Information maintained by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Updating the database of the Illinois Compiled Statutes (ILCS) is an ongoing process. Recent laws may not yet be included in the ILCS database, but they are found on this site as Public Acts soon after they become law. For information concerning the relationship between statutes and Public Acts, refer to the Guide.

Because the statute database is maintained primarily for legislative drafting purposes, statutory changes are sometimes included in the statute database before they take effect. If the source note at the end of a Section of the statutes includes a Public Act that has not yet taken effect, the version of the law that is currently in effect may have already been removed from the database and you should refer to that Public Act to see the changes made to the current law.

BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS
(815 ILCS 105/) Promissory Note and Bank Holiday Act. (Part 1)

815 ILCS 105/0.01

    (815 ILCS 105/0.01) (from Ch. 17, par. 600)
    Sec. 0.01. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Promissory Note and Bank Holiday Act.
(Source: P.A. 86-1324.)

815 ILCS 105/3

    (815 ILCS 105/3) (from Ch. 17, par. 601)
    Sec. 3. All promissory notes, bonds, due bills and other instruments in writing, made or to be made, by any person, body politic or corporate, whereby such person promises or agrees to pay any sum of money or articles of personal property, or any sum of money in personal property, or acknowledges any sum of money or article of personal property to be due to any other person, shall be taken to be due and payable, and the sum of money or article of personal property therein mentioned shall, by virtue thereof, be due and payable as therein expressed.
(Source: R.S. 1874, p. 718.)

815 ILCS 105/4

    (815 ILCS 105/4) (from Ch. 17, par. 602)
    Sec. 4. Any note, bond, bill or other written instrument, made payable to any person named as payee therein, shall be assignable, by indorsement thereon, under the signature of such person, and of his assignees, in the same manner as bills of exchange are, so as to transfer absolutely and vest the property thereof in each and every assignee successively.
(Source: P.A. 84-550.)

815 ILCS 105/5

    (815 ILCS 105/5) (from Ch. 17, par. 603)
    Sec. 5. Any assignee to whom such sum of money or personal property is, by such indorsement or indorsements, made payable, or in case of the death of such assignee, his executor or administrator, may, in his own name, institute and maintain the same kind of action for the recovery thereof, against the person who made and executed any such note, bond, bill or other instrument in writing, or against his heirs, executors or administrators, as might have been maintained against him by the obligee or payee, in case the same had not been assigned; and in every such action, in which judgment shall be given for the plaintiff, he shall recover his damages and costs of suit, as in other cases.
(Source: R.S. 1874, p. 718.)

815 ILCS 105/6

    (815 ILCS 105/6) (from Ch. 17, par. 604)
    Sec. 6. No maker of any such note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, or other person liable thereon, shall be allowed to allege payment to the payee, made after notice of assignment, as a defense against the assignee.
(Source: R.S. 1874, p. 718.)

815 ILCS 105/7

    (815 ILCS 105/7) (from Ch. 17, par. 605)
    Sec. 7. The rights of the lawful holders of promissory notes payable in money and the liability of all parties to or upon said notes shall be the same as that of like parties to inland bills of exchange according to the custom of merchants. Every assignor of every other note, bond, bill or other instrument in writing mentioned in Section III of this act shall be liable to the action of the assignee or lawful holder thereof, if such assignee or lawful holder shall have used due diligence by the institution and prosecution of a suit against the maker thereof, for the recovery of the money or property due thereon, or damages in lieu thereof. But if the institution of such suit would have been unavailing, or the maker had absconded or resided without or had left the state when such instrument became due, such assignee or holder may recover against the assignor as if due diligence by suit had been used.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 262.)

815 ILCS 105/9

    (815 ILCS 105/9) (from Ch. 17, par. 610)
    Sec. 9. In any action upon a note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, for the payment of money or property, or the performance of covenants or conditions, if such instrument was made or entered into without a good and valuable consideration, or, if the consideration upon which it was made or entered into has wholly or in part failed, it shall be lawful for the defendant to plead such want of consideration, or that the consideration has wholly or in part failed; and if it shall appear that such instrument was made or entered into without a good or valuable consideration, or that the consideration has wholly failed, judgment shall be rendered in favor of the defendant; and if it shall appear that the consideration has failed in part, the plaintiff shall recover according to the justice of the case: Provided, that nothing in this section contained shall be construed to affect or impair the right of any bona fide assignee of any instrument made assignable by this act, when such assignment was made before such instrument became due.
(Source: P.A. 83-345.)

815 ILCS 105/10

    (815 ILCS 105/10) (from Ch. 17, par. 611)
    Sec. 10. If any fraud or circumvention be used in obtaining the making or executing of any of the instruments aforesaid, such fraud or circumvention may be pleaded in bar to any action to be brought on any such instrument so obtained, whether such action be brought by the party committing such fraud or circumvention, or any assignee of such instrument.
(Source: R.S. 1874, p. 718.)

815 ILCS 105/11

    (815 ILCS 105/11) (from Ch. 17, par. 612)
    Sec. 11. If any such note, bond, bill or other instrument in writing shall be indorsed after the same becomes due, and any indorsee shall institute an action thereon against the maker of the same, the defendant being maker shall be allowed to set up the same defense that he might have done had the action been instituted in the name and for the use of the person to whom such instrument was originally made payable, or any intermediate holder.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 262.)

815 ILCS 105/12

    (815 ILCS 105/12) (from Ch. 17, par. 613)
    Sec. 12. In any action upon a note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, which has been assigned to or transferred by delivery to the plaintiff after it became due, a set-off to the amount of the plaintiff's debt may be made of a demand existing against any person or persons who shall have assigned or transferred such instrument after it became due, if the demand be such as might have been set-off against the assignor, while the note or bill belonged to him.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 262.)

815 ILCS 105/13

    (815 ILCS 105/13) (from Ch. 17, par. 614)
    Sec. 13. If any such note, bond, bill, or other instrument of writing, shall be assigned before the day the money or property therein mentioned becomes due and payable, and the assignee shall institute an action thereon, the defendant may give in evidence at the trial any money or property actually paid on the said note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, before the said note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing was assigned to the plaintiff, on proving that the plaintiff had sufficient notice of the said payment before he accepted or received such assignment.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 262.)

815 ILCS 105/14

    (815 ILCS 105/14) (from Ch. 17, par. 615)
    Sec. 14. In any action founded upon any note, bond, bill, or other instrument in writing, or in which the same, if produced might be allowed as a set-off in defense, if it shall appear that such instrument was lost while belonging to the party claiming the amount due thereon, to entitle him to recover upon or set-off the same, he may, in the discretion of the court, be required to provide such security as is required in Section 3-804 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
(Source: P.A. 85-350.)

815 ILCS 105/15

    (815 ILCS 105/15) (from Ch. 17, par. 616)
    Sec. 15. No promissory note, cheque, draft, bill of exchange, order or other negotiable or commercial instruments, shall be entitled to days of grace, but shall be absolutely payable at maturity.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 261.)

815 ILCS 105/16

    (815 ILCS 105/16) (from Ch. 17, par. 617)
    Sec. 16. In all computations of time, and of interest and discounts, a month shall be considered to mean a calendar month, and a year shall consist of twelve calendar months; and in computations of interest or discounts for any number of days less than a month, a day shall be considered a thirtieth part of a month and interest or discounts shall be computed for such fractional parts of a month upon the ratio which such number of days shall bear to thirty.
(Source: Laws 1895, p. 262.)