Signature

NMSA 1978, § 55-3-401 — under Article 3.

NMSA 1978, § 55-3-401

A person is not liable on an instrument unless (i) the person signed the instrument or (ii) the person is represented by an agent or representative who signed the instrument and the signature is binding on the represented person under Section 55-3-402 NMSA 1978. History: 1978 Comp., § 55-3-401, enacted by Laws 1992, ch. 114, § 126; 2023, ch. 142, § 23. OFFICIAL COMMENTS UCC Official Comments © by ALI & the NCCUSL. Reproduced with permission of the PEB for the UCC. All rights reserved. 1. This section provides the fundamental rule that an obligation on an instrument depends on a signature that is binding on the obligor. The signature may be made by the obligor personally or by an agent or other representative authorized to act for the obligor. Signature by agents and other representatives is covered by Section 3-402 [55- 3-402 NMSA 1978]. It is not necessary that the name of the obligor appear on the instrument, so long as there is a signature that binds the obligor. These obligations include those on an "order" (Section 3-103(a)(6) [55-3-103 NMSA 1978]) and a "promise" (Section 3-103(a)(9)) and those of an "issuer," "maker," or "drawer" (Sections 3-103(a)(5) and (7), 3-105(c), 3-412, and 3-414 [55-3-105, 55-3-412 and 55-3-414 NMSA 1978, respectively]), an "acceptor" (Sections 3-409 and 3-413 [55-3-409 and 55- 3-413 NSMA 1978]), and an indorser (Sections 3-204(b) and 3-415 [55-3-204 and 55-3- 415 NMSA 1978, respectively]). 2. Subsection (b) of the pre-2022 text of this section has been deleted as unnecessary in view of the 2022 revision of the definition of "sign." See Section 1- 201(b)(37) [55-1-201 NMSA 1978] and Comment 37. Although former subsection (b) had not proven to be problematic, its deletion eliminates any implication that the revised definition of "sign" is inadequate for purposes of this Article. For example, former subsection (b) provided examples of the means of making a signature with the present intention of authenticating a writing, such as by means of a device or machine, by the use of a trade name or assumed name, or by the use of a word, mark, or symbol. These means now are encompassed by the broad, general terms of the revised definition of "sign." A signature may appear in the body of the instrument, as in the case of "I, John Doe, promise to pay ***" without any other signature. It may be made in any name, including a name other than a designated payee. However, to be signed an instrument (a writing) must exist at the time it is signed by the execution or adoption of a tangible symbol on the instrument. The deletion of former subsection (b) effected no change in the law.