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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wuhan Guoyu Logistics Group Co Ltd & Anor v Emporiki Bank of Greece SA [2013] EWCA Civ 1679 (19 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1679.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 1679, [2014] CILL 3460, [2014] BLR 119, [2014] 1 Lloyd's Rep 273 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, COMMERCIAL COURT
Mr Justice Christopher Clarke
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
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Wuhan Guoyu Logistics Group Co Ltd & Anr |
Respondents |
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- and - |
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Emporiki Bank of Greece SA |
Applicant |
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Sean O'Sullivan and James Leabeater (instructed by Ince & Co) for the Applicant
Hearing date : 20 November 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Tomlinson :
"34. We had some argument as to the legal position if, on the assumption that the bank is liable to pay and does pay the amount guaranteed, the underlying position turns out to be that the Buyer never was obliged under the shipbuilding contract to pay the second instalment. Would the Seller hold the amount paid by the bank on constructive or resulting trust for the Buyer? That is better considered when finality is reached in the arbitration."
"In that case Chase Manhattan, a New York bank, had by mistake paid the same sum twice to the credit of the defendant, a London bank. Shortly thereafter, the defendant bank went into insolvent liquidation. The question was whether Chase Manhattan had a claim in rem against the assets of the defendant bank to recover the second payment.
Goulding J. was asked to assume that the monies paid under a mistake were capable of being traced in the assets of the recipient bank: he was only concerned with the question whether there was a proprietary base on which the tracing remedy could be founded: p. 116b. He held that, where money was paid under a mistake, the receipt of such money without more constituted the recipient a trustee: he said that the payer "retains an equitable property in it and the conscience of [the recipient] is subjected to a fiduciary duty to respect his proprietary right": p. 119d-e.
It will be apparent from what I have already said that I cannot agree with this reasoning. First, it is based on a concept of retaining an equitable property in money where, prior to the payment to the recipient bank, there was no existing equitable interest. Further, I cannot understand how the recipient's "conscience" can be affected at a time when he is not aware of any mistake. Finally, the Judge found that the law of England and that of New York were in substance the same. I find this a surprising conclusion since the New York law of constructive trusts has for a long time been influenced by the concept of a remedial constructive trust, whereas hitherto English law has for the most part only recognised an institutional constructive trust: see Metall & Rohstoff v. Donaldson Inc. [1990] 1 Q.B. 391, 478-480. In the present context, that distinction is of fundamental importance. Under an institutional constructive trust, the trust arises by operation of law as from the date of the circumstances which give rise to it: the function of the court is merely to declare that such trust has arisen in the past. The consequences that flow from such trust having arisen (including the possibly unfair consequences to third parties who in the interim have received the trust property) are also determined by rules of law, not under a discretion. A remedial constructive trust, as I understand it, is different. It is a judicial remedy giving rise to an enforceable equitable obligation: the extent to which it operates retrospectively to the prejudice of third parties lies in the discretion of the court. Thus for the law of New York to hold that there is a remedial constructive trust where a payment has been made under a void contract gives rise to different consequences from holding that an institutional constructive trust arises in English law.
However, although I do not accept the reasoning of Goulding J., Chase Manhattan may well have been rightly decided. The defendant bank knew of the mistake made by the paying bank within two days of the receipt of the monies: see at p. 115a. The judge treated this fact as irrelevant (p. 114f) but in my judgment it may well provide a proper foundation for the decision.
Although the mere receipt of the monies, in ignorance of the mistake, gives rise to no trust, the retention of the monies after the recipient bank learned of the mistake may well have given rise to a constructive trust: see Snell's Equity p. 193: Pettit Equity and the Law of Trusts 7th edn. 168: Metall and Rohstoff v. Donaldson Inc. [1990] 1 Q.B. 391 at pp. 473-474."
"It is, however, worth looking into the question somewhat further.
United City Merchants (Investments) Ltd. v. Royal Bank of Canada [1983] 1 A.C. 168 was not an interlocutory dispute; it concerned the liability at trial of a bank under a letter of credit, when documents had been presented and payment refused. The letter of credit incorporated the self-styled Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits 1974. It required presentation of a bill of lading showing that goods had been shipped from Felixstowe on or before 15 December 1976. The bill of lading did say that, but it was not true; the goods were in fact loaded on the following day. The bank refused to pay on the ground that they "had information in their possession which suggested that shipment was not effected as it appears in the bill of lading." However the judge found that there was no fraud on the part of the sellers or their assignee.
Subject to another point which will be considered later, the claim against the bank succeeded. Lord Diplock said, at p. 183:
"If, on their face, the documents presented to the confirming bank by the seller conform with the requirements of the credit as notified to him by the confirming bank, that bank is under a contractual obligation to the seller to honour the credit, notwithstanding that the bank has knowledge that the seller at the time of presentation of the conforming documents is alleged by the buyer to have, and in fact has already, committed a breach of his contract with the buyer for the sale of the goods to which the documents appear on their face to relate, that would have entitled the buyer to treat the contract of sale as rescinded and to reject the goods and refuse to pay the seller the purchase price. The whole commercial purpose for which the system of confirmed irrevocable documentary credits has been developed in international trade is to give to the seller an assured right to be paid before he parts with control of the goods that does not permit of any dispute with the buyer as to the performance of the contract of sale being used as a ground for non-payment or reduction or deferment of payment. To this general statement of principle as to the contractual obligations of the confirming bank to the seller, there is one established exception: that is, where the seller, for the purpose of drawing on the credit, fraudulently presents to the confirming bank documents that contain, expressly or by implication, material representations of fact that to his knowledge are untrue."
As the decision in that case shows, it is nothing to the point that at the time of trial the beneficiary knows, and the bank knows, that the documents presented under the letter of credit were not truthful in a material respect. It is the time of presentation that is critical."
"The general situation as to performance bonds is that they provide that the bank or the other party giving the bond has to pay forthwith, usually on demand. But subsequently there has to be an accounting between the parties to the commercial contract."
See also per Potter LJ in Comdel Commodities Ltd v Siporex Trade SA [1997] 1 Lloyd's Rep 424 at 431:-
"Comdel submit that they have a strong case on the merits in their claim against Siporex. The substantive issue between the parties is whether, as Siporex contends, Siporex are entitled to keep the full amount paid under the performance bonds regardless of the amount of damage which Siporex suffered as a result of Comdel's breach of the original contracts of sale.
The law in this respect has recently been the subject of an illuminating decision of Morison J. in Cargill International SA -v- Bangladesh Sugar and Food Industries Corporation [1996] 2 Lloyd's LR 524 in which the authorities are reviewed, most notably decisions in two Australian cases and dicta of Lord Denning MR in State Trading Corporation of India Limited -v- E.D. & F. Man (Sugar) Limited , July 17th, 1981, transcript.
Those authorities are to the effect that it is implicit in the nature of a performance bond that, in the absence of some clear words to a different effect, when the bond is called, there will at some stage in the future be an "accounting" between the parties to the contract of sale in the sense that their rights and obligations will finally be determined at some future date. The bond is a guarantee of due performance; it is not to be treated as representing a pre-estimate of the amount of damages to which the beneficiary may be entitled in respect of the breach of contract giving rise to the right to call for payment under the bond. If the amount of the bond is not enough to satisfy the seller's claim for damages, the buyer is liable to the seller for damages in excess of the amount of the bond. On the other hand, if the amount of the bond is more than enough to satisfy the seller's claim for damages, the buyer can recover from the seller the amount of the bond which exceeds the seller's damages."
"Our obligations under this guarantee shall not be affected or prejudiced by any dispute between you as the Seller and the Buyer under the Shipbuilding Contract or by the Seller's delay in the construction and/or delivery of the Vessel due to whatever causes or by whatever variation or extension of their terms thereof or by any security or other indemnity now or hereafter held by you in respect thereof, or by any time or indulgence granted by you or any other person in connection therewith, or by any invalidity or unenforceability of the terms thereof, or by any act, omission, fact or circumstances whatsoever, which could or might, but for the foregoing, diminish in any way our obligations under this Guarantee."
"20. In my view there is no basis for saying that a term of that kind is to be implied by law and Mr. Gruder did not seriously pursue that aspect of the argument. Indeed, he expressly disavowed any suggestion that such a term is to be implied into every performance bond, which effectively rendered the argument untenable. Nor, in my view, can it be said that it is necessary to imply a term of that kind in order to give business efficacy to the contract. The guarantee stands as an independent contract between NBU and the Bank and is capable of operating effectively without the need for such a term. If a demand under the guarantee resulted in the wrongful refund of part of the price due to the seller, the seller would have a remedy against AMJ under the contract of sale. It is well established, as indeed Mr. Gruder recognised, that in the ordinary case a performance bond is intended to provide a provisional remedy and that in the absence of clear language in the contract pursuant to which it is issued either party can seek to recover from the other the additional amount of its loss or the amount by which the amount paid under the bond exceeds its true liability. There will, in other words, usually be room for an accounting between the parties to reflect their rights and liabilities under the underlying contract: see Cargill International S.A. v Bangladesh Sugar & Food Industries Corp. [1996] 2 Lloyd's Rep 524 and Comdel Commodities Ltd v Siporex Trade S.A. [1997] 1 Lloyd's Rep 424. That provides the answer to the 'windfall' argument, despite the fact that in this case the remedy may be of little practical value because AMJ is insolvent."
Lord Justice Rimer :
Lord Justice Longmore :