Case For L.C
Case For L.C
Case For L.C
"For the purpose of these Articles, branches of a bank in different countries are
considered another bank."
Charles del Busto explained in ICC Publication No. 511 "UCP 500 and 400
Compared" that the underlying reason is because branches of the bank in different
countries may be subject to different jurisdictions. What is legal for the head
office of a bank may not be also legal in its branches in different countries.
Hong Kong was a British territory before 1 July 1997. After 1 July 1997, Hong
Kong became part of the People's Republic of China (PRC) but it practises "One
Country Two Systems" whereby the applicable law in Hong Kong is the Basic
Law (Common Law) whereas that of PRC is Civil Law.
On 24 July 2007, a documentary credit subject to UCP 600 issued by Bank ABC
Beijing Head Office was advised by its branch in Hong Kong. There were
disputes on the discrepancies between the Beneficiary and the Bank ABC Head
Office. The Beneficiary's law firm served a strong letter to Bank ABC Hong
Kong Branch showing its intent to sue it in Hong Kong unless payment was made
within 14 days. Bank ABC Hong Kong Branch replied as follows:
"Due to different jurisdictions between Hong Kong and PRC, we are in fact a
different bank according to the provisions of UCP 600 article 3, based on the
interpretation of Charles del Busto in ICC Publication No. 511 "UCP 500 and
400 Compared". Hence as an advising bank we have no payment obligations.
Your client, as a beneficiary, should sue our Head Office in Beijing instead."
Is the defence of Bank ABC Hong Kong Branch correct?
12. The applicant showed to the beneficiary a written undertaking from the issuing
bank for its agreement to issue a letter of credit subject to UCP 600. However,
due to change in financial position of the applicant, the issuing bank later decided
not to do so. The beneficiary wrote to the issuing bank to force its commitment in
writing. Is the beneficiary successful? Please give your reasons.
13. Under which condition that a confirmed letter of credit subject to UCP 600 may
become unconfirmed without the consent of the beneficiary?
14. In determination of the compliance of a refusal notice with the UCP 600, should
the stipulations of UCP 600 articles 14 and 16 be read separately for (a) document
examination for compliance, (b) determination of refusal or acceptance and (c)
sending of the refusal notice respectively?
15. One set of Drafts drawn on the drawee bank presented under a documentary credit
subject to UCP 600 expiring on 30 August 2007 was accepted on 30 July 2007 for
30 days deferred payment but was unpaid on maturity 30 August 2007. According
to UCP 600 article 7 (a) (iv) the beneficiary made a new set of "replacement"
Drafts drawing on the issuing bank on 3 September 2007. The issuing bank
refused to pay the Drafts because they were drawn and presented after expiry of
the DC. Is the issuing bank correct in its decision? Please state your reasons.
16. An issuing bank sent its refusal notice on the 5th banking day after receipt of the
documents presented under UCP 600. In fact a simple set of documents was
presented for sales of kitchenware, consisting of a total of 12 pages of documents.
Is this refusal notice sent within reasonable time?
17. An issuing bank sent its refusal notice to a presentation under UCP 600 to a
presenting bank overseas by courier. Is this acceptable?
18. Under UCP 600, can a beneficiary, through a presenting bank, have the right to
present documents against a confirmed letter of credit directly to the issuing
bank?
19. A standby letter of credit subject to UCP 600 was issued to back up an "open
account" transaction where payment was made only 30 days after the "shipped on
board" date. The standby required presentation of Drafts in duplicate, one Default
Statement signed by the Beneficiary, one copy of Commercial Invoice and one
copy of "shipped on board" B/L. It also specified that no presentation could be
made until after default in payment. The Issuing Bank sent its Refusal Notice as
follows:
"We refuse to pay due to the following discrepancy in the B/L:
The copy of B/L was presented more than 21 days after shipment, which is
against the stipulation in UCP 600 article 14 (c)."
Is the Issuing Bank correct in its refusal decision?
20. For a DC subject to UCP 600, what should the presenting bank advise the
beneficiary who asks for direct presentation to the issuing bank, thereby bypassing the confirming bank?
21. A standby LC issued by Bank I was confirmed by Bank C expiring on 1
September 2002. There was no restriction on the presentation. The beneficiary
presented the documents to Bank I on 29 August 2002 but was wrongly
dishonoured on 2 September 2002 relying on invalid discrepancies, such as the
commercial invoice was not marked "original" whereas the standby LC did not
ask for such marking. The documents were returned to the beneficiary that
received them on 5 September 2002. The beneficiary presented the same
documents without any alteration to the confirming bank on 6 September 2002.
The refusal notice from the confirming bank stated:
"We refuse to pay due to presentation made after expiry of the standby LC.
Meantime we are holding the documents at your disposal and risk."
Is the confirming bank right in its refusal under ISP98?
22. Case Study
A beneficiary put in its purchase agreement a special condition: "Payment by a
confirmed letter of credit" and a "confirmed letter of credit" subject to UCP 600
was advised by the advising bank, which was also the nominated paying bank for
at sight payment with reimbursements subject to URR 525 by an independent
reimbursing bank. When the issuing bank in country A was ordered by the local
government to freeze payment due to foreign exchange control, the beneficiary
presented the compliant documents (later certified by the ICC DOCDEX
Decision) to the nominated paying bank in country B, but no payment was made.
What are the reasons?
23. A beneficiary made a compliant presentation under a documentary credit subject
to UCP 600. The applicant showed to the issuing bank that the same beneficiary
had made fraudulent presentation under another documentary credit issued by
another bank and instructed the issuing bank not to pay the beneficiary. The
issuing bank did not follow the instruction and paid the beneficiary. The applicant
refused to reimburse the issuing bank. Is the applicant right in doing so? Please
give your reasons.
24. Is the nominated paying bank in question 10 subject to the sanction under UCP
600 Article 16 (f)?
25. A DC subject to UCP 600 has the following stipulation:
"Purchase Contract No. 123456 dated 24 July 2007 attached herewith forms an
integral part of this documentary credit."
Is this stipulation acceptable and what are the risks?
After a period of time, the beneficiary presented compliant documents for the
second instalment shipment made according to the shipping schedule stated in the
DC. The issuing bank denied payment according to UCP 600 article 32.
The beneficiary sued the issuing bank for payment dishonour and negligence.
I.
II.
The expert's report from the beneficiary states that the confusion is
created by the issuing bank that should have clarified in its waiver
notice whether or not the DC is still valid for the second and the
third instalment shipments. So the issuing bank should bear the
serious consequences for its negligence and should effect payment
of the second instalment shipment, since the documents are all
compliant.
The expert's report from the issuing bank states that:
a. There is no stipulation in the UCP 600 that requires the
issuing bank to state its intention/decision on the validity of
the balanced instalment shipments after waiving the
discrepancy in the first instalment shipment.
b. Discrepancy and waiver are two separate issues. The
wavier cannot change the nature of a discrepancy. A
discrepancy always remains a discrepancy, whether being
waived or not.
c. The discrepancy will trigger the following two
consequences:
1. To dishonour payment according to UCP 600
articles 7, 14 & 16, and
2. To make the DC no more available for all future
instalment shipments according to UCP 600 article
32.
d. So the wavier only waives the first consequence regarding
payment but the second consequence affecting balanced
instalment shipments remains unwaived.
e. As a result, the issuing bank has no payment obligation for
the second and the third instalment shipments.
If you were the Judge, what would you adjudicate? Please state the reasons of
your judicial decisions.
28. An Insurance Policy Not Indicating Number of Originals Issued
A DC subject to UCP 600 calls for full set of insurance policy but is silent on the
number of originals issued. The issuing bank refuses to pay due to the insurance
policy presented does not indicate number of originals issued. Is the issuing bank
correct in naming this as a discrepancy?
29. Port of Loading Different from DC
The commercial invoice and the bill of lading are not consistent with each other.
Meanwhile we hold documents at your risk and disposal".
Is this refusal notice valid?
39. Interpretation of CIF
An LC subject to UCP 600 was issued on 1 August 2007 stating the total value of
the goods as "USD 200,000 CIF Hong Kong" and a commercial invoice stating
"USD 200,000 CIF Hong Kong Incoterms 2000" was presented.
The Issuing Bank considered this as a discrepancy. The reasons are:
.
"CIF" does not exist only in Incoterms. It is also found in other trade terms, such
as the USA Trade Definitions, the Warsaw Trade Terms and the like. The Applicant may
not mean Incoterms.
i.
Even if the parties do mean Incoterms, it may be Incoterms 1990 other
than Incoterms 2000.
Is the Issuing Bank correct in its determination of this discrepancy? Please state
your reasons.
Come
by
Chance,
Canada
Chance,
Canada
Come
by
"Come by chance in Canada" means "Any port at which the goods happen to be
discharged in Canada". Come by Chance is not the name of a port. The Port of Loading
should show the name of a port in Canada, such as Toronto, as required by UCP 600 subarticle 20 (a) (iii).
i.
ii.
What is the intent of the confirming bank for making such a request?
Q3
What is the risk for the issuing bank after accepting such a request?
44. Bill of Lading Consigned to Order of Issuing Bank
Meanwhile a third party sent for D/A collection under URC 522 full sets of same
original bills of lading to another Branch of Issuing Bank in country B (now
acting as Remitting Bank) to endorse to another Collecting Bank to facilitate
delivery after acceptance of drafts.
The Beneficiary claimed payment from the Issuing Bank due to its endorsement
on the original bills of lading, resulting the goods being delivered by the
Applicant. Should the Issuing Bank be liable for this claim?
45. Extension of Confirmation After An Amendment
A DC, subject to UCP 600, available for 30-day deferred payment of
USD200,000, covering furniture items of Reconnaissance design shipped from
Hong Kong to Jeddah, Saudi Arabia was confirmed by the Advising &
Nominated Bank. An amendment added USD100,000 for framed oil paintings
with pornographic themes. The Confirming Bank advised the amendment without
adding confirmation to USD100,000 because pornographic works would be
confiscated by the Saudi Arabian import authorities due to religious reasons. The
Beneficiary argued that (a) DC deals with documents not with goods (b) A bank
should not speculate the intention of the parties in international trade and (c) since
both the Issuing Bank and the Applicant agreed to the amendment, they were the
parties to take this risk, not the Confirming Bank that could claim reimbursement
from the Issuing Bank regardless as whether the goods were confiscated or not,
according to UCP 600 articles 7 (c) and 12 (b).
Questions:
0.
Can
the
transferring
bank
accept
such
request?
Q2
If the transferring bank nevertheless accepts the request, what terms and
conditions should the transferring bank take?
52. UCP 600 uses terms like "banks", "banking days" and "international
standard banking practice". Would this imply that UCP 600 couldn't
be applicable to credits issued by non-banks?
To answer this question we have to go back to the original intent of the UCP 600
Drafting Group.
53. Is "advance or agree to advance funds" in the definition of
"negotiation" in UCP 600 article 2 same as "giving of value" or
"undertaking an obligation to make payment" in ICC Position Papers
No. 2?
Negotiation is one of the most misled terms in UCP operations because the
meaning of negotiation may be different from one region to another, such as
North America, Europe, Middle East and Asia. Hence it is almost impossible to
create a perfect definition for "negotiation" in UCP.
As a result, the definition of "negotiation" in article 2 of UCP 600 is not perfect
and is still subject to disputes during the drafting stage as well as after approval
by the ICC National Committees. For example, some bankers start asking ICC
Banking Commission to provide the definition of "purchase" used in article 2 of
UCP 600. The more new words are introduced, the more clarification will be
requested.
54. The scope of application for UCP 600 article 38 (k)
A credit subject to UCP 600 is fully transferred to a second beneficiary without
any reduction in unit price and total value. The issuing bank has been notified for
the details of this transfer by the transferring bank. Meanwhile the first
beneficiary has also received outside the credit operations an agreed amount from
the second beneficiary as its reasonable share of profits in the underlying
transaction. In this arrangement, it is obvious that there is no need for substitution
of documents by the first beneficiary. Then can the second beneficiary bypass the
transferring bank and make direct presentation to the issuing bank?
55. Loss of documents in a back-to-back credit situation
The documents presented under a baby letter of credit subject to UCP 600 were lost
during transit. Nevertheless, Bank IB, the intermediate bank that issued the baby credit,
paid the ultimate supplier according to the provisions of UCP 600 article 35. Certified
true copies of documents, including the bills of lading, other than drafts and commercial
invoices that were replaced with originals, were presented to Bank IA, the issuing bank of
the master letter of credit that was also subject to UCP 600.
Could Bank IA refuse the otherwise compliant presentation according to UCP 600 17 (a),
relying on the following reasons:
a. The two credits, although both subject to UCP 600, are in fact separate payment
undertakings.
b. The originals are lost in another presentation (under the baby credit) and not in the
same presentation (under the master credit), and
c. Most of the documents (other than drafts and commercial invoices) are not
originals?
56. If examination of documents by a nominated bank constitutes "acting on its
nomination" under UCP 600 article 14 (b)?
The beneficiary presented documents to a nominated bank N under a credit subject to
UCP 600 available for deferred payment 60 days after date of bill of lading. Negotiation
is restricted to nominated bank N.
As bank N is the beneficiary's banker, the beneficiary requested bank N to examine the
documents for compliance. Bank N found the documents compliant and forwarded them
to the issuing bank in USA. Ten banking days after receipt of presentation by the issuing
bank, there was no notice of refusal received. Two week before the payment maturity
date, the issuing bank applied for Chapter 11 protection due to lack of liquidity.
On payment maturity date, the beneficiary demanded payment by Bank N based on
following reasons:
1. Bank N is the nominated bank, having examined the documents and found them
compliant.
2. Bank N never showed any intention to refuse the nomination before the payment
maturity date.
Is bank N obligated to pay the beneficiary?
57. Beneficiary's Certification in Commercial Invoice
A credit subject to UCP 600, amongst other documents, asks for one original
commercial invoice certifying that one set of documents has been sent to the forwarder
F nominated by the applicant and one original forwarder's cargo receipt issued by
forwarder F.
The commercial invoice presented has no such certification but the forwarder's cargo
receipt has acknowledged receipt of one set of documents from the beneficiary on the
same date of delivery which is within the shipment period stated in the credit.
Should missing the certification in commercial invoice be a valid discrepancy under the
circumstance?
58. Beneficiary's Certificate
A credit subject to UCP 600, amongst other documents, asks for one original
beneficiary's certificate certifying that one set of documents has been sent to the
forwarder F nominated by the applicant and one original forwarder's cargo receipt
issued by forwarder F.
The beneficiary's certificate is not presented but the forwarder's cargo receipt has
acknowledged receipt of one set of documents from the beneficiary on the same date of
delivery which is within the shipment period stated in the credit.
Should missing the beneficiary's certificate be waived under the circumstance?
59. A credit subject to UCP 600 asks for full set of 3 original bills of lading evidencing
shipment of building materials, comprising of cement, steel round bars, I-beams,
etc. consigned to the order of issuing bank, evidencing shipment from any Chinese
port to Dubai, with freight prepaid, notifying the applicant. The credit prohibits
partial shipments. Three sets of original bills of lading loaded on the same vessel
under the same voyage number, discharging at Dubai are presented.
The issuing bank dishonours due to following discrepancy:
The issuing bank rejects this bill of lading because the agent has not stated whether it is
signing for the master or for the carrier.
Is this discrepancy valid?
62. A credit subject to UCP 600 asks for a FCR (Forwarder's Certificate of Receipt)
consigned to Applicant, evidencing shipment from Yantian, China to San Francisco,
USA under Purchase Order No. 123456, marked freight prepaid.
A FCR is signed by a chop as follows:
For and on behalf of:
(Manual signature)
XYZ Freight Forwarding Company Ltd.
The issuing bank rejects this FCR as XYZ Freight Forwarding Company Ltd. does not
indicate whether it signs as a carrier or as an agent of the carrier or as an agent of the
master.
Is this discrepancy valid?
63. A credit subject to UCP 600 asks for a FCR (Forwarder's Certificate of Receipt)
consigned to Applicant, evidencing shipment from Yantian, China to San Francisco,
USA under Purchase Order No. 123456, marked freight prepaid.
A FCR is signed by a chop as follows:
For and on behalf of:
(Manual signature)
XYZ Godown Company Ltd.
The issuing bank rejects this FCR as XYZ Godown Company Ltd. is only a godown or
warehouse and cannot sign as an issuer of the FCR that should be signed by a forwarder
only.
Is this discrepancy valid?
64. A credit subject to UCP 600 asked for presentation of One original and 2 copies of
certificate of origin evidencing China origin for sales of 10,000 MT steel goods
from Hong Kong to Dubai. A certificate of origin issued by a Chamber of
Commerce in China covering 30,000 MT of steel goods was presented, showing
shipment from Hong Kong to Dubai.