Okla. Stat. tit. 12A, § 5-102
(6) "Document" means a draft or other demand, /pinpoint3/applications/quickcase/statredirect.asp?title=occ&stn=1-201 - D15document of title, investment security, certificate, invoice, or other record, statement, or representation of fact, law, right, or opinion:
(ii) which is capable of being examined for compliance with the terms and conditions of the letter of credit.
A
document may not be oral;
(8) "Honor" of a letter of credit means performance of the issuer's undertaking in the letter of credit to pay or deliver an item of value. Unless the letter of credit otherwise provides, "honor" occurs:
(11) "Nominated person" means a person whom the issuer:
(c) Article 1 of this title contains certain additional general definitions and principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout this article.
Oklahoma Code Comment
The revision expands the number of statutory definitions contained in former Section 5-103. Newly included terms are: "adviser," "applicant," "confirmer," "dishonor," "good faith," "honor," "nominated person," "presentation," "record," "successor of a beneficiary" and "value." The following definitions were deleted by the revision: "documentary draft" (see "document"); "advising bank" and "confirming bank" (see "adviser" and "confirmer"); "customer" (see "applicant") and "notation credit."
The definition of "document" contemplates the inclusion of certain electronic and other non-paper media as documents. The former version limited a "document" to a paper item.
The definition of "honor" is broader than that in subsection 1-201(21), which provides that to "honor" is "to pay or to accept and pay, or where a credit so engages to purchase or discount a draft complying with the terms of the credit." What constitutes honor is defined by the issuer's undertaking and may include delivery of an item of value under revised Article 5. As noted in Official Comment 4, the definition of "honor" now also includes incurring a deferred obligation. This provision presumes that a letter of credit providing for honor by acceptance obligates the issuer to accept and, at maturity, to pay.
Consumers are specifically excluded from the definition of "issuer." The former definition contained no exclusion.
Official Comment 6 states the labeling of a document is not conclusive as to its legal effect. In explaining the approach of revised Article 5, the Comment should qualify the decision in Dubuque Packing Co. v. Fitzgibbon, 599 P.2d 440 (Okla. Ct.App.1979), which held, in part, that a document which referred to itself four times as a guarantee was a "guarantee," rather than a letter of credit.
The former Article 5 Definitions section referenced Section 3-104, which defines a "draft" as a negotiable order. The Official Comments point out that the language in revised Article 5 does not require the document to be negotiable.
Prior Statutory Provisions:
15 Okla. Stat. § 401 (1910), which defined "letter of credit."
15 Okla. Stat. § 404 (1910), which defined "classes" of letters of credit.
15 Okla. Stat. § 405 (1910), which defined a "general" letter of credit.
15 Okla. Stat. § 409 (1910).
Laws 1961, SB 36, p. 132, §