Fraud in the factum

Fraud in the Factum is a type of fraud where misrepresentation causes one to enter a transaction without accurately realizing the risks, duties, or obligations incurred.[1] This can be when the maker or drawer of a negotiable instrument, such as a promissory note or check, is induced to sign the instrument without a reasonable opportunity to learn of its fraudulent character or essential terms. Determination of whether an act constitutes fraud in the factum depends upon consideration of “all relevant factors.” Fraud in the factum usually voids the instrument under state law and is a real defense against even an holder in due course.

Contrast this with the situation where a trusted employee signs a check without permission. The employer must still honor the check despite the fact that the check was a fraudulent negotiable instrument. Here, the employer had a reasonable opportunity to avoid the obligation by restricting access to the checks.

Fraud in the factum is often contrasted with fraud in the inducement.

In Boro v. Superior Court, 163 Cal. App. 3d 1224 (1985), the defendant phoned the victim saying he was "Dr. Stevens" from the hospital and that the victim had a life-threatening disease. He further presented two options for treatment: option one was to have a painful surgery costing the victim $9,000; option two was to have sex with an anonymous donor costing the victim only $1,000. The victim had intercourse with the defendant believing at the time that her life was threatened and that was the only choice she had to cure the disease. The victim, upon learning the truth, brought charges against the defendant for rape. The court held this was fraud in the inducement and therefore, there was no rape. It was fraud in the inducement because the deception related not to the thing done - the sexual intercourse - but merely to some collateral matter (cure from a life-threatening disease).

See also

References

  1. Black's Law Dictionary (2nd Pocket ed. 2001 pg. 293).
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