Centax (india) Limited
v.
Vinmar Impex Inc. And Others
(Supreme Court Of India)
Civil Appeal No. 869 Of 1986 | 19-08-1986
1. The short and narrow point involved in this appeal by special leave is whether upon the principles laid down in United Commercial Bank v. Bank of India [1981] 3 SCR 300 [LQ/SC/1981/184] ; [1982] 52 Comp Cas 186 (SC), the court should not interfere in a transaction between a banker and a beneficiary of a letter of guarantee or indemnity by grant of an injunction at the instance of the buyer restraining the beneficiary from enforcing the liability under the letter of indemnity executed by the banker which was absolute and upon a demand being made by the beneficiary, the bank became liable to honour the same regardless of any controversy between the parties, i.e., the appellant who is the buyer, and respondent No. 1, the sellers, as to whether the contract of sale had been performed. Briefly stated, the facts are that the appellant, the buyer, covenanted to purchase and respondent No. 1, Messrs. Vinmar Impex Inc., Singapore, the sellers, agreed to sell and supply 100 M.T. of high-density polythene powder called HDPE at $565 per M.T. CIF, Calcutta, on an irrevocable letter of credit being opened by the appellant in favour of respondent No. 1, the sellers. One of the terms of the contract as per the letter of intent dated April 29, 1985, signed by both the parties pertained to the " shipping mark " and was to the effect : " Bills of lading should mention shipping mark 5202 ". Pursuant thereto, at the request of the appellant, the Allahabad Bank opened a letter of credit for $56, 500 valid up to June 30, 1985, in favour of respondent No. 1. In terms of the said agreement, respondent No. 1, Messrs. Vinmar Impex Inc., Singapore, despatched 100 M.T. HDPE Granules free on board the vessel, Ganges Poineer, packed in four containers of 25 M.T. each covered by four bills of lading. The said vessel, Ganges Poineer, arrived at the Calcutta port on or about June 5, 1985, and despatched the goods covered by the said bills of lading.It appears that the parties entered into a correspondence due to the failure on the part of respondent No. 1 to forward, through bank, the original bills of lading, marine insurance policy, signed invoices, etc., to enable the appellant to take delivery. Since the shipping company was refusing to release the cargo for want of the original bills of lading and other documents, respondent No. 1 instructed them to release the said cargo upon the appellant furnishing bank guarantee for release of the goods in lieu of the original bills of lading and other documents. Accordingly, the Allahabad Bank, at the instance of the appellant, executed four letters of indemnity, variously described as letters of guarantee or letters of indemnity or both, and each of the documents has been countersigned by the appellant in favour of the shipping company.
2. On the strength of the said letters of indemnity, the shipping company delivered the goods to the appellant without production of the original bills of lading, marine insurance policy, signed invoices, etc. After taking delivery of the goods, the appellant sold them in the market and realised the proceeds amounting to Rs. 17, 50, 000. The shipping company having made a demand upon the Allahabad Bank to honour the letters of indemnity and the bank having called upon the appellant to pay the amount due, the appellant brought a suit in the Original Side of the Calcutta High Court seeking to recover Rs. 9, 25, 020.80 as damages from respondent No. 1, the sellers, alleging that they were in breach in that the goods despatched by respondent No. 1 were of inferior quality and not the goods contracted for, i.e., not of grade 5202 but of grade 5502, and also because they had failed to forward the original shipping documents. The appellant applied for grant of a temporary injunction under Order XXXIX, rule 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, restraining the Allahabad Bank from making any payment to the shipping company in terms of the letters of indemnity and also restraining respondent No. 1 from recovering the amount due thereunder.
3. The High Court has disallowed the application made by the appellant for grant of a temporary injunction on the ground that the requirements of Order XXXIX, r. 1, of the Code are not fulfilled. A learned single judge, by his order dated November 25, 1985, held that the appellant had no prima facie case, the balance of convenience did not require the grant of an injunction and that the refusal of such injunction would not put the appellant to any irreparable loss. In coming to the conclusion, the learned judge observed that prima facie it does not appear that the figure 5202 or 5502 pertained to the grade or quality of the goods contracted for but to " shipping mark " of the goods as evident from the letter of intent. He further observed that despite knowledge of the goods being of a different mark or grade, as alleged in the plaint, the appellant took delivery of the goods and sold them for Rs. 17, 50, 000 and appropriated the proceeds. He also observed that even assuming that the appellant had suffered the damages and it has assessed the same at Rs. 9, 25, 020.80, there still remained a clear margin of over Rs. 8 lakhs in the hands of the appellant on account of the sale price of the goods, the agreed price of the said goods being Rs. 6, 90, 000. The learned judge felt that there was no reason why the appellant should retain the entire sale proceeds amounting to Rs. 17, 50, 000 and pay nothing to respondent No. 1 towards the price. A Division Bench of the High Court by its judgment dated February 3, 1986, upheld the order of the learned single judge. The learned judges, in the course of their reasoned judgment, referred in detail to the relevant documents as also to various authorities, including the decision of this court in United Commercial Banks case [1981] 3 SCR 300 [LQ/SC/1981/184] ; [1982] 52 Comp Cas 186 (SC), and held that the obligation of the Allahabad Bank under the letters of indemnity countersigned by the appellant was absolute and upon a demand being made by the shipping company, i. e., the beneficiary, the bank was liable to honour the same regardless of any controversy between the parties, i. e., the appellant who is the buyer, and respondent No. 1, the sellers, as to whether the contract of sale had been performed. We agree with the reasoning and conclusions of the learned judges.
4. In the instant case, the appellant took the risk of unconditional wording of the letters of indemnity executed by its bankers, the Allahabad Bank. There is really no equity in favour of the appellant. The shipping company, on the faith and assurance of the letters of indemnity which was duly countersigned by the appellant, gave delivery of the goods without production of the original shipping documents. The appellant has sold the goods and realised the proceeds amounting to the huge sum of Rs. 17, 50, 000 and has not paid a farthing to respondent No. 1, the sellers, and has instead brought the instant suit claiming that the goods supplied were of inferior quality and not the goods contracted for. The High Court has rightly held that the mark 5202 pertained not to the quality or the grade but to the shipping mark. We are satisfied that the appellant has no prima facie case. The balance of convenience also lies in not granting the injunction prayed for, i.e., in allowing the banking transaction to go forward. The appellant would also not be put to any irreparable loss if no injunction is granted.This case is really an extension of the principles laid down by this court in United Commercial Banks case [1981] 3 SCR 300 [LQ/SC/1981/184] ; [1982] 52 Comp Cas 186 (SC). The main point, in controversy, in that case was whether the court should in a transaction between a banker and 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/indemnity at the instance of the beneficiary. In dealing with the nature of a bankers obligation under an irrevocable letter of credit, the court observed (at page 206 of 52 Comp Cas) :
" In view of the bankers obligation under an irrevocable letter of credit to pay, his buyer-customer cannot instruct him not to pay. In Hamzeh Malas v. British Imex Industries Ltd. [1958] 2 QB 127 (CA), the plaintiffs, the buyers, applied for an injunction restraining the sellers, the defendants, from drawing under the credit established by the buyers bankers. This was refused, Jenkins L.J., stating at page 129 that :
......the opening of a confirmed letter of credit constitutes a bargain between the banker and the vendor of the goods, which imposes upon the banker an absolute obligation to pay.......
and that this was not a case in which the court ought to exercise its discretion and grant the injunction. "
The court held that the same considerations should apply to a bank guarantee and added (at page 206 of 52 Comp Cas) :
" A letter of credit sometimes resembles and is analogous to a contract of guarantee. In Elian v. Matsas [1966] 2 LI LR 495, Lord Denning M.R., while refusing to grant an injunction stated :......a bank guarantee is very much like a letter of credit. The courts will do their utmost to enforce it according to its terms. They will not, in the ordinary course of things, interfere by way of injunction to prevent its due implementation....... "
It was observed that commitments of banks must be allowed to be honoured free from interference by the courts. Otherwise, trust in international commerce would be irreparably damaged. The court referred to, with approval, the following observations of Kerr J. in R. D. Harbottle (Mercantile) Ltd. v. National Westminster Bank Ltd. [1977] 3 WLR 752, 761 (QB) :
" It is only in exceptional cases that the courts will interfere with the machinery of irrevocable obligations assumed by banks. They are the life-blood of international commerce. "
And added (at page 761 of [1977] 3 WLR) :
" Except possibly in clear cases of fraud of which the banks have notice, the courts will leave the merchants to settle their disputes under the contracts by litigation or arbitration as available to them or as stipulated in the contracts. "
5. We do not see why the same principles should not apply to a bankers letter of indemnity.
6. Accordingly, the appeal must fail and is dismissed with costs.
Advocates List
Atul C. Jain, Kamini Jaiswal, Kishore Lahiri, Somnath Chatterjee, H. K. Puri, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE JUSTICE A. P. SEN
HON'BLE JUSTICE B. C. RAY
Eq Citation
(1986) 4 SCC 136
[1987] 61 COMPCAS 697 (SC)
AIR 1986 SC 1924
JT 1986 (1) SC 175
1986 (2) UJ 559
1986 (2) SCALE 254
LQ/SC/1986/271
HeadNote
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 — S. 92 and Or. XXXIX r. 1 — Banker's letter of indemnity — Injunction restraining beneficiary from enforcing liability under the letter of indemnity executed by the banker — Whether should be granted at the instance of the buyer restraining the beneficiary from enforcing the liability under the letter of indemnity executed by the banker which was absolute and upon a demand being made by the beneficiary the bank became liable to honour the same regardless of any controversy between the parties as to whether the contract of sale had been performed — Held, the same principles should apply to a bankers letter of indemnity — Banker's letter of indemnity executed by the Allahabad Bank duly countersigned by the appellant gave delivery of the goods without production of the original shipping documents — Appellant sold the goods and realised the proceeds amounting to the huge sum of Rs 17 50 000 and has not paid a farthing to respondent No 1 the sellers and has instead brought the instant suit claiming that the goods supplied were of inferior quality and not the goods contracted for — High Court rightly held that the mark 5202 pertained not to the quality or the grade but to the shipping mark — Appellant has no prima facie case — Balance of convenience also lies in not granting the injunction prayed for ie in allowing the banking transaction to go forward — Appellant would also not be put to any irreparable loss if no injunction is granted — Contract Act, 1872 — S. 126