Mueller Company v. South Shore Bank ( 1993 )


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    United States Court of Appeals
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________

    No. 92-2145

    MUELLER COMPANY,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    SOUTH SHORE BANK,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________


    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________


    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
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    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge
    ____________________
    and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    David M. Jones with whom James E. Howard, M. Katherine Willard,
    _______________ ________________ ____________________
    and Kirkpatrick & Lockhart were on brief for appellant.
    ______________________
    George W. Mykulak with whom Gary R. Greenberg, Louis J. Scerra,
    __________________ __________________ ________________
    Jr., and Goldstein & Manello, P.C. were on brief for appellee.
    ___ _________________________


    ____________________

    April 22, 1993
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    STAHL, Circuit Judge. In this appeal, we must
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    determine whether defendant-appellee South Shore Bank ("South

    Shore") properly refused plaintiff-appellant Mueller Co.'s

    ("Mueller") request for payment under a letter of credit.

    Because the documents accompanying Mueller's request did not

    comply with the requirements of the letter of credit, we

    affirm the district court's ruling that the dishonor was

    proper.

    I.
    I.
    __

    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS
    ________________________________________

    George A. Caldwell Company ("Caldwell") was a

    family-owned gas and water-works supply company located in

    Stoughton, Massachusetts.1 Caldwell purchased supplies on a

    regular basis from Mueller, a supplier in Atlanta, Georgia.

    By early 1990, Caldwell could no longer meet its payments to

    Mueller, and Mueller stopped shipping supplies.

    As a condition to Mueller's resumption of

    shipments, Caldwell arranged for South Shore to issue an

    irrevocable standby letter of credit in favor of Mueller.

    The letter, dated May 24, 1990, and in the amount of

    $500,000, provided that if Caldwell failed to make payments

    for goods ordered and shipped after May 24, 1990, then

    Mueller could present a sight draft to South Shore for

    payment. The sight draft was to be accompanied by invoices


    ____________________

    1. Caldwell is not a party to the controversy before us.

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    "clearly evidencing that the goods described in said

    invoice(s) represent goods ordered and shipped after May 24,

    1990."2 By its terms, the letter of credit was to be

    governed by the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary

    Credits (1983 Version) (hereinafter "UCP").

    With the assurance of the standby letter of credit,

    Mueller resumed shipments to Caldwell. Again, Caldwell was

    unable to meet its payments. Mueller notified South Shore in

    late October that it planned to draw on the letter of credit,

    and sent South Shore an "aged trial balance" which listed

    invoices that Mueller planned to present for payment.





    ____________________

    2. The letter of credit stated in relevant part:

    [South Shore] hereby establish[es] our irrevocable
    letter of credit in [Mueller's] favor available by
    your drafts drawn at sight and accompanied by
    documents specified below:

    1. A statement on the letterhead of Mueller
    Company, addressed as per this letter of credit,
    signed by an individual or individuals purporting
    to be authorized, stating: "Payment has been
    demanded of George A. Caldwell, 213 Turnpike
    Street, Stoughton, Ma. 02072-0006, not received and
    is still outstanding for more than 60 days from the
    relative invoice date(s). Our demand relates
    solely to goods ordered and shipped after May 24,
    1990."

    2. Copy(ies) of invoice(s) issued by Mueller
    Company purporting to represent the above
    transaction, marked "unpaid" and clearly evidencing
    that the goods described in said invoice(s)
    represent goods ordered and shipped after May 24,
    1990.

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    On December 31, 1990, the expiration date of the

    letter of credit, Mueller presented a sight draft to South

    Shore in the amount of $221,996.11. The draft was

    accompanied by 163 invoices purporting to represent goods

    ordered and shipped after May 24, 1990. A considerable

    number of the invoices, however, listed order dates prior to

    May 24, 1990. South Shore sent a timely letter to Mueller

    refusing to honor the draft on the grounds that the

    "[i]nvoices presented do not clearly evidence that goods

    described represent goods ordered and shipped after May 24,

    1990 as per . . . the letter of credit."

    Mueller thereafter filed a diversity action in

    district court, alleging that South Shore wrongfully

    dishonored the draft, arguing, inter alia, that South Shore
    _____ ____

    knew or should have known that the invoices represented goods

    ordered and shipped after May 24, 1990. Upon motion for

    summary judgment by South Shore, the district court dismissed

    Mueller's cause of action on the grounds that the invoices

    submitted by Mueller did not comply with the terms of the

    letter of credit. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

    II.
    II.
    ___

    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    __________

    A. Dishonor of the Draft
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    Under the provisions of the UCP, "[b]anks must

    examine all documents with reasonable care to ascertain that



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    they appear, on their face, to be in accordance with the

    terms and conditions of the credit." UCP, Art. 15.

    Moreover, letters of credit "by their nature, are

    transactions separate from the sales or other contract(s) on

    which they may be based, and banks are in no way concerned

    with or bound by such contract(s)." UCP, Art. 3. See also
    ___ ____

    Ground Air Transfer, Inc. v. Westates Airlines, Inc., 899
    ___________________________ ________________________

    F.2d 1269, 1272 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[C]ourts have typically

    considered the letter of credit as `independent' of the

    contract."). Thus, in determining their rights and

    obligations under a letter of credit, "parties are not
    ___

    required to look beyond the face of the documents presented."

    Auto Servicio San Ignacio, S.R.L. v. Compania Anonima
    ______________________________________ _________________

    Venezolana de Navegacion, 765 F.2d 1306, 1310 (5th Cir. 1985)
    ________________________

    (emphasis in original). See also UCP, Art. 4 ("[A]ll parties
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    concerned deal in documents, not in goods, services and/or

    other performances to which the documents may relate."). I n

    this case, the letter of credit required that the sight draft

    be accompanied by invoices "clearly evidencing" that the

    goods were "ordered and shipped after May 24, 1990."3



    ____________________

    3. Mueller argues that the qualifying term "after May 24,
    1990" applies only to "shipped," and not to "ordered."
    Obviously, goods would not be shipped without being ordered
    at some date, and if the phrase were read as meaning that the
    date was of no consequence, there would be no point to the
    word "ordered" being present at all. Accordingly, we agree
    with the district court that the term "after May 24, 1990"
    unambiguously modifies both "shipped" and "ordered."

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    Surely, an invoice with an order date prior to May 24, 1990
    _____

    does not "clearly evidence" an order placed after that date.

    Rather, such an invoice directly contradicts the terms of the

    letter of credit.4 In contending that South Shore knew or

    should have known that these invoices represented goods that

    had been reordered and shipped subsequent to May 24, 1990,
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    Mueller is essentially urging that South Shore should have

    looked beyond the face of invoices to the underlying

    transaction. As we have stated, however, South Shore was

    under no such obligation. See, e.g., Auto Servicio, 765 F.2d
    ___ _____ _____________

    at 1310; UCP, Art. 4. Because the invoices failed to meet

    the requirements of the letter of credit, we find that

    dishonor was proper.

    B. Additional Arguments
    ________________________




    ____________________

    4. We disagree with Mueller's characterization of the
    improper order dates as "technical inconsistencies." See,
    ___
    e.g., Exotic Traders Far East Buying Office v. Exotic Trading
    ____ _____________________________________ ______________
    U.S.A., Inc., 717 F. Supp. 14, 17 (D. Mass. 1989). Unlike
    ____________
    the documents in Exotic Traders which the district court
    _______________
    found "could not have misled anyone," id., the non-conforming
    ___
    order dates in the instant case signaled that the goods had
    been ordered prior to May 24, 1990. By its terms, the letter
    _____
    of credit did not bind South Shore to honor such invoices.
    Moreover, we reject Mueller's argument that South Shore
    could or should have relied on the "invoice" dates, rather
    than the "order" dates, in determining whether the invoices
    complied with the letter of credit. While it appears that
    most or all of the invoices had invoice dates after May 24,
    1990, the nonconforming order dates were sufficient to
    justify dishonor. See, e.g., UCP, Art. 15 ("Documents that
    ___ ____
    appear, on their face, to be inconsistent with one another
    will be considered as not appearing, on their face, to be in
    accordance with the terms of the letter of credit.").

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    Our ruling that dishonor was proper, as the

    district court properly pointed out below, is dispositive of

    Mueller's additional arguments.

    We reject Mueller's contention that the invoices

    with valid order dates constituted separate or partial

    drawings on the letter of credit. While the letter of credit

    did allow partial drawings, Mueller chose to draw upon the

    letter of credit only once with a single sight draft

    presented on the letter's expiration date. Mueller directs

    us to no authority, nor have we located any, which stands for

    the proposition that an issuing bank must pay a portion of a
    _______

    documentary sight draft on the grounds that some of the
    ____

    documents comply. Because the "valid" invoices presented did

    not meet the amount of the sight draft, the bank properly

    declined to honor the entire draft.

    Finally, we find nothing in the record to support

    Mueller's contention that the dishonor amounted to bad faith

    or an unfair business practice.5


    ____________________

    5. In arguing that South Shore's dishonor was in bad faith,
    Mueller relies almost exclusively on the fact that Caldwell
    expressed an initial willingness to waive the documentary
    discrepancies between the invoices and the letter of credit.
    This argument is based on a misunderstanding of the doctrine
    of waiver as it applies to letter of credit transactions.
    While Caldwell may waive its own right to insist on strict
    ___
    compliance, it may not waive South Shore's right in this
    respect. See e.g., Cooperative Agricole Groupement de
    ___ ____ _____________________________________
    Producteurs Bovins de L'Ouest v. Banesto Banking Corp., 1989
    _____________________________ _____________________
    WL 82454, *23 (S.D.N.Y. July 19, 1989) ("Any waiver by the
    [customer] merely effects the contract between the bank and
    the [customer]. Any other interpretation of the waiver

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    III.
    III.
    ____

    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    __________

    Because Mueller has presented no genuine issue as

    to any material fact, the entry of summary judgment in favor

    of South Shore was proper as a matter of law. Accordingly,

    the order of the district court is

    Affirmed.
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    ____________________

    doctrine would emasculate the UCP requirements for amending a
    letter of credit."). Accordingly, we find no merit in
    Mueller's argument that Caldwell's willingness to waive
    indicates that South Shore proceeded in bad faith.
    Equally unavailing is Mueller's estoppel argument.
    Mueller's late October letter, which included the "aged trial
    balance," and which stated that Mueller intended to draw on
    the letter of credit, did not include any actual invoices.
    Thus, South Shore's failure to object to the October
    notification letter did not estop it from later rejecting the
    draft due to nonconforming invoices.
    To the extent that Mueller makes other waiver, bad
    faith, or estoppel claims, we find them to be without merit.

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Document Info

Docket Number: 92-2145

Filed Date: 4/22/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015