SECTION
229.52—Substitute-Check Warranties
A. 229.52(a) Warranty Content and Provision 1. The responsibility for providing the substitute-check warranties
begins with the reconverting bank. In the case of a substitute check
created by a bank, the reconverting bank starts the flow of warranties
when it transfers, presents, or returns a substitute check for which
it receives consideration or when it rejects a check submitted for
deposit and returns to its customer a substitute check. A bank that
receives a substitute check created by a nonbank starts the flow of
warranties when it transfers, presents, or returns for consideration
either the substitute check it received or an electronic or paper
representation of that substitute check.
2. To ensure that warranty protections flow all the way
through to the ultimate recipient of a substitute check or paper or
electronic representation thereof, any subsequent bank that transfers,
presents, or returns for consideration either the substitute check
or a paper or electronic representation of the substitute check is
responsible to subsequent transferees for the warranties. Any warranty
recipient could bring a claim for a breach of a substitute-check warranty
if it received either the actual substitute check or a paper or electronic
representation of a substitute check.
3. The substitute-check warranties and indemnity are not
given under sections 229.52 and 229.53 by a bank that truncates the
original check and by agreement transfers an electronic check to a
subsequent bank for consideration. However, the warranties in section
229.34(a) would apply to the transfer of an electronic check, and
those warranties may be varied by agreement between the parties. A
bank that is a truncating bank under section 229.2(eee)(2) because
it accepts a deposit of a check electronically might be subject to
a claim by another depositary bank that accepts the original check
for deposit. (See section 229.34(f) and commentary thereto).
Example. A bank that receives an electronic check
and uses it to create substitute checks is the reconverting bank and,
when it transfers, presents, or returns that substitute check, becomes
the first warrantor with respect to the substitute check warranties.
That bank, however, may have similar warranty claims with respect
to the electronic check under section 229.34(a) against the bank that
transferred the electronic check.
4. A bank need not affirmatively make the warranties because
they attach automatically when a bank transfers, presents, or returns
the substitute check (or a representation thereof) for which it receives
consideration. Because a substitute check transferred, presented,
or returned for consideration is warranted to be the legal equivalent
of the original check and thereby subject to existing laws as if it
were the original check, all UCC and other Regulation CC warranties
that apply to the original check also apply to the substitute check.
5. The legal-equivalence warranty by definition must be
linked to a particular substitute check. When an original check is
truncated, the check may move from electronic form to substitute-check
form and then back again, such that there would be multiple substitute
checks associated with one original check. When a check changes form
multiple times in the collection or return process, the first reconverting
bank and subsequent banks that transfer, present, or return the first
substitute check (or a paper or electronic representation of the first
substitute check) warrant the legal equivalence of only the first
substitute check. If a bank receives an electronic representation
of a substitute check and uses that representation to create a second
substitute check, the second reconverting bank and subsequent transferees
of the second substitute check (or a representation thereof) warrant
the legal equivalence of both the first and second substitute checks.
A reconverting bank would not be liable for a warranty breach under
section 229.52 if the legal-equivalence defect is the fault of a subsequent
bank that handled the substitute check, either as a substitute check
or in other paper or electronic form.
6. The warranty in section 229.52(a)(1)(ii), which addresses
multiple payment requests for the same check, is not linked to a particular
substitute check but rather is given by each bank handling the substitute
check, an electronic representation of a substitute check, or a subsequent
substitute check created from an electronic representation of a substitute
check. All banks that transfer, present, or return a substitute check
(or a paper or electronic representation thereof) therefore provide
the warranty regardless of whether the ultimate demand for double
payment is based on the original check, the substitute check, or some
other electronic or paper representation of the substitute or original
check, and regardless of the order in which the duplicative payment
requests occur. This warranty is given by the banks that transfer,
present, or return a substitute check even if the demand for duplicative
payment results from a fraudulent substitute check about which the
warranting bank had no knowledge. (See also section 229.34(a)(1)(ii)).
Example. A nonbank depositor truncates a check
and in lieu of the check sends an electronic check to both Bank A
and Bank B. Bank A and Bank B each use the check information that
it received electronically to create a substitute check, which it
presents to Bank C for payment. Bank A and Bank B are both reconverting
banks and each made the substitute-check warranties when it presented
a substitute check to and received payment from Bank C. Bank C could
pursue a warranty claim for the loss it suffered as a result of the
duplicative payment against either Bank A or Bank B.
7. A bank that rejects a check submitted for
deposit and, instead of the original check, provides its customer
with a substitute check makes the warranties in section 229.52(a)(1).
As noted in the commentary to section 229.2(ccc), the Check 21 Act
contemplates that nonbank persons that receive substitute checks (or
representations thereof) from a bank will receive warranties and indemnities
with respect to the checks. A reconverting bank that provides a substitute
check to its depositor after it has rejected the check submitted for
deposit may not have received consideration for the substitute check.
In order to prevent banks from being able to transfer a check the
bank truncated and then reconverted without providing substitute check
warranties, the regulation provides that a bank that rejects a check
submitted for deposit but provides its customer with a substitute
check (or a paper or electronic representation of a substitute check)
makes the warranties set forth in section 229.52(a)(1) regardless
of whether the bank received consideration.
Example. A bank’s customer submits a check for
deposit at an ATM that captures an image of the check and sends the
image electronically to the bank. After reviewing the item, the bank
rejects the item submitted for deposit. Instead of providing the original
check to its customer, the bank provides a substitute check to its
customer. This bank is the reconverting bank with respect to the substitute
check and makes the warranties described in section 229.52(a)(1) regardless
of whether the bank previously extended credit to its customer. (See commentary to section 229.2(ccc)).
9-574.2
1. A reconverting bank makes the warranties to the person
to which it transfers, presents, or returns the substitute check for
consideration and to any subsequent recipient that receives either
the substitute check or a paper or electronic representation derived
from the substitute check. These subsequent recipients could include
a subsequent collecting or returning bank, the depositary bank, the
drawer, the drawee, the payee, the depositor, and any indorser. The
paying bank would be included as a warranty recipient, for example
because it would be the drawee of a check or a transferee of a check
that is payable through it.
2. The warranties flow with the substitute check to persons
that receive a substitute check or a paper or electronic representation
of a substitute check. The warranties do not flow to a person that
receives only the original check or a representation of an original check that
was not derived from a substitute check. However, a person that initially
handled only the original check could become a warranty recipient
if that person later receives a returned substitute check or a paper
or electronic representation of a substitute check that was derived
from that original check. (See section 229.34(f) regarding
claims by a depositary bank that accepts deposit of an original check).
3. A reconverting bank also makes the warranties to a
person to whom the bank transfers a substitute check that the bank
has rejected for deposit regardless of whether the bank received consideration.