T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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685.1 | DCU's charge seems to be in line with other financial institutions in my area | ROWLET::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Aug 17 1993 09:40 | 17 |
| Actually, DCU's fees are lower than my banks fees. My bank charges $15 per
check, not sequential run of checks.
Before deciding if the fees are too high, I'd like to know what is involved
in processing a stop payment request and what the actual cost is. For example,
I currently have a stop payment in on a check that was lost by a real estate
agent. Whenever I cash a check at the bank, the teller's terminal beeps and
the teller compares the check number on the check with the stop payment order.
I don't know what happens to checks presented at another financial institution.
Does the software in my bank's computer check each check transaction being
processed against my account and reject it if the check number matches the
stop payment order? I hope so. I know that at my bank a stop payment order is
good for 2 years. The cost for the software to check for my lost check is
obviously trivial, but what about the cost of the teller who must check each
time I cash a check for the next two years?
Bob
|
685.2 | | VMSVTP::S_WATTUM | OSI Applications Engineering, West | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:22 | 15 |
| >I don't know what happens to checks presented at another financial institution.
I would wager that no one finds out about the stop payment until the transaction
hits DCU via the federal reserve network, and DCU (in this example) rejects
it.
This is why personal checks almost always have a holding time associated with
them - it takes some time for the check to hit a clearinghouse and then
the net. It usually doesn't take the 5-7 days (or longer) that many institutions
insist on, which is I suspect part of the reason that new legislation went into
effect limiting the amount of time an institution can have a hold (though it's
still long enough for them to get at least 2-3 days worth of float).
--Scott
|
685.3 | | GSFSYS::MACDONALD | | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:31 | 10 |
|
Whether a check is lost or stolen the issue is how much does it
cost the DCU to flag that check(s) so that it won't be paid not
why it ends up a check that won't be paid. I am sure that it
costs the DCU the same whether it was lost or stolen. What I
would inquire into, however, was what the actual cost is. The
DCU should not be making money on this.
Steve
|
685.4 | and that number is ... | XLIB::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, Development Assistance | Tue Aug 17 1993 12:49 | 13 |
| WHEN SOMETHING IS STOLEN, CALL! I'm sure that the credit union cares
more about you than about their fees!
When my checkbook was stolen ( a few years back ) I called the bank and
told them immediately. The bank officer and I quickly determined which
checks were outstanding and which ones were stolen, and moved most of
my money into a new checking account (left enough to cover the
outstanding checks). He watched the old account daily until he and I
were both satisfied that none of the stolen checks were used, and then
we closed the account. My fees? I had to order and pay for new
checks. That was fine with me.
Mark
|