When a debtor who “denies everything” suddenly pays part of the amount, that payment can speak louder than the denial. In a bounced-cheque dispute, a partial payment often strengthens the creditor’s position. Here is why.
Last updated: May 2026. Part of our complete bounced cheque recovery guide.
Quick answer
A partial payment toward a bounced cheque can amount to an admission of the debt. A party who genuinely disputes all liability does not usually pay part of it. The conduct — paying — tends to contradict a blanket denial and acknowledges the validity of the underlying obligation.
The contradiction at the heart of it
Debtors frequently do two contradictory things:
- Pay part of the amount to reduce pressure.
These cannot both be true. You cannot deny owing anything while paying down the very debt you deny. The payment is the more reliable signal of the real position.
What the payment acknowledges
A partial payment toward a specific bounced cheque can be read as acknowledging:
This is why a creditor should always document a partial payment carefully: the date, amount, and that it was credited toward the specific cheque.
How it changes your position
After a partial payment, your recovery shifts to the outstanding balance. The correct next step is a final demand letter that:
- acknowledges the amount received,
- credits it against the cheque,
Responding to a “denial + part payment” letter
If the debtor’s lawyer denies liability while their client has paid part of the amount, the rebuttal writes itself: highlight the payment, date it, and note that partial settlement is inconsistent with a genuine denial. The payment undercuts the denial.
Received such a letter? Reply to a legal notice · Background: bounced cheque as executory instrument
Frequently asked questions
If someone pays part of a bounced cheque, do they admit the whole debt? A partial payment is strong evidence the debt is acknowledged. It can support the claim for the full balance, though outcomes depend on the facts.
Should I accept a partial payment? Generally yes — accept it, document it, credit it to the cheque, and demand the balance. It improves your position.
What do I do after receiving a partial payment? Issue a final demand for the outstanding balance with a short deadline, then proceed to execution if unpaid.
