The words might suggest that, but long-established banking practice says otherwise. I suspect that it turns on the point that endorsing a cheque in favour of another person makes that person the payee.
One upon a time the banks accepted endorsed "A/C Payee Only" cheques - not now. I've had endless trouble with one particular bank over this and they maintain it has always been the case, even though I proved to them that they habitually accepted endorsed crossed cheques before. It seems the banks are now tightening up so much that it will become impossible to get even your own money out!!A cheque crossed "a/c payee" can be endorsed in favour of another person and lodged to that person's account. Your mother is the legal representative of your father's estate, so she has the same legal capacity to endorse a cheque as your father would have had. An endorsement by her "as executor of the estate of ..." should be sufficient.
If levelpar's interpretation were correct, then we would have an absurd situation where a bank could hold on to money which it had been ordered to pay out
Ordered to pay out by whom?
By the person who signed the cheque. Look at a cheque: the formula of words starts with "Pay ...". It is a written order from an authorised signatory on an account to the banker to pay a stipulated amount to somebody
Yes and in this case that "authorised signatory" who made out the "written order" made it payable to someone who since died and for some reason made to A/C payee only.
One upon a time the banks accepted endorsed "A/C Payee Only" cheques - not now. I've had endless trouble with one particular bank over this and they maintain it has always been the case, even though I proved to them that they habitually accepted endorsed crossed cheques before. It seems the banks are now tightening up so much that it will become impossible to get even your own money out!!
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