South Carolina Statutes

§ 36-7-502 — Rights acquired by due negotiation.

South Carolina § 36-7-502
JurisdictionSouth Carolina
Title 36COMMERCIAL CODE
Ch. 7COMMERCIAL CODE—WAREHOUSE RECEIPTS, BILLS OF LADING AND OTHER DOCUMENTS OF TITLE

This text of South Carolina § 36-7-502 (Rights acquired by due negotiation.) 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. § 36-7-502 (2026).

Text

(a)Subject to Section 36-7-503, a holder to which a negotiable document of title has been duly negotiated acquires thereby:
(1)title to the document;
(2)title to the goods;
(3)all rights accruing under the law of agency or estoppel, including rights to goods delivered to the bailee after the document was issued; and (4) the direct obligation of the issuer to hold or deliver the goods according to the terms of the document free of any defense or claim by the issuer except those arising under the terms of the document or under this chapter, but in the case of a delivery order, the bailee's obligation accrues only upon the bailee's acceptance of the delivery order and the obligation acquired by the holder is that the issuer and any indorser will procure the acceptance of the bailee.
(b)S

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Legislative History

HISTORY: 1962 Code SECTION 10.7-502; 1966 (54) 2716; 2014 Act No. 213 (S.343), SECTION 2, eff October 1, 2014. OFFICIAL COMMENT Prior Uniform Statutory Provision: Former Section 7-502. Changes: To accommodate electronic documents of title and for style. Purpose: 1. This section applies to both tangible and electronic documents of title. The elements of duly negotiated, which constitutes a due negotiation, are set forth in Section 7-501. The several necessary qualifications of the broad principle that the holder of a document acquired in a due negotiation is the owner of the document and the goods have been brought together in the next section (Section 7-503). 2. Subsection (a)(3) covers the case of "feeding" of a duly negotiated document by subsequent delivery to the bailee of such goods as the document falsely purported to cover; the bailee in such case is estopped as against the holder of the document. 3. The explicit statement in subsection (a)(4) of the bailee's direct obligation to the holder precludes the defense that the document in question was "spent" after the carrier had delivered the goods to a previous holder. But the holder is subject to such defenses as non-negligent destruction even though not apparent on the document. The sentence on delivery orders applies only to delivery orders in negotiable form which have been duly negotiated. On delivery orders, see also Section 7-503(b) and Comment. 4. Subsection (b) continues the law which gave full effect to the issuance or due negotiation of a negotiable document. The subsection adds nothing to the effect of the rules stated in subsection (a), but it has been included since such explicit reference was provided under former Section 7-502 to preserve the right of a purchaser by due negotiation. The listing is not exhaustive. The language "any stoppage" is included lest an inference be drawn that a stoppage of the goods before or after transit might cut off or otherwise impair the purchaser's rights. Cross References: Sections 7-103, 7-205, 7-403, 7-501, and 7-503. Definitional Cross References: "Bailee". Section 7-102. "Control". Section 7-106. "Delivery". Section 1-201. "Delivery order". Section 7-102. "Document of title". Section 1-201. "Duly negotiate". Section 7-501. "Fungible". Section 1-201. "Goods". Section 7-102. "Holder". Section 1-201. "Issuer". Section 7-102. "Person". Section 1-201. "Rights". Section 1-201. "Term". Section 1-201. "Warehouse receipt". Section 1-201. 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."

Nearby Sections

15
View on official source ↗

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
South Carolina § 36-7-502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/sc/36-7-502.