THE HONGKONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, 9TH MAY, 1885.
55. (1.) The drawer of a bill by drawing it—
(a.) Engages that on due presentment it shall be accepted and paid according to its tenor, and that if it be dishonoured he will compensate the holder or any indorser who is compelled to pay it, provided that the requisite proceedings on dishonour be duly taken;
(b.) Is precluded from denying to a holder in due course the existence of the payee and his then capacity to indorse.
(2.) The indorser of a bill by indorsing it-
(a.) Engages that on due presentment it shall be accepted and paid according to its tenor, and that if it be dishonoured he will compensate the holder or a subsequent indorser who is compelled to pay it, provided that the requisite proceedings on dishonour be duly taken;
(b.) Is precluded from denying to a holder in due course the genuineness and regularity in all respects of the drawer's signature and all previous indorsements;
(c.) Is precluded from denying to his immediate or a subsequent indorsee that the bill was at the time of his indorsement a valid and subsisting bill, and that he had then a good title thereto.
56. 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. Where a bill is dishonoured, the measure of damages, which shall be deemed to be liquidated damages, shall be as follows:
(1.) The holder may recover from any party liable on the bill, and the drawer who has been compelled to pay the bill may recover from the acceptor, and an indorser who has been compelled to pay the bill may recover from the acceptor or from the drawer, or from a prior indorser-
(a.) The amount of the bill:
(b.) Interest thereon from the time of presentment for payment if the bill is payable on demand, and from the maturity of the bill in any other case:
(c.) The expenses of noting, or, when protest is necessary, and the protest has been extended, the expenses of protest.
(2.) In the case of a bill which has been dishonoured abroad, in lieu of the above damages, the holder may recover from the drawer or an indorser, and the drawer or an indorser who has been compelled to pay the bill may recover from any party liable to him, the amount of the re-exchange with interest thereon until the time of payment.
(3.) Where by this Ordinance interest may be recovered as damages, such interest may, if justice require it, be withheld wholly or in part, and where a bill is expressed to be payable with interest at a given rate, interest as damages may or may not be given at the same rate as interest proper.
58. (1.) Where the holder of a bill payable to bearer negotiates it by delivery without indorsing it, he is called a "transferor by delivery."
(2.) A transferor by delivery is not liable on the instrument.
(3.) A transferor by delivery who negotiates a bill thereby warrants to his immediate transferee, being a holder for value, that the bill is what it purports to be, that he has a right to transfer it, and that at the time of transfer he is not aware of any fact which renders it valueless.
Discharge of Bill.
59. (1.) A bill is discharged by payment in due course by or on behalf of the drawee or acceptor.
'Payment in due course' means payment made at or after the maturity of the bill to the holder thereof in good faith and without notice that his title to the bill is defective.
Liability of drawer or indorser.
Stranger signing bill liable as Indorser.
Measure of damages against parties to dishonoured bill.
Transferor by delivery and transferee.
Payment in due course.
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