18 Feb 2008 04:53:04 | John Thomson
The Check 21 Law is the new federal law for financial
institutions and has taken effect last October 28, 2004.
Before the Check 21 law was enacted, your paper check had to be
physically transported from where the check was paid out before
it could be deposited to the financial institution. Now, even if
it has always been prudent for you to keep money in your account
to pay for the checks you’ve issued, this law makes it
imperative.
Here are some of the other effects The Check 21 Law will have on
you and fellow consumers.
You will no longer receive the original paper checks you issued,
as your bank won’t have these.
The probabilities of your checks clearing sooner have increased.
If you don’t have funds to cover this amount, your check will
bounce. So don’t make out a check when your checking account has
insufficient funds, you’ll be severely penalized.
On the minus side is, you will not be able to access the funds
you’ve issued a check for, as the new law doesn’t include
shorter check hold times.
Because of the shorter time in process the checks, your banks
will be able to save money in processing your checks, but they
are not required under the law to share these savings with you.
For each kind of copy, your check will have different rights
attached with it. For instance, Check 21 has created a new paper
copy of an electronic image of a check and is called the
"substitute check." This substitute check can be a legal
equivalent of the original check, and right attached to this, is
that only a substitute check triggers your right to recredit of
disputed funds.
The regular copy of a check does not have this same kind of
protection. If you ask for a copy of a check, your bank can send
you an ordinary copy instead of this special kind of copy which
triggers legal rights and protections unless you specifically
ask for the substitute check.
A second bank other than your issuing bank can have your
original check and under this law, has the right to decide if it
will keep or destroy your check. Before enactment of Check 21,
your own bank could decide how long they should keep your
original checks, if you didn't get these back together with your
monthly statements. Under Check 21, the bank of the person you
wrote the check to may decide when to destroy your check.
Under the Check 21 law, you can have funds of up to $2,500
recredited to the your account in 10 business days if the check
is paid twice, paid for the wrong amount, or otherwise paid in
error. However, a gray area exists, does this new right apply
when a paper substitute check is used in the processing of the
check but is not returned to the consumer? The regulations apply
this recredit right only to the consumer who was provided with a
substitute check. If the check was electronically processed by
all the banks it was routed through, and the consumer was not
provided with a substitute check, then the check remains under
state check law.
If you want to safeguard your rights, you can request for a
return of “substitute checks" you issued together with your
monthly checking account statements. One possible difficulty
lies in the amount you may pay in getting these checks back,
change banks if these are too high!
In essence, what the Check 21 federal law has done is shorten
the gap financial institutions take in processing checks. This
new law has enabled financial institutions to scan paper checks
and to send images of these same checks for electronic
processing. This law is an efficient and faster way to process
check payments.
If you need information that is more detailed about your rights
on the Check 21 law, access the Federal Reserve Bank website and
request for these materials: Consumer Guide to Check 21 &
Substitute Checks and what you should know about your checks.
About Author :
John Thomson is webmaster at
http://www.business-personal-checks.com where check information
is a click away. Easily find the checks for you at
http://www.business-personal-checks.com