Banks and Their Customers

银行和顾客

新概念英语第四册 流利英语 美音

语言学习

2 分钟

第 12 集

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  • Lesson 12

  • Banks and their customers

  • Why is there no risk to the customer when a bank prints the customer's name on his cheques?

  • When anyone opens a current account at a bank, he is lending the bank money,

  • repayment of which he may demand at any time either in cash or by drawing a cheque in favour of another person.

  • Primarily, the banker-customer relationship is that of debtor and creditor --

  • who is which depending on whether the customer's account is in credit or is overdrawn.

  • But, in addition to that basically simple concept,

  • the bank and its customer owe a large number of obligations to one another.

  • Many of these obligations can give rise to problems and complications but a bank customer, unlike, say, a buyer of goods,

  • cannot complain that the law is loaded against him.

  • The bank must obey its customer's instructions, and not those of anyone else.

  • When, for example, a customer first opens an account, he instructs the bank to debit his account only in respect of cheques drawn by himself.

  • He gives the bank specimens of his signature, and there is a very firm rule

  • that the bank has no right or authority to pay out a customer's money on a cheque

  • on which its customer's signature has been forged.

  • It makes no difference that the forgery may have been a very skillful one:

  • the bank must recognize its customer's signature.

  • For this reason there is no risk to the customer in the practice, adopted by banks, of printing the customer's name on his cheques.

  • If this facilitates forgery, it is the bank which will lose, not the customer.