I think a bill with a Payee and Drawer in TEXAS and CALIFORNIA, respectively, is considered inland these days, though in the past a bill with a Payee and Drawer in Texas and California, respectively, might have been foreign.
I've always though noting/protesting an inland bill was merely optional but wasn't done because the inconvenience would burden the financial industry. Others claim one cannot protest an inland bill in this country, though I haven't seen any documentation as to why that supposedly is.
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Originally Posted by fulltitle
WITHOUT PREJUDICE
Do inland bills these days require noting/protest instead of merely notice of dishonor? Inland bills meaning where Payee and Drawer are both say in TEXAS. Foreign bills (international bills of exchange) meaning where Payee is in, say, TEXAS and Drawer is in, say, CALIFORNIA.
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