UCC Section 3-301

UCC Section 3-301 provides only three ways in which an individual may qualify as the person eligible to enforce a note, two of which require the person to be in possession of the note (which may include possession by a third party that possesses it for the person)
19 : • The first way a person may qualify as the person eligible to enforce a note will be its “holder.” This familiar concept, put down in more detail in UCC Section 1-201(b)(21)(A), requires that the person be in possession of the note and either (i) the note is payable to that person or (ii) the note is payable to bearer. Determining to whom a note is payable requires examination not only of the face area of the note but additionally of any indorsements. This is because the party to whom a note is payable may be changed by indorsement20 to ensure that, for instance, a note payable to the order of a named payee that’s indorsed in blank by that payee becomes payable to bearer.21
• The 2nd way a person may be the person eligible to enforce a note will be a “Non-holder in possession of the [note] who has the rights of a holder.” o Just how can an individual who is not the holder of a note have the rights of a holder?. This may occur by operation of law beyond your UCC, such as the law of subrogation or estate administration, by what type person may be the successor to or acquires another person’s rights.22. Additionally it may occur if the delivery of the note to that person is really a “transfer” (as that term is defined in UCC Section 3-203, see below) because transfer of a note “vests in the transferee any right of the transferor to enforce the instrument.”23 Thus, in case a holder (who, as seen above, is really a person eligible to enforce a note) transfers the note to another person, that other person (the transferee) obtains from the holder the right to enforce the note even though the transferee does not end up being the holder (as in the example below). Similarly, a 19 See UCC § 1-103(b) (unless displaced by particular provisions of the UCC, the law of, inter alia, principal and agent supplements the provisions of the UCC). See also UCC § 3-420, Comment 1 (“Delivery to an agent [of a payee] is delivery to the payee.”). Note that “delivery” of a negotiable instrument is defined in UCC § 1-201(b)(15) as voluntary transfer of possession. This Report does not address the determination of whether a particular person is an agent of another person under the law of agency and the agency law implications of such a determination.
20 “Indorsement,” as defined in UCC § 3-204(a), requires the signature of the indorser. The law of agency determines whether a signature made by a person purporting to act as a representative binds the represented person. UCC § 3-402(a); see note 12, supra. An indorsement may appear either on the instrument or on a separate piece of paper (usually referred to as an allonge) affixed to the instrument. See UCC § 3-204(a) and Comment 1, par. 4.
21UCC Section 3-205 contains the rules concerning the effect of various types of indorsement on the party to whom a note is payable. Either a “special indorsement” (see UCC § 3-205(a)) or a “blank indorsement” (see UCC § 3205(b)) can change the identity of the person to whom the note is payable. A special indorsement is an indorsement that identifies the person to whom it makes the note payable, while a blank indorsement is an indorsement that does not identify such a person and results in the instrument becoming payable to bearer. When an instrument is indorsed in blank (and, thus, is payable to bearer), it may be negotiated by transfer of possession alone until specially indorsed. UCC § 3-205(b).
22 See Official Comment to UCC § 3-301. 23 UCC § 3-203(b).
Subsequent transfer will result in the following transferee being truly a person eligible for enforce the note.
23 o Under what circumstances does delivery of a note qualify as an exchange? As mentioned in UCC Section 3-203(a), a note is transferred “if it is delivered by a person apart from its issuer for the purpose of giving to the person receiving delivery the right to enforce the instrument.” For instance, assume that the payee of a note sells it to an assignee, going to transfer all of the payee’s rights to the note, but delivers the note to the assignee without indorsing it. The assignee won’t qualify as a holder (because the note continues to be payable to the payee) but, because the transaction between the payee and the assignee qualifies as an exchange, the assignee now has all of the payee’s rights to enforce the note and thereby qualifies as the person eligible for enforce it. Thus, the failure to acquire the endorsement of the payee doesn’t prevent a person in possession of the note from being the person eligible for enforce it, but demonstrating that status is more difficult. The reason being the person in possession of the note must also demonstrate the purpose of the delivery of the note to it to be able to qualify as the person eligible for enforce.
24 Under what circumstances does delivery of a note qualify as a transfer? As stated in UCC Section 3-203(a), a note is transferred “if it is delivered with a person apart from its issuer for the goal of giving to the person receiving delivery the right to enforce the instrument.” Like, think that the payee of a note sells it to an assignee, intending to transfer all of the payee’s rights to the note, but delivers the note to the assignee without indorsing it. The assignee will not qualify as a holder (because the note is still payable to the payee) but, as the transaction between the payee and the assignee qualifies as a transfer, the assignee now has all of the payee’s rights to enforce the note and thereby qualifies as the individual eligible for enforce it. Thus, the failure to obtain the endorsement of the payee doesn’t prevent a person in possession of the note from being the individual eligible for enforce it, but demonstrating that status is more difficult. The reason being the individual in possession of the note must demonstrate the goal of the delivery of the note to it in order to qualify as the individual eligible for enforce.24
24 If the note was transferred for value and the transferee does not qualify as a holder because of the lack of endorsement by the transferor, “the transferee has a specifically enforceable right to the unqualified endorsement of the transferor.” See UCC § 3-203(c).
25 UCC § 3-309(a)(iii) (1990 text), 3-309(a)(3) (2002 text). The 2002 text goes on to provide that a transferee from the person who lost possession of a note may also qualify as a person entitled to enforce it. See UCC § 3309(a)(1)(B) (2002). This point was thought to be implicit in the 1990 text, but was rejected in some cases in which the issue was raised. The reasoning of those cases was rejected in Official Comment 5 to UCC § 9-109 and the point was made explicit in the 2002 text of Article 3.
26 To prevail the person must establish not only that the person is a person entitled to enforce the note but also the other elements of the maker’s obligation to pay such a person. See generally UCC §§ 3-309(b), 3-412. Moreover, as is the case with respect to the enforcement of all rights under the UCC, the person enforcing the note must act in good faith in enforcing the note. UCC § 1-304. Subsequent transfer can lead to the next transferee being a person eligible for enforce the note.
Illustrations:
1.Maker issued a negotiable mortgage note payable to the order of Payee. Payee is in possession of the note, which has not been indorsed. Payee may be the holder of the note and, therefore, is the person eligible to enforce it. UCC §§ 1-201(b)(21)(A), 3-301(i).
2. Maker issued a negotiable mortgage note payable to the order of Payee. Payee indorsed the note in blank and gave possession of it to Transferee. Transferee may be the holder of the note and, therefore, is the person eligible to enforce it. UCC §§ 1-201(b)(21)(A), 3-301(i).
3. Maker issued a negotiable mortgage note payable to the order of Payee. Payee sold the note to Transferee and gave possession of it to Transferee for the objective of giving Transferee the proper to enforce the note. Payee did not, however, indorse the note. Transferee isn’t the holder of the note because, while Transferee is in possession of the note, it’s payable neither to bearer nor to Transferee. UCC § 1-201(b)(21)(A). Nonetheless, Transferee is really a person eligible to enforce the note. This is because the note was transferred to Transferee and the transfer vested in Transferee Payee’s to enforce the note. UCC § 3-203(a)-(b). As a result, Transferee is really a nonholder in possession of the note with the rights of a holder and, accordingly, a person eligible to enforce the note. UCC § 3-301(ii).
4 Same facts as Illustrations 2 and 3, except that (i) underneath the law of agency, Agent is the agent of Transferee for purposes of possessing the note and (ii) it is Agent, rather than Transferee, to whom actual physical possession of the note is written by Payee. In the important points of Illustration 2, Transferee is just a holder of the note and a person eligible to enforce it. In the context of Illustration 3, Transferee is just a person eligible to enforce the note. Whether Agent may enforce the note or mortgage on behalf of Transferee depends partly on what the law states of agency and, in the event of the mortgage, real property law.
5. Same facts as Illustration 2, except that after obtaining possession of the note, lost the note and its whereabouts cannot be determined. Transferee is just a person eligible to enforce the note even though Transferee does not need possession of it. UCC § 3-309(a). If Transferee brings an action on the note against Maker, Transferee must establish the terms of the note and the weather of Maker’s obligation on it. The court might not enter judgment and only Transferee, however, unless the court finds that Maker is adequately protected against loss that may occur by reason of a state of another person (such while the finder of the note) to enforce the note. UCC § 3-309(b). 27 See id. UCC § 3-309(b) goes on to state that “Adequate protection may be provided by any reasonable means.”

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