Business Law Final: True/False
A check which is "payable to cash" requires an appropriate indorsement for further negotiation.
False
A draft involves only two parties, the drawer and the drawee.
False
A drawee bank's refusal to certify a check constitutes dishonor of the instrument.
False
A nonnegotiable instrument is not transferable.
False
A note must be signed by the drawer, while a draft must be signed by the maker.
False
A person can be a holder only if the instrument has been transferred to that person by negotiation.
False
A qualified indorsement destroys the instrument's negotiability.
False
An accommodation party will always be primarily liable on an instrument.
False
An aggrieved buyer may make a reasonable contract of cover and then seek to recover from the seller the difference between the cost of cover and the market price, plus any incidental and consequential damages.
False
An allonge may be used only if the instrument does not contain sufficient space for an indorsement.
False
An indorsement written on a piece of paper clipped to the instrument is not valid.
False
An indorser who has indorsed a negotiable instrument with a qualified indorsement stating that it is "without recourse" has no liability of any kind to subsequent holders.
False
An instrument is negotiable even though it is incomplete as to the amount payable.
False
An instrument is nonnegotiable if the holder may extend the maturity of the instrument for an indefinite period of time.
False
An instrument is nonnegotiable if the obligor may extend the maturity of the instrument for a definite period of time.
False
An obligation-oriented remedy is one that provides the aggrieved party with the opportunity to recover monetary damages.
False
An unauthorized signature cannot be ratified by the person whose name appears on the instrument.
False
Assignment is the transfer of a negotiable instrument in such a manner that the transferee becomes a holder.
False
Contributory negligence by the user of a defective product that is unreasonably dangerous will prevent the user from pursuing a claim based on Section 402A.
False
Elder, an authorized agent for Mullins, signs a negotiable instrument, "Mullins, principal, by Elder, agent." Mullins has primary liability and Elder has secondary liability on the instrument.
False
Greater rights are given to the transferee under assignment than under negotiation.
False
Heidi Homeowner buys a defective toaster at a neighborhood garage sale and is injured when it explodes. Heidi can sue her neighbor for breach of the implied warranty of merchantability.
False
In Davis v. Watson Brothers Plumbing, Inc., the court found that Davis was not a "holder" of the check.
False
In resolving ambiguities, printed words control typewritten and handwritten words, and typewritten words control handwritten words.
False
Most states have eliminated the requirements of horizontal privity but have retained vertical privity requirements in warranty actions.
False
Negotiation of a bearer instrument requires a valid indorsement.
False
Strict liability in tort may arise from a manufacturing defect but not from a defective design.
False
The Code has rejected the common law remedy of cover.
False
The Code requires that a seller make certain warranties, which cannot be disclaimed.
False
The concept of holder in due course was developed to make transferees subject to defenses.
False
The doctrine of strict liability in tort may be held to be applicable to merchant sellers for personal injuries but not property damage.
False
The expression "as is" will only disclaim the implied warranty of merchantability if it is in writing and conspicuous.
False
The strict liability in tort of manufacturers extends only to buyers and their families.
False
Under Revised Article 3, an order to pay only out of a particular fund makes the instrument conditional and thus destroys negotiability.
False
A blank indorsement can be converted into a special indorsement.
True
A cashier's check is a check drawn by a bank on itself to the order of a named payee.
True
A drawee bank is primarily liable after it accepts the check.
True
A note is a written promise by a maker to pay a payee and is thus a two-party instrument.
True
A restrictive indorsement attempts to limit the rights of the indorsee.
True
A seller who discovers that the buyer is insolvent may stop any delivery.
True
A signature may be made by an individual herself or by an authorized agent.
True
A thief or finder of order paper which has been indorsed in blank can transfer good title to a subsequent holder who may qualify as a holder in due course.
True
A warranty creates a duty on the part of the seller to ensure that the goods it sells will conform to certain qualities, characteristics, or conditions.
True
An instrument payable with a stated, variable rate of interest is an obligation for a fixed amount.
True
An instrument, otherwise negotiable, is negotiable bearer paper if by its terms it is payable to "cash."
True
Any seller can make an implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose, but only a merchant can make an implied warranty of merchantability.
True
Application of the implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose does not depend on whether the seller is a merchant.
True
Checks, when accepted, are said to be certified.
True
If a buyer breaches an installment contract in a manner that substantially impairs the whole contract, the seller may cancel the entire contract.
True
In the event of a breach of warranty, the measure of damages is the difference at the time and place of the acceptance between the value of the accepted goods and the value of the goods as warranted.
True
Negotiability is a legal concept that makes written instruments an accepted form of payment in substitution for money.
True
Presentment is excused where the acceptor is undergoing bankruptcy.q
True
Requirements for negotiation depend on whether the instrument is bearer paper or order paper.
True
Strict liability in tort generally is not subject to disclaimer, exclusion, or modifications by contractual agreement.
True
The Code allows parties to a contract to specify the extent of damages in the event of a breach.
True
The Code has rejected the doctrine of election of remedies, providing that remedies for breach are cumulative in nature.
True
The Code permits an aggrieved seller to bring an action to recover the price where the goods have been identified to the contract and there is no ready market available for their resale.
True
The Code's implied warranty of merchantability is a warranty by a merchant seller that the goods are reasonably fit for the ordinary purposes for which they are manufactured and sold.
True
The aggrieved seller's right to stop delivery of goods by a carrier or other bailee upon learning of the buyer's insolvency ceases when a negotiable document of title covering the goods is negotiated to the buyer.
True
The indorsement of an impostor or of any other person in the name of the named payee is effective if the impostor has induced the maker or drawer to issue the instrument to him.
True
The purpose of the Code's remedial provisions is to place the aggrieved party in as good a position as if the other party had fully performed.
True
The transfer of a nonnegotiable promise or order operates as an assignment
True
The treasurer of Image, Inc. uses a stamp to sign checks drawn on the corporate account. This meets the signature requirement of negotiability.
True
There is no implied warranty on defects that an examination ought to have revealed.
True
Under the Code the parties may, by agreement, limit, modify, or exclude remedies or damages available for breach.
True
Under the Magnuson-Moss Act, no seller providing a written warranty can effectively disclaim any implied warranty.
True
When a severe weather warning has been declared, a delay in notice of dishonor is excused to the reasonably diligent holder who was prevented from posting the notice.
True