RELEVANT AUTHORITIES
19 I now turn to consider a number of relevant authorities. In Bachmann the appellant agreed to design, manufacture, supply and commission steel manufacturing equipment for the respondent. A clause in the Supply Contract required the supplier to provide security for the performance of its obligations, which it did by an irrevocable standby letter of credit in favour of the purchaser. The letter of credit required the purchaser to provide the bank with a statement that the supplier had failed to comply with the contract and a sight draft, which the bank undertook to honour. The relevant clause provided:
"A party shall not convert into money security that does not consist of money until the party becomes entitled to exercise a right under the contract in respect of the security."
20 Brooking JA with whom Tadgell JA and Ormiston JA agreed said:
'It is also plain that it is competent to the holder of security provided by the other contracting party to promise as part of the contract under which the security is provided - the underlying contract - not to do some act in relation to the security except in a certain event. Such a contractual promise is efficacious, not in the sense, of when the security is constituted by the obligation of a third person, that the third person can rely by way of defence as against the security holder on a term of the underlying contract, to which he was not a party, but in the sense that relief can be afforded to the person who procured the security in an action brought against the security holder on the promise contained in the underlying contract. No principle or rule of law would deny that a promise forming part of the underlying contract is in this sense efficacious, and the cases recognise this.' [28]
21 The cases relied upon by his Honour included Wood Hall Ltd v The Pipeline Authority (1979) 141 CLR 443 at 452-4 per Gibbs J (with whom Mason J agreed) and at 459 per Stephen J. His Honour continued:
'I do not overlook the credible distinction between the effect of the underlying contract as between the parties to it and its effect (if any) as between the holder of the security and the third person whose obligation constitutes the security. One can for brevity speak of a contractual qualification upon the owner's powers in relation to the security where the underlying agreement between the owner and the contractor or supplier contains a term which restricts the exercise of those powers in some way.' [29]
22 The supplier in Bachmann did not seek to establish any case of fraud on the purchaser's part but relied only on the contractual qualification upon the purchaser's powers under the general conditions of the underlying contract to demand payment under the letter of credit. It was conceded that the clause referred to constituted a contractual qualification on the purchaser's powers in relation to the security. This is to be contrasted with earlier Australian cases where the initial question was whether the underlying contract on its proper construction qualified the security holder's powers to claim under the security. The only point in the appeal as his Honour put it was as to the content of the qualification. [30]
23 His Honour canvassed a number of cases in which the proper construction of the language contained in the standby letter of credit, "… until the party becomes entitled to exercise a right under the contract …" had been similarly discussed. Those authorities range from requiring no more than a claimed entitlement which is not specious or fanciful: Hughes Bros Pty Ltd v Telede Pty Ltd (1989) 7 BCL 210 to requiring that the holder of the security establish, whether by litigation or arbitration, an actual entitlement to payment of the moneys: Mitsui Kensetsu Corporation Australia Pty Ltd v State of South Australia (unreported Qld Supreme Court, 9 August 1990 per Byrne J).
24 His Honour referred to Hudson's Building and Engineering Contracts1995 11 Ed where I N Duncan Wallace QC said:
'However, in so far as a construction contract may make clear provision for the furnishing of an unconditional guarantee as security for due performance, the normal interpretation … will be that, in response to the stipulated demand, an unqualified transfer of the sums in question is intended, provided only that there is a bona fide dispute or claim on the secured party's part, and any further investigation of its merits or extent is not usually intended by the contract…'.
25 Ultimately, as a matter of construction of the particular standby letter of credit, his Honour concluded that as between the purchaser and the supplier, the purchaser was entitled to have recourse to the security where according to a bona fide claim made by the purchaser monies were due to it from the supplier which exceeded any monies due from it to the supplier. [53]
26 In Ideas PlusSteytler P with whom McLure and Buss JJA agreed concluded that the National Australia Bank (NAB) was empowered to claim under a letter of credit granted by HSBC Bank of Australia Ltd (HSBC) so long as it had a bona fide belief that the conditions were satisfied. The certificate by the NAB issued to HSBC certifying in effect that the conditions of the letter of credit had been met was only a representation of such a bona fide belief and perhaps that there were reasonable grounds for such a belief. [55]-[57], [105] See also Fletcher Construction Australia Limited v Varnsdorf Pty Ltd [1998] 3 VR 812. Steytler P with whom McLure JA agreed held that the basis for the payment made by HSBC pursuant to its independent obligation by it to NAB under the letter of credit was the provision by NAB of a certificate in the required terms. It was, his Honour found, the presentation of that certificate, not the truth of the facts certified, which conditioned HSBC's obligation to pay.
27 In Olex Focas Pty Ltd v Skodaexport Co Ltd, sub-contractors provided unconditional bank guarantees to the head contractor known as mobilisation guarantees. Additionally they provided performance bonds again by way of bank guarantees to the head contractor. All the guarantees contained unconditional undertakings by the bank to pay the head contractor on demand. The contracts made between the sub-contractors and the head-contractor were variously expressed to be subject to the laws of India or Switzerland. The contracts also contained an arbitration clause requiring disputes to be arbitrated in Paris.
28 Disputes arose between the sub-contractors and the head-contractor. The sub-contractors claimed that they had performed all their obligations under the contract. The head-contractor denied this. The head-contractor then called up the full amount of the guarantees. The sub-contractors sought interlocutory injunctions requiring the head-contractor to countermand the demands made upon the bank, restraining the head-contractor from making any further demand under any of the guarantees and restraining the bank from making any payment pursuant to any of the guarantees.
29 The mobilisation and bank guarantees all contained irrevocable undertakings on the part of the bank "to pay the buyer at site forthwith on first demand and in writing without protest or demur or proof or satisfaction and without reference to the seller any and all amounts demanded from us by the buyer", subject to an aggregate limit.
30 The bank further agreed that: it wasn't necessary for the buyer to proceed against the seller before proceeding against the bank and that the guarantee would be enforceable against the bank as principal debtor notwithstanding the existence of any security; the liability of the bank to the buyer under the undertaking would remain in full force and effect notwithstanding the existence of any difference or dispute between the seller and the buyer, the seller and the bank and/or the bank and the buyer or otherwise howsoever … to the effect that notwithstanding the existence of such difference, dispute or instruction, the bank shall remain liable to make payment to the buyer in terms of the guarantee.
31 The Court declined to grant injunctions under the general law, they not having established a clear case of fraud by the head-contractor in making demand under the guarantees and that the bank was aware of any such fraud at the time of the post payment. There was accordingly no serious question to be tried in that respect. In so finding the Court applied Wood Hall Ltd v The Pipeline Authority (1979) 141 CLR 443.
32 However, the Court held that there were serious questions to be tried whether the parties were engaged in trade and commerce between Australia and a place outside Australia, for the purposes of s 6(2) of the Act, and whether the head-contractor had acted unconscionably, and in contravention of s 51AA of the Act, by making demand under the mobilisation guarantees, in the sense that it had insisted on strict legal rights in circumstances which made that harsh or oppressive or caused hardship. Accordingly, the sub-contractors were entitled to injunctions in respect of the mobilisation guarantees: (Logue v Shoalhaven Shire Council [1979] 1 NSWLR 537; Stern v McArthur (1988) 165 CLR 489 referred to). Batt J in so finding held that the effect of the Act, applying as it did to international trade and commerce, was to work a substantial inroad into the well-established common law autonomy of letters of credit and performance bonds and other bank guarantees. In that case the bank which operated in Victoria, had made a submitting appearance only.
33 In Wood Hall Ltd v The Pipeline Authority a condition in a contract for the construction of a pipeline required the contractor to provide a cash security or, alternatively, a bank guarantee as security for the contractors due and faithful performance of the work. This was in the nature of a performance guarantee. Another condition entitled the owner to retain 10% of the progress payments due to the contractor until the work had been performed and accepted in accordance with the contract. The owner, at the contractor's request, agreed to accept a bank guarantee in lieu of the monies retained. This was a so-called retention guarantee. By each of the guarantees the bank unconditionally undertook to pay the owner on demand any sum up to the limit specified in each guarantee. When the work was almost complete, the owner demanded payment from the bank under the guarantee. The contactor sought declarations and orders the purpose of which was to restrain the bank from making payment to the Authority under four instruments described on their face as bank guarantees given by the bank to the Pipeline Authority. The Court there held that the owner was entitled to demand and be paid the amount of the performance guarantee whether or not there had been a want of due and faithful performance of the work, and the monies so paid must be held by him as security for the contractors due and faithful performance of the work.
34 Gibbs J, having regard to the proper construction of the performance guarantee, said that to hold that the Banks should not pay on receiving a demand, but should be bound to inquire into the rights of the Authority and the contractor under a contract to which the bank was not a party would be to depart from the ordinary meaning of the undertaking that the Bank is to pay on demand. (p 451) However, Stephen J observed that, if the construction contract itself had contained some qualification upon the Authority's power to make a demand under a performance guarantee, the position in relation to the grant of such an injunction might well have been different (p 459). Young J in Hortico (Australia) Pty Ltd v Energy Equipment Co (Australia) Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 545 at 550-551 made observations to like effect.
35 In Reed Construction Services Pty Ltd v Kheng Seng (Australia) Pty Ltd (1999) 15 BCL 158, 164 Austin J said:
'There are three principal exceptions. The first, noted in passing by Gibbs J in the Wood Hall case (at 451) and recognised as well by Young J in Hortico (Australia) Pty Ltd v Energy Equipment Co (Australia) Pty Ltd (1986) 2 BCL 366, 370, is that the Court will enjoin the party in whose favour the bond has been given from acting fraudulently. The second exception, recently recognised by the Victorian Supreme Court in Olex Focas Pty Ltd v Skodaexport Co Ltd, [1997] ATPR (Digest) [46-163], is that the Court will intervene to restrain the party for whose benefit the bond was given from acting unconscionably for the purposes of s 51AA of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth).
There is a third exception, which is based on contract and is the most important for present purposes. A line of cases has recognised that whilst the Court will not restrain the issuer of the bond from acting on the unqualified promise to honour it, if the party in whose favour the bond has been given has made a contract promising not to call upon the bond, breach of that contractual promise may be enjoined on normal principles relating to the enforcement by injunction of negative stipulations in contracts.' [emphasis added]
36 Clough relies upon the last two of these three principle exceptions for the proposition that the performance of the bond is an event in which the Court will not intervene at all.
37 In addition to its submissions concerning the Construction Contract Clough also contends that the performance guarantees are expressly by their terms triggered only "on breach of contract by" Clough. It is said accordingly that the performance guarantees are not 'unconditional' enabling the Banks to ignore the position as between Clough and ONGC. Any suggestion that notices under the performance guarantees are 'conclusive and binding', and had effect notwithstanding any dispute pending in any court and that the bank's liability is 'absolute and unequivocal' is, it is submitted, to miss the threshold point. They are only conclusive it is said if they are properly called and absent there being a breach of contract they have not been so called. Clough contends that there is a serious question to be tried whether in fact they have been properly called.