U.C.C. - ARTICLE 4A
OFFICIAL COMMENTS
COMMENT § 4A-102.
- Article 4A governs a specialized method of payment referred to in the Article
as a funds transfer but also
commonly referred to in the commercial community as a wholesale wire transfer.
A funds transfer is made by means of one or more payment
orders. The scope of Article 4A is determined by the definitions of "payment
order" and "funds transfer" found in Section 4A-103 and
Section 4A-104.
- The funds transfer governed
by Article 4A is in large part a product of recent and developing technological
changes. Before this Article was drafted there was no comprehensive body of
law -- statutory or judicial -- that defined the juridical nature of a funds
transfer or the rights and obligations flowing from payment
orders. Judicial authority with respect to funds transfers is sparse, undeveloped
and not uniform. Judges have had to resolve disputes by referring to general
principles of common law or equity, or they have sought guidance in statutes
such as Article 4 which are applicable to other payment methods. But attempts
to define rights and obligations in funds transfers by general principles or
by analogy to rights and obligations in negotiable instrument law or the law
of check collection have not been satisfactory.
- In the drafting of Article 4A, a deliberate decision was made to write on
a clean slate and to treat a funds
transfer as a unique method of payment to be governed by unique rules that
address the particular issues raised by this method of payment. A deliberate
decision was also made to use precise and detailed rules to assign responsibility,
define behavioral norms, allocate risks and establish limits on liability,
rather than to rely on broadly stated, flexible principles. In the drafting
of these rules, a critical consideration was that the various parties to funds
transfers need to be able to predict risk with certainty, to insure against
risk, to adjust operational and security
procedures, and to price funds transfer services appropriately. This consideration
is particularly important given the very large amounts of money that are involved
in funds transfers.
- Funds transfers involve competing interests -- those of the banks that
provide funds transfer services
and the commercial and financial organizations that use the services, as well
as the public interest. These competing interests were represented in the drafting
process and they were thoroughly considered. The rules that emerged represent
a careful and delicate balancing of those interests and are intended to be
the exclusive means of determining the rights, duties and liabilities of the
affected parties in any situation covered by particular provisions of the Article.
Consequently, resort to principles of law or equity outside of Article 4A is
not appropriate to create rights, duties and liabilities inconsistent with
those stated in this Article.
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