Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TARAPORE & CO., MADRAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M/S. V/O TRACTORS EXPORT, MOSCOW AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/11/1968
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
SIKRI, S.M.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 891 1969 SCR (2) 920
1969 SCC (1) 233
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1426 (28)
ACT:
Banking Practice-Irrevocable letter of credit-Significance
of-If Courts can interfere with commercial practice when
international repercussions are involved.
HEADNOTE:
An Indian Firm (the appellant) entered into a contract
with a Russian Firm (the respondent) for supply of certain
machinery. In pursuance of the contract, the appellant
opened a confirmed, irrevocable and divisible letter of
credit with a Bank in India for the entire value of the
equipment. The respondent supplied all the machinery and
received 25% of the money payable under the letter of credit
from the Bank. Thereafter, the appellant complained that
the performance of the machinery was not efficient and filed
a suit seeking an injunction restraining the respondent from
realising the balance of amount payable under the letter of
credit. The parties, however, entered into an agreement, by
which it was agreed that the appellant would withdraw the
suit, the respondent would not demand any payment under the
letter of credit for 6 months, the parties would try to
settle the dispute amicably during that period, ’and if no
settlement was reached the period would be extended by a
further period of 6 months. The appellant withdrew its
suit, but before any settlement was arrived at the Indian
rupee was devalued, as a result of which the appellant had
to pay an additional sum for the machinery supplied. There
was correspondence between the parties wherein the
respondent insisted upon the appellant opening an additional
letter of credit. for the extra amount and the appellant
objected to such a course. The original dispute between the
parties was not amicably settled and when the extended time
under the agreement was about to expire, the appellant filed
a suit on the original side of the High Court for
restraining the Bank and the respondent from taking any
steps in pursuance of the letter of credit. A temporary
injunction was also prayed for and it was granted, but the
order was reversed by the Appellate Bench of the High Court.
In appeal to this Court, on the question whether the
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order of temporary injunction was sustainable,
HELD: (1 ) An irrevocable letter of credit has a
definite implication. It is independent of and unqualified’
by the contract of sale or other underlying transactions.
It is a mechanism of great importance in international trade
and any interference with that mechanism is bound to have
serious repercussions on the international trade of this
country. The autonomy of an irrevocable letter of credit is
entitled to protection ’and except in very exceptional
circumstances courts should not interfere with that
autonomy. [929 B--C; 931 G]
Urquhart Lindsay and Co. Ltd. v. Eastern Bank Ltd.,
[1922] 1 K.B. 318; Hamzeh Malas and Sons v. British Imex
Industries Ltd., [1958] 2 Q.B. 127 and Dulien Steel
Products Inc. o/Washington v. Bankers Trust Co., Fed. Rep.
2nd Series, 298, p. 836, applied.
(2) The allegation of the appellant that the respondent
had no assets in this Country and therefore if the
respondent was allowed to take away
921
the money secured to it by the letter of credit the
appellant could not effectively enforce its claim arising
from the breach of the contract, was not made in the
pleadings. Nor do the facts pleaded in the plaint amount to
a plea of fraud. [929 B; 931 H]
(3) It could not be contended that the letter of credit
was not enforceable as the original contract was modified by
the later agreement and subsequent correspondence between
the parties. The contention was not taken either in the
plaint or in the High Court. It is not a mere legal
contention as it bears on the intention of parties.
Further, a perusal of the entire correspondence between the
parties shows that in the absence of an amicable settlement,
the parties continued to be bound by the original contract
subject only to extension of time granted for payment of’
price. [932 B--D, F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 2251 and
2252 of 1968.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment ’and order
dated’ October 9, 1968 of the Madras High Court in O.S.A.
Nos. 26 and 27 of 1968 and Civil Appeals Nos. 2305 and 2306
of 1968.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order
dated April 12, 1968 of the Madras High Court in
Applications Nos. 1760 and 2455 of 1967 in C.S. No. 118 of
1967.
M.C. Setalvad, V.P. Raman, D.N. Mishra and 1. B.
Dadachanji for the appellant (in C.As. Nos. 2251 and 2252 of
1968) and respondent No. 1 (in C.As. 2305 and 2306 of 1968).
S. Mohan Kumaramangalam, M.K. Ramamurthi, Shyamala Pappu
and Vineet Kumar, for respondent No. 1 (in C.As. Nos. 2251
and 2252 of 1968) and the appellant (in C.As. 2305 and 2306
of 1968).
Rameshwar Nath and Mahinder Narain, for respondent
No. 2 (in all the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. These are connected appeals. They arise from
Civil Suit No. 118 of 1967 on the original side of the High
Court of Judicature at Madras. Herein the essential facts
are few and simple though the question of law that arises
for decision is of considerable importance.
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The suit has been brought by M/s. Tarapore & Co., Madras
(hereinafter referred to as the "Indian Firm"). That firm
had taken up on contract the work of excavation of a canal
as a part the Farakka Barrage Project. In that
connection they entered into a contract with M/s. V/O
Tractors Export, Moscow (which
922
will hereinafter be referred to as the "Russian Firm") for
the supply of construction machinery such as Scrapers and
Bulldozers. In pursuance of that contract, the Indian Firm
opened a confirmed, irrevocable and divisible letter of
credit with the Bank of India, Limited for the entire value
of the equipment i.e., Rs. 66,09,372 in favour of the
Russian Firm negotiable through the Bank for Foreign Trade
of the U.S.S.R., Moscow. Under the said letter of credit
the Bank of India was required to pay to the Russian Firm on
production of the documents particularised in the letter
of credit alongwith the drafts. One of the conditions of
the letter of credit was that 25 per cent of the amount
should be paid on the presentation of the specified
documents and the balance of 75 per cent to be paid one year
from the date of the first payment. The agreement entered
into between the Bank of India and the Russian Firm under
the letter of credit was "subject to the Uniform Customs and
Practice for Documentary Credits (1962 Revision),
International Chamber of Commerce Brochure No. 222". Article
3 of the brochure says that:
"’An irrevocable credit is a definite
undertaking on the part of an issuing bank and
constitutes the engagement of that bank to the
beneficiary or, as the case may be, to the
beneficiary and bona fide holders of drafts
drawn and/or documents presented thereunder,
that the provisions for payment, acceptance or
negotiation contained in the credit will be
duly fulfilled, provided that all the terms
and conditions of the credit are complied
with.
An irrevocable credit may be advised to
a beneficiary through another bank without
engagement on the part of that other bank (the
advising bank), but when an issuing bank
authorises another bank to confirm its
irrevocable credit and the latter does so,
such confirmation constitutes a definite
undertaking on the part of the confirming bank
either that the provisions for payment or
acceptance will be duly fulfilled or, in the
case of a credit available by negotiation of
drafts, that the confirming bank will
negotiate drafts without recourse to drawer.
Such undertakings can neither be
modified nor cancelled without the agreement
of all concerned."
Article 8 of the brochure says:
"In the documentary credit operations
all parties concerned deal in documents and
not in goods.
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Payment, acceptance or negotiation
against documents which appear on their face
to be in accordance with the terms and
conditions of a credit by a bank authorised to
do so, binds the party giving the
authorisation to take up the documents and
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reimburse the bank which has effected the
payment, acceptance or negotiation ...... "
The only other Article in that brochure which
is relevant for our present purpose is Art. 9
which reads:
"Banks assume no liability or
responsibility for the form, sufficiency,
accuracy, genuineness, falsification or legal
effect of any documents, or for the general
and/or particular conditions stipulated in the
documents or superimposed thereon; nor do they
assume any liability or responsibility for the
description, quantity, weight, quality,
condition, packing, delivery, value or
existence of the goods represented thereby, or
for the good faith or acts and/or omissions,
solvency, performance or standing of the
consignor, the carriers or the insurers of the
goods or any other person whomsoever."
On the strength of the aforementioned. contract, the
Russian Firm supplied all the machinery it undertook to
supply, by about the end of December 1965, which were duly
taken possession of by the Indian Firm and put to work at
Farakka Barrage Project. They are still in the possession
of the Indian Firm. After the machinery was used for
sometime, the Indian Firm complained to the Russian Firm
that the performance of the machinery supplied by it was not
as efficient as represented at the time of entering into the
contract and consequently it had incurred and continues to
incur considerable loss. In that connection there was some
correspondence between the Indian Firm and the Russian Firm.
Thereafter the Indian Firm instituted a suit on the original
side of the High Court of Madras seeking an injunction
restraining the Russian Firm from realizing the amount
payable under the letter of credit. During the pendency of
that suit the parties arrived at an agreement on August 14,
1966 at Delhi (which shah be hereinafter referred to as the
Delhi agreement). The portion of that agreement which is
relevant for our present purpose reads as follows:
"Tarapore & Co., Madras, agree to
withdraw immediately the court case filed by
them against ’Tractoro export’ Moscow, in the
Madras High Court.
2. Immediately on Tarapore withdrawing
the case, V/O ’Tractoro export’ agree to
instruct the Bank for
924
Foreign Trade of the USSR in Moscow, not to
demand any further payment against L.C.
established by Tarapore & Co., Madras, for a
period of six months from the due dates in
the first instance. During this period both
the parties shall do theft best to reach an
amicable settlement.
3. In case the settlement between the
two parties is not completed within this
period of six months V/O Tractors export shall
further extend the period of payment by
further period of six months for the
settlement to be completed.
4. Tarapore & Co. (shall authorise
their Bank to keep the unpaid portions L.C.
valid for the extended period as stated
above."
At this stage it may be mentioned that the Russian Firm had
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received from the Bank of India 25 per cent of the money
payable under the letter of credit very soon after it
supplied to the Indian Firm the machinery mentioned earlier.
In pursuance of the aforementioned agreement the Indian Firm
withdrew the suit. Thereafter there were attempts to settle
the dispute. In the meantime the Indian Rupee was devalued.
The contract between the Indian Firm and the Russian Firm
contains the following term:
"Payment for the delivered goods shall
be made by the Buyers in Indian Rupee in
accordance with the Trade Agreement between
the USSR and India dated. 10th June, 1963. All
the prices are stated in Indian Rupees. One
Indian Rupee is equal to 0.186621 grammes of
pure gold. If the above gold content of
Indian Rupee is changed the, prices and the
amount of this Contract in Indian Rupee shall
be revalued accordingly on the date of
changing the gold parity of the Indian Rupee."
This clause will be hereinafter referred to as the ’Gold
Clause’. In view of that clause, the price fixed for
machinery supplied stood revised.. Consequently under the
contract the Indian Firm had to pay to the Russian Firm an
additional sum of about rupees twenty six lacs. Accordingly
the bankers of the Russian Firm called upon the Indian Firm
to open an additional letter of credit for payment of the
extra price payable under the contract. They also intimated
the Indian Firm that the extension of time for the payment
of the price of the machinery supplied, agreed to at Delhi
will be given effect to only after the Indian Firm arranges
for the additional letter of credit asked for. The Indian
Firm objected to this demand as per its letter of 20th
September, 1966. The relevant portion of that letter reads:
925
"We are rather surprised to see this,
because, by our arrangement dated the 14th
Aug., 1966, at New Delhi you had agreed to
give further time for the payments on the
withdrawal of the Madras High Court case. That
was the only condition that was talked about
and incorporated in our written agreement. If
you will be good enough to refer to the
agreement dated the 14th Aug., 196’6, you will
find that we were obliged to withdraw the
Madras suit pending talks of settlement and
immediately on our withdrawing this suit, you
agreed to instruct your Bankers not to demand
any further payment under the letter of
credit. There is absolutely no reference in
that agreement to our having to open any
additional letter of credit in view of the
devaluation of the Indian rupee ........ We
would therefore request you to immediately
instruct your Bankers in Moscow. to advise our
Bankers regarding the extension of time for
payment under the letter of credit without any
reference to any additional letters of credit
in view of devaluation .......... Moreover,
when the entire question is open for amicable
settlement between us, it is not possible to
determine what exactly will be the amount
payable and unless that amount is known, it is
not possible to open additional letters of
credit to give effect to the gold
clause ............ "
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On November 1, 1966, the Russian Firm sent to the Indian
Firm addendum No. 1 modifying the original contract in
accordance with the gold clause. The last clause of that
addendum recited that "all ,other terms and conditions are
as stated in the above mentioned contract" (original
contract). The Indian Firm objected to that addendum as well
as to the demand for opening an additional letter of credit.
In that connection the Russian Firm wrote a letter to the
Indian Firm on November 29, 1966. As considerable arguments
were advanced on the basis of that letter, we shall quote
the relevant portion of that letter :--
" ...... We confirm that you have
signed with us the addendum No. 1 to our
Contract No. 61/Tarapore 220/65 dated the 2nd
Feb., 1965, at our request for the sole and
specific purpose of satisfying our bankers. We
confirm further that this addendum will not in
any manner prejudice the arrangement we have
come to in Delhi on the 14th August, 1966, and
is without prejudice to your claims and points
of controversy regarding which we shall have
further discussions with a view to reach an
amicable settlement.
926
Under this addendum, the company will
extend the letter of credit for one year and
accept the drafts for the difference in value
of 57.5 per cent due to devaluation. The final
amount payable will be in accordance with the
settlement."
Thereafter the Russian Firm appears to have drawn drafts on
the Indian Firm for the excess amount payable under the gold
clause. For one reason or the other, no settlement as
contemplated by the Delhi agreement was reached. The Indian
Firm complained that the Russian Firm never made any serious
attempt to resolve the dispute whereas the Russian Firm
alleged that it found no substance in the complaint made by
the Indian Firm as regards the machinery supplied. In the
suit as brought, as well as in these appeals that
controversy is not open for examination. Suffice it to say
that the parties did not amicably settle the dispute in
question. When the extended time granted under the Delhi
agreement was about to come to a close, the Indian Firm
instituted the suit from which these appeals have arisen.
In that suit the only substantive relief asked for is that
the Bank of India as well as the Russian Firm’ should be
restrained from taking any further steps in pursuance of the
letter of credit opened by the Indian Firm in favour of the
Russian Firm. Therein temporary injunctions were asked for
in the very terms in which the permanent injunctions were
prayed for. At a subsequent stage a further injunction
restraining the Russian Firm from enforcing its right under
the gold clause was also prayed for. The Russian Firm
opposed those applications but the trial judge granted the
temporary injunctions asked for. The Russian Firm took up
the matter in appeal to the Appellate Bench of that High
Court which reversed the order of the trial judge by its
Order dated October 9, 1968 but it certified that they are
fit cases for appeal to this Court. When the applications
in the appeals seeking interim orders came up for
consideration by this Court the Russian Firm entered its
caveat. It not only opposed the interim reliefs prayed for,
it further challenged the validity of the certificates
granted by the High Court on the ground that the orders
appealed against are not final orders within the meaning of
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Art. 133 of the Constitution. Evidently as a matter of
abundant caution, the Indian Firm had filed two separate
applications seeking special leave to appeal against the
orders of the Appellate Bench of the Madras High Court.
After hearing the parties this Court revoked the
certificates granted holding that the orders appealed
against are not final orders but at the same time granted
special leave to the Indian Firm to appeal against the
orders of the Madras High Court. Civil Appeals Nos. 2051
and 2052 of 1968 are appeals filed by the Indian Firm.
Before the Appellate Bench of the High Court of Madras,
the Indian Firm had objected to be maintainability of the
appeals
927
filed by the Russian Firm on the ground that orders appealed
against are not judgments within the meaning of el. 15 of
the Letters Patent of the Madras High Court but that
objection had been overruled by the Appellate Bench
following the earlier decisions of that High Court. That
contention was again raised in the appeals filed by the
Indian Firm in this Court. To obviate any difficulty the
Russian Firm applied to this Court for special leave to
appeal against the interim orders passed by the trial judge.
We allowed those applications and consequently Civil Appeals
Nos. 2305 and 2306 of 1968 came to be filed.
In view of the appeals filed by the Russian Firm in this
Court against the interim orders made by the trial judge it
is not necessary to decide whether the appeals filed by the
Russian Firm before. the Appellate Bench of the Madras High
Court were maintainable? On that question, judicial opinion
is. sharply divided as could be seen from the decision of
this Court in Asrumati Debi v. Kumar Rupendra Deb Rajkot and
Ors.(x) Hence we shall, confine our attention to the
question whether the temporary injunctions issued by the
trial judge are sustainable?
The scope of an irrevocable letter of credit is
explained’ thus in Halsbury’s Laws of England (Vol. 34
paragraph 319 at p. 185):
"It is often made a condition of a
mercantile contract that the buyer shall pay
for the goods by means of a confirmed credit,
and it is then the duty of the buyer to
procure Iris bank, known as the issuing or
originating bank, to issue an irrevocable
credit in favour of the seller by which the
bank undertakes to the seller, either directly
or through another bank in the seller’s
country known as the correspondent or
negotiating bank, to accept drafts drawn upon
it for the price of the goods, against tender
by the seller of the shipping documents. The
contractual relationship between the issuing
bank and the buyer is defined by the terms of
the agreement between them under which the
letter opening the credit is issued; and’ as
between the seller and the bank, the issue of
the credit duly notified to the seller creates
a new contractual nexus and renders the bank
directly liable to the seller to pay the
purchase price or to accept the bill of
exchange upon tender of the documents. The
contract thus created between the seller and
the bank is separate from, although ancillary
to, the original contract between the buyer
and. the seller, by reason of the bank’s
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undertaking to the seller, which is absolute.
Thus the bank is not entitled to,
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1159. L6 Sup. CI/69-8.
928
rely upon terms of the contract between the
buyer and the seller which might permit the
buyer to reject the :goods and to refuse
payment therefore; and, conversely, the buyer
is not entitled to an injunction restraining
the seller from dealing with the letter of
credit if the goods are defective."
Chalmers on "Bills of Exchange" explains the legal position
in these words:’
"The modern commercial credit serves to
interpose between a buyer and seller a third
person of unquestioned solvency, almost
invariably a banker of international repute;
the banker on the instructions of the buyer
issues the letter of credit and thereby
undertakes to act as paymaster upon the seller
performing the conditions set out in it. A
letter of credit may be in any one of a number
of specialised forms and contains the
undertaking of the banker to honour all bills
of exchange drawn thereunder. It can hardly
be over-emphasised that-the banker is not
bound or entitled to honour such bills of
exchange unless they, and such accompanying
documents as may be required thereunder, are
in exact compliance with the terms of the
credit. Such documents must be scrutinised
with meticulous care, the maim de minimis non
curat lex cannot be invoked where payment is
made by later of credit. If the seller has
complied with the terms of the letter of
credit, however, there is an absolute
Obligation upon the banker to pay irrespective
of any disputes there may be between the buyer
and the seller as to whether the goods are up
to contract or not:
Similar are the views expressed in Practice and Law of
Banking by H.P. Sheldon ’the Law of Bankers Commercial
Credits" by H.C. Gutteridge "the Law Relating to Commercial
Letters of Credit" by A.G. Davis "the Law Relating to
Bankers’ Letters of Credit" by B.C. Mitra and in several
other text books read to us by Mr. Mohan Kumaramangalam,
learned Counsel for the Russian Firm. The legal position as
set out above was not controverted by Mr. M.C. Setalvad,
learned Counsel for the Indian Firm. So far as the Bank of
India is concerned it admitted its liability to honour the
letter of credit and expressed its willingness to abide by
its terms. It took the same position before the High
The main grievance of the India Firm is that if the
Russian Firm is allowed to take away the money secured to it
by the letter ’
929
of credit, it cannot effectively enforce its claim arising
from the breach of the contract it complains of. It was
urged on its behalf that the Russian Firm has no assets in
this country and therefore any decree that it may be able to
obtain cannot be executed. Therefore, it was contended that
the trial court was justified in issuing the impugned
orders. The allegation that Russian Firm has no assets in
this country was not made in the pleadings. That apart in
the circumstances of this case that allegation has no
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relevance. An irrevocable letter of credit has a definite
implication. It is a mechanism of great importance in
international trade. Any interference with that mechanism
is bound to have serious repercussions on the international
trade of this country. Except under very exceptional
circumstances, the Courts should not interfere with that
mechanism.
For our present purpose we shall assume, without
deciding, that the allegations made by the Indian Firm are
true. We shall further assume that the suit as brought is
maintainable though Mr. Kumaramangalam seriously challenged
its maintainability. But yet, in our judgment, the learned
trial judge was not justified in law in granting the
temporary injunctions appealed against. Ordinarily this
Court does not interfere with interim orders. But herein
legal principles of great importance affecting international
trade are involved. If the orders impugned are allowed to
stand they are bound to have their repercussion on our
international trade.
We have earlier referred to several well known treatises
on the subject. Now we shall proceed to consider the decided
eases bearing on the question under consideration.
A case somewhat similiar to the one before us came up
for consideration before the Queens Bench Division in
England in Hamzeh Malas and Sons v. British Imex
Industries Ltd.(1) Therein the plaintiffs, a 10 Jordanian
firm contracted to purchase from the defendants, a British
firm, a large quantity of reinforced steel rods, to be
delivered in two instalments. Payment was to be effected by
opening in favour of the defendants of two confirmed letters
of credit with the Midland Bank Ltd., in, London, one in’
respect of each instalment. The letters of credit were duly
opened and the first was realized by the defendants on the
delivery of’ t, he first instalment. The plaintiffs
complained that that instalment was defective and Sought an
injunction to bat the defendants from realizing the second
letter of credit. Donovan 1., the trial judge refused the
application. In appeal Jenkins, Sellers and Pearce L.JJ.
confirmed the decision of the trial judge. In the course of
(1) [1958] 2 Q.B. 127.
930
his judgment Jenkins L.J. who spoke for the Court observed
thus:
"We have been referred to a number of
authorities, and it seems to be plain enough
that the opening of a ’confirmed letter of
credit constitutes a bargain between the
banker and the vendor of the goods, which
imposes upon the banker an absolute obligation
to pay, irrespective of any dispute there may
be between the parties as to whether the goods
are up to contract or not. An elaborate
commercial system has been built up on the
footing that bankers’ confirmed credits are of
that character, and, in my judgment, it would
be wrong for this Court in the present case to
interfere with that established practice.
There is this to be remembered, too. A
vendor of goods selling against a confirmed
letter of credit is selling under the
assurance that nothing will prevent him from
receiving the price. That is of no mean
advantage when goods manufactured in one
country are being sold in another. It is,
furthermore, to be observed ’that vendors are
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often reselling goods bought from third
parties. When they are doing that, and when
they are being paid by a confirmed letter of
credit, their practice is--and I think it was
followed by the defendants in this case--to
finance the payments necessary to be made to
their suppliers against the letter of credit.
That system of financing these operations, as
I see it, would break down completely if a
dispute as between the vendor and the
purchaser was to have effect of ’freezing,’ if
I may use that expression, the sum in respect
of which the letter of credit was opened."
In Urquhart Lindsay and Co. Ltd. v. Eastern Bank Ltd.(1)
the King’s Bench held that the refusal of the defendants
bank to take and_pay for the particular bills on
presentation of the proper documents constituted a
repudiation of the contract as a whole and that the
plaintiffs were entitled to damages arising from such a
breach. It may be noted that in that case the price quoted
in the invoices was objected to by the buyer and he had
notified his objection to the bank. But under the terms of
the letter of credit the bank was required to make payments.
on the basis of the invoices tendered by the seller. The
Court held that if the buyers had an enforceable claim that
adjustment must be made by way of refund by the seller and
not by way of retention by the buyer.
(1) [1922] 1 K.B. 318.
931
Similar opinions have been expressed by the American
Courts, The leading American case on the subject is Dulien
Steel Products Inc., of Washington v. Bankers Trust
Co.(1). The facts of that case are as follows:
The plaintiffs,. Dulien Steel Products Inc., of
Washington, contracted to sell steel scrap to the European
Iron and Steel Community. The transaction was put through
M/s. Marco Polo Group Project, Ltd. who were entitled to
commission for arranging the transaction. For the payment of
the commission to Marco Polo, plaintiffs procured an
irrevocable letter of credit from Seattle First National
Bank. As desired by Marco Polo this letter of credit was
opened in favour of one Sica. The defendant-bankers
confirmed that letter of credit. The credit stipulated for
payment against (1 ) a receipt of Sica for the amount of the
credit and (2 ) a notification of Seattle Bank to the
defendants that the plaintiffs had negotiated documents
evidencing the shipment of the goods. Sica tendered the
stipulated receipt and. Seattle Bank informed the defendants
that the Dulien had negotiated documentary drafts.
Meanwhile after further negotiations between the plaintiffs
and the vendees the price of the goods sold was reduced and
consequently the commission payable to Marco Polo stood
reduced but the defendants were not informed of this fact.
Only after notifying the defendants about the negotiation of
the drafts drawn under the contract of sale, the Seattle
Bank informed the defendants about the changes underlying
the transaction and asked them not to pay Sica the full
amount of the credit. The defendants were also informed that
Sica was merely a nominee of Marco Polo and has no rights of
his own to the sum of the credit. Sica, however, claimed
payment of the full amount of the credit. The defendants
asked further instructions from Seattle Bank but despite
Seattle Bank’s instructions decided to comply with Sica’s
request. After informing Seattle Bank of their intention,
they paid Sica the full amount of the credit. Plaintiffs
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thereupon brought an action in the District Court of New
York for the recovery of the moneys paid to Sica. The
action was dismissed by the trial court and that decision
was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. That decision
establishes the well known principle that the letter of
credit is independent of an unqualified by the contract of
sale or underlying transaction. The autonomy, of an
irrevocable letter of, credit is entitled to protection. As
a rule courts refrain from interfering with that autonomy.
A half hearted attempt was made on behalf of the Indian
Firm to persuade us not to apply the principles noticed
above as in these appeals we are dealing with a complaint
of fraud. The facts pleaded in the plaint do not amount to a
plea of fraud despite the
(1) Federal Reporter 2nd Series 298, p. 836.
932
assertions of the Indian Firm that the Russian Firm was
guilty of fraud.
Evidently with a view to steer clear of the well
established legal position Mr. Setalvad, learned Counsel for
the Indian Finn urged that the letter of credit was no more
enforceable as the original contract stood modified as a
result of the Delhi agreement and the Subsequent
correspondence between the parties., It was urged that
according to the modified contract the Indian Firm is only
liable to pay the price that may be settled between the
buyer and the seller. This contention has not been taken
either in the plaint or in the arguments before the trial
judge or before the Appellate Bench. It is taken for the
first time in this Court. This is not purely a legal
contention. The contention in question bears on the
intention of the parties who entered into the agreement. NO
one could have known the intention better than the plaintiff
who was a party to the contract. If there was such an
intention, the plaintiff would have certainly pleaded the
same. That apart, we are unable to accept the contention
that either the Delhi agreement or the subsequent
correspOndence between the parties modified, the original
contract. The Delhi agreement merely provided that the
parties will try and settle the dispute out of court, if
possible. Much was made of the letter written, by the
Russian Firm to the Indian Firm on 29-11-1965 wherein as
seen earlier it was stated:
"that the final amount payable will be in accordance
with the settlement".
This letter has to be read along with the other letters that
passed between the parties. If so read, it is clear that the
statement that the final payment will be made in accordance
with the settlement is subject to the condition that the
parties are able ,to arrive at a settlement. Otherwise the
parties continue to be bound by the original contract
subject to the extension of the time granted under the Delhi
agreement for the payment of the price. As regards the
additional payment demanded by the Russian Firm, there is no
occasion for issuing any temporary injunction. If the
Indian Firm does not comply with that demand the law will
take its course. It is for that Firm to choose its course of
action.
In the result we allow Civil Appeals Nos. 2305 and 2306
of 1968 with costs of the appellant therein and set aside
the temporary injunctions granted by the trial judge. The
other appeals are dismissed with no order as to costs. The
costs to be paid by the Indian Company.
V.P.S. C.A. Nos. 2305 & 2306/68
allowed.
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C.A.Nos. 2251 & 2252/68
dismissed.