THE LIFE OF A NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENT:
1.issue
2.negotiation
3.presentment for acceptance in certain bills
4.acceptance
5.dishonor by on acceptance
6.presentment for payment
7.dishonor by nonpayment
8.notice of dishonor
9.protest in certain cases
10.discharge
Some common incidents in the life of a negotiable instrument include transfer, negotiation, presentment, dishonor, and discharge. Transfer refers to the passing of the instrument from one party to another, whereas negotiation refers to the transfer of the instrument to a holder in due course. Presentment is the act of showing the instrument to the party primarily liable on it, dishonor occurs when the instrument is not accepted or paid by the party responsible for it, and discharge happens when the liability on the instrument is terminated.
yes, its a non negotiable instrument
yes, its a non negotiable instrument
issue, negotiation, presentment for acceptance ..... etc.
No You are asking if the medium of transfer is a negotiable instrument It is not. A wire transfer represents the medium (or method) of transfer. It is like asking if the stage coach transporting the money is a negotiable instrument, it is not. Money itself is a negotiable instrument, the medium itself is not.
no it does not complt with the definition of a cheque and its not a valid negotiable instrument
No, a mortgage is a contract.
yes
essential of negotiable instrument say's that a negotiable instrument must be unconditional so when we will alter any condition in it then it will be discharged.
No. A cheque is a non-negotiable monetary instrument. The value of the cheque cannot be modified or negotiated and hence the term non-negotiable. The amount filled up by the cheque issuer is the value of the cheque and it would not change.
No, an instrument is something like a bond or cd.
A credit card is not a negotiable instrument because it does not meet the legal requirements to be classified as one. Negotiable instruments must be unconditional promises to pay a fixed amount of money, which credit cards do not fulfill. Additionally, credit cards involve the extension of credit rather than a direct payment.