CHAN WAN V. TAN KIM
109 PHIL 706
FACTS:
Tam Kim issued 11 checks payable to cash or bearer. Chan Wan presented these for payment but were dishonored for insufficiency of funds. This prompted Chan Wan to institute an action against Tam Kim. She didn't take the witness stand and merely presented the checks for payment. Tan Kim on the other hand alleged that the checks were for mere receipts only. The trial court dismissed the complaint as Chan Wan failed to show that she was a holder in due course.HELD:
Eight of the checks were crossed checks specially to Chinabank and should have been presented for payment by Chinabank and not by Chan Wan. Inasmuch as Chan Wan didn't present them for payment himself, there was no proper presentment, and the liability didn't attach to the drawer.The facts show that the checks were indeed deposited with Chinabank and were by the latter presented for collection to the drawee bank. But as the account had no sufficient funds, they were unpaid and returned, some of them stamped “account closed”. How it reached the hands of Chan Wan, she didn't indicate. Most probably, as the trial court surmised, she acquired them after they have been dishonored.
Chan Wan is then not a holder in due course. Nonetheless, it doesn't mean that she couldn't collect on the checks. He can still collect against Tan Kim if the latter has no valid excuse for refusing payment. The only disadvantage for Chan Kim is that she is susceptible to defenses of Tan Kim but what are the defenses of latter? This has to be further deliberated by the trial court.