Summary
In Mennen v. J.P. Morgan Co., 689 N.E.2d 869, 875 (N.Y. 1997), the New York Court of Appeals, the state's highest court, reaffirmed the independence principle in letter of credit law.
Summary of this case from In re Lancaster Steel Co., Inc.Opinion
Argued October 16, 1997
Decided December 2, 1997
APPEAL, by permission of the Court of Appeals, from an order of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court in the Fourth Judicial Department, entered February 7, 1997, which modified, on the law, and, as modified, affirmed a judgment of the Supreme Court (Barbara Howe, J.), entered in Erie County, granting a motion by defendant Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York (Morgan) for summary judgment on its first five counterclaims, declaring that plaintiffs are not entitled to receive the aggregate sum of $227,767.65 from Morgan under their letters of credit, declaring that Morgan is entitled to make claim against plaintiffs for recovery of said amount, and awarding judgment to Morgan against plaintiffs in the aggregate sum of $227,767.65, and granting a cross motion by plaintiffs for summary judgment to the extent of dismissing Morgan's sixth counterclaim. The modification consisted of denying Morgan's motion for summary judgment, granting the cross motion by plaintiffs for summary judgment dismissing the five remaining counterclaims of Morgan against them, and granting judgment in favor of plaintiffs declaring that Morgan has no claim against plaintiffs concerning their draws upon their letters of credit.
Mennen v Morgan Co., 229 A.D.2d 237, affirmed.
Levi Lubarsky, New York City (Howard B. Levi of counsel), and Hiscock Barclay, L.L.P., Buffalo, for appellant.
Kavinoky Cook, L.L.P., Buffalo (Marilyn A. Hochfield, Lauren D. Rachlin and Todd K. Card of counsel), for respondents.
This financial dispute occurs as the aftermath of payments made in precise compliance with letters of credit. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., the defendant issuing bank, seeks to recover for alleged overpayments to the plaintiffs who are the beneficiaries of the subject letters of credit. Morgan had honored the drafts from the beneficiaries holding the irrevocable standby letters of credit, upon their presentation of conforming documentation. Months later, Morgan alleged some falsity in that respect.
Plaintiffs commenced this action seeking a declaration (1) that their beneficial draws on the subject letters of credit were correct in amount, and (2) that defendant Morgan may not assert claims against plaintiffs by reaching beyond the letters of credit themselves.
Supreme Court granted part of defendant Morgan's motion for summary judgment as to its counterclaims. The Appellate Division modified by denying Morgan's motion; instead, it granted plaintiffs' cross motion for summary judgment, dismissed Morgan's first five counterclaims and declared that Morgan has no claim against plaintiffs concerning the draws upon the letters of credit. This Court granted defendant Morgan leave to appeal. We affirm for reasons different from those expressed by the Appellate Division.
I.
This case arises from a 1991 stock buy-out of Mennen Medical, Inc., in which plaintiffs were major shareholders. Plaintiffs sold their shares to a group of investors including an entity named Odyssey Partners, L.P. To finance the transaction, Mennen executed and delivered a five-year promissory note to each plaintiff. The notes were identical except for the names of the shareholders and the amount of the note. Each note called for five equal annual payments of principal commencing September 1991, with monthly interest payments the first year, followed by annual interest payments on subsequent anniversary dates. The notes also contained an acceleration clause to cover defaults.
To secure the notes for payment to bought-out shareholders, Mennen obtained standby irrevocable letters of credit from defendant Morgan Guaranty Trust Company. Each letter of credit is identical in form except for the named beneficiary and face amounts. The letters of credit provide for payment within 10 days after presentation of a draft accompanied by a notarized statement that the draw represents an unpaid note installment or that the outstanding balance is due as a consequence of default. The letters of credit also include a standard merger clause to the effect that they reflect the full contractual undertaking and that "such undertaking shall not in any way be modified, amplified or amended by reference to any document, instrument, agreement or note referred to herein and any such reference shall not be deemed to be incorporated herein by reference to any such document, instrument, agreement or note." The letters of credit also expressly provide that they are subject to the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (UCP).
Mennen Medical, the obligor, timely paid the first two installments due under the promissory notes. Eventually, Odyssey took financial control of the group of investors who had purchased the Mennen stock. Prior to the third due payment, Odyssey defaulted on its obligations, and plaintiffs accelerated the notes and drew upon the maximum payment provided under the letters of credit.
Morgan promptly paid the respective draws to the beneficiaries of the letters of credit. Several months later, however, Morgan concluded that the amounts it had paid exceeded the amounts due under the promissory notes themselves. Morgan demanded reimbursement from plaintiffs for the alleged overpayments totaling approximately $230,000. Morgan alleged misstatements of the amounts declared to have been owing in the notarized draw statements. The beneficiaries retorted that the "overpayments" represented a premium above the face amounts of the notes, orally negotiated at the time of the purchase. They added that the premiums were designed to compensate them for increased tax liabilities upon acceleration and for the loss of future interest.
Notably, Morgan had contractually relinquished the right to seek reimbursement from its customer Odyssey through a defeasance agreement between those two parties. Under the defeasance device, Morgan, in exchange for an up-front, lumpsum payment, released Odyssey from any subsequent obligation to reimburse Morgan for any amounts Morgan paid to the beneficiaries pursuant to the letters of credit.
The beneficiaries preemptively sued for a declaration that their draws under the letters of credit were correct in amount and that Morgan enjoyed no separate rights over against them. Morgan counterclaimed for alleged overpayments under theories of money had and received, breach of contract, payment by mistake, unjust enrichment, negligent misrepresentation, and fraud. It moved for summary judgment and plaintiffs crossmoved for similar relief and for dismissal of the counterclaims.
Supreme Court dismissed Morgan's fraud counterclaim, but granted it summary judgment on the other counterclaims. The court determined that the letters of credit payments exceeded the amounts due on the underlying promissory notes secured by the letters of credit. With regard to Morgan's fraud counterclaim, however, the court reasoned that dismissal was necessitated by the fact that Morgan had not submitted any admissible evidentiary proof evoking a disputed issue of material fact which would require a trial on the issue of fraud. On the contrary, the court determined that plaintiffs had established a legal basis for their entitlement to the later-disputed premium amounts.
The Appellate Division modified, holding that Morgan has no claim against plaintiffs concerning their draws upon their letters of credit ( 229 A.D.2d 237). It gave full relief to plaintiffs and none to defendant. The Court reasoned that Supreme Court's in-part favorable ruling for Morgan "violates the principle that a letter of credit is independent of other contracts associated with it" ( id., at 238). The Court stated that "[t]he only relationship between Morgan Guaranty and each plaintiff was the letter of credit, an instrument separate and distinct from either of the two underlying contracts" ( id., at 240). Additionally, the Court declared that "[t]he fact that Morgan Guaranty terminated its contract with its customer [Odyssey] does not give any new or additional rights to Morgan Guaranty against the beneficiaries of the independent letters of credit. All parties chose to allocate risks when they entered into the letter of credit arrangement, and the courts should not reallocate those risks" ( id., at 241).
On this appeal, appellant Morgan argues that it should be entitled to recover overpayments made to plaintiffs on the UCP-governed letters of credit pursuant to pre-Uniform Commercial Code common law, notwithstanding that plaintiffs' allegedly false documentation facially complied with the terms of the instrument. Morgan contends that it did not learn until after making payments that the documents fraudulently (as it perceives and alleges the circumstance) specified the amounts owing and, as such, it should be permitted to assert a claim against the payee beneficiaries subsequent to satisfaction pursuant to the letters of credit.
II.
"The purpose of a letter of credit is to substitute for, and therefore support, an engagement to pay money" ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, 64 N.Y.2d 287, 294; see, Dolan, Letters of Credit: Commercial and Standby Credits ¶ 2.02, at 2-4 [2d ed]). "By issuing a letter of credit, the issuer undertakes an obligation to pay the beneficiary * * * from the account of its customer" ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, 64 N.Y.2d, at 294).
Letters of credit typically involve three separate contractual relationships and undertakings: the underlying contract between the customer and the beneficiary; the agreement between the bank and its customer, by which the letter of credit is issued in exchange for the customer's promise to reimburse the bank; and, the letter of credit itself, which represents the financial institution's commitment to honor drafts presented by the intended beneficiary upon compliance with the terms and conditions specified in the instrument ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, 64 N.Y.2d, at 294 [citing United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 N.Y.2d 254, 258-259]; see, All Serv. Exportacao, Importacao Comercio v Banco Bamerindus, 921 F.2d 32, 34).
"[A] fundamental principle governing these transactions is the doctrine of independent contracts," which "provides that the issuing bank's obligation to honor drafts drawn on a letter of credit by the beneficiary is separate and independent from any obligation of its customer to the beneficiary under the * * * contract and separate as well from any obligation of the issuer to its customer under their agreement" ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, 64 N.Y.2d, at 294 [citing UCC 5-114 (1)]). "Stated another way, this principle stands for `the fundamental proposition * * * that all parties [to a letter of credit transaction] deal in documents rather than with the facts the documents purport to reflect'" ( id., at 294 [citations omitted] [emphasis added]). Therefore, "the issuer's obligation to pay is fixed upon presentation of the drafts and the documents specified in the letter of credit. It is not required to resolve disputes or questions of fact concerning the underlying transaction" ( id., at 295).
The twist presented by this case requires the Court to determine first whether an issuer has violated this principle when it promptly pays a draw and only subsequently challenges the validity of the documentation on fraud grounds. A leading authority on the letters of credit type negotiable instruments has stated that "[i]n the event the documents comply on their face with the terms of the credit, the issuer should have a cause of action against the beneficiary if the issuer honors the conforming demand and then learns that, for some reason, the documents do not comply" (Dolan, Letters of Credit: Commercial and Standby Credits ¶ 9.04, at 9-48 [2d ed]). Therefore, the issuer's initial, timely payment sufficiently satisfies the independence principle and, "[a]fter payment * * * the independence principle should not bar the issuer's claim against a beneficiary" ( id., at 9-48).
This is so because the independence doctrine realistically reflects "[t]he exigencies of credit law," which necessitate that the issuer honor presentations that comply on their face without looking beneath the documents (Dolan, op. cit., at 9-48). "Any other rule would frustrate the credit's promptness feature, which is indispensable to the credit's success as a commercial device" ( id., at 9-48). "Letters of credit provide a quick, economic and trustworthy means of financing transactions for parties not willing to deal on open accounts by permitting the seller to rely on the credit of the issuing bank, as well as that of the buyer" ( All Serv. Exportacao, Importacao Comercio v Banco Bamerindus, 921 F.2d 32, 36, supra). The underlying purpose of the rule, however, should not "permit a beneficiary to say, after payment, that [its] false, fraudulent, or inaccurate documents satisfied the conditions of the credit" (Dolan, Letters of Credit: Commercial and Standby Credits ¶ 9.04, at 9-48 [2d ed]).
The above precedents and authorities persuade us that Morgan, by timely paying the letters of credit upon presentation, did not violate the independence principle. The underlying purpose of the doctrine to insure that promptness of payment was and is fulfilled by requiring the issuer to pay up front, even though it would also recognize the issuer subsequently pursuing recovery against a beneficiary based on alleged fraud.
We, thus, conclude that the Appellate Division's holding that the independence principle was violated by Morgan in the instant case is not well founded. That feature of the analysis, however, does not prevent us from arriving at the same bottom line result as the Appellate Division. We turn, then, to the next and dispositive aspects of the case.
III.
From the Uniform Commercial Code, we note a "limited exception" to the independence principle ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, 64 N.Y.2d, at 295; see, UCC 5-114). Under the general rule, an issuer must honor a draft which complies with the terms of the relevant letter of credit, regardless of whether the documents conform to the underlying contract between the customer and the beneficiary (UCC 5-114). When a required document, however, does not conform to the necessary warranties, is forged or fraudulent, or there is fraud in the transaction, an issuer may properly refuse to honor a draft drawn under a letter of credit even though the documents presented appear on their face to comply with the terms of the letter of credit (UCC 5-114 [b]; see, First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, 64 N.Y.2d, at 295).
Furthermore, the Uniform Commercial Code allows an issuing bank a remedy against a beneficiary for breach of warranty ( see, UCC 5-111). It states that "the beneficiary by transferring or presenting a documentary draft or demand for payment warrants to all interested parties that the necessary conditions of the credit have been complied with" (UCC 5-111; see, Mellon Bank v General Elec. Credit Corp., 724 F. Supp. 360 [applying UCC 5-111]). Notably, the section does not suggest that "breach of the underlying agreement constitutes a breach of the Section 5-111 warranty" (Dolan, Letters of Credit: Commercial and Standby Credits ¶ 9.04, at 9-49 [2d ed]). Rather, "[t]hat warranty relates to the conditions of the credit, not to the conditions of the underlying agreement" ( id., at 9-49).
A key, distinguishing feature of the instant transaction and controversy is that the letters of credit are expressly made subject to the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits ( see, UCC 5-102 [noting that UCC article 5 does not apply to a letter of credit when by its terms or agreement the letter of credit is subject in whole or in part to the UCP]). Unlike the Uniform Commercial Code, the UCP is silent with respect to a letter-of-credit remedy for the issuer against the beneficiary under circumstances where the issuer accepts the documents and only later discovers that they may be false or inaccurate, based on variations with underlying documents.
This Court has noted that "even if the [UCP] were deemed applicable * * *, it would not, in the absence of a conflict, abrogate the precode case law (now codified in [UCC] 5-114) and that authority continues to govern even where article 5 is not controlling" ( United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 N.Y.2d 254, 258, n 2, supra). We reasoned that the relevant UCP provisions are not in conflict and, more generally, do not affect the subject matter of section 5-114 ( id.). Our conclusion was expressed in this way: "the [UCP], where applicable, does not bar the relief provided for in section 5-114 of the code" ( id., at 258, n 2; see, 3 White and Summers, Uniform Commercial Code § 26-3, at 123-124 [Practitioner's 4th ed] [noting that pre-Code case law applies as long as it does not conflict with the UCP and that "New York courts will turn to (UCC) Article 5 to the extent the UCP and pre-Code case law are silent"]).
We are satisfied, therefore, that pre-Code case law (codified in UCC 5-114) must be considered in resolving the instant litigation. Morgan's various counterclaims, however, were properly dismissed because direct recourse is effectively blocked under the merger clause, which was part and parcel of the letters of credit in this case. Indeed, Morgan's rights in this instance and on this record should not be deemed and allowed to be greater than those fixed by the four corners of the letters of credit. Its counterclaims inescapably flow from and implicate the separate, underlying contract between plaintiffs as sellers and the Mennen group of buyers. To give legal cognizance and effect to Morgan's counterclaims in this commercial transaction, thus, would pierce the protective shield of the particular clauses and financial instruments arranged by and among these sophisticated parties.
Lastly, an issuing bank may have redress for fraud against a beneficiary if its claim is predicated on sustainable fraud allegations and admissible evidence ( see, United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 N.Y.2d 254, 259, supra). Although the fraud theory could obviate the otherwise prohibitive express language of letters of credit, these nuanced features do not support Morgan's legal position as applied in this case and on this record. The trial court correctly determined that there are no sustainable or cognizable issues of fact as to fraud. That was impliedly adopted by the Appellate Division. The fraud exception theory of recourse against beneficiaries of letters of credit, thus, provides no outlet for Morgan.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.
The issue in this case is whether an issuer that has paid on a letter of credit may recover its payment from the beneficiary where the payment was made on the strength of an affidavit by the beneficiary and the facts asserted in the affidavit were later shown to be false. The majority opinion does not explicitly address this question, but its holding impliedly resolves it against the issuer. Since I conclude that the issuing bank is entitled to recover under these facts, I dissent.
I.
The majority persuasively explains why the so-called "independence principle" embodied in the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits (the UCP) does not preclude an issuer of a letter of credit from suing the beneficiary for the alleged overpayments under the facts in this case. As the majority states, the independence principle is fulfilled once the issuer has met its obligation to honor the letter of credit upon presentation of documents that conform to the letter of credit's demands ( see, Dolan, Letters of Credit: Commercial and Standby Credits ¶ 9.04, at 9-48 [2d ed 1991]). At that point, both the letter of UCP and the underlying policies favoring the facilitation of commerce through prompt and predictable payment are satisfied ( see, id.; see also, All Serv. Exportacao, Importacao Comercio v Banco Bamerindus, 921 F.2d 32, 36). Here, the issuer honored the letter of credit in a timely manner and, consequently, the independence principle is not implicated. Thus, there is nothing in that principle to prevent the issuer from pursuing the beneficiary in a postpayment lawsuit to recover any overpayments. The next logical question is whether there is a legal basis for such recovery.
II.
As to that question, the critical factor to consider is the nature of the letter of credit transaction itself. As the majority has stated, such transactions typically involve three separate relationships: the one between the issuer and its customer, the one between the customer and the beneficiary and, finally, the one between the beneficiary and the issuer ( see, First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, 64 N.Y.2d 287, 294).
It has often been observed that the relationship between the beneficiary and the issuer is "separate and independent from any obligation of its customer to the beneficiary * * * as well [as] from any obligation of the issuer to its customer under their agreement" ( id., at 294; see, United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 N.Y.2d 254, 256-257). This fundamental tenet is not only the source of the "independence principle," but is also the root of the corollary proposition that the "`parties [to a letter of credit transaction] deal in documents'" ( First Commercial Bank v Gotham Originals, supra, at 294-295, quoting Harfield, Letters of Credit, at 76 [ALI-ABA Uniform Commercial Code Practice Handbook 1979]; see, United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., supra, at 259). It follows from these principles that it is the documents and only the documents that must be consulted in determining whether any of the parties has a cause of action against another party.
In the present postpayment dispute between the issuer and the beneficiaries, the starting place for analysis is the letters of credit themselves, since they are the documents that govern the rights and obligations of those parties. The standby letters at issue here provided that the issuer would pay the amount demanded by the beneficiaries within 10 days after presentation of a draft along with a notarized statement certifying that the requested amount represents the amount due to the beneficiary under a separate identified note between the beneficiary and the issuer's customer. It is this notarized statement — and its alleged falsity — that forms the basis of defendant issuer's claim.
It seems to me that the beneficiaries' notarized statements, which were required by the letters of credit and thus were critical components of the documentary transaction between the beneficiaries and defendant issuer, were sufficient to create an obligation on the part of the former and gave rise to a corresponding right on the part of the latter to sue in the event of falsity. The specific obligation of the beneficiary in question is that of any party who makes a sworn representation to be accurate. Indeed, whenever a sworn statement of fact is requested or required, it is implicit that the parties expect the statement to be true. And, where, as here, money is obtained on the strength of the statement, a cause of action for "money had and received" ( see, Schank v Schuchman, 212 N.Y. 352) or breach of warranty ( cf., UCC 5-111) should lie to enable the party who innocently overpaid to recoup its overpayment.
Significantly, in cases arising under the Uniform Commercial Code, a beneficiary is deemed to warrant "that the necessary conditions of the credit have been complied with" when it presents its letter of credit for payment (UCC 5-111). While the issuer cannot invoke a breach of this warranty as an excuse for refusing to honor the letter of credit, the breach may become the basis for a subsequent suit "to recover payment already made" (3 White and Summers, Uniform Commercial Code § 26-8, at 161 [Practitioner's 4th ed]).
In Mellon Bank v General Elec. Credit Corp. ( 724 F. Supp. 360), for example, a beneficiary of a standby letter of credit submitted to the issuer both a demand for payment and a statement certifying that the underlying secured debt had been accelerated. Having subsequently learned that the asserted acceleration had not occurred, the issuer, which had already paid on the draft, brought an action to recover its overpayment. The court held in the issuer's favor and permitted recovery for breach of the UCC 5-111 warranty, even though the presented documents had been facially conforming and resolution of the dispute required the court to look beyond those documents to determine the parties' rights. The result in Mellon Bank is consistent with the views expressed by the commentators ( see, Dolan, op. cit., ¶ 6.07; 3 White and Summers, op. cit., at 161).
The majority relies on the following statement in Dolan's treatise: "Nothing in Section 5-111 suggests that breach of the underlying agreement constitutes a breach of the Section 5-111 warranty. That warranty relates to the conditions of the credit, not to the conditions of the underlying agreement" (Dolan, op. cit., ¶ 9.04, at 9-49). That statement, however, merely emphasizes what is plain from the language of the cited Code provision, i.e., that the implied warranty that is created by the UCC does not automatically incorporate all of the terms and obligations of the underlying agreement; instead, it extends only to those specific terms and conditions that have expressly been made "necessary conditions of the credit." The Dolan statement does not and cannot mean that the courts may never look to the parties' conduct in relation to an underlying agreement to determine whether the implied warranty relating to the "conditions of the credit" has been breached. If that were the case, the issuing bank in Mellon Bank could not have obtained relief. Indeed, since the "conditions of the credit" often relate to the parties' conduct in relation to the underlying agreement (as they do both in this case and Mellon Bank), the broad restriction that the majority suggests would render the UCC 5-111 implied warranty pragmatically useless in a wide variety of cases.
The facts in Mellon Bank are analogous to those presented here. To be sure, this case is governed by the UCP and, consequently, the specific warranty provided for in UCC 5-111 is inapplicable ( see, UCC 5-102). Nonetheless, there is no sound reason not to apply the same analysis in this UCP case, since the beneficiaries' notarized representations are the functional equivalent of the UCC 5-111 warranty and recognition of a cause of action under these circumstances would not conflict with any principle set forth in the UCP ( cf., United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp., 41 N.Y.2d 254, 258, n 2, supra). Manifestly, if the UCC provisions governing letters of credit are not offended by a rule permitting the court in a postpayment lawsuit to look beyond the letter of credit, then the same principle should apply in a case arising under the UCP, since both the UCP and the letter of credit article of the UCC are the same in their adherence to the "independence principle" and its related rules of law.
I would note that the dictum in United Bank v Cambridge Sporting Goods Corp. ( 41 N.Y.2d 254, 258, n 2, supra), on which the plaintiff beneficiaries rely, is not helpful to the analysis in this case. In United Bank, a case involving a fraud claim, the Court stated in a footnote that even though the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) is not applicable to transactions governed by the UCP, the UCP "would not, in the absence of a conflict, abrogate the precode case law (now codified in Uniform Commercial Code, § 5-114) and that authority continues to govern even where [UCC] article 5 is not controlling" ( 41 N.Y.2d, at 258, n 2, supra, citing White and Summers, Uniform Commercial Code § 18-6, at 613-614, 624-625).
UCC 5-114 (2), the specific provision referred to in United Bank, gives the issuer of a letter of credit the option of refusing to honor in certain cases involving fraud. The section was necessary to provide relief from the otherwise rigid rule set forth in UCC 5-114 (1) that an issuer must honor a letter of credit when it is presented with facially conforming documents. The provision is neither necessary nor relevant when the issuer seeks to recover in a postpayment proceeding, since at that point both the duty to honor and the limited exceptions to that duty are moot. Thus, although the right to dishonor may be conditioned on the existence of a fraud, it cannot be inferred from the United Bank dictum that an issuer's right to recover a previously made payment is similarly limited.
III.
Since there is no rule of law derived from the UCP or the common law that would preclude defendant's recovery on a nonfraud claim and since falsity of the notarized statement demanded as a condition of the credit gives rise to a viable basis for recovery, the only remaining question is whether there is anything in the letters of credit themselves that would prevent the issuer from establishing its entitlement to relief in this case. The majority finds such a barrier in a "merger" clause contained in the letters of credit. However, the so-called "merger" clause is of limited utility to the beneficiaries, since it appears to be aimed solely at limiting defendant issuer's obligations to the terms set forth within the four corners of the letters of credit. The clause does not appear to pertain at all to the beneficiaries' obligations to the issuer. Indeed, as a general matter, it seems unlikely that a letter of credit would contain a conventional, mutually binding merger clause, since such documents are not bilateral agreements, but rather are unilateral documents drafted and dispensed by an issuer at the behest of its customer.
The clause in question states: "This Letter of Credit sets forth in full our [the issuer's] undertaking, and such undertaking shall not in any way be modified, amplified or amended by reference to any document, instrument, agreement or note referred to herein and any such reference shall not be deemed to be incorporated herein by reference to any such document, instrument, agreement or note."
In any event, even if the purported "merger" provision in these letters of credit were deemed to limit the beneficiaries' obligations as well as those of the issuer, I would not conclude that it precluded this issuer from showing that the beneficiaries' sworn statement as to what was owed under their notes was inaccurate. The purpose of a merger clause is "to bar the introduction of extrinsic evidence to vary or contradict the terms of the writing" ( Matter of Primex Intl. Corp. v Wal-Mart Stores, 89 N.Y.2d 594, 599). Here, there has been no attempt made to use an extrinsic document to vary or contradict the beneficiaries' obligations under the letters of credit. To the contrary, the issuer in this case is basing its claim for relief specifically on the beneficiaries' obligations under a particular term of the letters of credit, i.e., the demand for notarized certifications of the amount owed, and on the implied obligation to submit certifications that are truthful. Thus, the issuer's claim involves nothing that would be prohibited by a merger clause.
That the truthfulness of the certification cannot be determined without looking to the note between the beneficiaries and the issuer's customer does not alter the analysis. In this instance, the terms of the note are being used not to create a new or different set of obligations on the beneficiaries' part, but rather as proof of the beneficiaries' compliance with their obligations under the letters of credit. Thus, the theories and rules surrounding the preclusive effect of merger clauses are inapplicable.
Indeed, it would make little sense to hold that in these circumstances the issuer is precluded by the "four corners" doctrine from using the beneficiaries' note to establish the falsity of their certifications. Such a holding would mean that a "condition of the credit" that was specifically described within the four corners of the letters of credit themselves would be, in effect, unenforceable. Manifestly, the rule against the use of extrinsic evidence to vary or contradict the terms of a writing does not require such an absurd result.
Accordingly, contrary to the majority's result, I would hold that the issuer in this case is entitled to recover from the beneficiaries any overpayments it made under the terms of the letters of credit. Such a result is consistent with both the applicable legal principles governing letters of credit and the general principle that a party ought not to be permitted to retain a windfall, at least in the absence of some countervailing policy consideration. In this case, the majority's result leaves plaintiffs beneficiaries with moneys to which they were not entitled, despite the fact that the only identifiable legal tenet or policy concern, i.e., the "independence principle," is not implicated. Since I can find no rule of law that compels such an undesirable result, I dissent and vote to reinstate the Supreme Court judgment.
Chief Judge KAYE and Judges SMITH, LEVINE, CIPARICK and WESLEY concur with Judge BELLACOSA; Judge TITONE dissents and votes to reverse in a separate opinion.
Order affirmed, with costs.