<P> Bank notes are frequently referred to as promissory notes, a promissory note made by a bank and payable to bearer on demand . According to section 4 of India's Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, "a Promissory Note is an writing (not being a bank note or currency note), containing an unconditional undertaking, signed by the maker to pay a certain sum of money only to or to the order of a certain person or the bearer of the instrument". </P> <P> A negotiable instrument or "draft" is a written order by the drawer to the drawee to pay money to the payee . A common type of bill of exchange is the cheque (check in American English), defined as a bill of exchange drawn on a banker and payable on demand . Bills of exchange are used primarily in international trade, and are written orders by one person to his bank to pay the bearer a specific sum on a specific date . Prior to the advent of paper currency, bills of exchange were a common means of exchange . They are not used as often today . </P> <P> A bill of exchange is essentially an order made by one person to another to pay money to a third person . A bill of exchange requires in its inception three parties--the drawer, the drawee, and the payee . The person who draws the bill is called the drawer . He gives the order to pay money to the third party . The party upon whom the bill is drawn is called the drawee . He is the person to whom the bill is addressed and who is ordered to pay . He becomes an acceptor when he indicates his willingness to pay the bill . The party in whose favor the bill is drawn or is payable is called the payee . The parties need not all be distinct persons . Thus, the drawer may draw on himself payable to his own order . A bill of exchange may be endorsed by the payee in favour of a third party, who may in turn endorse it to a fourth, and so on indefinitely . The "holder in due course" may claim the amount of the bill against the drawee and all previous endorsers, regardless of any counterclaims that may have disabled the previous payee or endorser from doing so . This is what is meant by saying that a bill is negotiable . In some cases a bill is marked "not negotiable"--see crossing of cheques . In that case it can still be transferred to a third party, but the third party can have no better right than the transferor . </P> <P> In the United States, Articles 3 and 4 of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) govern the issuance and transfer of negotiable instruments, unless the instruments are governed by Article 8 of the UCC . The various state law enactments of UCC § § 3--104 (a) through (d) set forth the legal definition of what is and what is not a negotiable instrument: </P>

An instrument that promises to pay in goods can be negotiable