4 cheques
4.1 cheques
4.2 bank cheques
4.1 cheques
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We will inform you of the need to keep your chequebook
safe at all times and that you should never sign cheques in advance, or leave
any details blank after a cheque has been signed. The loss of your chequebook,
any cheques or any unauthorised withdrawals from your account should be reported
to us immediately. The Police may also need to be notified.
- We may ask you for identification when you cash a
cheque and we will explain our reasons for doing so on request.
- On request, information will also be available to
you on:-
- how long it is likely
to take to clear a cheque (cheques drawn on an overseas bank will
take longer to clear);
- what happens if
one of your cheques is dishonoured and what happens if a cheque you
pay into your account is dishonoured;
- the various ways
cheques may be “crossed” to help protect against theft
or fraud;
- what happens when
a cheque is altered;
- how you can obtain
a “Special Answer” for early clearance of a cheque; and
- any fees and charges
for cheque processing, honours and dishonours.
- On request, we will inform you how to stop a cheque
and of any fees or charges that may apply. We will make reasonable efforts
to stop a cheque when you request us to do so and we will also advise you
of the circumstances when we may not be able to comply with your request
to stop a cheque (for example, if the cheque has already been cashed or
presented by way of “Special Answer”). At the time you request
a stop, we may not be able to establish whether or not the cheque can be
stopped.
- If a cheque is misplaced in processing, all banks
involved will do their best to help you obtain a replacement.
- If a cheque is not presented to us for payment within
a certain period of time (usually six months from the date written on the
cheque) we may:-
- pay the cheque;
- decline to pay the
cheque; or
- make any further
enquiry we consider necessary before deciding whether to pay or not
to pay the cheque.
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4.2 bank cheques
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Like any other cheque, Bank Cheques need to clear and
the funds may not be available to you until this process is complete.
- On request, we will inform you of the terms and conditions
relating to Bank Cheques and of the fees for this service.
- There are some limited circumstances in which we may
refuse payment on Bank Cheques that have been issued to Customers. In general,
this would only be when:-
- the cheque is fraudulent,
forged or counterfeit, or has been altered since it was issued;
- the cheque has been
reported lost or stolen;
- a court has issued
an order restraining payment;
- there has not been
proper payment by the customer for the cheque and that customer presents
the cheque for payment; or
- there has not been
proper payment for the cheque and any other person presents the cheque
for payment and that person has obtained the cheque by fraud, or
knows that a previous owner obtained the cheque by fraud, or knows
that it was originally obtained from the bank without proper payment.
- We are not obliged to stop a bank cheque issued to
you upon your request. However, we may do so if the cheque has been lost,
stolen or returned to us by you. Bank Cheques cannot be stopped for example,
because you have changed your mind about a transaction after handing the
cheque over to another person or a transaction between the parties has
broken down through the supply of faulty goods and services.
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