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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Fortis Bank S.A /N.V & Anor v Indian Overseas Bank [2009] EWHC 2303 (Comm) (25 September 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2009/2303.html Cite as: [2009] 2 CLC 550, [2009] EWHC 2303 (Comm), [2010] 1 Lloyd's Rep 227 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
(1) FORTIS BANK S.A. /N.V (2) STEMCOR UK LIMITED |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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INDIAN OVERSEAS BANK |
Defendant |
____________________
Miss Sara Cockerill (instructed by Holman Fenwick Willan) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10th September 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
(a) Fortis claims, as confirming bank (alternatively nominated bank), US$5,024,041.80 under three of these IOB L/Cs;
(b) Stemcor claims, as beneficiary, US$3,033,037.20 under two of these IOB L/Cs (which were not confirmed).
(a) In relation to the majority of drawings and the bulk of the quantum IOB raised one or more valid objections to each such drawing, and was therefore entitled to refuse payment. Alternatively, IOB's case on such drawings has a reasonable prospect of success and should be permitted to advance to trial, the more so given IOB's evidence that expert evidence may be of assistance to the court on a number of the issues which arise.
(b) In relation to all of Fortis' claim IOB has a further arguable defence, in that Fortis' claim is not, as a matter of law, as a confirming bank, and any alternative claim (as nominated bank) is highly arguable on the facts. It is not therefore the case that Fortis are entitled to judgment on those three drawings where no discrepancy is now maintained, and in relation to the remainder of Fortis' claims IOB have at least two arguable defences.
The Contractual Background
- the law of England was to govern, with arbitration of disputes in London;
- payment was 100% by sight L/C by a first class bank acceptable to Stemcor, opened in workable form and received in London with the advising bank nominated as Fortis' Aldermanbury Square branch.
The Letters of Credit
L/C ref: | L/C date: | L/C value (US$): | ||
L/C1 | 585/LC/166/08* | 14 August 2008 | 1,160,000.00 | |
L/C2 | 585/LC/170/08* | 18 August 2008 | 1,440,000.00 | |
L/C3 | 585/LC/184/08* | 29 August 2008 | 2,625,000.00 | |
L/C4 | 585/LC/171/08 | 13 August 2008 | 1,800,000.00 | |
L/C5 | 585/LC/164/08 | 18 August 2008 | 1,240,000.00 |
(The L/Cs will be referred to below by the number in the first column in the above table. The asterisks indicate confirmation by Fortis)
(a) The documents Stemcor presented in respect of each drawing under L/C numbers 1, 2 and 3 were negotiated and honoured by Fortis and forwarded by Fortis to IOB; and
(b) The documents presented in respect of each drawing under L/C numbers 4 and 5 were forwarded by Fortis to IOB.
The Issues
(1) The alleged discrepancies
(2) The confirming bank point
(3) The preclusion point
(4) The bill of lading date point.
(1) The alleged discrepancies
The law
(1) the dictum of Viscount Sumner in Equitable Trust Co of New York v Dawson Partners (1926) 27 Ll L Rep 49 @ 52:
"It is both common ground and common sense that in such a transaction the accepting bank can only claim indemnity if the conditions on which it is authorised to accept are in the matter of the accompanying documents strictly observed. There is no room for documents which are almost the same, or which will do just as well. Business could not proceed securely on any other lines. The bank's branch abroad, which knows nothing officially of the details of the transaction thus financed, cannot take upon itself to decide what will do well enough and what will not. If it does as it is told, it is safe; if it declines to do anything else, it is safe; if it departs from the conditions laid down, it acts at its own risk."
(2) Banque de l'Indochine et de Suez v J H Rayner (Mincing Lane) Ltd [1983] 1 QB 711 @ 729H/730B per Sir John Donaldson MR):
"I approach this aspect of the appeal on the same basis as did the judge, namely, that the banker is not concerned with why the buyer has called for particular documents (Commercial Banking Co. of Sydney Ltd. -v- Jalsard Pty. Ltd. [1973] AC 279), that there is no room for documents which are almost the same, or which will do just as well, as those specified (Equitable Trust Co. of New York -v- Dawson Partners Ltd. (1926) 27 Ll.L.Rep. 49), that whilst the bank is entitled to put a reasonable construction upon any ambiguity in its mandate (Jalsard's case [1973] AC 279), the documents have to be taken up or rejected promptly and without opportunity for prolonged inquiry (Hansson -v- Hamel and Horley Ltd. [1922] 2 A.C. 336) and that a tender of documents which properly read and understood calls for further inquiry or are such as to invite litigation are a bad tender (M. Golodetz & Co. Inc. v. Czarnikow-Rionda Co. Inc. [1980] 1 W.L.R. 495)."
(1) As is reflected in clause 2 of the International Standard Banking Practice for the Examination of Documents (the ISBP; ICC publication No. 681):
"The Applicant bears the risk of any ambiguity in its instructions to issue or amend a credit."
Where instructions are ambiguous a confirming bank which acts upon a reasonable construction of those instructions is still entitled in law to reimbursement, even if the court were ultimately to conclude that that was a wrong construction: Crédit Agricole Indosuez v. Muslim Commercial Bank Ltd [2000] 1 Lloyd's Rep. 275 at 280 (per Sir Christopher Staughton) and 281 (per Peter Gibson LJ).
(2) The doctrine does not extend to trivial discrepancies.
(3) The question of compliance should be considered intelligently rather than mechanically and may involve the exercise of judgment:
"... the requirement of strict compliance is not equivalent to a test of exact literal compliance in all circumstances and as regards all documents. To some extent, therefore, the banker must exercise his own judgement whether the requirement is satisfied by the documents presented to him" – per Evans LJ in Krediet Bank Antwerp v Midland Bank [1999] CLC 1108 at para. 12.
"a document containing an error in a name or similar should be rejected unless the nature of the error is such that it is unmistakably typographical and that the document could not reasonably be referring to a person or organisation different from the one in the credit. In assessing this the bank should look only at the context in which the name appears in the document and not judge it against the underlying facts of the transaction."
(i) Documents not in the name of SESA International
"INVOICE AND OTHER RELATED DOCUMENTS EXCEPT BILL OF LADING ARE NOT PREPARED IN THE NAME OF BUYER. ROLE OF MSTC LTD, IS LIMITED TO THAT OF FACILITATOR. PLEASE REFER TO FIELD 47A, CLAUSE 7"
(ii) Bill of Lading not in the name of SESA International
"ALL DOCUMENTS EXCEPT THE CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN WERE REQUIRED TO BE PREPARED IN THE NAME OF THE BUYER VIZ. SESA INTERNATIONAL LTD, 31, SHAKESPEARE SARANI, JASMINE TOWER, 6TH FLOOR, KOLKATA-700017, WHICH HAS NOT BEEN DONE, THUS NON COMPLIANCE OF CLAUSE 7 OF FIELD 47A. B/L IS NOT IN CONFIRMITY WITH CLAUSE 7 OF FIELD 47A".
"ALL DOCUMENTS EXCEPT FOR CERTIFICATE OF ORIGIN TO BE PREPARED IN THE NAME OF THE BUYER VIZ. SESA INTERNATIONAL LTD, 31, SHAKESPEARE SARANI, JASMINE TOWER, 6TH FLOOR, KOLKATA 700017".
"2. FULL SET OF 3/3 ORIGINAL SHIPPED ON BOARD BILLS OF LADING STAMPED, SIGNED MARKET FREIGHT PREPAID CONSIGNED TO ORDER OF INDIAN OVERSEAS BANK, INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS BRANCH, 2, WOOD STREET, KOLKATA-700016, INDIA AND NOTIFY THE APPLICANT BANK AND SESA INTERNATIONAL LTD., 31, SHAKESPEARE SARANI, JASMINE TOWER, 6TH FLOOR, KOLKATA 700017, INDIA. ..."
"AS PER FIELD 47A, CLAUSE 7 BILL OF LADING IS NOT ISSUED IN THE NAME FO BUYER, VIZ, SESA INTERNATIONAL LTD, THE CONTRACTING PARTY. IT IS ISSUED IN THE NAME OF MSTC LTD, WHOSE ROLE IS LIMITED TO THAT OF FACILITATOR AS STATED IN CLAUSE 6 OF FIELD 47A.".
"MSTC WILL ACT AS FACILITATOR".
(iii) Haldia or Haldia/Kolkata
"COMMODITY AND SPECIFICATION: THE COMMERCIAL INVOICES DO NOT COMPLY THE PRICE TERM OF THE LC: THE PRICE TERM, IE, 'USD 600.00 NET PMT CFR CY HALDIA, INDIA' DOES NOT CORRESPOND WITH THAT APPEARING IN THE CREDIT AS PER FIELD 45A".
"USD 600.00 NET PMT, CFR CY, HALDIA/KOLKATA, INDIA"
whereas the price set out on the commercial invoices presented is:
"USD 600.00 NET PMT, CFR CY, HALDIA, INDIA".
(iv) Beneficiary's consolidated certificate
"BENEFICIARY'S CONSOLIDATED CERTIFICATE IS CONTRARY TO THE LC TERMS. REFER FIELD 46A CLAUSE 7D"
"7. BENEFICIARY'S CONSOLIDATED CERTIFICATE CERTIFYING AS FOLLOWS:
WE HEREBY CERTIFY THE FOLLOWING
….
...D) THAT THE NEGOTIATING BANK HAS BEEN ADVISED TO DESPATCH ORIGINAL SHIPPING DOCUMENTS ONLY BY AIR COURIER SERVICE TO THE LC OPENING BANK AT OUR COST...."
"WE HEREBY CERTIFY THE FOLLOWING:
... D) THAT THE NEGOTIATING BANK HAS BEEN ADVISED TO DESPATCH ORIGINAL SHIPPING DOCUMENTS ONLY BY AIR COURIER SERVICE TO THE LC OPENING BANK AT ISSUING BANK'S COST."
(2) The Confirming Bank Point
(1) Goode, Commercial Law (3rd ed.) p 959:
"It is not uncommon for an advising bank to add its confirmation without authority from IB in return for a commission from S himself. This so called 'silent confirmation' is outside the UCP, and the 'confirming' bank, though committed to S by virtue of its confirmation, is no more than an advising bank vis a vis IB."(2) Jack, Documentary Credits (4th ed.) paragraph 6.25:
"exporters … themselves requesting confirmation of a credit by the advising bank without the authorisation of the issuing bank .. is referred to as a 'silent' confirmation. Such a confirmation will fall outside the ambit of the Uniform Customs."
" (b) Permission to confirm on request
In contrast, sometimes the instruction to the advising bank will expressly permit it to confirm a credit at the beneficiary's request and expense. Such a situation is encompassed by the definition of a confirming bank in Article 2 – namely, 'the bank that adds its confirmation to a credit upon the issuing bank's authorization or request' (emphasis added). It is suggested that such an instruction will bring a confirmation at the beneficiary's request within the express terms of Article 8 as a confirmation by a 'confirming bank' (because it is a confirmation which has been authorised (though not requested) by the issuing bank). In a credit transmitted by SWIFT, the instruction would be given by including 'MAY ADD' in the confirmation field."
Fortis as Nominated Bank
(1) Under UCP IOB are only liable to Fortis for failing to reimburse Fortis if Fortis honoured or negotiated a complying presentation as nominated bank: see Article 7(c) of UCP 600 which states: "An issuing bank undertakes to reimburse a nominated bank that has honoured or negotiated a complying presentation and forwarded the documents to the issuing banks. Reimbursement for the amount of a complying presentation… is due at maturity.."
(2) If Fortis were to pay or at least to negotiate as nominated bank their obligation to do so arose on sight of the documents at their counter and in any event within five working days of the presentation of the documents, without waiting for reimbursement from IOB as issuing bank.
(3) For the reasons set out in Mr Hardaker's evidence there are serious doubts whether Fortis did negotiate the documents so as to come within UCP 7(c). In particular:
(i) In no case does it appear that Fortis (as they were obliged to do under the terms of the LC) paid or negotiated on sight;
(ii) In a number of cases no negotiation was made until more than five days after presentation of the documents, and negotiation was thus outside the terms of UCP Article 14(b); and
(iii) In a number of other cases payment was not made until after IOB had rejected the documents and therefore after the date for reimbursement under the LC. Such a payment would be contrary to the requirements for a negotiation in UCP Article 2.
(3) The Preclusion point
(a) Article 16(c) of UCP 600 provides that when an issuing bank decides to refuse to honour it must give a notice to that effect to the presenter. Article 16(c) prescribes that that notice must state that the issuing bank will do one of four things with the rejected documents, namely:
(i) that it is holding the documents pending further instructions from the presenter; or
(ii) that it is holding the documents until it receives a waiver from the applicant or receives further instructions from the presenter prior to agreeing to accept a waiver; or
(iii) that it is returning the documents; or
(iv) that it is acting in accordance with instructions previously received from the presenter.
(b) Article 16(f) then provides that if an issuing bank fails to act in accordance with the provisions of Article 16, the issuing bank "…shall be precluded from claiming that the documents do not constitute a complying presentation".
(4) The Bill of Lading point
Conclusion