Seychelles
Bills of Exchange Act
Act 18 of 1959
- Commenced on 26 October 1959
- [This is the version of this document at 30 June 2012 and includes any amendments published up to 30 June 2014.]
Part I – Preliminary
1. Short title
This Act may be cited as the Bills of Exchange Act.2. Interpretation of terms
In this Act—"acceptance" means an acceptance completed by delivery or notification;"action" means action or suit and includes counterclaim and set-off;"banker" includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or not, who carry on the business of banking;"bankrupt" includes any person whose estate is vested in a trustee or assignee under the law relating to bankruptcy;"bearer" means the person in possession of a bill or note which is payable to bearer;"bill" means bill of exchange, and "note" means promissory note;"delivery" means transfer of possession, actual or constructive, from one person to another;"holder" means the payee or indorsee of a bill or note who is in possession of it, or the bearer thereof;"indorsement" means an indorsement completed by delivery;"issue" means the first delivery of a bill or note, complete in form, to a person who takes it as a holder;"person" includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or not;"public holiday" means any public holiday under the Public Holidays Act;"value" means valuable consideration.Part II – Bills of exchange
Form and interpretation
3. Definition of bill of exchange
4. Inland and foreign bills
5. Effect where different parties to bill are the same person
6. Drawee
7. Certainty required as to payee
8. What bills are negotiable
9. Sum payable
10. Bill payable on demand
11. Bill payable at future time
12. Omission of date in bill payable after date
Where a bill expressed to be payable at a fixed period after date is issued undated, or where the acceptance of a bill payable at a fixed period after sight is undated, any holder may insert therein the true date of issue or acceptance, and the bill shall be payable accordingly.Provided that—13. Ante-dating and post-dating
14. Computation of time of payment
Where a bill is not payable on demand, the day on which it falls due is determined as follows:—15. Referee in case of need
The drawer of a bill and any indorser may insert therein the name of a person to whom the holder may resort in case of need, that is to say, in case the bill is dishonoured by non-acceptance or non-payment. Such person is called the referee in case of need. It is in the option of the holder to resort to the referee in case of need or not, as he may think fit.16. Optional stipulations by drawer or indorser
The drawer of a bill or any indorser may insert therein an express stipulation—17. Definition and requisites of acceptance
18. Time for acceptance
19. General and qualified acceptance
20. Inchoate instruments
21. Delivery
Capacity and authority of parties
22. Capacity of parties
23. Signature essential to liability
No person is liable as drawer, indorser, or acceptor of a bill who has not signed it as such:Provided that—24. Forged or unauthorized signature
Subject to the provisions of this Act, where a signature on a bill is forged or placed thereon without the authority of the person whose signature it purports to be, the forged or unauthorised signature is wholly inoperative, and no right to retain the bill, or to give a discharge therefor, or to enforce payment thereof against any party thereto can be acquired through or under that signature, unless the party against whom it is sought to retain or enforce payment of the bill is precluded from setting up the forgery or want of authority:Provided that nothing in this section shall affect the ratification of an unauthorised signature not amounting to a forgery.25. Procuration signature
A signature by procuration operates as notice that the agent has but a limited authority to sign, and the principal is only bound by such signature if the agent in so signing was acting within the actual limits of his authority.26. Person signing as agent or in representative capacity
Consideration for bill
27. Value and holder for value
28. Accommodation party
29. Holder in due course
30. Presumption of value and good faith
Negotiation of bill
31. Negotiation of bill
32. Requisites of valid indorsement
An indorsement in order to operate as a negotiation must comply with the following conditions, namely:—33. Conditional indorsement
Where a bill purports to be indorsed conditionally, the condition may be disregarded by the payer, and payment to the indorsee is valid whether the condition has been fulfilled or not.34. Indorsement in blank and special indorsement
35. Restrictive indorsement
36. Negotiation of overdue or dishonoured bill
37. Negotiation of bill to party already liable thereon
Where a bill is negotiated back to the drawer, or to a prior indorser, or to the acceptor, such party may, subject to the provisions of this Act, reissue and further negotiate the bill, but he is not entitled to enforce payment of the bill against any intervening party to whom he was previously liable.38. Rights and powers of holder
The rights and powers of the holder of a bill are as follows:—General duties of the holder
39. When presentment for acceptance is necessary
40. Time for presenting bill payable after sight
41. Rules as to presentment for acceptance, and excuses for non-presentment
42. Non-acceptance
When a bill is duly presented for acceptance and is not accepted within the customary time, the person presenting it must treat it as dishonoured by non-acceptance. If he does not, the holder shall lose his right of recourse against the drawer and indorsers.43. Dishonour by non-acceptance and its consequences
44. Duties as to qualified acceptances
45. Rules as to presentment for payment
Subject to the provisions of this Act, a bill must be duly presented for payment. If it is not so presented, the drawer and indorsers shall be discharged. A bill is duly presented for payment which is presented in accordance with the following rules:—46. Excuses for delay or non-presentment for payment
47. Dishonour by non-payment
48. Notice of dishonour and effect of non-notice
Subject to the provisions of this Act, when a bill has been dishonoured by non-acceptance or by non-payment notice of dishonour must be given to the drawer and each indorser, and any drawer or indorser to whom such notice is not given is discharged:Provided that—49. Rules as to notice of dishonour
Notice of dishonour, in order to be valid and effectual, must be given in accordance with the following rules:—50. Excuses for non-notice and delay
51. Noting or protest of bill
52. Duties of holder as regards drawee or acceptor
Liabilities of parties
53. Funds in hands of drawee
A bill, of itself, does not operate as an assignment of funds in the hands of the drawee available for the payment thereof, and the drawee of a bill who does not accept, as required by this Act, is not liable on the instrument.54. Liability of acceptor
The acceptor of a bill, by accepting it—55. Liability of drawer or indorser
56. Stranger signing bill liable as indorser
Where a person signs a bill otherwise than as drawer or acceptor, he thereby incurs the liabilities of an indorser to a holder in due course.57. Measure of damages against parties to dishonoured bill
Where a bill is dishonoured the measure of damages, which shall be deemed to be liquidated damages, shall be as follows:—58. Transferor by delivery and transferee
Discharge of bill
59. Payment in due course
60. Banker paying demand draft whereon indorsement is forged
When a bill payable to order on demand is drawn on a banker, and the banker on whom it is drawn pays the bill in good faith and in the ordinary course of business, it is not incumbent on the banker to show that the indorsement of the payee or any subsequent indorsement was made by or under the authority of the person whose indorsement it purports to be, and the banker is deemed to have paid the bill in due course, although such indorsement has been forged or made without authority.61. Acceptor the holder at maturity
When the acceptor of a bill is or becomes the holder of it at or after its maturity, in his own right, the bill is discharged.62. Express waiver
63. Cancellation
64. Alteration of bill
Acceptance and payment for honour
65. Acceptance for honour supra protest
66. Liability of acceptor for honour
67. Presentment to acceptor for honour
68. Payment for honour supra protest
Lost instrument
69. Holder's right to duplicate of lost bill
70. Action on lost bill
In any action or proceeding upon a bill, the court or a judge may order that the loss of the instrument shall not be set up, provided an indemnity be given, to the satisfaction of the court or judge against the claims of any other person upon the instrument in question.Bill in a set
71. Rules as to bill in set
Conflict of law
72. Rules where laws conflict
Where a bill drawn in one country is negotiated, accepted, or payable in another, the rights, duties, and liabilities of the parties thereto are determined as follows:—Part III – Cheques on a banker
73. Definition of cheque
74. Presentment of cheque for payment
Subject to the provisions of this Act—75. Revocation of banker's authority
The duty and authority of a banker to pay a cheque drawn on him by his customer are determined by—Crossed cheques
76. Definition of general and special crossing
77. Crossing by drawer or holder after issue
78. Crossing a material part of cheque
A crossing authorised by this Act is a material part of the cheque; it shall not be lawful for any person to obliterate or, except as authorised by this Act, to add to or alter the crossing.79. Duties of banker as to crossed cheque
80. Protection to banker and drawer where cheque is crossed
Where the banker on whom a crossed cheque is drawn, in good faith and without negligence, pays it, if crossed generally, to a banker and, if crossed specially, to the banker to whom it is crossed or his agent for collection being a banker, the banker paying the cheque, and, if the cheque has come into the hands of the payee, the drawer, shall respectively be entitled to the same rights and be placed in the same position as if payment of the cheque had been made to the true owner thereof.81. Effect of crossing on holder
Where a person takes a crossed cheque which bears on it the words "not negotiable", he shall not have, and shall not be capable of giving, a better title to the cheque than that which the person from whom he took it had.82. Protection of bankers paying unindorsed or irregularly indorsed cheques, etc.
83. Rights of bankers collecting cheques not indorsed by holders
A banker who gives value for, or has a lien on, a cheque payable to order which the holder delivers to him for collection without indorsing it, has such (if any) rights as he would have had if, upon delivery, the holder had indorsed it in blank.84. Unindorsed cheques as evidence of payment
An unindorsed cheque which appears to have been paid by the banker on whom it is drawn is evidence of the receipt by the payee of the sum payable by the cheque.85. Protection of bankers collecting payment of cheques, etc.
86. Drafts on bankers payable to order on demand sufficient authority for payment without proof of indorsement
Any draft or order drawn upon a banker for a sum of money payable to order on demand which shall, when presented for payment, payable, shall be sufficient authority to such banker to pay the amount of such draft or order to the bearer thereof: and it shall not be incumbent on such banker to prove that such indorsement or any subsequent indorsement was made by or under the direction or authority of the person to whom the said draft or order was or is made payable either by the drawer or any indorser thereof.87. Application of certain provisions of Act to instruments not being bills of exchange
The provisions of this Act relating to crossed cheques shall, so far as applicable have effect in relation to instruments (other than cheques) to which Section 85 applies as they have effect in relation to cheques.88. Instrument not made negotiable by provisions of certain sections
The provisions of Sections 85, 86 and 87 do not make negotiable any instrument which, apart from them, is not negotiable.Part IV – Promissory notes
89. Definition of promisory note
90. Delivery necessary
A promissory note is inchoate and incomplete until delivery thereof to the payee or bearer.91. Joint and several notes
92. Note payable on demand
93. Presentment for payment
94. Liability of maker
The maker of a promissory note, by making it—95. Application of Part II to notes
Part V – Supplementary
96. Good faith
A thing is deemed to be done in good faith, within the meaning of this Act, where it is in fact done honestly, whether it is done negligently or not.97. Signature
98. Computation of time
99. Acts not compellable to be done on public holiday
Subject to the provisions of section 14, it shall not be necessary for any person to make any payment or to do any other act, including noting or protesting, relating to any bill or note on a public holiday, but any obligation to make such payment or to do any such other act shall apply to the next following day not being itself a public holiday.100. When noting equivalent to protest
For the purposes of this Act, where a bill or note is required to be protested within a specified time or before some further proceeding is taken, it is sufficient that the bill has been noted for protest before the expiration of the specified time or the taking of the proceeding; and the formal protest may be extended at any time thereafter as of the date of the noting.101. Protest when notary not accessible
102. Crossing of dividend warrant
The provisions of this Act relating to crossed cheques shall apply to a warrant for payment of dividend.103. Limitation
104. Savings
Nothing in this Act or any repeal affected thereby shall affect—History of this document
26 October 1959
Commences.