Australia The
Cheques Act 1986 (Cth) imposes
strict liability on the drawer of a dishonoured cheque. The payee may sue the drawer on the cheque itself, who may not have been the original debtor.
India In India, a bounced cheque is a criminal offence, punishable by fines upto twice the cheque amount, jail term of 2 years, or both under Section 138 of the
Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881.
Israel In Israel, a bounced cheque without cover incurs a negative record in the credit history of account holder(s). Ten bounced cheques during a year would result in the restriction of cheques for the account, and the bank will bounce new cheques for a year. If the account owner continues to draw cheques during the restriction period, that person's accounts in all Israeli banks will be denied from issuing cheques. Dishonoured cheque can be presented to the state bailiff service for being forcedly paid.
United Arab Emirates Until January 2013, a bounced cheque was a criminal offence in the United Arab Emirates that led to imprisonment of the person who wrote it.
United States In many jurisdictions in the United States, a
bad check restitution program exists that allows recipients of bad cheques to collect the funds from the local
district attorney's office, regardless of the amount. An agency run by the district attorney will pursue the drawer of the cheque by attempting to collect the funds in exchange for avoiding
criminal prosecution. The cheque drawer will be responsible to cover the amount of the cheque, plus all fees to which the recipient is legally entitled, plus a programme fee. The drawer will also be required to take a course designed to improve cheque-writing habits. These programmes are controversial and in recent years have come under fire in lawsuits. Normally, if the cheque writer can cover up their bad credits in sixty days, all charges will be dropped. In some jurisdictions, for a criminal prosecution on a bad cheque there must be some element of
fraud involved in the issuance of the cheque. In some U.S. states, if the cheque drawer informs the party they are uttering the cheque to that it will not clear at the current time (such as asking someone to "hold" a cheque for a few days), if the cheque bounces, they can still be sued for the value of the cheque, but warning the recipient before acceptance that the cheque will not clear immediately negates the element of fraud and prevents criminal prosecution. For similar reasons, a post-dated cheque will not normally support a conviction for issuing a NSF cheque.
United Kingdom In England and Wales, the use of the endorsement "refer to drawer" has become standard after a bank was successfully sued for
libel after returning a cheque incorrectly endorsed "insufficient funds"; the court ruled that, as there were sufficient funds, the statement was demonstrably false and damaging to the reputation of the person issuing the cheque. ==See also==