Podcast Episode Details

Back to Podcast Episodes
Negotiable Instruments Law (Part 2): Holder in Due Course (Lecture and Discussion)

Negotiable Instruments Law (Part 2): Holder in Due Course (Lecture and Discussion)



Holder in Due Course (HDC) Doctrine: A Concise Overview


The HDC doctrine is crucial in negotiable instruments law, facilitating the smooth transfer of commercial paper. It protects good-faith purchasers from certain defenses against the original payee. Becoming an HDC requires meeting specific criteria, and even then, some "real" defenses remain.


Core Concept: Negotiable instruments are designed for easy transfer. The HDC concept encourages good-faith acceptance of these instruments by shielding holders from prior disputes. This privileged status requires meeting specific rules.


HDC Requirements: To attain HDC status under the UCC:


Holder Status: Lawful possession with a proper endorsement chain (if applicable).

Value: Giving consideration (money, property, debt cancellation, service). Gifts don't qualify.

Good Faith: Honesty and reasonable commercial standards. No willful ignorance of wrongdoing.

Lack of Notice: No knowledge of claims or defenses at the time of taking.

Real vs. Personal Defenses:


Real Defenses: Defeat even an HDC (e.g., fraud in the factum, forgery, alteration, infancy, illegality/mental incapacity).

Personal Defenses: Do not defeat an HDC (e.g., breach of contract, ordinary fraud, unconscionability, breach of warranty).

Practical Implications & Exam Approach:


Analyze the Defense: Is it real or personal? Real defenses defeat HDC claims.

"Without Notice": Suspicious circumstances (e.g., "Void if not paid…," knowledge of forgery, overdue note) can disqualify HDC status.

Fraud Types: Distinguish fraud in the factum (real) from ordinary inducement (personal).

Capacity: Is the illegal contract void or voidable?

Exam Strategy: Determine HDC status (holder, value, good faith, no notice), classify the defense, and determine the outcome. Always mention HDC possibility, even if inapplicable.

Ramifications: Payees should ensure smooth HDC transfer. Makers should warn transferees of fundamental issues, as personal defenses are lost against an HDC.


Example: Abby signs a note for Bill, who endorses it to Clara. If Clara is an HDC, she can enforce it against Abby (defective product is a personal defense). However, if Abby's signature was forged (real defense), Clara cannot enforce it.


Published on 9 months, 3 weeks ago






If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Donate