South Carolina Statutes

§ 36-1-202 — Notice; knowledge.

South Carolina § 36-1-202
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 36COMMERCIAL CODE
Ch. 1COMMERCIAL CODE—GENERAL PROVISIONS

This text of South Carolina § 36-1-202 (Notice; knowledge.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S.C. Code Ann. § 36-1-202 (2026).

Text

(a)Subject to subsection (f), a person has "notice" of a fact if the person:
(1)has actual knowledge of it;
(2)has received a notice or notification of it;
(3)from all the facts and circumstances known to the person at the time in question, has reason to know that it exists.
(b)"Knowledge" means actual knowledge. "Knows" has a corresponding meaning.
(c)"Discover", "learn", or words of similar import refer to knowledge rather than to reason to know.
(d)A person "notifies" or "gives" a notice or notification to another person by taking such steps as may be reasonably required to inform the other person in ordinary course, whether or not the other person actually comes to know of it.
(e)Subject to subsection (f), a person "receives" a notice or notification when:
(1)it comes to that

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Legislative History

HISTORY: 1962 Code SECTION 10.1-201; 1966 (54) 2716; 1988 Act No. 494, SECTION 2; 1991 Act No. 161, SECTION 2(A); 2001 Act No. 67, SECTION 3; former 1976 Code SECTION 36-1-201; 2014 Act No. 213 (S.343), SECTION 1, eff October 1, 2014. OFFICIAL COMMENT Source: Derived from former Section 1-201(25)-(27). Changes from former law: These provisions are substantive rather than purely definitional. Accordingly, they have been relocated from Section 1-201 to this section. The reference to the "forgotten notice" doctrine has been deleted. 1. Under subsection (a), a person has notice of a fact when, inter alia, the person has received a notification of the fact in question. 2. As provided in subsection (d), the word "notifies" is used when the essential fact is the proper dispatch of the notice, not its receipt. Compare "Send." When the essential fact is the other party's receipt of the notice, that is stated. Subsection (e) states when a notification is received. 3. Subsection (f) makes clear that notice, knowledge, or a notification, although "received," for instance, by a clerk in Department A of an organization, is effective for a transaction conducted in Department B only from the time when it was or should have been communicated to the individual conducting that transaction. Editor's Note 2014 Act No. 213, SECTION 51, provides as follows: "SECTION 51. This act becomes effective on October 1, 2014. It applies to transactions entered into and events occurring after that date."

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Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 36-1-202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/1/36-1-202.