser to a
holder in due course.
Section 55—Measure of Damages
Against Parties to Dishonoured
Bill.
Where a bill is dishonoured, the
measure of damages, which shall be
deemed to be liquidated damages,
shall be as follows—
(a) The holder may recover from
any party liable on the bill, and
the drawer who has been compelled
to pay the bill may recover from
the acceptor, and an endorser who
has been compelled to pay the bill
may recover from the acceptor or
from the drawer, or from a prior
endorser—
(i)
the amount of the bill;
(ii) interest thereon from the
time of presentment for payment if
the bill is payable on demand, and
from the maturity of the bill in
any other case;
(iii) the expenses of noting, or,
when protest is necessary, and the
protest has been extended, the
expenses of protest.
(b) In the case of a bill which
has been dishonoured abroad, in
lieu of the above damages, the
holder may recover from the drawer
or an endorser, and the drawer or
an endorser who has been compelled
to pay the bill may recover from
any party liable to him the amount
of the re-exchange with interest
thereon until the time of payment.
(c) Where by this Act interest may
be recovered as damages, such
interest may, if justice require
it, be withheld wholly or in part,
and where a bill is expressed to
be payable with interest at a
given rate, interest as damages
may or may not be given at the
same rate as interest proper.
Section 56—Transferor by Delivery
and Transferee.
(1) Where the holder of a bill
payable to bearer negotiates it by
delivery without endorsing it, he
is called a "transferor by
delivery".
(2) A transferor by delivery is
not liable on the instrument.
(3) A transferor by delivery who
negotiates a bill thereby warrants
to his immediate transferee being
a holder for value that the bill
is what it purports to be, that he
has a right to transfer it, and
that at the time of transfer he is
not aware of any fact which
renders it valueless.
Discharge of Bill
Section 57—Payment in Due Course.
(1) A bill is discharged by
payment in due course by or on
behalf of the drawee or acceptor.
"Payment in due course" means
payment made at or after the
maturity of the bill to the holder
thereof in good faith and without
notice that his title to the bill
is defective.
(2) Subject to the provisions
hereinafter contained, when a bill
is paid by the drawer or an
endorser it is not discharged;
but—
(a) where a bill payable to, or to
the order of, a third party is
paid by the drawer, the drawer may
enforce payment thereof against
the acceptor, but may not re-issue
the bill;
(b) where a bill is paid by an
endorser, or where a bill payable
to drawer's order is paid by the
drawer, the party paying it is
remitted to his former rights as
regards the acceptor or antecedent
parties, and he may, if he thinks
fit, strike out his own and
subsequent endorsements, and again
negotiate the bill.
(3) Where an accommodation bill is
paid in due course by the party
accommodated the bill is
discharged.
Section 58—Banker Paying Demand
Draft Whereon Endorsement is
Forged.
When a bill payable to order on
demand is drawn on a banker, and
the banker on whom it is drawn
pays the bill in good faith and in
the ordinary course of business,
it is not incumbent on the banker
to show that the endorsement of
the payee or any subsequent
endorsement was made by or under
the authority of the person whose
endorsement it purports to be, and
the banker is deemed to have paid
the bill in due course, although
such endorsement has been forged
or made without authority.
Section 59—Sufficient Authority to
Pay Draft on Bankers Without Proof
of Indorsement.
Any draft or order drawn whether
in or out of Ghana upon a banker
whether in or out of Ghana for a
sum of money payable to order on
demand or at some other time which
shall, when presented for payment,
purport to be endorsed by the
person to whom the same shall be
drawn payable, shall be a
sufficient authority to such
banker to pay the amount of such
draft or order to the bearer
thereof; and it shall not be
incumbent on such banker to prove
that such endorsement, or any
subsequent endorsement, was made
by or under the direction or
authority of the person to whom
the said draft or order was or is
made payable either by the drawer
or any endorser thereof.
Section 60—Acceptor the Holder at
Maturity.
When the acceptor of a bill is or
becomes the holder of it at or
after its maturity, in his own
right, the bill is discharged.
Section 61—Express Waiver.
(1) When the holder of a bill at
or after its maturity absolutely
and unconditionally renounces his
rights against the acceptor, the
bill is discharged. The
renunciation must be in writing,
unless the bill is delivered up to
the acceptor.
(2) The liabilities of any party
to a bill may in like manner be
renounced by the holder before,
at, or after its maturity, but
nothing in this section shall
affect the rights of a holder in
due course without notice of the
renunciation.
Section 62—Cancellation.
(1) Where a bill is intentionally
cancelled by the holder or his
agent, and the cancellation is
apparent thereon, the bill is
discharged.
(2) In like manner any party
liable on a bill may be discharged
by the intentional cancellation of
his signature by the holder or his
agent. In such case any endorser
who would have had a right of
recourse against the party whose
signature is cancelled, is also
discharged.
(3) A cancellation made
unintentionally, or under a
mistake, or without the authority
of the holder is inoperative; but
where a bill or any signature
thereon appears to have been
cancelled, the burden of proof
lies on the party who alleges that
the cancellation was made
unintentionally, or under a
mistake, or without authority.
Section 63—Alteration of Bill.
(1) Where a bill or acceptance is
materially altered without the
assent of all parties liable on
the bill, the bill is avoided
except as against a party who has
himself made, authorised, or
assented to the alteration, and
subsequent endorsers:
Provided that where a bill has
been materially altered, but the
alteration is not apparent, and
the bill is in the hands of a
holder in due course, such holder
may avail himself of the bill as
if it had not been altered, and
may enforce payment of it
according to its original tenor.
(2) In particular the following
alterations are material, namely,
any alteration of the date, the
sum payable, the time of payment,
the place of payment, and, where a
bill has been accepted generally,
the addition of a place of payment
without the acceptor's assent.
Acceptance and Payment for Honour
Section 64—Acceptance for Honour
Supra Protest.
(1) Where a bill of exchange has
been protested for dishonour by
non-acceptance, or protested for
better security, and is not
overdue, any person, not being a
party already liable thereon, may,
with the consent of the holder,
intervene and accept the bill
supra protest, for the honour of
any party liable thereon, or for
the honour of the person for whose
account the bill is drawn.
(2) A bill may be accepted for
honour for part only of the sum
for which it is drawn.
(3) An acceptance for honour supra
protest in order to be valid must—
(a) be written on the bill, and
indicate that it is an acceptance
for honour;
(b) be signed by the acceptor for
honour.
(4) Where an acceptance for honour
does not expressly state for whose
honour it is made, it is deemed to
be an acceptance for the honour of
the drawer.
(5) Where a bill payable after
sight is accepted for honour, its
maturity is calculated from the
date of the noting for
non-acceptance, and not from the
date of the acceptance for honour.
Section 65—Liability of Acceptor
for Honour.
(1) The acceptor for honour of a
bill by accepting it engages that
he will, on due presentment, pay
the bill according to the tenor of
his acceptance, if it is not paid
by the drawee, provided it has
been duly presented for payment,
and protested for non-payment, and
that he receives notice of these
facts.
(2) The acceptor for honour is
liable to the holder and to all
parties to the bill subsequent to
the party for whose honour he has
accepted.
Section 66—Presentment to Acceptor
for Honour.
(1) Where a dishonoured bill has
been accepted for honour supra
protest, or contains a reference
in case of need, it must be
protested for non-payment before
it is presented for payment to the
acceptor for honour, or referee in
case of need.
(2) Where the address of the
acceptor for honour is in the same
place where the bill is protested
for non-payment, the bill must be
presented to him not later than
the day following its maturity,
and where the address of the
acceptor for honour is in some
place other than the place where
it was protested for non-payment,
the bill must be forwarded not
later than the day following its
maturity for presentment to him.
(3) Delay in presentment or
non-presentment is excused by any
circumstance which would excuse
delay in presentment for payment
or non-presentment for payment.
(4) When a bill of exchange is
dishonoured by the acceptor for
honour it must be protested for
non-payment by him.
Section 67—Payment for Honour
Supra Protest.
(1) Where a bill has been
protested for non-payment any
person may intervene and pay it
supra protest for the honour of
any party liable thereon, or for
the honour of the person for whose
account the bill is drawn.
(2) Where two or more persons
offer to pay a bill for the honour
of different parties, the person
whose payment will discharge most
parties to the bill shall have the
preference.
(3) Payment for honour supra
protest, in order to operate as
such and not as a mere voluntary
payment, must be attested by a
notarial act of honour which may
be appended to the protest or form
an extension of it.
(4) The notarial act of honour
must be founded on a declaration
made by the payer for honour, or
his agent in that behalf,
declaring his intention to pay the
bill for honour, and for whose
honour he pays.
(5) Where a bill has been paid for
honour, all parties subsequent to
the party for whose honour it is
paid are discharged, but the payer
for honour is subrogated for, and
succeeds to both the rights and
duties of, the holder as regards
the party for whose honour he pays
and all parties liable to that
party.
(6) The payer for honour on paying
to the holder the amount of the
bill and the notarial expenses
incidental to its dishonour is
entitled to receive both the bill
itself and the protest. If the
holder does not on demand deliver
them up he shall be liable to the
payer for honour in damages.
(7) Where the holder of a bill
refuses to receive payment supra
protest he shall lose his right of
recourse against any party who
would have been discharged by such
payment.
Lost Instruments
Section 68—Holder's Right to
Duplicate of Lost Bill.
(1) Where a bill has been lost
before it is overdue, the person
who was the holder of it may apply
for the drawer to give him another
bill of the same tenor, giving
security to the drawer if required
to indemnify him against all
persons whatever in case the bill
alleged to have been lost shall be
found again.
(2) If the drawer on request as
aforesaid refuses to give such
duplicate bill he may be compelled
to do so.
Section 69—Action on Lost Bill.
In any action or proceeding upon a
bill, the Court may order that the
loss of the instrument shall not
be set up, provided that an
indemnity be given to the
satisfaction of the Court against
the claims of any other person
upon the instrument in question.
Bill in a Set
Section 70—Rules as to Sets.
(1) Where a bill is drawn in a
set, each part of the set being
numbered, and containing a
reference to the other parts, the
whole of the parts constitutes one
bill.
(2) Where the holder of a set
endorses two or more parts to
different persons, he is liable on
every such part, and every
endorser subsequent to him is
liable on the part he has himself
endorsed as if the parts were
separate bills.
(3) Where two or more parts of a
set are negotiated to different
holders in due course, the holder
whose title first accrues is as
between such holders deemed the
true owner of the bill; but
nothing in this subsection shall
affect the rights of a person who
in due course accepts or pays the
part first presented to him.
(4) The acceptance may be written
on any part, and it must be
written on one part only.
If the drawee accepts more than
one part, and such accepted parts
get into the hands of different
holders in due course, he is
liable on every such part as if it
were a separate bill.
(5) When the acceptor of a bill
drawn in a set pays it without
requiring the part bearing his
acceptance to be delivered up to
him, and that part at maturity is
outstanding in the hands of a
holder in due course, he is liable
to the holder thereof.
(6) Subject to the preceding
rules, where any one part of a
bill drawn in a set is discharged
by payment or otherwise, the whole
bill is discharged.
Conflict of Laws
Section 71—Rules where Laws
Conflict.
Where a bill drawn in one country
is negotiated, accepted, or
payable in another, the rights,
duties, and liabilities of the
parties thereto are determined as
follows—
(a) The validity of a bill as
regards requisites in form is
determined by the law of the place
of issue, and the validity as
regards requisites in form of the
supervening contracts, such as
acceptance, or endorsement, or
acceptance supra protest, is
determined by the law of the place
where such contract was made:
Provided that—
(i)
where a bill is issued out of
Ghana it is not invalid by reason
only that it is not stamped in
accordance with the law of the
place of issue;
(ii) where a bill issued out of
Ghana conforms, as regards
requisites in form, to the law of
Ghana, it may for the purpose of
enforcing payment there, be
treated as valid as between all
persons who negotiate, hold, or
become parties to it in Ghana.
(b) Subject to the provisions of
this Act, the interpretation of
the drawing, endorsement,
acceptance, or acceptance supra
protest of a bill, is determined
by the law of the place where such
contract is made:
Provided that where an inland bill
is endorsed in a foreign country
the endorsement shall as regards
the payer be interpreted according
to the law of Ghana.
(c) The duties of the holder with
respect to presentment for
acceptance or payment and the
necessity for or sufficiency of a
protest or notice of dishonour, or
otherwise, are determined by the
law of the place where the act is
done or the bill is dishonoured.
(d) Where a bill is drawn out of
but payable in Ghana and the sum
payable is not expressed in the
currency of Ghana, the amount
shall, in the absence of some
expressed stipulation, be
calculated according to the rate
of exchange for sight drafts at
the place of payment on the day
the bill is payable.
(e) Where a bill is drawn in one
country and is payable in another,
the due date thereof is determined
according to the law of the place
where it is payable.
PART II—CHEQUES AND SIMILAR
INSTRUMENTS
Cheques on a Banker
Section 72—Cheque Defined.
A
cheque is a bill of exchange drawn
on a banker payable on demand.
Except as otherwise provided in
this Part, the provisions of this
Act applicable to a bill of
exchange payable on demand apply
to a cheque.
Section 73—Presentment of Cheque
for Payment.
Subject to the provisions of this
Act—
(a) Where a cheque is not
presented for payment within a
reasonable time of its issue, and
the drawer or the person on whose
account it is drawn had the right
at the time of such presentment as
between him and the banker to have
the cheque paid and suffers actual
damage through the delay, he is
discharged to the extent of such
damage, that is to say, to the
extent to which such drawer or
person is a creditor of such
banker to a larger amount than he
would have been had such cheque
been paid.
(b) In determining what is a
reasonable time regard shall be
had to the nature of the
instrument, the usage of trade and
of bankers, and the facts of the
particular case.
(c) The holder of such cheque as
to which such drawer or person is
discharged shall be a creditor, in
lieu of such drawer or person, of
such banker to the extent of such
discharge, and entitled to recover
the amount from him.
Section 74—Revocation of Banker's
Authority.
The duty and authority of a banker
to pay a cheque drawn on him by
his customer are determined by—
(a) countermand of payment;
(b) notice of the customer's
death.
Crossed Cheques
Section 75—General and Special
Crossing Defined
(1) Where a cheque bears across
its face an addition of—
(a) the words "and company" or any
abbreviation thereof between two
parallel transverse lines, either
with or without the words "not
negotiable"; or
(b) two parallel transverse lines
simply, either with or without the
words "not negotiable,"
that addition constitutes a
crossing, and the cheque is
crossed generally.
(2) Where a cheque bears across
its face an addition of the name
of a banker, either with or
without the words "not
negotiable," that addition
constitutes a crossing, and the
cheque is crossed specially, and
to that banker.
Section 76—Crossing by Drawer or
After Issue.
(1) A cheque may be crossed
generally or specially by the
drawer.
(2) Where a cheque is uncrossed,
the holder may cross it generally
or specially.
(3) Where a cheque is crossed
generally the holder may cross it
specially.
(4) Where a cheque is crossed
generally or specially, the holder
may add the words "not
negotiable."
(5) Where a cheque is crossed
specially the banker to whom it is
crossed may again cross it
specially to another banker for
collection.
(6) Where an uncrossed cheque, or
a cheque crossed generally, is
sent to a banker for collection,
he may cross it specially to
himself.
Section 77—Crossing a Material
Part of Cheque.
A
crossing authorised by this Act is
a material part of the cheque; it
shall not be lawful for any person
to obliterate or, except as
authorised by this Act, to add to
or alter the crossing.
Section 78—Duties of Banker as to
Crossed Cheques.
(1) Where a cheque is crossed
specially to more than one banker,
except when crossed to an agent
for collection being a banker, the
banker on whom it is drawn shall
refuse payment thereof.
(2) Where the banker on whom a
cheque is drawn which is so
crossed nevertheless pays the
same, or pays a cheque crossed
generally otherwise than to a
banker, or if crossed specially
otherwise than to the banker to
whom it is crossed, or his agent
for collection being a banker, he
is liable to the true owner of the
cheque for any loss he may sustain
owing to the cheque having been so
paid:
Provided that where a cheque is
presented for payment which does
not at the time of presentment
appear to be crossed, or to have
had a crossing which has been
obliterated, or to have been added
to or altered otherwise than as
authorised by this Act, the banker
paying the cheque in good faith
and without negligence shall not
be responsible or incur any
liability, nor shall the payment
be questioned by reason of the
cheque having been crossed, or of
the crossing having been
obliterated, or having been added
to or altered otherwise than as
authorised by this Act, and of
payment having been made otherwise
than to a banker or to the banker
to whom the cheque is or was
crossed, or to his agent for
collection being a banker, as the
case may be.
Section 79—Protection to Banker
and Dawer Where Cheque is Crossed.
Where the banker on whom a crossed
cheque is drawn in good faith and
without negligence pays it, if
crossed generally, to a banker and
if crossed specially, to the
banker to whom it is crossed, or
his agent for collection being a
banker, the banker paying the
cheque, and, if the cheque has
come into the hands of the payee,
the drawer, shall respectively be
entitled to the same rights and be
placed in the same position as if
payment of the cheque had been
made to the true owner thereof.
Section 80—Effect of Crossing on
Holder.
Where a person takes a crossed
cheque which bears on it the words
"not negotiable," he shall not
have and shall not be capable of
giving a better title to the
cheque than that which the person
from whom he took it had.
Protection to Collecting Banker
Section 81—Protection to
Collecting Banker.
Where a banker in good faith and
without negligence—
(a) receives payment for a
customer of a cheque, whether
crossed or uncrossed; or
(b) having credited a customer's
account with the amount of such a
cheque, receives payment thereof
for himself;
and the customer has no title or a
defective title, to the cheque,
the banker does not incur any
liability to the true owner of the
cheque by reason only of having
received payment thereof.
Other Instruments
Section 82—Application of ss.75 to
81 to Other Instruments.
The provisions of sections 75 to
81 of this Act shall, so far as
applicable, have effect in
relation to—
(a) any document issued by a
customer of a banker which, though
not a cheque, is intended to
enable a person to obtain payment
from that banker of the sum
mentioned in the document;
(b) any draft payable on demand
drawn by a banker upon himself,
whether payable at the head office
or some other office of his bank;
(c) warrants for the payment of
dividends;
as they have effect in relation to
cheques.
PART III—PROMISSORY NOTES
Section 83—Promissory Note
Defined.
(1) A promissory note is an
unconditional promise in writing
made by one person to another
signed by the maker, engaging to
pay, on demand or at a fixed or
determinable future time, a sum
certain in money, to, or to the
order of, a specified person or to
bearer.
(2) An instrument in the form of a
note payable to maker's order is
not a note within the meaning of
this section unless and until it
is endorsed by the maker.
(3) A note is not invalid by
reason only that it contains also
a pledge of collateral security
with authority to sell or dispose
thereof.
(4) A note which is, or on the
face of it purports to be, both
made and payable within Ghana is
an inland note. Any other note is
a foreign note.
Section 84—Delivery Necessary.
A
promissory note is inchoate and
incomplete until delivery thereof
to the payee or bearer.
Section 85—Joint and Several Note.
(1) A promissory note may be made
by two or more makers, and they
may be liable thereon jointly, or
jointly and severally, according
to its tenor.
(2) Where a note runs "I promise
to pay" and is signed by two or
more persons it is deemed to be
their joint and several note.
Section 86—Note Payable on Demand.
(1) Where a note payable on
demand has been endorsed, it must
be presented for payment within a
reasonable time of the
endorsement. If it be not so
presented the endorser is
discharged.
(2) In determining what is a
reasonable time, regard shall be
had to the nature of the
instrument, the usage of trade,
and the facts of the particular
case.
(3) Where a note payable on demand
is negotiated, it is not deemed to
be overdue, for the purpose of
affecting the holder with defects
of title of which he had no
notice, by reason that it appears
that a reasonable time for
presenting it for payment has
elapsed since its issue.
Section 87—Presentment of Note for
Payment.
(1) Where a promissory note is in
the body of it made payable at a
particular place, it must be
presented for payment at that
place in order to render the maker
liable. In any other case,
presentment for payment is not
necessary in order to render the
maker liable.
(2) Presentment for payment is
necessary in order to render the
endorser of a note liable.
(3) Where a note is in the body of
it made payable at a particular
place, presentment at that place
is necessary in order to render an
endorser liable; but when a place
of payment is indicated by way of
memorandum only, presentment at
that place is sufficient to render
the endorser liable, but a
presentment to the maker
elsewhere, if sufficient in other
respects, shall also suffice.
Section 88—Liability of Maker.
The Maker of a Promissory note by
Making it—
(a) engages that he will pay it
according to its tenor;
(b) is precluded from denying to a
holder in due course the existence
of the payee, and his then
capacity to endorse.
Section 89—Application of Part I
to Notes.
(1) Subject to the provisions in
this Part, and except as by this
section provided, the provisions
of this Act relating to bills of
exchange apply, with necessary
modifications, to promissory
notes.
(2) In applying those provisions
the maker of a note shall be
deemed to correspond with the
acceptor of a bill, and the
endorser of a note shall be deemed
to correspond with the drawer of
an accepted bill payable to
drawer's order.
(3) The following provisions as to
bills do not apply to notes,
namely, provisions relating to—
(a) presentment for acceptance;
(b) acceptance;
(c) acceptance supra protest;
(d) bills in a set.
(4) Where a foreign note is
dishonoured, protest thereof is
unnecessary.
PART IV—SUPPLEMENTARY
Section 90—Good Faith.
A
thing is deemed to be done in good
faith, within the meaning of this
Act, where it is in fact done
honestly, whether it is done
negligently or not.
Section 91—Signature.
(1) Where, by this Act, any
instrument or writing is required
to be signed by any person, it is
not necessary that he should sign
it with his own hand, but it is
sufficient if his signature is
written thereon by some other
person by or under his authority.
(2) In the case of a corporation,
where by this Act, any instrument
or writing is required to be
signed, it is sufficient if the
instrument or writing be sealed
with the corporate seal, but
nothing in this section shall be
construed as requiring the bill or
note of a corporation to be under
seal.
Section 92—Computation of Time.
Where by this Act the time limited
for doing any act or thing is less
than three days, in reckoning time
non-business days are excluded.
Section 93—Business and
Non-business Days.
(1) For the purposes of this Act,
Sundays, Good Friday, Christmas
Day, public holidays and days
prescribed under subsection (2)
are non-business days. Any other
day is a business day.
(2) The President may by
legislative instrument prescribe
that a particular day shall be a
non-business day.
Section 94—When noting Equivalent
to Protest.
For the purposes of this Act,
where a bill or note is required
to be protested within a specified
time or before some further
proceeding is taken, it is
sufficient that the bill has been
noted for protest before the
expiration of the specified time
or the taking of the proceeding;
and the formal protest may be
extended at any time thereafter as
of the date of noting.
Section 95—Protest when Notary not
Accessible.
Where a dishonoured bill or note
is authorised or required to be
protested, and the services of a
notary cannot be obtained at the
place where the bill is
dishonoured, any householder,
substantial resident, merchant, or
mercantile agent of the place may,
in the presence of two witnesses,
give a certificate, signed by
them, attesting the dishonour of
the bill, and the certificate
shall in all respects operate as
if it were formal protest of the
bill.
The form given in the First
Schedule to this Act may be used
with necessary modification, and
if used shall be sifficient.
Section 96—Savings.
(1) The rules of common law,
including the law merchant, save
in so far as they are inconsistent
with the express provisions of
this Act, shall continue to apply
to bills of exchange, promissory
notes, and cheques.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall
affect—
(a) any enactment relating to the
revenue;
(b) the validity of any usage
relating to dividend warrants, or
the endorsements thereof.
Section 97—Interpretation.
In this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires—
"acceptance" means an acceptance
completed by delivery or
notification;
"action" includes counter-claim
and set off;
"banker" includes a body of
persons, whether incorporated or
not, who carry on the business of
banking;
"bearer" means the person in
possession of a bill or note which
is payable to bearer;
"bill" means bill of exchange;
"delivery" means transfer of
possession, actual or
constructive, from one person to
another;
"endorsement" means an endorsement
completed by delivery;
"holder" means the payee or
endorsee of a bill or note who is
in possession of it, or the bearer
thereof;
"insolvent" includes any person
whose estate is vested in a
trustee under the law for the time
being in force relating to
insolvency;
"issue" means the first delivery
of a bill or note, complete in
form to a person who takes it as a
holder;
"note" means promissory note;
"value" means valuable
consideration.
Section 98—Statutes Ceasing to
Apply.
The statutes, and provisions of
statutes, mentioned in the Second
Schedule to this Act shall,
insofar as they apply in Ghana,
cease to apply.
Section 99—Repeal.
The Bills of Exchange Ordinance
(Cap. 195) is repealed.
FIRST SCHEDULE
Section 95
Form of protest when notary not
accessible.
FORM OF PROTEST WHICH MAY BE USED
WHEN THE SERVICES OF NOTARY CANNOT
BE OBTAINED
KNOW ALL MEN that I, A. B.
(householder, of ) at the
request of C. D., there being no
notary public available, did on
the day of 19,
at , demand payment
(or acceptance) of the bill of
exchange hereunder written, from
E. F., to which demand he made
answer (state answer, if any),
wherefore I now, in the presence
of G. H. and J. K., do protest the
said bill of exchange.
(Signed) A.B. G. H.) )
G.H )
J. K. ) Witnesses
.
N.B.—The bill itself should be
annexed or a copy of the bill and
all that is written thereon should
be underwritten
SECOND SCHEDULE
Section 98
STATUTES CEASING TO APPLY
Session and
Chapter
Subject-matter
9
Will. 3, c.17 (1697)
Bills of Exchange.
3
and 4 Ann., c.8
(sometimes
Bills of Exchange.
known as c.9) (1704)
17 Geo. 3, c.30 (1776)
Bills of Exchange.
39 and 40. Geo. 3, c.42
(1799) Bills of
Exchange.
48 Geo. 3, c.88 (1808)
Bills of Exchange.
1
and 2 Geo. 4, c.78 (1820)
Bills of Exchange.
ACT 55 Sch.2
7
and 8 Geo. 4, c.15 (1826)
Bills of Exchange.
2
and 3 Will. 4, c.98 (1832)
Bills of
Exchange.
6
and 7 Will. 4, c.58 (1836)
Bills of
Exchange.
18 and 19 Vict., c.67 (1854)
Bills of Exchange.
19 and 20 Vict., c.25 (1856)
Drafts on Bankers.
Sections 6 and 7 of 19 and
20
Mercantile Law Amendment
Vict., c.97 (1856).
34 and 35 Vict., c.74 (1871)
Bills of Exchange.
amended by
BILLS OF EXCHANGE (AMENDMENT)
DECREE, 1966 [NLCD 120].1
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