' Thе United States appeals from the judgment entered in one of two consolidated diversity actions involving a letter of credit and a standby letter of credit. The letters were issued in connection with a contract between plaintiff-appellee Centrifugal Casting Machine (CCM) and State Machinery Trading Company (SMTC), an agency of the Iraqi government, under which CCM was to provide cast ductile iron pipe plant equipment to SMTC for a total contract price of $27,390,731. The contracting parties agreed that the payment mechanism from SMTC to CCM was to be an irrevocable letter of credit for the benefit of CCM in the contract amount, out of which CCM was entitled tо draw ten percent as a down
The parties further agreed that a standby letter of credit in the amount of the $2.7 million down payment would be issued on behalf of CCM for the benefit of an agent of SMTC, and would be available to repay SMTC the amount of the down payment upon the requisite proof that CCM had not performed under the contract.
The suits below involved claims to the $2.7 million down payment by CCM, ABT, and BNL, the bank that had confirmed the letter of credit in favor of CCM and had issued the standby letter of credit in favor of SMTC. The United States intervened, asserting that Iraq had a property interest in the down payment and therefore in the mоney deposited by CCM in ABT. The United States claimed that the bank account was a blocked account under the regulations implementing the Executive Orders freezing assets of the Iraqi government.
The district court ruled that no valid draw had been made on the standby letter of credit, that this letter had expired by its own terms, and that CCM, ABT and BNL had no liability thereundеr.
I.
Following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait on August 2, 1990, the President issued two Executive Orders blocking any transfer of property in which Iraq holds an interest. See Exec. Order No. 12,722, 55 Fed.Reg. 31,803 (1990); Exec. Order 12,724, 55 Fed. Reg. 33,089 (1990). These orders are implemented by regulations promulgated by the Secretary of the Treasury, through the Office of Foreign Assets Control. See 31 CFR §§ 575.201-.806 (1991). Under these regulations, “no property or interests in property of the Government of Iraq that are in the United States ... may be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn or оtherwise dealt in.” Id. § 575.201(a).
The United States contends on appeal that the freeze of Iraq’s assets furthers national policy to punish Iraq by preventing it from obtaining economic benefits from transactions with American citizens, and by preserving such assets both for use as a bargaining chip in resolving this coun
We perceive the gist of the United States’s argument- to be that the asset at issue is a down payment Iraq made on a contract that CCM has not performed. Therefore, it is argued, Iraq has a property interest in this asset on the basis of a purported breach-of-contract claim under principles of rescission and restitution. This analysis, however, runs directly contrary to the legal principles governing the financial mechanisms chosen by the contracting parties to facilitate payments under the contract.
II.
We begin by observing that CCM received the
“[A] letter of credit involves three- parties: (1) an issuer (generally a bank) who agrees to pay conforming drafts presented under the letter of credit; (2) a bank customer or ‘account party’ who orders the letter of credit and dictates its terms; and (3) a beneficiary to whom the letter of credit is issued, who can collect monies under the letter of credit by presenting drafts and making proper demand on the issuеr.”
Arbest Const. Co. v. First Nat’l Bank & Trust Co., 777 F.2d 581, 583 (10th Cir. 1985). A letter of credit thus involves three legally distinct relationships, that “between the issuer and the account party, the issuer and the beneficiary, and the account party and the beneficiary (this last relationship being the underlying business deal giving rise to the issuance of the letter of credit).” Id. In this case, CCM was the beneficiary of the letter which wаs issued by Central Bank of Iraq to fund the contract, BNL was the confirming bank which then became directly liable to CCM,
■ Two interrelated features of the letter of credit provide it with its unique value in the marketplace and are of critical importance in our consideration of the United States’s claim here. First, “[t]he simple result [of a letter of credit] is that the issuer substitutes its credit, preferred by the beneficiary, for that of the account party.” Id,.; see also Republic Nat’l Bank v. Fidelity & Deposit Co.,
Second, the issuer’s obligation to pay on a letter of credit is completely independent from the underlying commercial transaction between the beneficiary and the account party. See Ward Petroleum Corp. v. FDIC,
This assurance of payment gives letters of credit a central role in commercial dealings, see Bank of San Francisco,
III.
Because of the nature of a letter of credit, we conclude that Iraq does not have a property interest in the money CCM' received under the letter. The United States contends in essence that Iraq has a property interest in this money because it was allegedly a contract payment made by Iraq, which Iraq should recover because CCM breached the contract. In so arguing, the United States makes a breach of contract claim on behalf of Iraq that Iraq has never made, creates a remedy for the contracting parties in derogation of the remedy they themselves provided,
First, the payment to CCM under the letter of credit was made not by Iraq, but by the confirming bank, BNL. Indeed, there is no way of ascertaining on the record befоre us whether Iraq has ever reimbursed the draw on the letter of credit, leaving open the possibility that Iraq has never actually paid out funds representing the down payment. Second, we know of no legal authority for the proposition that a potential breach of contract claim, prior to the commencement of litigation, gives а putative plaintiff a legally cognizable property interest in the assets of the putative defendant. Finally, no authority supports the argument that Iraq, as the account party on a letter of credit, has a property interest in the beneficiary’s payment on the basis of the beneficiary’s alleged breach of the underlying сontract. To the contrary, such a holding would defeat the principle of independence universally recognized by the courts as crucial to the letter of credit’s integrity as a financing device. Determining whether an account party has a property interest in a letter-of-credit payment to a beneficiary by refеrring to a dispute over the underlying contract is not materially different from the unacceptable practice of resorting to the contract to ascertain whether payment was proper in the first place. Reliance on the contract in either circumstance is antithetical to the unique value of the lettеr of credit, because certainty of payment would be undermined by concluding that the account party has a right to that payment by virtue of the underlying contract prior to litigation on that contract. The beneficiary’s bargained-for right to retain the payment pending contract litigation would be effectively defeated.
The United States’s reliance on Itek Corp. v. First Nat’l Bank,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "The essential function of [a letter of credit] is to assure a party to an agreement that he will receive the benefits of his performance.” Wood v. R.R. Donnelley & Sons Co.,
“A variation on this arrangement is present where, as hеre, the bank issues a ‘stand-by’ letter of credit. The beneficiary of an ordinary letter may draw upon it simply by presenting documents that show that the beneficiary has performed and is entitled to the funds. In contrast, a 'stand-by' letter requires documents that show that the customer has defaulted on some obligation, thereby triggering the beneficiary's right to draw down on the letter."
Id.
. This portion of the district court’s ruling has not been challenged on appeal.
. We note that the parties have not addressed the law applicable to diversity actions in which the United States asserts a claim on the basis of Executive Orders implemented by federal regulations. The forum state, Oklahoma, has passed its version of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), see Okla.Stat. tit. 12A, §§ 1-101 to 9-507 (1981), Article 5 of which covers letters of credit, see id. §§ 5-101 to -117. The letter of credit itself éxpressly provides that it is subject to the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (1983 Revision), International Chamber of Commerce Publication No. 400 (UCP). See App. at 10. The UCP is not legislation or a treaty, but a set of rules, generally viewed as customary rules of law, that may be incorporated into the private law of a contract between parties. See (UCP) Introduction & Bibliography, 2 (1989); see also Trans Meridian Trading Inc. v. Empresa Nacional de Comercializacion,
. “A ‘confirming bank’ is a bank which engages either that it will itself honor a credit already issued by another bank or that such a credit will be honored by the issuer or a third bank." Okla.Stat. tit. '12A, § 5-103(l)(f). Here, BNL agreed to honor the credit itself. See App. at 10. “A confirming bank by confirming a credit becomes directly obligated on the credit to the extent of its confirmation as though it were its issuer and acquires the rights of an issuer." Id. § 5-107(2).
. The UCC contains an exception for cases of fraud. See Okla.Stat. tit. 12A, § 5-114(2) (court may enjoin issuer from honoring fraudulent demand for payment). "[T]his exceptiоn must be narrowly construed or it will swallow up the rule.” Ward Petroleum Corp. v. FDIC,
. As noted above, the parties themselves provided, through a standby letter of credit in favor of the agent of SMTC, a remedy by which SMTC could recover the down payment in the event of a breach by CCM. The parties further agreed to an expiration date for this standby letter of credit. The district court ruled that this letter expired under its own terms before a proper draw was made upon it. The United States does not appeal this ruling.
. Rather, the position of Iran in Itek is analogous to Iraq’s position as beneficiary of the standby letter of credit in this case. We emphasize that the United States has not challenged on appeal the district court’s ruling that any right on behalf of Iraq to payment under the standby
