Okla. Stat. tit. 12A, § 4A-505
Oklahoma Code Comment
This section establishes the statute of limitations for all claims by a bank customer under Article 4A, if the claim seeks recovery of the funds used to pay for the payment order. Note that it does not matter whether the action for recovery is based on contract, statute, or tort. The one year limitation applies in all cases. This is similar to the one year statute under 12A O.S. Section 4-406(4) for a claim based on an unauthorized signature. While the title to the section and Official Comment 1 refer to the most common method of payment (by debiting the originator's bank account) the text of the section applies the one year statute irrespective of the method used to pay for the payment order. If this were not the case, the applicable limitations period would vary with the method of payment, a result not intended by the drafters.
The one year period begins to run from the date notice of the payment is received by the bank's customer. Pursuant to 12A O.S. § 1-201(26), "notice" occurs when the bank takes such steps as may be reasonably required to inform the customer in the ordinary course of business. The notice is "received" if it is duly delivered to the customer's place of business. This means that notice is effective even if the payment order was engineered by the customer's agent to misdirect and the same agent intercepts the notice. This language is similar to the rule governing forged signatures on the drawer's check under 12A O.S. 4-406(4), which places on the drawer the duty to control and supervise its accounts. The result may be different from the one obtained under Section 4-406 however. The language of § 4-406(4) is similar to that of 6 O.S. § 118w, which it replaced. The Oklahoma Supreme Court, in First National Bank of McAlester v. Mann, 410 P.2d 74 (Okla.1965), held that the actions of a dishonest employee may toll the limitation period under § 118w. The Mann decision is contrary to an extensive line of decisions construing § 4-406 from other jurisdictions, which do not permit a dishonest employee to toll the limitation period. See F. Miller and A. Harrell, The Law of Modern Payment Systems and Notes 1 9.03(4) (1986). In keeping with the statement of purposes and policies in 12A O.S. Section 1-102(2)(c), an Oklahoma court should look to these alternative jurisdictions, rather than the Mann decision, in interpreting the provisions of § 4-406. However, even if the Mann decision still governs the result under § 4-406, it should not be applied to § 4A-505 . Unlike § 4-406 , § 4A-605 specifically limits the bank's obligation to providing "notice," as defined in § 1-201(26).