Introduction
The
purpose of this project is to examine the power of the Court to interfere with
the invocation of the bank guarantee. The project analyses the problem with the
help of the case law. The project has been broadly divided in three parts. In
the first, the meaning of bank guarantee, The second part brings out the mode
of invocation of the bank guarantee. The third part focuses on the
circumstances in which the court can interfere with the contractual obligations
of the parties under a bank guarantee by analyzing judicial decisions.
The Courts generally do
not interfere with the performance of the contractual obligations. The contract
law provides autonomy to the parties to agree to a contract according to their
convenience. Freedom of contract is a settled principle of law. The bank
guarantee involves a contractual relationship. The bank is under an obligation
to pay to the beneficiary under the contract of guarantee. Therefore, the
freedom of contract principle provides immunity to the invocation of bank
guarantees from the court's interference. The contract has to be performed in
accordance with its terms and conditions and the courts refrain from issuing
injunctions restraining the parties from the performance of the bank guarantee.
But, freedom of contract
is subject to reasonable restrictions. In certain situations, it becomes
necessary for the court, in the public interest or in equity, to interfere with
the performance of the contractual obligation. The parties cannot agree to
perform the contract in a way, which is against the law of the land or
prejudicial to the public interest.
Meaning Of Bank Guarantee
Bank guarantee is a kind
of contract of guarantee as defined under Section 126 of the Indian Contract
Act, 1872. The Section reads as follows:
A ‘contract of guarantee is a contract to perform the
promise, or discharge the liability, of a third person in case of his default.
The person who gives the guarantee is called the ‘surety’; the person in respect
of whose default the guarantee is given is called the ‘principal debtor’, and
the person to whom the guarantee is given is called the ‘creditor’. A guarantee
may be either oral or written.
It is clear from Section 126, Contract Act, 1872 that
contract of guarantee involves three parties, the creditor, the surety and the
principal debtor. A contract of guarantee must, therefore, involve a contract
to which all those three parties are privy. Their express participation or
implied assent to have such a contract must be proved by the person who wants
to rely upon it. Three contracts are involved. One contract is between the
principal debtor and the creditor, which is the main contract and the other
contract is between the creditor and the surety (guarantor). The third contract
is between the surety and the principal debtor. In the bank guarantee, the
respective parties are the buyer, seller and the bank.
In the bank guarantee, the
person in whose favor the bank guarantee is issued is called beneficiary.
Beneficiary is one who is entitled to invoke the bank guarantee.
Bank guarantee is an
instrument of trade and commerce for assuring the payment or the performance
of contract. In international transactions, letter of credit is issued
by the buyer in favor of the seller as an assured means of payment.
If the buyer wants assurance for the performance of the contract and
supply of goods according to the contract, he can ask for bank guarantee
in the form of performance guarantee. In national transaction, bank
guarantee is issued for the assured payment as well as for the assured
performance of contract. If one party asks for a bank guarantee, the
other party furnishes the same in his favor from any bank or as agreed in the
contract. The party in whose favor the guarantee is issued is called the
beneficiary. The bank guarantee issued by the bank, is a contract between the
beneficiary and the bank.
The contract for bank
guarantee is quite independent distinct from the underlying contract the
performance of which it seeks to secure and to that extent it gives rise
to a cause of action separate from that of the underlying
contract. In State of Maharashtra v. National Construction Company[1] the
Supreme Court said that a bank issuing a guarantee is not concerned with the
underlying contract between the parties to the contract. The bank's duty is created by the
documents of guarantee itself. The payment under the bank guarantee has to be
made upon demand if it is unconditional and on the fulfillment of the
condition, if it is conditional. Whether the bank guarantee is conditional or
unconditional is determined by the terms of the contract of guarantee.
Types of Bank Guarantee
Bank guarantee is mainly
of two types: -
a) Absolute
guarantee or unconditional guarantee: In an unconditional guarantee, the
guarantor is bound immediately upon the principal failing to perform his
contract. The bank has to pay the amount claimed under the guarantee without
any demur. In such kind of contract of guarantee, it is generally written that
the bank will make payment immediately upon demand without any objection or
demur.
b) Conditional
Guarantee: - In such kind of bank guarantee, before the invocation
of the bank guarantee, the beneficiary has to comply with the conditions. These
conditions are mentioned in the main contract itself. Once those conditions are
satisfied, the bank is under an obligation to pay the beneficiary.
In
business transactions, the referred guarantee is the unconditional guarantee.
It depends upon the bargaining power of the concerned parties as to how they
agree to the bank guarantee. The conditional bank guarantee does not mean that
it is subject to the main contract. It implies that the bank will pay the money
on invocation of the guarantee only when the stipulated conditions in the
contract of bank guarantee have been fulfilled. It may be agreed that no
payment will be made until the beneficiary produces certain documents to the
bank. There may be other conditions also like the payment of money on the
non-performance of contract etc. But, once the conditions stipulated in the
contract are fulfilled, the bank is under an obligation to pay the money.
An
irrevocable bank guarantee containing a condition that it shall be enforceable
"should the contractor default in performing any of the terms and
conditions of the contract or in the payment of any money due to the owner or
in case the amount from the running bills of the contractor can not be deducted
by the owner towards the payments of mobilization advance" is a guarantee
which is independent of the contract between the parties and is enforceable
without reference to any claim or counter claim arising out of the principal
contract between the parties. Such a guarantee is also independent of the
adjudication of disputes raised and proposed to be referred to arbitration. As
to the fulfillment of the conditions incorporated in the guarantee the
statement of the beneficiary should be taken at its face vale unless the contractor
can establish that the beneficiary's stand is motivated by fraud,
misrepresentation, deliberate suppression of material facts or the like of
which would give rise to special equities in favour of the contractor. In the
absence of such elements the bank guarantee has to be honoured by the bank and
the beneficiary cannot
be
restrained from enforcement.
Mode of Invoking Bank Guarantee
The bank guarantee has to
be invoked in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract of
guarantee. If it is unconditional, the bank must make the payment on demand
without any objection. If the contract requires the presentation of certain
documents, the beneficiary must produce those documents. Otherwise, the bank
will be entitled to refuse the payment.
In Puri International
(P.) Ltd v. National Building Construction Co. Ltd and Another[2], the
Indian Railway Construction Corporation (IRCON) awarded the contract of
construction of railway station and commercial complex to defendant no.1. Defendant
no. 1 on its part desired to split up the total contract work into smaller
parts and give the same on sub- contracts. The plaintiffs submitted its tender
for a part of the works proposed to be sub-contracted by defendant no1. The
plaintiff got the sub- contract. In terms of the agreement between defendant
no. 1 and the plaintiff, the plaintiff was entitled to raise mobilization
advance to the extent of 5 % of the contract value and the said mobilization
advance was payable to the plaintiff against furnishing of bank guarantees from
nationalized banks on the Performa provided by defendant no.1, in addition to
furnishing bank guarantees towards mobilization advance the plaintiff company
also furnished bank guarantees towards security deposit for 2% of the contract
value. These bank guarantees were issued by the erstwhile New Bank of India
(changed to Punjab National Bank). Subsequently, IRCON terminated the contract
of defendant no.1 and he in turn terminated the contracted the contract with
the plaintiff. The dispute between the IRCON and the defendant no. 1 was
pending. The bank guarantees were renewed from time to time on the request of
the defendant no. 1. At last, the defendant no. 1 decided to invoke the bank
guarantee and sent a letter of invocation of the guarantee to the bank. The
plaintiff alleged that the defendant tried to commit fraud and so injunction
should be granted restraining the bank from making the payment. It was also
contended that the invocation has not been made in accordance with the terms
and conditions of the contract of guarantee. The contract of guarantee provided
that the payment would be made without any demur on demand if the amount is due
by way of loss or damage caused to or would be caused to or suffered by the
defendant no.1.The defendant no.1 did not mention in the letter of invocation
as whether there has been a loss or damage or not. Simply, they claimed the
money under the guarantee and said that the payment has to be made without any
demur. But, the condition that the damage or loss must be mentioned was not
fulfilled. Therefore, the court refused to allow the invocation of the
guarantee as it was not in accordance with the contract. The court did not look
into the issues of fraud as alleged by the plaintiff once the letter of
invocation of the guarantee itself was declared not to be according to the
contract. The court relied on the decision of Supreme Court in UP. Sugar Corporation
Ltd v. Sumac International Ltd[3], where
the court had held that the bank giving such a guarantee is bound to honor it
as per its terms irrespective of any disputes raised by its customer.
If the terms of guarantee
stipulate a notice in writing to be served on the bank by the beneficiary,
then, needless to add, a notice must be served. In a nutshell, the Courts seem
to attach considerable importance to the expressions and language of the
guarantee document in arriving at a conclusion regarding reciprocal rights and
duties; and liabilities of the parties involved in the transaction. The terms
of this contract alone must, therefore, be looked upon to determine the rights
of parties. It may in this context be pointed out, that the guarantee is given
by the bank at the instance and on behalf of the supplier and, secondly, the
guarantee can be invoked by the beneficiary only in the event of default or
failure of supplier in the observance of the terms of the principal contracts
in respect of which the guarantee is given. Thus, the contract of guarantee may
be said to have closer connection with, though not an integral part, of the
principal contract.
Power Of The Court To Restrain The Invocation Of Bank Guarantee
As a general rule, the
court does not interfere with the performance of the contractual obligations of
a bank under the bank guarantee. In a bank guarantee, the bank pledges its
reputation. If it is frequently restrained from making the payment, its credit
will go down, which will mean the fall in business. Secondly and importantly,
the bank guarantee is one of the significant modes of documentary credit used
in the international as well as national commerce, if delays or frequent
obstructions take place in its invocation, it will be detrimental to the trade
and commerce.
Therefore,
only in exceptional circumstances, the courts issue injunction under order
XXXIX of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908.
In R.D. Harbottle v.
National Westminster Bank Limited[4], there
was an invocation of the bank guarantee by the buyers. The bank guarantee was
unconditional. The guarantees were performance bonds. The sellers alleged that
the buyers were demanding the payment fraudulently. The invocation of guarantee
by the buyers was unconditional and so the bank initiated the process to pay.
The sellers approached the court to grant an injunction to restrain the bank
from making the payment. The Court observed:
It is
only in exceptional cases that the courts will interfere with the machinery of
irrevocable obligations assumed by the banks. They are the life
and blood of international commerce. Except possibly in clear cases of fraud
of which the banks have notice, the courts will leave merchants to settle
their disputes under the contract by litigation or arbitration as available to them or stipulated in the
contracts. The courts are not concerned with their difficulties to enforce such
claims; these are risks, which merchants take. In this case, the plaintiffs
took the risk of the unconditional wording of the guarantees. The machinery and
commitments of banks are on a different level. They must be allowed to be
honored, free from interference by the courts. Otherwise, trust in
international commerce could be irreparably damaged. In the instant case, no
case of fraud was established, so the court refused to grant injunction to
restrain the bank from making the payment.
In United Commercial
Bank v. Bank of India and other[5], M\S
Godrej Soaps Limited (plaintiffs) entered into an agreement with the Bihar State
Food and Civil Supply Corporation to supply one thousand metric tones of
‘Sizola Brand Pure Mustard Oil’, the total value of which was 86 lakhs. The
contract required the Bihar Food Corporation to open a letter of credit in
favor of the suppliers. The letter of credit was opened with the United
Commercial Bank. The negotiating bank on behalf of the suppliers was the Bank
of India. When the documents were presented before the bank for the encashment
of the payment under the letter of credit, the bank refused. The Railway
Receipt described the supplied goods as 'Sizola Brand Mustard Oil unrefined'.
It was not in consonance with the contract. The contract required the supply of
pure mustard oil. In the end, the United Commercial Bank made the payment to the
Bank of India ‘under reserve’ on the guarantee of the Bank of India.
When the bill of exchange
was presented before the Bihar Food Corporation, it dishonored it saying that
the sellers had supplied defecting goods. The chemical analysis proved that the
oil was not fit for human consumption. Thus, the United Commercial Bank
demanded the payment made under reserve to the Bank of India. The seller
approached the court for restraining the bank from making the payment and
restraining the invocation of the bank guarantee executed by the Bank of India.
The main issue was whether the court should in a transaction between a banker
and a banker grant an injunction, at the instance of the beneficiary of an
irrevocable letter of credit, restraining the issuing bank from recalling the
amount paid under reserve from the negotiating bank, acting on behalf of the
beneficiary against a document of guarantee at the instance of the beneficiary?
The Court observed that:
The rule is well established that a
bank issuing or confirming a letter of credit is not concerned with the
underlying contract between the buyer and seller. Duties of a bank under a
letter of credit are created by the document itself, but in any case it has the
power and is subject to the limitations, which are given or imposed by it, in
the absence of the appropriate provisions in the letter of credit.
In UP. Co-operative
Federation Ltd. V. Singh Consultants and Engineers (P) Ltd.[6], the
respondent was a private company who entered with the State Government
enterprise (UP Cooperative Ltd) for the supply and installation of a
vanaspati manufacturing plant at Halduchaur in UP. The contract bond
contemplated, according to the appellant, guaranteed performance of work
at various stages in accordance with the time schedule prescribed therein and
provided for completion and commissioning of the plant after due trial
run by May15, 1984. It was contended by the appellant that the time was the
essence of contract. According to the contract, the respondent
furnished a performance bank guarantee for Rs.16.5 lakhs and another bank
guarantee of Rs.33 lakhs as security advanced by the appellant to the
respondent for undertaking the work. Both these two guarantees as also
the contract bond entitled the appellant to invoke them and call for
their realization and encashment on the respondent's failing to perform
the obligations for which the appellant was made the sole judge.
The contract was not
performed within the stipulated time or even the within the extended time, then
the appellant invoked the bank guarantees. The respondent approached the court
for the grant of injunction restraining him from invoking the same.
The Court
observed that it is a settled principle of law that the commitments of banks
must be honoured free from interference by the Courts. Otherwise, trust in
commerce, internal and international would be irreparably damaged. It is only
in exceptional cases that are to say in case of fraud or in case of
irretrievable injustice be done, the court should interfere. In the instant
case, the Court did not grant injunction as no exceptional case had, been made
out.
In General Electric
Technical Services Company v. M/S Punj Sons (P) Ltd[7],
the General Electric Technical Services Company had entered into a contract
with Indian Airlines, which included, inter- alia, the construction and
fabrication of aircraft testing center and engine repair center in
Delhi. The GETSCO in turn entered into a contract with M/s Punj Sons (P) Ltd,
for getting that work done for Indian Airlines. As per the contract respondent
no.1 was required to provide performance bond equal to 30 % of the total value
of contract price, which was to be split up into two performance bonds partly
to be released upon the expiration of the warranty. The respondent no.1 was
also required to furnish a bank guarantee to secure the mobilization advance of
25% of the contract value. Respondent no.1 furnished the bank guarantee to
secure the mobilization advance of the required amount. The guarantee was
furnished by the Hong Kong & Shanghai Bank, respondent no.2. The contract
of guarantee provided that the amount due and payable under the Guarantee would
be paid by the bank without demur, merely on demand from the owner stating that
amount claimed is due by way of loss or damage caused to or would be caused to
or suffered by the owner by reason of any breach by the Contractor of any of
the terms or conditions contained in the Agreement or by reason of the
Contractor's failure to perform the Agreement. It further stated that any such
demand made on the bank should be conclusive with regard to the amount due and
payable by the Bank under this Guarantee.
The contract was not
performed according to the terms and conditions of the contract and therefore
the appellant invoked the bank guarantee according to the contract of
guarantee. The respondent 1 approached the Court for issuance of injunction
restraining the bank from making the payment. The Court observed:
The bank must honour the bank guarantee free from
interference by the Courts. Otherwise, trust in commerce internal and
international would be irreparably damaged.
It is only in
exceptional cases that are to say in case of fraud or in case of irretrievable
injustice, the Court should interfere.
Therefore, the Court did
not allow the injunction to be issued in the absence of fraud or special
equities in the form of preventing irretrievable injustice between the
parties. The bank was obliged to honor its contractual obligation under the
contract of guarantee.
In Hindustan Steel
Works Construction Ltd. v. Tarapore Co. and Another[8], HSCL
awarded a contract to the contractor for construction of civil works in
its Visakhapatnam Steel Plant. The time was of the essence of the
contract. But, the contract was not performed even during the extended time.
The bank had undertaken to indemnify HSCL against any loss or damage caused to
or suffered by it by reason of any breach by the
contractor of any term and condition of the contract. It is also
stipulated in the bank guarantees that HSCL shall be the sole judge on the
question as to whether the contractor has committed any breach of the
contract and what the extent of loss or damage is. On the very day, the
appellant rescinded the contract, it revoked the three bank guarantees
furnished under the contract. The respondent urged for an injunction against
the payment. The ground was that there were genuine disputes between the
parties and those disputes have been referred to the arbitrators for
adjudication. But, the Court on the analysis of previous cases refused to grant
the injunction as no genuine case was made out. The Court observed:
We are,
therefore, of the opinion that the correct position of law is that commitments
of bank must be honoured free from interference by the Courts and it is only in
exceptional cases where irretrievable injustice would be done if bank guarantee
were allowed to be encashed, the Court should interfere. In this case fraud has
not been pleaded and the relief for injunction was sought by the contractor/
Respondent no1, on the ground that special equities or the special
circumstances of the case required it. The special circumstances and special
equities, which have been pleaded in this case, are that there is a serious
dispute on the question as to who has committed breach of the contract, that
the contractor has a counter- claim against the appellant. That the disputes
between the parties have been referred to the arbitrators and that no amount
can be said to be due and payable by the contractor to the appellant till the
arbitrators declare their award. In our opinion, these factors are not
sufficient to make this case an exceptional case justifying interference by
restraining the appellant from enforcing the bank guarantees.
Thus, the Supreme Court
has established certain legal principles with regard to the minimal
interference in the execution of an unconditional bank guarantee. The legal
principles can be summarised as follows:
1. A bank guarantee is an independent and distinct contract between
the beneficiary and the bank and the rights and obligations therein are to be
determined on its own terms;
2. A bank guarantee which is payable on demand implies that the bank
is liable to pay as and when demand is made upon the bank by the beneficiary
and the person at whose instance the bank had issued the bank guarantee;
3. The Courts must honour commitments of the banks free from
interference. Otherwise, trust in commerce, internal and international, would
be irreparably damaged;
4. An irrevocable commitment in the form of confirmed bank guarantee
cannot be interfered with except in case of established fraud of an egregious
nature as to vitiate the entire underlying contract;
5. Allegations of fraud and irretrievable harm must be genuine,
established and immediate as well as irreversible.
CONCLUSION
The assurance of payment
is of much significance for smooth functioning of trade and commerce. This is
one of the reasons behind the policy of law Courts not to intervene in the
invocation of bank guarantees. The other important reason is that the parties
must be allowed to perform their contractual obligations without interference.
The parties themselves agree to the terms and conditions of a contract and
therefore they must fulfill them when called for.
Therefore, the Court does
not interfere with the invocation of bank guarantee as long as there is an
established case of fraud or irretrievable harm or injury. The fraud must be of
an egregious nature and must have been committed by the beneficiary himself.
The harm to be caused is irretrievable or not, is to be decided by the facts
and circumstances of each case. In case, there is no scope of recovering the
money once paid and there is a dispute between the parties for with regard to
the contract, it can be a situation where the invocation of bank guarantee
would cause irretrievable harm. On this second exception, one case of United
States Court can be illustrative.
In Itek Corporation v The First National Bank of
Boston[9], an
exporter in the USA entered into an agreement with the Imperial Government of
Iran and sought an order terminating its liability on stand by letters of
credit issued by an American Bank in favour of an Iranian Bank as part of the
contract. The relief was sought on account of the situation created after the
Iranian revolution when the American Government cancelled the export licenses
in relation to Iran and the Iranian Government had forcibly taken 52 American
citizens as hostages. The US Government had locked all Iranian assets under the
jurisdiction of USA. In such a case, the Court upheld the contention of the
exporter that any claim for damages against the purchaser if decreed by the
American Courts would not be executable in Iran under these circumstances and
realization of the bank guarantee would cause irretrievable injury to the
plaintiff. Thus, for establishing the second exception, there must be a
certainty of harm and the Court should be prima facie satisfied that there is
such a situation to cause irretrievable harm to the person asking for the
injunction.
The object behind it is
to, inculcate respect for free flow of commerce and trade and faith in the
commercial banking transactions unhinged by pending disputes between the
beneficiary and the contractor. The whole purpose for which the system of
confirmed irrevocable documentary credits had been developed in international
trade was to give the seller of goods an assured right to be paid before he
parted with control of the goods without risk of the payment being refused,
reduced or deferred because of a dispute with buyer.
Once the terms of guarantee are complied with and the
technicalities are observed the bank is under an obligation to honour the
demand from the beneficiary under the guarantee, regardless of any disputes
between the parties. This is an established principle of law, which has to be
followed by the Courts, while dealing with the application for injunction
against the invocation of bank guarantee. Banking system is the backbone of the
economy and it is necessary that there should be confidence in the banking
system itself. If the bank guarantees are not encashable just like a credit
note or there is an impediment in encashing the bank guarantee then the whole
foundation of the banking system will collapse and the people will loose faith
in it. It will have an adverse impact on the smooth functioning of trade and
commerce. The instruments of documentary credit are the life and blood of trade
and commerce and they must not be stopped from being running properly.
References
Books
§
Dr. Sharma, B.R. & Dr. Nainta, R.P., “Banking Law
& Negotiable Instruments Act”, 2nd Edition, 2004, Allahabad Law
Agency, Faridabad.
§
Suneja, H.R.,
“Practice and law of Banking”, 1990, Allahabad Law Agency, Faridabad.
§
Maheshwari,
S.N., “Banking Law & Practice”, 1994.
§
Andrews Mary
Geraldine, Millet Richard, “Law of Guarantees”, 3rd Edition, Sweet
and Maxwell, London, 2000.
Web sources
§
www.supremecourtofindia.nic.in
In specfic cases, there are attempt to invoke performance bank guarantee for its full value by the beneficiary is imminent in the event of alleged mal functioning of the product or any one of the product from a set of products for which guarantee is given. In such cases is it correct on the part of the beneficiary to invoke the PBG on its full value ?
ReplyDeletewhether the court could interfere under Order XXXIX of CPC citing irretreivable injustice and direct the beneficiery to restrict their claim to the extent of performance of the particular productand not for the entire group of products (like power plant,Refinery etc) where mal performance not reported for the entire end product. if the PBG is invoked and enchash the same to its full value the Principal who gave the Bank guarantee under double jeopardy .The first one is money is being taken away and the second one is evenafter the encashement of PBG the obligation under the contract to achive performance of the product exists and to establish the performance of the product the contractor/principal who gave the PBG have to cough further money to the project to reach the end result. In such a situation whether the court can pass an order keeping in mind the Hon'ble
supreme court's directions wrt to invokation of BG's and to keep the money in to an escrow account enabling to have freedom to operate the account by both the parties on consent exlusively for the said project and not for any other reason or cause. This could some what save the principal from irretrievable injury or injustice in the event of invockation of PBG's in commercial contracts where the stake is very high ...
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We are authorized Financial consulting firm that work directly with
ReplyDeleteA rated banks eg Lloyds Bank,Barclays Bank,hsbc bank etc
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Equally,we are ready to work with Brokers and financial
consultants/consulting firms in their respective countries.
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Awaiting a favourable response from you.
Best regards
WALSH SMITH, ROBERT
email : info.iqfinanceplc@gmail.com
skype: cpt_young1
We are authorized Financial consulting firm that work directly with
ReplyDeleteA rated banks eg Lloyds Bank,Barclays Bank,hsbc bank etc
We provide BG, SBLC, LC, LOAN and lots more for client all over the world.
Equally,we are ready to work with Brokers and financial
consultants/consulting firms in their respective countries.
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email : info.iqfinanceplc@gmail.com
skype: cpt_young1