Cheques, Second EditionThe purpose of this book is to introduce the law of cheques in Hong Kong. It assumes that the reader is familiar in outline with the legal system in Hong Kong and knows something of the law of contract. Care has been taken to present the ideas comprehensibly and no technical words are used without explanation. Cheques have been put in their banking context and bills of exchange, promissory notes and other banking instruments and devices have also been described, though in less detail. This book contains all that an accounting student needs to study for the Hong Kong Society of Accountants’ examination in respect of negotiable instruments. It is one of a series published by the Hong Kong University Press, under the General Editorship of Professor Derek Roebuck, to provide accounting students with an introduction to Hong Kong law. |
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... delivered today , then the supplier has allowed the promisor credit . The supplier will be getting some form of value for allowing that credit . Perhaps the price is higher than it would have been for a cash sale . Perhaps the buyer ...
... delivery . 4. The instrument may create a right separate from the transaction from which it arose . 5. Most of the law which applies to cheques ( and bills of exchange and promissory notes ) is stated in the Bills of Exchange Ordinance ...
... delivered : but if it requires indorsement , then transfer of value is effective only when it is properly indorsed and ... delivery and indorsement ' , depending on what the instrument says about the need for indorsement . The narrower ...
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Contents
3 | 23 |
Indorsements and Crossings | 35 |
Parties Holders and Defects | 43 |
7 | 69 |
8 | 77 |
Conclusion | 86 |
MAAA wwwww | 91 |
Table of Cases | 92 |