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The Attorney's Fee and Jury Trial Provisions
of Revised Article 5 Require Change
By Margaret L. Moses,
Of Counsel, International Business
This article appeared in the December 1996 edition of UCC Bulletin.
UCC Revised Article 5 has now been enacted,
with no amendments, in 14 states. As the new letter of credit
law wends its way through the local review process in each state,
howwever, some groups are starting to take a closer look at certain
of its provisions. While most of the revised provisions appear
to have general support, there are at least two which have generated
lively discussions. The first, Section 5-111(e), which provides
for mandatory attorneys' fees to a prevailing party, caused a
fair bit of controversy in the final approval stages, and the
language was changed from precatory to mandatory in the final
draft. The second, Section 5-108(e), which limits the right to
a jury trial, produced no controversy until after the final draft
was released. Both sections warrant thoughtful consideration
by bar committees, law revision commissions, and other groups,
as they determine whether or not to recommend adoption of these
provisions.
I. MANDATORY ATTORNEY'S FEES
Section 5-111(e) creates a "loser
pay rule", providing as follows:
Reasonable attorney's fees and other
expenses of litigation must be awarded to the prevailing party
in an action in which a remedy is sought under this article.
This provision overturns the "American
rule" of having each party pay its own legal fees. Since
fees and expenses "must be awarded", the provision eliminates
a judge's discretion to disallow a fee award in cases of hardship.
This "loser pay" rule is even more strict than the
English rule, where courts retain some discretion to mitigate
excessive hardship caused by a fee shift.
Parties arguing in favor of the rule
assert that it will deter both frivolous dishonor on the part
of issuers, and frivolous suits on the part of beneficiaries.
It has been asserted that "users" as well as issuers
favored the rule. However, the users who participated in the
Article 5 drafting sessions were representatives of corporations
such as Exxon, Occidental Petroleum, and Mobil Oil. Their concern,
understandably, was that after having endured the cost and delay
of litigating a wrongful dishonor suit, they should be made whole
by having their attorneys' fees paid. The possibility of losing
and having to pay the banks' attorneys' fees would obviously not
deter such companies from bringing a wrongful dishonor suit against
a bank.
The problem with the mandatory attorneys'
fee provision is in its impact on mid-sized and small companies,
where the risk of paying the attorneys' fees of a large bank could
be a major deterrent to seeking redress through the courts. These
smaller companies had no representatives at the drafting committee
sessions. Nonetheless, they make up a substantial portion of
letter of credit users and contribute in healthy measure, particularly
through exports, to the growth of the economy. These companies
have no incentive to bring "frivolous" lawsuits against
banks. They simply want to get paid for goods they ship. When
such companies sue a bank, the most common framework is a situation
where they have shipped goods to a buyer, have not been paid under
the letter of credit, and the buyer has become insolvent. The
letter of credit, which they believed was their protection against
buyer insolvency, has failed to provide such protection.
The loss of payment can have a very major
impact on a small company. The mandatory attorney's fee provision
of section 5-111(e) will have an additional adverse impact. Having
already suffered damage by losing payment for goods shipped, a
small company faces difficult prospects in suing on a letter of
credit. The substance of letter of credit law effectively protects
banks, and makes it hard for a beneficiary to prevail. Moreover,
as in all litigation, one-shot players such as beneficiaries tend
to do less well in lawsuits against repeat players, such as banks.
Added to this, the punitive effect of possibly losing and having
to pay the bank's attorneys' fees will certainly deter litigation
by these companies. A mandatory shift of attorneys' fees to the
losing party will deter not only weak cases, but cases that could
reasonably win, thereby reducing access to the courts. The mandatory
provision is inescapably and unnecessarily punitive, since it
provides no escape for a party undeserving of punishment. Adding
a mandatory shift of attorneys' fees to substantive law that is
already favorable to banks will come rather close, in some cases,
to granting unreviewable discretion in banks to dishonor letters
of credit.
The provision may also encourage dilatory
tactics by defendants, to drive up costs of litigation in order
to encourage faster settlement on the part of plaintiffs, who
face the risk that those costs will be shifted to them. This
was the experience in Florida, after the legislature in 1980 enacted
a two-way mandatory fee-shifting statute applicable to medical
malpractice claims. Statistics showed that the provision had a
deterrent effect on the willingness of plaintiffs to adjudicate
their claims, and that where plaintiffs did sue, defendants drove
up the costs of litigation in order to coerce settlements. The
Florida legislature repealed the statute in 1985.
The background of the mandatory attorney's
fees provision shows that despite being touted as a benefit for
beneficiaries, it was in fact a major benefit for banks. An initial
draft of revised Article 5 included a provision imposing consequential
damages upon banks who wrongfully dishonored. This would have
permitted seller/beneficiaries to recover not only the face amount
of the dishonored draft but also other damages to their business
that flowed from the wrongful dishonor. The banks objected, and
were supported in their position by the Federal Reserve, which
believed such an unquantified exposure would create regulatory
problems. A suggested compromise was to eliminate consequential
damages, broaden the definition of good faith, and impose mandatory
attorney's fees as a way of discouraging frivolous dishonor.
The ultimate result of the proposed "compromise" was
that consequential damages were eliminated, the definition of
the duty of good faith was kept narrow, and mandatory attorneys'
fees were provided for the prevailing party. It was a solution
that was more than acceptable to the banks.
A two-way mandatory attorneys' fees
provision in the U.S. like that proposed in section 5-111(e) is
rather unusual. While many statutes shift attorneys' fees, it
is usually a one-way provision, that is, attorneys' fees are provided
to prevailing plaintiffs, as part of a public policy to deter
certain conduct by defendants. Civil rights statutes, as interpreted
by the courts, antitrust statutes, and consumer fraud statutes,
to name a few, provide that attorneys' fees be paid to a prevailing
plaintiff. To discourage frivolous dishonor, Section 5-111(e)
could be amended to follow this model and provide a one-way fee
award to a prevailing beneficiary, in order to make the company
whole after proving wrongful dishonor. It would not punish a
beneficiary who brought a reasonable, if unsuccessful suit.
An alternative would be for the provision
to be changed from mandatory to precatory, from "must"
to "may". Providing the court with some discretion
not to shift fees would be more consistent with the goal of discouraging
the disfavored conduct of wrongful dishonor. Such judicial discretion
would also promote equal access to the justice system by not chilling
the right to bring a reasonable lawsuit.
The Committee on Federal Legislation
of the Bar Association of the City of New York, in a report in
April, 1996, came to this conclusion after examining proposed
legislation and other proposals concerning various kinds of fee
shifting:
A strict "loser pays" rule...runs
the risk of overdeterrence -- it may well discourage meritorious
plaintiffs and defendants from litigating.... Frivolous litigation
is undoubtedly a problem, but given the substantial risks that
a "loser pays" provision will deter meritorious
litigation, we believe that frivolous litigation should be regulated
by more focused remedies such as Rule 11. We are uncomfortable
with a proposal to deter frivolous litigation, where no finding
is ever made that the litigation pursued was in fact frivolous.
At least one state Law Revision Commission
has decided to recommend to its legislature that it adopt Section
5-111(e) with precatory rather than mandatory language. The New
Jersey Law Revision Commission, in its Final Report, recommended
changing "must" to "may", based on its finding
that the mandatory provision "may have a chilling effect
on the beneficiary's exercise of its right to sue on a letter
of credit." It also found that while discouraging frivolous
litigation may be a worthy goal, New Jersey already has enacted
a frivolous claims statute. The Commission concluded that the
mandatory language of Section 5-111(e) is thus not needed for
that purpose, and is undesirable in light of its chilling effect
on potential plaintiffs.
II. JURY TRIAL RIGHT
In Section 5-108(e), the drafters inserted
a sentence which impacts upon the right to a jury trial in both
federal and state court. Section 5-108(e) provides as follows:
An issuer shall observe standard
practice of financial institutions that regularly issue letters
of credit. Determination of the issuer's observance of the
standard practice is a matter of interpretation for the court.
The court shall offer the parties a reasonable opportunity to
present evidence of the standard practice.
added. The second sentence
removes all discretion from the court to determine in the first
instance whether certain issues may be appropriate factual issues
for a jury rather than for the court. In mandating that the court
determine issuer liability, however, this provision comes into
conflict with constitutional guarantees of a right to a jury trial
for disputed issues of fact.
In considering the constitutional guarantee,
it is important to look both at the Seventh Amendment to the United
States Constitution, and at the various state constitutions.
Although the Seventh Amendment has never been applied to the states
through the due process clause of the Fourteen Amendment, it is
nonetheless applicable to letter of credit cases which are tried
in federal courts as a result of diversity jurisdiction. Simler
v. Conner, 372 U.S. 221, 222 (1962). With respect to the
fifty states, all provide some form of right to a civil jury trial,
and in forty-eight of the fifty (all but Louisiana and Colorado),
the right is constitutionally based.
The essential constitutional requirement
is that "questions of fact in common law actions shall be
settled by a jury". Walker v. New Mexico & Souther
Pacific R. Co., 165 U.S. 593, 596 (1897).
It is well-settled that the jury right
also reaches beyond common law forms of action to statutory actions,
if those actions are analogous to common law actions existing
at the time of the adoption of the jury right provision. Tull
v. United States, 481 U.S. 412, 417 (1987). Letter of credit
cases, which have ancient origins, and which almost always seek
money damages, are legal actions for which a jury trial right
is guaranteed.
The second sentence of Section 5-108(e)
-- "Determination of the issuer's observance of the standard
practice is a matter of interpretation for the court" --
raises three different questions and appears to mandate that the
court decide them as questions of law: 1. What is the standard
practice of the banking industry? 2. What did the issuer do?
3. Did the issuer's conduct comply with the standard practice?
While the plain meaning of the sentence suggests that the judge
must decide the second and third questions, the Official Comment
to Section 5-108(e) also assigns to the judge the decision as
to the first question of what the standard practice is:
Identifying and determining compliance
with standard practice are matters of interpretation for the court,
not for the jury. As with similar rules in Sections 4A-202(c)
and 2-302, it is hoped that there will be more consistency in
the outcomes and speedier resolution of disputes if the responsibility
for determining the nature and scope of standard practice is granted
to the court, not to a jury.
The Official Comment thus interprets
Section 5-108(e) to mean that the court, not the jury, should
both identify the standard practice and determine its nature and
scope. Since the drafters properly considered standard practice
to be a usage of trade, this Official Comment directly contradicts
UCC 1-205(2), which provides that the existence and scope of a
usage of trade are to be proved as facts. While UCC 1-205(2)
is a "General Provision", which may be superseded by
a specific statutory section in another UCC article, it is not
superseded by an Official Comment, which is not law. Thus, the
constitutional issue regarding who determines standard practice
could be avoided by concluding that the Official Comment is trumped
by UCC 1-205(2), and should be disregarded.
If one assumes, however, that the provision
itself, upon fair reading, requires the court to determine what
is standard practice, then one must consider whether the requirements
of UCC 1-205(2) are constitutionally mandated, and therefore cannot
be superseded by Section 5-108(e). While a complete analysis
of this issue far exceeds the scope of this article, it should
be noted that "standard practice" is anything but standard
with respect to letters of credit. Paragraph 8 of the Official
Comment to Section 5-108(e) makes this point quite clearly:
The standard practice referred to in
subsection (e) includes (i) international practice set forth in
or referenced by the Uniform Customs and Practice, (ii) other
practice rules published by associations of financial institutions,
and (iii) local and regional practice. It is possible that standard
practice will vary from one place to another. Where there are
conflicting practices the parties should indicate which practice
governs their rights. A practice may be overridden by agreement
or course of dealing. See Section 1-205(4).
Since "standard practice" will
"vary from one place to another", and there are "conflicting
practices", it is inevitable that there will be factual issues
as to whether a practice is "standard", and what the
"standard practice" actually is. On the other hand,
certain international practices, such as those set forth in writing
in the Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits, ICC
Publication 500, 1993 Revision ("UCP"), are, under the
general rules of interpretation of written documents, properly
to be interpreted by the court, so long as they are clear and
undisputed. When extrinsic evidence is necessary, because the
terms are not clear, then it presents a question of fact for the
jury if a material, disputed fact exists. Banca del Sempione
v. Provident Bank of Maryland, 75 F.3d 951, 959 (1996).
Thus, the question of whether judge or
jury should determine standard practice and whether determining
standard practice in some situations raises issues that are constitutionally
mandated for the jury permits no simple answer. The problem with
Section 5-108(e), if it is read to require the judge to determine
standard practice, is that it is overbroad in denying the judge
any discretion to determine that some issues are more appropriately
questions for the jury.
With respect to the second question --
what the issuer did -- this seems clearly be a question of fact
for the jury, not the judge, at least where the conduct is disputed.
In documentary compliance cases, there frequently is no dispute
as to what the issuing bank did, so there may be no factual question
on the issuer's conduct to go to a jury. If there is a disputed
fact, however, its resolution is a jury function.
With respect to the third question --
whether the issuer's conduct complied with the standard practice
-- it is not a simple matter to determine if such a question is
constitutionally mandated to be determined by a jury rather than
by a judge. There may well be times, however, when constitutional
requirements would seem to mandate that a jury resolve this question.
Knowing what the issuing bank did, and knowing what the standard
practice was, may, for example, require a drawing of inferences
in order to conclude whether the conduct of the bank met the standard.
The drawing of such inferences is a factual finding, appropriately
made by the jury.
Contrary to the assertion in the Official
Comment that Sections 4A-202(c) and 2-302 provide support for
mandating that factual issues be decided by the court, there is
little, if any, support to be found there. Section 2-302 pertains
to unconscionability, which has always been a question of equity.
Assigning to a judge the power to determine if a contract is
unconscionable is consistent with the fact that in matters of
equity, there is no jury trial right. Since letters of credit
have always been considered legal, not equitable matters, Section
2-302 provides no basis for restricting a jury trial right for
letter of credit cases.
Section 4A-202(c) deals with the commercial
reasonableness of a security procedure. The Official Comment
to that section (which is combined with the Comment for 4A-203
and found following 4A-203), supports having a jury, rather than
a judge determine whether a bank's conduct meets a particular
standard.
The issue of whether a particular security
procedure is commercially reasonable is a question of law. Whether
the receiving bank complied with the procedure is a question of
fact. (Emphasis added).
While one might disagree that "commercial
reasonableness" can be legislated to be a question of law,
it cannot be disputed, and the Comment clearly states, that the
bank's compliance with the procedure is a question of fact.
Comparing Section 5-108(e) to this provision, the interpretation
of a written practice may well be a matter for the court, but
the bank's compliance with that practice is a question of fact.
Thus, a comparison with 4A-202(c) not only does not support
having a judge determine an issuer's compliance with a standard,
but makes clear that this is a fact question for the jury.
The New Jersey Law Revision Commission
has recommended an interesting approach to Section 5-108(e).
The Commission found the second sentence of the provision to be
ambiguous. The Final Report of the Commission stated that if
read to mean that the court "must determine the ordinary
fact question of whether the issuer complied with standard practice",
the provision might abridge the state constitutional right of
a jury trial. The Report also stated that representatives of
the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws
had testified that the sentence did not mean that the court was
required to resolve factual disputes surrounding the conduct of
the issuer, but rather that the court was merely required to determine
the standard practice of financial institutions that regularly
issue letters of credit. The Commission considered trying to
resolve the ambiguity by a Comment, but determined that since
Comments are not law, the better way was to recommend a non-conforming
amendment to Section 5-108(e). It thus recommended deletion of
the phrase "issuer's observance of", so that the second
sentence of Section 5-108(e) would read, "Determination of
the standard practice is a matter of interpretation for the court."
While this is clearly an improvement,
since the judge is no longer mandated to determine what the issuer
did and whether the issuer's conduct complied with the standard,
it does not completely resolve the problem. Having the judge
determine the standard practice is not a problem when the standard
practice is clearly set forth in the UCP, and no extrinsic evidence
is required. It is a problem, however, when the standard is not
in writing, or when extrinsic evidence is required to establish
what the written standard practice in fact means. A better solution,
which would completely eliminate the problem, would be simply
to delete the second sentence of Section 5-108(e), so the provision
would read:
An issuer shall observe standard practice
of financial institutions that regularly issue letters of credit.
The court shall offer the parties a reasonable opportunity to
present evidence of the standard practice.
Deletion of the controversial second
sentence would permit trial judges to continue to do in letter
of credit cases what they do in so many other kinds of cases --
determine in the first instance what issues, if any, are disputed
issues of fact, and send these issues to the jury. It is in denying
a judge this function that the second sentence of Section 5-108(e)
abridges the constitutional right to a jury trial.
Revised Article 5 is the culmination
of years of effort to improve and clarify the provisions governing
letter of credit law, and to harmonize them with international
practice. While the effort has succeeded in large measure, Sections
5-111(e) and 5-108(e), as drafted, are flawed, and should be modified
prior to enactment.
For further advice about revised Article 5, please contact Margaret L. Moses.
© 1997 Connell Foley LLP. The foregoing is provided for informational purposes only and not as legal advice. Any questions about the law or your rights and obligations should be reviewed by legal counsel engaged by you and provided with your specific fact situation.
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