§760.780. Evidence of Unpaid Debt or Undischarged Obligation  


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  • a)         A record of a person subject to examination showing an unpaid debt or undischarged obligation is prima facie evidence of the debt or obligation. [765 ILCS 1026/15-1005(a)]

     

    b)         A person subject to examination may establish by a preponderance of the evidence that there is no unpaid debt or undischarged obligation for a debt or obligation or that the debt or obligation was not, or no longer is, a fixed and certain obligation of the person subject to examination. [765 ILCS 1026/15-1005(b)] Thus, the prima facie evidence may be rebutted by the person subject to examination.

     

    c)         A person subject to examination may overcome prima facie evidence by establishing by a preponderance of the evidence that a check, draft, or similar instrument was:

     

    1)         issued as an unaccepted offer in settlement of an unliquidated amount;

     

    2)         issued but later was replaced with another instrument because the earlier instrument was lost or contained an error that was corrected;

     

    3)         issued to a party affiliated with the issuer;

     

    4)         paid, satisfied, or discharged;

     

    5)         issued in error;

     

    6)         issued without consideration;

     

    7)         issued but there was a failure of consideration;

     

    8)         voided not later than 90 days after issuance for a valid business reason set forth in a contemporaneous record;

     

    A)        for purposes of this provision "valid business reason" does not include a policy of voiding outstanding checks, drafts, or similar instruments after a specified number of days;

     

    B)        a policy of automatically voiding would be tantamount to a private escheat law in violation of longstanding public policy in Illinois (see People ex rel. Callahan v. Marshall Field & Co., 83 Ill. App. 3d 811, 818, 404 N.E.2d 368, 374 (1980));

     

    C)        this defense merely indicates that when a check, draft, or similar instrument is voided quickly, for a valid business reason (i.e., not as a private escheat law), and the reason is indicated in a contemporaneous record, there is sufficient evidence to overcome the prima facie evidence of the existence of a debt or obligation; or

     

    9)         issued but not delivered to the third-party payee for a sufficient reason recorded within a reasonable time after issuance. [765 ILCS 1026/15-1005(c)]

     

    d)         In asserting a defense under this Section, and subject to the records retention requirements of the Act, a putative holder may present evidence of a course of dealing between the putative holder and the apparent owner. [765 ILCS 1026/15-1005(d)]