Source: L. 90: Entire article added, p. 353, § 1, effective January 1, 1991.
In the case discussed in the preceding paragraph the $10 charge is trivial in relation to the amount of the payment and it may not be important to Beneficiary how the charge is paid. But it may be very important if the $1,000,000 obligation represented the price of exercising a right such as an option favorable to Originator and unfavorable to Beneficiary. Beneficiary might well argue that it was entitled to receive $1,000,000. If the option was exercised shortly before its expiration date, the result could be loss of the option benefit because the required payment of $1,000,000 was not made before the option expired. Section 4A-406(c) allows Originator to preserve the option benefit. The amount received by Beneficiary is deemed to be $1,000,000 unless Beneficiary demands the $10 and Originator does not pay it.
Structure Colorado Code
Title 4 - Uniform Commercial Code
Part 3 - Execution of Sender's Payment Order by Receiving Bank
§ 4-4.5-301. Execution and Execution Date
§ 4-4.5-302. Obligations of Receiving Bank in Execution of Payment Order
§ 4-4.5-303. Erroneous Execution of Payment Order
§ 4-4.5-304. Duty of Sender to Report Erroneously Executed Payment Order
§ 4-4.5-305. Liability for Late or Improper Execution or Failure to Execute Payment Order