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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Swotbooks.com Ltd v Royal Bank of Scotland Plc [2011] EWHC 2025 (QB) (29 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/2025.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 2025 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
LONDON MERCANTILE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Deputy Judge of the Queen's Bench Division)
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SWOTBOOKS.COM LIMITED | Claimant | |
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ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC | Defendant |
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Mr John Taylor (instructed by Addleshaw Goddard LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28, 29 March, 6 April 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
The issue of the Credit
"10.2 Authority to pay10.2.1 The [Claimant] irrevocably and unconditionally directs the Bank to make such payments and comply with such demands as may be claimed from or made on the bank in respect of or purporting to be in respect of the Bank's Commitment as the Bank thinks fit without any reference to the [Claimant] or any necessity to obtain the [Claimant's] confirmation or verification and notwithstanding that the [Claimant] may have disputed the Bank's liability to make such payments or to comply with such demands or that the Bank's Commitment may not be legally binding on the Bank.
10.2.2 The [Claimant] agrees that any such payment or compliance by the Bank shall as between the bank and the [Claimant] be conclusive evidence that the Bank was liable to make such payment or comply with such demand."
DEAR SIRS,OUR IRREVOCABLE STANDBY LETTER OF CREDIT NO.: G111377
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WE HEREBY ISSUE OUR IRREVOCABLE STANDBY LETTER OF CREDIT NO. G111377 IN YOUR FAVOUR FOR ACCOUNT OF SWOTBOOKS.COM LIMITED, OFFICE SUITE2, 4 BRIDGE STREET, MILLS, BRIDGE STREET, WHITNEY, OXFORD OX28,1FX FOR GBP250,000 (SAY GBP TWO HUNDERED FIFTY THOUSNAD) 00/100 VALID IN LEEDS UNTIL 31 MAY.
AVAILABLE FOR PAYMENT AT SIGHT AT THE COUNTERS OF ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND PLC, BONDS & GUARANTEES CENTRE LEED, 1 VICTORIA PLACE, HOLBECK, LEEES LS11 5AR U.K ON PRESENTATION OF THE FOLLOWING DOCUMENTS:-
A) YOUR SIGNED STATEMENT (SIGNATURES APPEARING THEREON TO BE AUTHENTICATED BY YOUR BANKERS) THAT SWOTBOOKS.COM LIMITED HAS FAILED TO MAKE PAYMENT TO YOU WITHIN 14 DAYS FROM SETTLEMENT DATE
B) CERTIFIED TRUE AND CORRECT COPY INVOICE EVIDENCING THE VALUE OF THE GOODS DELIVERED.
C) CERTIFIED TRUE AND CORRECT COPY TRANSPORT DOCUMENT.
D) YOUR SIGNED AND DATED STATEMENT CONFIRMING THAT THERE IS NO DISPUTE PENDING BETWEEN YOU AND SWOTBOOKS.COM LIMITED REGARDING CONFORMITY OF THE GOODS TO THE SPECIFICATION AGREED BETWEEN YOU AND SWOTBOOKS.COM LIMITED.
COVERING PROVISION OF BOOKS
PARTIAL DRAWINGS ALLOWED
ALL BANK CHARGES OTHER THAN THOSE OF THE ISSUING BANK ARE FOR YOUR ACCOUNT
EXCEPT SO FAR AS OTHERWISE EXPRESSLY STATED AND EXCEPT ARTICLE 43 THIS IRREVOCABLE STANDY LETTER OF CREDIT IS SUBJECT TO UNIFORM CUSTOMS AND PRACTICE FOR DOCUMENTARY CREDITS (1993) REVISION INTERNATIONAL CHAMBER OF COMMERCE PUBLICATION NO.500.
YOURS FAITHFULLY
AUTHRORISED SIGNATORY
The 2008 presentations
The May 2009 presentations
(1) Document (A): a signed statement dated 5 May 2009 that the Claimant had failed to make payment within 14 days.(2) Document (B): by way of an invoice, a document dated 15 April 2009 addressed to the Claimant, comprising:
(i) a covering page headed "INVOICE FOR BOOKS", asking that previous "initial" invoices be ignored and explaining that "Compared to these initial invoices this Invoice is a partial summary invoice. It is partial because it omits other items than books. It is summary because it summarizes all sales of books between 2 December 2007 and 21 February 2008";(ii) a spreadsheet setting out a total of 10,927 items, in relation to each item stating that its trade description was "Book", setting out the "Initial Invoice" number, a "Transport Document Number", a "Delivery Note Number" and the price in Euros.(3) Document (C): by way of a transport document, the following:
(i) a letter from DHL in German and a translation produced by Libri which referred to 11,748 packets which had been consigned by DHL, and that "regarding to Libri", those packets were as set out in the attached packing list. During the course of the trial it became clear that the German phrase translated as "regarding to Libri" would better be translated "according to Libri", and was so translated elsewhere in the same document. Further, Ms Sandra Nichols, the Bank employee with primary responsibility for dealing with the presentations, confirmed that that was how she understood the phrase at the time.(ii) the 21 April 2008 "declaration in lieu of oath" (first submitted under the 5 May 2008 presentation) and a further long spreadsheet of packages.(4) Document (D): a statement of conformity.
(1) (B): A revised version of the invoice, which remained dated 15 April 2009, but which:(i) stated the total amount due in sterling (£231,021.49) as well as Euros, applying an exchange rate as at 15 April 2009;(ii) changed the date range of the sales to 3 December 2007 to 22 February 2008;(iii) deleted the words "CD", "DVD" and similar words (apart from the word "Diskette") from the description of the relevant items. Otherwise there was no change to the total number of items, or their individual or total values as stated in Euros.(2) (C): In respect of the transport document:
(i) a new letter from DHL and a translation which were identical to the previous versions except that (a) the number of packets referred to was 10,641, and (b) it was re-dated 15 May 2009;(ii) a different version of the spreadsheet of packages (referred to as "the Packing List"), omitting the "declaration in lieu of oath".(3) (D): A new statement of conformity.
Did the documents presented on 19 May 2009 comply with the Credit?
(i) The transport Document
"A transport document is issued by the carrier when the goods are consigned. In the documentary credit transaction it performs three main functions:
(1) It evidences receipt of the goods in the charge of the carrier for delivery as specified in the document. This gives the bank and the buyer the assurance when paying against the document that the goods have been despatched.
(2) In the case of negotiable marine bill of lading (and, possibly, certain other transport documents), it acts as what can loosely be described as a document of title giving rights of ownership or possession to the holder. ..
(3) It evidences the existence and terms of the contract of carriage between the consignor and the carrier. ..."
"There is no room for documents which are almost the same, or which will do just as well… [The bank] 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."
(ii) The invoice
"Unless otherwise stipulated in the Credit, commercial invoices;i, must appear on their face to be issued by the Beneficiary named in the Credit ....
ii. must be made out in the name of the Applicant ...
iii. need not be signed.
Mr Taylor further pointed out that the parties well knew that they were trading in Euros but that the Credit was in sterling, and that Mr Gray of the Claimant accepted in his evidence that claims would be made in sterling. But once again, it is clear that the Bank was not entitled to take such matters into account in deciding whether the Invoice complied with the Credit.
(iii) The statement of failure to make payment
(iv) Conclusion on discrepancies
Did the Claimant ratify the Bank's payment to Libri?
"Given that the company had such a choice, and that even the commencement of proceedings against one or the other of them would not necessarily be an exercise of it, the mere recording of [the agent] as a debtor in the company's books was not in my judgment an exercise of the choice in this case. It was an act which could logically be analysed without imputing approval. The company may have dipped its toe in the Rubicon but had not crossed it."
"If in law the effect of unauthorised transfers was that [the bank] owed the company money and [the recipient] did not, I should hold that this did amount to ratification: it could not logically be analysed without concluding that the transfers were approved, that [the recipient] owed the company money, and that [the bank] did not. But in my judgment the premise of this argument is not well founded. The case is one of election ..."
Does the Bank have a defence based on principles of "unjust enrichment"?
"Applying the Cleadon case to the present facts, I regard it as authority for the proposition that, in the absence of authorisation or ratification by the company of the bank's payment to the third party, the "mere fact" that the bank's payment enured to the benefit of the company does not establish an equity in favour of the bank against the company. Moreover, even upon Wright J.'s formulation in the Liggett case, in order to establish the equity, the bank would have to show that the payment discharged (at least partially) a legal liability of the customer. In the absence of evidence that the bank's payment has been made on the customer's behalf or subsequently ratified by him, the payment to the creditor will not of itself discharge the company's liability to the creditor .... It is not established in this case that the company's legal liability to the company's creditor had been discharged by the voluntary payment by the bank. While stating that the rule appears to be of "little merit" Goff and Jones by reference to authority state that ... "it is not easy to discharge another's debt in English law. This will occur only if the debtor authorised, or subsequently ratified the payment". Thus the two principles coincide and authorisation or ratification is necessary."
"There will be circumstances in which a court may intervene to prevent unjust enrichment either by the customer having his money from the bank as well as having the claim of his creditor met, or by the creditor who has double payment of the debt. The onus is in my judgment on the bank to establish the unjust enrichment on the evidence. In this case not only is there no evidence of authorisation or ratification of the payment to the third party by the customer but there is no evidence of unjust enrichment of the customer. In the absence of authorisation or ratification of the payment, the bank must in my judgment meet this claim and recoup the sum paid, if they can, from the third party to which it was paid."
"In another case, it might be possible to establish that the customer ratified the gratuitous payment either expressly or by taking advantage of it; or there might conceivably be circumstances not amounting to ratification in which it would nevertheless be unconscionable to allow the customer to recover from the bank the balance of the his account without deduction of a payment which the bank had made gratuitously. But I agree with Pill L.J. that no such circumstances were established in the present case"
Conclusion