N-lc-03 HSBC V NSC & City Trust
N-lc-03 HSBC V NSC & City Trust
N-lc-03 HSBC V NSC & City Trust
(now BPI)
FACTS
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Uniform Rules for the Collection of Commercial Paper Publication No. 322.
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The terms of the Letter of Credit clearly stated that UCP 400
should apply. Moreover, even if the Letter of Credit did not state
that UCP 400 governs, it should still be applied as this Court
consistently recognized UCP 400 under Philippine jurisdiction.
Hence, this petition where HSBC seeks reversal of CA decision and
contends that CityTrusts order to collect under URC 322 did not
modify nor contradict the Letter of Credit. HSBC asserts that
CityTrust acted as an agent of NSC in collecting payment and it had
the authority to instruct HSBC to proceed under URC 322 and not
under UCP 400. CityTrust having instructed HSCBC to collect under
URC 322, and having intended the transaction to proceed under
such rule as shown by a series of correspondence between
CityTrust and HSBC, CityTrust is estopped from claiming that the
collection was made under UCP 400 in accordance with the Letter
of Credit.
NSC however claims that the obligation to pay of HSBC is clear
from the terms of the Letter of Credit and under UCP 400.
ISSUES
1. Which between UCP 400 and URC 322 governs the transaction? UCP
400 governs the transaction
2. Based on the applicable rule, who among the parties is liable to pay the
amount stated in the Letter of Credit? see discussion.
1. Letter of Credit
2. Bill of Lading
3. Commercial Invoice
4. Packing List
5. Mill Test Certificate
6. NSCs TELEX to Klockner on shipping details
7. Beneficiarys Certificate of facsimile transmittal of documents
i.
j.
k.
CityTrusts Liability
l.
Article 17 of UCP 400 explains that under this principle, an issuing bank assumes
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..."
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ii. CityTrust
n.
DISPOSITION
NOTES
In simpler terms, the various transactions that give rise to a letter of credit proceed
as follows:
Once the seller ships the goods, he or she obtains the documents required under
the letter of credit. He or she shall then present these documents to the issuing
bank which must then pay the amount identified under the letter of credit after it
ascertains that the documents are complete.
The issuing bank then holds on to these documents which the buyer needs in order
to claim the goods shipped.
The buyer reimburses the issuing bank for its payment at which point the issuing
bank releases the documents to the buyer.
The buyer is then able to present these documents in order to claim the goods. At
this point, all the transactions are completed.
The seller received payment for his or her performance of his obligation to deliver
the goods.
The issuing bank is reimbursed for the payment it made to the seller.
The buyer received the goods purchased.
Owing to the complexity of these contracts, there may be a correspondent bank
which facilitates the ease of completing the transactions. A correspondent bank may
be a notifying bank, a negotiating bank or a confirming bank depending on the
nature of the obligations assumed.
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