193 A.D. 849 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1920
This action is brought in equity by the plaintiff, a buyer of Java sugar, permanently to enjoin the defendant Sherburne Company, the seller, from drawing or negotiating drafts upon a letter of credit issued by the National City Bank to the Sherburne Company to secure the payment of the purchase price of the sugar and permanently to enjoin the defendant bank from honoring or paying any drafts which may have been drawn and which now may be in the hands of third parties.
The facts, so far as material on the appeal, are that the plaintiff, a Maryland corporation, entered into a written
Carrying out the terms of the contract, the plaintiff procured a letter of credit from the defendant National City Bank, under which the bank authorized the Sherburne Company to draw on it, in the aggregate sum of $164,640, on sight drafts accompanied by delivery order or warehouse receipt, invoice and weigher’s certificate covering 350 tons of sugar, shipment of which was to be made in the quantities and during the months as specified in the letter of credit which were the same specifications of the sugar as those appearing in the contract. The letter of credit contains the following provision: “We hereby agree with bona fide holders that all drafts issued by virtue of this credit and in accordance with the above stipulated terms, shall meet with due honor upon presentation at our Export Commercial Credit Department if drawn and negotiated not later than period indicated.”
The provision in which reference is made to the plaintiff’s right of cancellation which appears in the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant was not embodied in the letter of credit.
It is alleged that on August 28,1920, the defendant Sherburne Company notified the plaintiff that the forty-five tons of sugar
The contentions of the defendants are, first, that according to the complaint there existed two distinct contracts, one between plaintiff and the Sherburne Company, being the contract of purchase and sale, and the other between the National City Bank and the defendant Sherburne Company and the holders of drafts, drawn in reliance on the letter of credit under the terms of which the defendant bank agreed to pay drafts drawn in accordance with the letter of credit regardless of the terms of the contract between the plaintiff and the Sherburne Company as to the right to cancel the contract and which are not mentioned or referred to in the letter of credit; second, that the plaintiff has a full and adequate remedy at law; third, that no injunction may issue against the bank paying drafts in the hands of third parties, which were drawn in accordance with the terms of the letter of credit, regardless of any other terms embodied in the contract between plaintiff and defendant Sherburne Company; fourth, that as matter of fact there was no breach of the contract between the plaintiff and defendant .which gave plaintiff the
From our view of the case it is not important to discuss : the rights of the plaintiff under the contract with the defendant Sherburne Company. In the case before us the letter of credit was an irrevocable one.
In the recent case of American Steel Co. v. Irving National Bank (266 Fed. Rep. 41) the court held that a letter of credit was “ a complete and independent contract.”
In Benecke v. Haebler (38 App. Div. 344; affd,, 186 N. Y. 631) the buyer had notified the banker who issued a letter of credit that the merchandise was not equal to sample. The court said: “I cannot see that the fact that the beans sent forward by Strauss were inferior in quality to those contracted for at all affects the question of the defendants’ liability for moneys paid by the plaintiffs in discharge of an obligation assumed by them at the defendants’ request. The kind or quality of the beans to be shipped by Strauss was not defined in the defendants’ letter asking for a credit, and no duty devolved upon the plaintiffs to ascertain, before accepting, whether the goods shipped corresponded in quality with the goods ordered.”
In Matter of Agra and Masterman’s Bank (L. R. [1867] Ch„ App. 391) it was held that holders in good faith of drafts upon a letter of credit were entitled to the absolute benefit of its terms and are not concerned with differences existing between the parties to the contract out of which the letter of credit was issued.
It is equally clear here that the bank issuing the 1 between the buyer and seller. The bank may only be heiu uauie in case of a violation of any of the terms of the letter of credit. It would thus follow that if the bank paid any drafts violative of the terms of the letter, the buyer would have recourse to the bank in an action for damages for the breach of its contract. Similarly, if the defendant Sherburne Company violated its contract with the plaintiff, the latter has a remedy in an action at law for damages against the defendant. credit is in no way concerned with any contract
We think the order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Dowling and Merrell, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed; with ten dollars costs and disbursements.