I bet most tellers wouldn't keep any notes they receive as multilated, even if some were 1935 or 1937 notes
Bank tellers are directed by management to set aside such notes for destruction (as Oli stated earlier). It wouldn't surprise me that if the teller was an established employee (and known collector) and requested to keep it, I'm sure the management would allow it occasionally. We've all heard stories of such. Why would they bother to keep a mutilated note when most notes aren't collectible? Most collectors know that the 37 H/A or Osborne/Towers signatures are "keepers" no matter how poor.
But as far as cashiers/tellers getting notes from prior to -1954 is rare indeed. We had a thread discussing using your old (circulated) $2.00 or 1973 $1.00 and many members voiced their amusement how many younger generation often consult management whether the note was legal tender. Such bewilderment happens when the note seen for the first time has been printed before one was born. My point is that 99% of notes prior to 1986 are likely on eBay, destroyed, locked up in safety deposit boxes, or in your collections.
example, million notes, solid digit notes, ladder notes, printing errors, cutting errors. Some notes have such obvious errors or very unique serial numbers, nobody seems to bother to keep them, they'd rather just spend the note, rather than bother to keep i
Probably 95% of that 99% are pretty common. I'm sure the odd collectible note (like 1 out of 100) does pass through many hands until destruction (esp:ERRORS I've got a well worn 1954 $1 with no serial numbers on it) but even it was eventually "found." I even bought (found) a regular G/R $2 note from a dealer (who didn't mark it as such). . "Eyevet" actually bought a G/R $2
test note off eBay for the price of a regular issue (no one else seemed to notice!) Oli got a $100 AJX for regular price...so a collector occasionally will make a great "find" amongst notes already kept aside. These "finds" are the exceptions of course. Just check out eBay to see how many common (run of the mill) notes are surfacing from safety deposit box or hoards these days.
But I think the likelihood of a "cool note slipping by" happens less and less with today's currency (and now eBay). I think now that there are so many more collectors, more dealers, and more brick searchers, the chances of solid radars passing into circulation are less too.
You are correct in terms of the old Journey $10's however. Rare (03 BER/BEL/BEK/BEP) $10 prefixes are likely still slipping into oblivion (if they haven't already been destroyed). No one, not even collectors, realized how rare they were when they came out. That's why the BV's are defying gravity! Rare (short issue) prefixes will likely elude a lot of us! I too vainly try to warn my family (or even friends who dare to listen) that there are these rare notes out there...but most think I'm ...well...
when discussing
collecting notes as a hobby 'they' think I'm bananas
SO TRUE!! Sometimes its best just to keep it to yourself!