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BILLS OF EXCHANGE ORDINANCE

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BILLS OF EXCHANGE ORDINANCE ——附加英文版

Hong Kong


BILLS OF EXCHANGE ORDINANCE
 (CHAPTER 19)
 ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
  
  ion
  I    PRELIMINARY PROVISIONS
  hort title
  nterpretation
  II    BILLS OF EXCHANGE
  and Interpretation
  efinition of bill of exchange
  nland and foreign bills
  ffect where different parties to bill are the same person
  ddress to drawee
  ertainty required as to payee
  hat bills are negotiable
  um payable
  Bill payable on demand
  Bill payable at future time
  Omission of date in bill payable after date
  Ante-dating and post-dating
  Computation of time of payment
  Referee in case of need
  Optional stipulations by drawer or indorser
  Definition and requisites of acceptance
  Time for acceptance
  General and qualified acceptance
  Inchoate instruments
  Delivery
  city and authority of parties
  Capacity of parties
  Signature essential to liability
  Forged or unauthorized signature
  Procuration signature
  Person signing as agent or in representative capacity
  Corporate signatures
  ideration for bill
  Value and holder for value
  Accommodation party
  Holder in due course
  Presumption of value and good faith
  
  tiation of bill
  Negotiation of bill
  Requisites of valid indorsement
  Conditional indorsement
  Indorsement in blank and special indorsement
  Restrictive indorsement
  Negotiation of overdue or dishonoured bill
  Negotiation of bill to party already liable thereon
  Rights and powers of holder
  ral duties of the holder
  When presentment for acceptance is necessary
  Time for presenting bill payable after sight
  Rules as to presentment for acceptance, and excuses for non-
  entment
  Non-acceptance
  Dishonour by non-acceptance and its consequences
  Duties as to qualified acceptances
  Rules as to presentment for payment
  Excuses for delay or non-presentment for payment
  Dishonour by non-payment
  Notice of dishonour and effect of non-notice
  Rules as to notice of dishonour
  Excuses for non-notice and delay
  Noting or protest of bill
  Duties of holder as regards drawee or acceptor
  ilities of parties
  Funds in hands of drawee
  Liability of acceptor
  Liability of drawer or indorser
  Stranger signing bill liable as indorser
  Measure of damages against parties to dishonoured bill
  Transferor by delivery and transferee
  harge of bill
  Payment in due course
  Banker paying demand draft whereon indorsement is forged
  Acceptor the holder at maturity
  Express waiver
  Cancellation
  Alteration of bill
  ptance and payment for honour
  Acceptance for honour supra protest
  Liability of acceptor for honour
  Presentment to acceptor for honour
  Payment for honour supra protest Lost instrument
  Holder's right to duplicate of lost bill
  Action on lost bill
  in a set
  Rules as to bill in set
  lict of laws
  Rules where laws conflict
  
  III   CHEQUES ON A BANKER
  Definition of cheque
  Presentment of cheque for payment
  Revocation of banker's authority Crossed cheques
  Definition of general and special crossings
  Crossing by drawer or after issue
  Crossing a material part of cheque
  Duties of banker as to crossed cheque
  Protection to banker and drawer where cheque is crossed
  Effect of crossing on holder
  Drafts on bankers payable to order on demand sufficient authority
for
  ent without proof of indorsement
  Protection of bankers paying unindorsed or irregularly indorsed
  ues, etc.
  Rights of bankers collecting cheques not indorsed by
  ers
  Unindorsed cheques as evidence of payment
  Protection of bankers collecting payment of cheques, etc.
  Application of provisions of this part to instruments not being
bills
  xchange
  Saving
  IV    PROMISSORY NOTES
  Definition of promissory note
  Delivery necessary
  Joint and several notes
  Note payable on demand
  Presentment for payment
  Liability of maker
  Application of Part II to notes
  V    SUPPLEMENTARY
  Good faith
  Signature
  Computation of time
  When noting equivalent to protest
  Protest when notary not accessible
  Crossing of dividend warrant
  Saving
  dule. Form of protest, without notary
  odify the law relating to bills of exchange, cheques and
promissory
  s. [4 May 1885]
 PART I PRELIMINARY PROVISIONS
  
  ed 51 of 1911; 63 of 1911 Schedule)
  hort title
  Ordinance may be cited as the Bills of Exchange Ordinance.
  nded 5 of 1924 s. 6)
  1882 c. 61 s. 1U. K.]
  nterpretation
  his Ordinance, unless the context otherwise requires--
  eptance" means an acceptance completed by delivery or
notification;
  ion" means action or suit and includes counterclaim and set-off;
  ker" includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or 
not, who
  y on the business of banking;
  krupt" includes any person whose estate is vested in a 
trustee or
  gnee under the law relating to bankruptcy; (Amended 50 of 1911;
62 of
  Schedule)
  rer" means the person in possession of a bill or note
  h is payable to bearer;
  l" means bill of exchange, and "note"
  s promissory note;
  ivery" means transfer of possession, actual or
  tructive, from one person to another;
  eral holiday" has the same meaning as in the Holidays Ordinance 
(Cap.
  ; (Added 5 of 1912 s. 8)
  der" means the payee or indorsee of a bill or note who 
is in
  ession of it, or the bearer thereof;
  orsement" means an indorsement completed by delivery;
  ue" means the first delivery of a bill or note, complete in form,
to a
  on who takes it as a holder;
  son" includes a body of persons, whether incorporated or not;
  ue" means valuable consideration.
  nded 43 of 1912 Schedule)
  1882 c. 61 s. 2 U. K.]
 PART II BILLS OF EXCHANGE
  
  nded 51 of 1911; 63 of 1911 Schedule)
  and Interpretation
  efinition of bill of exchange
  A bill of exchange is an unconditional order in writing, addressed 
by
  person to another, signed by the person giving it, 
requiring the
  on to whom it is addressed to pay on demand or at a 
fixed or
  rminable future time a sum certain in money to, or to the order
of, a
  ified person or to bearer.
  An instrument which does not comply with these conditions, or 
which
  rs any act to be done in addition to the payment of money, is 
not a
  of exchange.
  An order to pay out of a particular fund is not
  nditional within the meaning of this section; but an unqualified
order
  ay, coupled with--
  an indication of a particular fund out of which the drawee 
is to
  burse himself or a particular account to be debited with the 
amount;
  
  a statement of the transaction which gives rise to the 
bill, is
  nditional.
  A bill is not invalid by reason--
  that it is not dated;
  that it does not specify the value given or that any value has 
been
  n therefor;
  that it does not specify the place where it is drawn
  he place where it is payable.
  1882 c. 61 s. 3 U. K.]
  nland and foreign bills
  An inland bill is a bill which is or on the face of it purports
to be-
  
  both drawn and payable within the Colony; or
  drawn within the Colony, upon some person resident therein.
  Any other bill is a foreign bill.
  Unless the contrary appears on the face of the bill, the holder 
may
  t it as an inland bill.
  1882 c. 61 s. 4 U. K.]
  ffect where different parties to bill are the same person
  A bill may be drawn payable to, or to the order of, the drawer;
or it
  be drawn payable to, or to the order of, the drawee.
  Where, in a bill, drawer and drawee are the same person, or where 
the
  ee is a fictitious person or a person not having capacity to
contract,
  holder may treat the instrument, at his option, either as a 
bill of
  ange or as a promissory note. [cf. 1882 c. 61 s. 5 U. K.]
  ddress to drawee
  The drawee must be named or otherwise indicated in a 
bill with
  onable certainty.
  A bill may be addressed to two or more drawees,
  her they are partners or not, but an order addressed to two drawees
in
  alternative, or to two or more drawees in succession, is not a
bill of
  ange.
  1882 c. 61 s. 6 U. K.]
  
  ertainty required as to payee
  Where a bill is not payable to bearer, the payee must be 
named or
  rwise indicated therein with reasonable certainty.
  A bill may be made payable to two or more payees jointly, or it
may be
  payable in the alternative to one of two or one or some of 
several
  es. A bill may also be made payable to the bolder of an office
for the
  being.
  Where the payee is a fictitious or non-existing person, the bill 
may
  reated as payable to bearer.
  1882 c. 61 s. 7 U. K.]
  hat bills are negotiable
  Where a bill contains words prohibiting transfer, or 
indicating an
  ntion that it should not be transferable, it is valid as between 
the
  ies thereto, but is not negotiable.
  A negotiable bill may be payable either to order or to bearer.
  A bill is payable to bearer which is expressed to be so payable,
or on
  h the only or last indorsement is an indorsement in blank.
  A bill is payable to order which is expressed to be so payable, 
or
  h is expressed to be payable to a particular person, and 
does not
  ain words prohibiting transfer or indicating an intention 
that it
  ld not be transferable.
  Where a bill, either originally or by
  rsement, is expressed to be payable to the order of a 
specified
  on, and not to him or his order, it is nevertheless payable to
him or
  order at his option.
  1882 c. 61 s. 8 U. K.]
  um payable
  The sum payable by a bill is a sum certain within the meaning of 
this
  nance, although it is required to be paid--
  with interest;
  by stated instalments;
  by stated instalments, with a provision that, upon default in 
payment
  ny instalment, the whole shall become due;
  according to an indicated rate of exchange or according to a rate 
of
  ange to be ascertained as directed by the bill.
  Where the sum payable is expressed in words and also in figures, 
and
  e is a discrepancy between the two, the sum denoted by the words 
is
  amount payable.
  Where a bill is expressed to be payable with
  rest, unless the instrument otherwise provides, interest runs
from the
  of the bill, and, if the bill is undated, from the issue thereof.
  1882 c. 61 s. 9 U. K.]
  Bill payable on demand
  A bill is payable on demand--
  which is expressed to be payable on demand, or at sight, 
or on
  entation; or
  in which no time for payment is expressed.
  Where a bill is accepted or indorsed when it is overdue, it shall, 
as
  rds the acceptor who so accepts or any indorser who so indorses
it, be
  ed a bill payable on demand.
  1882 c. 61 s. 10 U. K.]
  
  Bill payable at future time
  A bill is payable at a determinable future time within the meaning 
of
  Ordinance which is expressed to be payable--
  at a fixed period after date or sight;
  on or at a fixed period after the occurrence of a specified 
event
  h is certain to happen, though the time of happening may be
uncertain.
  An instrument expressed to be payable on a contingency is not a 
bill,
  the happening of the event does not cure the defect.
  1882 c. 61 s. 11 U. K.]
  Omission of date in bill payable after date
  e a bill expressed to be payable at a fixed period after 
date is
  ed undated, or where the acceptance of a bill payable at a 
fixed
  od after sight is undated, any holder may insert therein the true
date
  ssue or acceptance, and the bill shall be payable 
accordingly:
  ided that--
  where the holder in good faith and by mistake inserts a wrong 
date;
  
  n every case where a wrong date is inserted, if the bill
  equently comes into the hands of a holder in due course, the 
bill
  l not be avoided thereby, but shall operate and be payable as if 
the
  so inserted had been the true date. [cf. 1882 c. 61 s. 12 U. K.]
  Ante-dating and post-dating
  Where a bill or an acceptance or any indorsement on a bill is 
dated,
  date shall, unless the contrary is proved, be deemed to be the 
true
  of the drawing, acceptance, or indorsement, as the case may be.
  A bill is not invalid by reason only that it is ante-dated or 
post-
  d, or that it bears date on a Sunday or any other general holiday.
  nded 5 of 1912 s. 8) [cf. 1882 c. 61 s. 13 U. K.]
  Computation of time of payment
  e a bill is not payable on demand, the day on which it falls due 
is
  rmined as follows--
  the bill is due and payable in all cases on the last day of the 
time
  ayment as fixed by the bill or, if that is a general holiday, on 
the
  eeding business day; (Replaced 67 of 1972 s. 2) [cf. 1971 c. 80
s. 3
  U. K.]
  where a bill is payable at a fixed period after date, after sight, 
or
  r the happening of a specified event, the time of 
payment is
  rmined by excluding the day from which the time is to begin to
run and
  ncluding the day of payment;
  where a bill is payable at a fixed
  od after sight, the time begins to run form the date of the
acceptance
  he bill is accepted, and from the date of noting or protest if 
the
  is noted or protested for non-acceptance or for non-delivery;
  the
  "month" in a bill means calendar month.
  1882 c. 61 s. 14 U. K.]
  Referee in case of need
  drawer of a bill and any indorser may insert therein the name 
of a
  on to whom the holder may resort in case of need, that is to say, 
in
  the bill is dishonoured by non-acceptance or non-payment. Such
person
  alled the referee in case of need. It is in the option of the 
holder
  esort to the referee in case of need or not, as he may think fit.
  1882 c. 61 s. 15 U. K.]
  
  Optional stipulations by drawer or indorser
  drawer of a bill and any indorser may insert therein an 
express
  ulation--
  negativing or limiting his own liability to the holder;
  waiving, as regards himself, some or all of the holder's duties. 
[cf.
  c. 61 s. 16 U. K.]
  Definition and requisites of acceptance
  The acceptance of a bill is the signification by the drawee of 
his
  nt to the order of the drawer.
  An acceptance is invalid unless it complies with the 
following
  itions, namely--
  it must be written on the bill and be signed by
  drawee. The mere signature of the drawee, without additional
words, is
  icient;
  it must not express that the drawee will perform his promise by 
any
  r means than the payment of money.
  1882 c. 61 s. 17 U. K.]
  Time for acceptance
  A bill may be accepted--
  before it has been signed by the drawer, or while 
otherwise
  mplete;
  when it is overdue, or after it has been dishonoured by a
  ious refusal to accept or by non-payment.
  When a bill payable after sight is dishonoured by non-acceptance, 
and
  drawee subsequently accepts it, the holder, in the absence 
of any
  erent agreement, is entitled to have the bill accepted as of the 
date
  irst presentment of the drawee for acceptance.
  nded 51 of 1911; 63 of 1911 Schedule)
  1882 c. 61 s. 18 U. K.]
  General and qualified acceptance
  An acceptance is either (a) general; or (b) qualified.
  A general acceptance assents without qualification to the order
of the
  er. A qualified acceptance in express terms varies the effect of 
the
  as drawn.
  In particular, an acceptance is qualified which is--
  conditional, that is to say, which makes payment by the 
acceptor
  ndent on the fulfilment of a condition therein stated,
  partial, that is to say, an acceptance to pay part only of the 
amount
  which the bill is drawn;
  local, that is to say, an acceptance to pay only at a 
particular
  ified place; an acceptance to pay at a particular place is a 
general
  ptance, unless it expressly states that the bill is to be paid 
there
  and not elsewhere;
  qualified as to time;
  the acceptance of some one or more of the drawees, but not of all.
  1882 c. 61 s. 19 U. K.]
  
  Inchoate instruments
  Where a simple signature on a blank paper is delivered by the 
signer
  rder that it may be converted into a bill, it operates as a 
prima
  e authority to fill it up as a complete bill for any amount, using
the
  ature for that of the drawer, or the acceptor, or an indorser;
and, in
  manner, when a bill is wanting in any material particular, the
person
  ossession of it has a prima facie authority to fill up the omission
in
  way he thinks fit. (Amended 31 of 1981 s. 65)
  In order that any such instrument, when completed, may be 
enforceable
  nst any person who became a party thereto prior to its completion, 
it
  be filled up within a reasonable time and strictly in accordance
with
  authority given. Reasonable time for this purpose is a 
question of
  : Provided that if any such instrument after completion is 
negotiated
  holder in due course, it shall be valid and effectual 
for all
  oses in his hands, and he may enforce it as if it had been filled 
up
  in a reasonable time and strictly in accordance with the 
authority
  n. [cf. 1882 c. 61 s. 20 U. K.]
  Delivery

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建立有中国特色的法院司法体制
何德荣 宋 健

    党的十五大提出了依法治国,建设社会主义法制国家的治国方略,并号召推进司法改革,从制度上保证司法机关依法独立公正行使审判权和检察权。这表明,法院司法体制改革迎来了前所未有的机遇和挑战。未来法院的司法体制改革的走势如何?学者们仁者见仁、智者见智。笔者以为,我国是社会主义国家,我们考虑问题只能在社会主义条件下从我国国情出发,既不能超前,也不能滞后。不能照抄照搬外国模式,要摒弃那些不适应社会主义市场经济条件下法院运行的制度,建立一种有中国特色的法院司法体制。
  看一种制度是否合理科学,应从其管理模式、主体素质、运作方式和社会效果四个要素加以考察,其中社会效果是反映一个制度是否合理科学最直接的要素。当一种制度在社会中实施,凡能起到促进人类健康发展的良性效果的,该制度便是合理科学的制度;反之,则是不合理非科学的制度。在这四个要素中,前三个要素是因,后一个要素是果。只有当前三个要素均具有科学性时,才能产生良性的社会效果,否则便产生不良的社会效果,从而说明该制度不具有科学性,需要矫治。一般来讲,只要三个要素均具有科学性,则制度必然会产生良性的社会效果。因此,我们要建立科学的法院司法体制,只须使法院司法的管理模式、主体素质、运作方式科学化就足够了。
  基于上述理论,这里主要谈谈在建立有中国特色的法院司法体制过程中的两个问题。
一、重新确立“垂直领导”的法院司法体制
  从法院司法管理模式上看,法制完善的国家,尤其是与西方实行“三权分立”的国家相比,我国的司法体制的建构与众不同。建国初期,由我国的政体和国体所决定,仿效苏联模式,在坚持党的领导和“一府两院”的基本框架内,自上而下建立了四级法院体制。当前各级法院除受上级法院的指导外,还受同级党委的领导和同级人大的监督,同时又由于法院人、财、物独立性的缺失,客观上还受各级政府及其职能部门的制约,这种“条块结合,以块为主”的法院体制,学者们称之为“块块领导”。由于此种领导方式有利于各级党委的一元化领导,在计划经济时代颇受欢迎。随着我国社会主义市场经济体制的建立和改革开放的不断深入,这种体制的弊端日益明显:一方面,它表现出与经济、教育、科技体制改革乃至政治体制改革的极不协调;另一方面,它已不能满足人们对公正、高效司法目标的期待;三是地方保护主义成了久治不愈的痼疾,法制难以统一。笔者赞同当前的一种倾向性的观点:即改“块块”领导为“条条”领导的“垂直领导”方式。在这种“垂直领导”管理模式下:下一级地方法院只服从上级地方法院,最后都服从最高法院,最高法院服从党中央,地方党委协管地方法院;人、财、物均属垂直领导与被领导的关系,审判工作为平行的监督关系。
  其实早在1954年,董必武同志就提出要力争法院“干部的垂直领导管理”。事实上在1957年以前,法院系统就是实行的“条条”领导的垂直领导管理模式。1957年毛泽东同志决定下放中央权力,作出了“五七”指示:除银行等部门外,凡中央政府各部包括法院、检察院设立在各地方的下级单位划归同级的地方党委领导,不再接受上级业务部门领导(人们把这种领导方式称为“块块领导”)。这种“块块领导”的方式延续至今。法院系统之所以应适用“条条”领导,是由其本身固有的性质、功能,运行规律和特征决定的。它是国家的审判机关,它的运作及其功能的发挥要求有能保障其高度自治的外部制度环境。现行法院实行的“块块领导”体制是不科学的管理方式,实践证明存在很多弊端。考察现代西方法治国家的法官,多是由国家中央一级来任免的,这也说明了法院适宜“垂直领导”。实际上,改“块块领导”为“条条领导”它们有本质上都是党的领导,只是外行领导和内行领导的问题。
  实行“垂直领导”的法院司法体制有着重要的意义:它有利于消除司法腐败,维护公平与正义,消除地方保护主义,维护法制的权威与统一,发挥法院的正常功能。
二、建立科学的法官制度
  中国共产党领导下的法官队伍是一个特殊的群体,他们从事着打击犯罪,保护人民,维护社会稳定的神圣事业,他们不仅要有极强的专业知识,而且还要有极高的政治理论修养,同时赋予这个群体崇高的荣誉和优厚的待遇,以创造这个群体的成员能抵御外来干扰的外部环境条件,真正做到秉公执法。
  在国外,无论大陆法系国家还是英美法系国家,其法官制度都有共同之特点:(一)任职资格十分严格,由国家中央一级加以任命;(二)都享有独立的审判权;(三)社会地位极高,普遍受到公众的尊重;(四)法官人数较少;(五)法官待遇特别优厚。
  据统计,我国目前有法官20余万名,其数量之多属世界之首。其任免由本级的国家权力机关进行,职级按同级政府的行政序列套用。在法院内部,审判员也不占主体地位,而是屈居院长、副院长、庭长、副庭长、组长等“五字辈”之后。导致这种状况的原因是多方面的,其中缺乏科学、民主的法官选任制度是最重要的原因。尽管历届法院领导者为提高法官队伍素质作了不懈努力,但是离建立一支高标准、高素质的专家型、复合型的法官队伍仍有相当差距。
  至于我国法官制度的建构,我们以为可以借鉴西方国家先进经验来完善我国的法官制度。做法如下:1?严格法官任免资格,要求具有法律本科以上学历,受过良好法学教育和职业理论道德教育;2?通过高难度的全国统一的法官资格考试,及五年以上见习,方可任命为地方法院法官;3?法官的任免由中央一级权力机关行使;4?建立健全从大学教授及优秀律师中选拔法官的制度;5?上级法院的法官,必须从下级法院的法官中择优选拔;6?对现有法官组织统一的法官资格考试,业务素质和政治理论水平合格者任命为法官,不合格者改作法官助理或另行安排;7?减少法官数量。各级法院根据需要,合理确定法官编制;8?给予法官优厚待遇;9?从宪法上规定法官享有独立审判权等;10?适当延长法官退休年龄。地方法院可到65岁,最高法院可至70岁退休。
  (作者单位:四川省达县人民法院) 

人事部、财政部关于1999年调整中国民用航空总局事业单位飞行人员工资标准的通知

人事部 财政部


人事部、财政部关于1999年调整中国民用航空总局事业单位飞行人员工资标准的通知
人事部 财政部



根据党中央、国务院关于调整机关、事业单位工作人员工资标准的决定和《国务院办公厅转发人事部财政部关于调整机关事业单位工作人员工资标准和增加离退休人员离退休费三个实施方案的通知》(国办发〔1999〕78号)精神,结合民航的实际情况,现将调整民航事业单位飞
行人员工资标准的有关问题通知如下:
从1999年7月1日起,调整民航事业单位飞行人员的职务工资标准(调整后的工资标准见附表一至二)。工资构成中固定部分调整后,活的部分按国家规定的工资构成比例相应提高。

附表一:民航事业单位飞行专业人员专业技术职务等级工资标准表

单位:元/月
----------------------------------------------------------
| | 职 务 工 资 标 准 |
|职务等级 |--------------------------------------------------|
| | 一| 二| 三| 四| 五| 六| 七| 八| 九| 十|十一|十二|十三|十四|十五|十六|十七|
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|一级飞行员|401 |431 |461 |491 |521 |561 |601 |641 |681 |721 |761 |801 |841 |881 |921 |961 |1001|
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|二级飞行员|312 |332 |352 |372 |392 |422 |452 |482 |512 |542 |572 |602 |632 |662 |692 |722 | |
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|三级飞行员|260 |274 |288 |308 |328 |348 |368 |388 |408 |428 |448 |468 |488 |508 |528 | | |
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|四级飞行员|236 |248 |260 |278 |296 |314 |332 |350 |368 |386 |404 |422 |440 |458 | | | |
----------------------------------------------------------
注:1、此表适用于依据《民用航空飞行技术人员职务试行条例》受聘的飞行专业人员。飞行专业人员包
括:飞行驾驶员、飞行领航员、飞行通信员、飞行机械员。
2、根据人薪函〔1988〕2号文件的规定,民航机关、事业单位飞行人员的工资标准提高30%,其提高
后的工资标准对应表见附表二。

附表二:提高民航事业单位飞行专业人员专业技术职务等级工资标准表

单位:元/月
----------------------------------------------------------
| | 职 务 工 资 标 准 |
|职务等级 |--------------------------------------------------|
| | 一| 二| 三| 四| 五| 六| 七| 八| 九| 十|十一|十二|十三|十四|十五|十六|十七|
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|一级飞行员|521 |560 |599 |638 |677 |722 |774 |826 |878 |930 |982 |1034|1086|1138|1190|1242|1294|
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|-----|--|--|--|--|--|
|二级飞行员|406 |432 |458 |484 |510 |549 |588 |627 |666 |705 |744 |783 |822 |861 |900 |939 | |
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|三级飞行员|338 |356 |374 |400 |426 |452 |478 |504 |530 |556 |582 |608 |634 |660 |686 | | |
|-----|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|--|
|四级飞行员|307 |322 |338 |361 |384 |407 |430 |453 |476 |499 |522 |545 |568 |591 | | | |
----------------------------------------------------------



1999年10月26日