I'd written a cheque mid to late afternoon yesterday and since I was busy transferred the funds to cover it today, since I understood funds were not immediately transferred.
So, I was a little surprised when I discovered I'd already copped an Honour Fee.
I emailed my manager at the Adelaide head office and he reversed it, but said this:
If a cheque is banked the day you issue it the funds will be debited from your account in overnight processing. The beneficiary of the cheque cannot access these funds for 3 working days in the event the issuing bank dishonours the cheque due to insufficient funds, stop payment etc....the following day. So in theory, if you write a cheque out sufficient funds should be in your cheque account the same day to ensure the account does not overdraw.
I replied:
Thank you, I'll bear that in mind.
I'd assumed it would naturally work the same both ways, and that transfer out of one account into the other would occur simultaneously after the checks..
After all, at that point it is purely electronic..
The operating scenario you describe does, however, raise the question of who gets or is entitled to the interest on the money while it is in limbo.
There would be quite a lot in suspension on any one day, and I wonder if it has ever been looked at...
I wonder if the recipient of the funds gets the interest or whether it goes sideways to the bank?