Promissory Notes Act of 1704 (England)
The Promissory Notes Act of 1704 officially established 
promissory notes as negotiable instruments. A promissory note is negotiable when 
it can be transferred to a third party by an endorsement, usually in the form of 
a signature of the recipient of the note. Because the bank note is a direct 
descendant of the promissory note, the Act of 1704 furnished the legal 
prerequisites for the use of bank notes as a medium of exchange.
In seventeenth-century England people deposited gold in the safekeeping of 
goldsmiths, who in return issued something like a warehouse voucher made out to 
the owner of the gold. It was a receipt for a deposit of gold. Rather than 
exchange gold in trade it was much easier to exchange warehouse receipts, giving 
rise to the custom of making these receipts transferable by endorsement. 
Promissory notes originated from these receipts. The wording on promissory notes 
entitled a certain person, or the “bearer,” of the note, to a
 fixed amount of 
gold on demand. The custom arose of transferring the ownership of promissory 
notes with signature endorsements. The ownership of these notes might change 
over and over as long as there was room for more endorsements. With promissory 
notes changing hands through repeated endorsements, invariably disputes came 
before the courts involving cases in which someone did not want to redeem an 
endorsed promissory note, or in which the recipients of endorsed promissory 
notes did not receive the same consideration as the initial recipients of the 
notes. For promissory notes to circulate as a medium of exchange, it was 
necessary that the holders of endorsed notes suffer no disadvantages when 
demanding that notes be paid in gold. That is, the promissory notes had to be 
negotiable. The courts waffled on the issue of the negotiability of promissory 
notes, forcing Parliament to take action.
Parliament named the law An Act for giving like Remedy upon Promissory Notes, 
as is now used upon Bills of Exchange, and for the better Payment of Inland 
Bills of Exchange. The act provided that promissory notes payable to order, or 
bearer, were legally binding obligations, assignable by endorsement to new 
holders, and new holders could sue in the courts for enforcement of their 
rights. Parliament cited the benefits to trade and commerce accruing from the 
provisions of the act.
The first step toward the evolution of bank notes came when goldsmiths 
dropped the names of individuals entitled to gold, and instead made the unnamed 
“bearer” of the note entitled to a fixed amount of gold. The rise of engraved 
notes completed the transition to bank notes. Indorsed checks also became 
negotiable instruments by virtue of the Act of 1704. With the legal status of 
notes clarified, bank notes grew in popularity. Adam Smith observed in The 
Wealth of Nations, published in 1776, that bank money had surpassed metallic 
money in quantity of circulation, marking a turning point in monetary 
history. 
 
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