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HomeCommercial CodeDiv. 11Ch. 4§ 11404 Beneficiary Bank Payment Obligation

§ 11404 Beneficiary Bank Payment Obligation

Commercial Code·California
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§ 11404 Beneficiary Bank Payment Obligation

This law says that if a bank agrees to process a payment for someone, they must pay the money on time. If they don't, they might have to pay extra money as a penalty.

Key Takeaways

  • •If a bank agrees to process your payment, they must pay you on time.
  • •If the bank is late and causes you problems, they might have to pay you extra money.
  • •The bank must tell you about the payment by the next business day if it's going into your account.
  • •If the bank doesn't tell you on time, they have to pay you interest for each day they're late.
  • •You can't agree to give up your right to be paid on time, but you can agree to change how the bank tells you about the payment.

Example

You are expecting a payment of $1000 from your friend, and the bank agrees to process it. The payment date is Monday, but the bank doesn't pay you until Wednesday.

The bank must pay you the $1000 on Monday. If they don't, and you tell them it's causing you problems (like you can't pay your rent), they might have to pay you extra money for the trouble they caused.

How to Calculate

Interest = (Amount of Payment Order) * (Interest Rate) * (Number of Days Notice was Late)

  1. Find out how much money the payment order was for.
  2. Determine the interest rate that applies (this might be a standard rate set by the bank or by law).
  3. Count the number of days between when the bank should have told you about the payment and when you actually found out.
  4. Multiply the amount of the payment order by the interest rate and then by the number of days to find out how much interest the bank owes you.

The bank was supposed to tell you about a $1000 payment on Monday, but you didn't find out until Friday. The interest rate is 0.1% per day.

Result: $1000 * 0.001 * 4 = $4 in interest

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 11404 Beneficiary Bank Payment Obligation

(a) Subject to subdivision (e) of Section 11211, and subdivisions (d) and (e) of Section 11405, if a beneficiary’s bank accepts a payment order, the bank is obliged to pay the amount of the order to the beneficiary of the order. Payment is due on the payment date of the order, but if acceptance occurs on the payment date after the close of the funds-transfer business day of the bank, payment is due on the next funds-transfer business day. If the bank refuses to pay after demand by the beneficiary and receipt of notice of particular circumstances that will give rise to consequential damages as a result of nonpayment, the beneficiary may recover damages resulting from the refusal to pay to the extent the bank had notice of the damages, unless the bank proves that it did not pay because of a reasonable doubt concerning the right of the beneficiary to payment. (b) If a payment order accepted by the beneficiary’s bank instructs payment to an account of the beneficiary, the bank is obliged to notify the beneficiary of receipt of the order before midnight of the next funds-transfer business day following the payment date. If the payment order does not instruct payment to an account of the beneficiary, the bank is required to notify the beneficiary only if notice is required by the order. Notice may be given by first-class mail or any other means reasonable in the circumstances. If the bank fails to give the required notice, the bank is obliged to pay interest to the beneficiary on the amount of the payment order from the day notice should have been given until the day the beneficiary learned of receipt of the payment order by the bank. No other damages are recoverable. Reasonable attorney’s fees are also recoverable if demand for interest is made and refused before an action is brought on the claim. (c) The right of a beneficiary to receive payment and damages as stated in subdivision (a) may not be varied by agreement or a funds-transfer system rule. The right of a beneficiary to be notified as stated in subdivision (b) may be varied by agreement of the beneficiary or by a funds-transfer system rule if the beneficiary is notified of the rule before initiation of the funds transfer. (Added by Stats. 1990, Ch. 125, Sec. 2.)

Last verified: January 10, 2026

Key Terms

beneficiary’s bankpayment orderpayment datefunds-transfer business daynoticeinterest

Related Statutes

  • § 11401 Payment Order Payment Date
  • § 11402 Sender Payment Obligation Timing
  • § 11405 Beneficiary Bank Payment Timing
  • § 11106 Payment Order Cutoff Times
  • § 11207 Beneficiary Identification Rules

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Commercial Code. Section 11404.
View Official Source