III.
On April 15, 1980, Roman filed a complaint against the Bank in federal district court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, claiming that the terms and conditions of the letter of credit had been satisfied by the documents submitted, and that Roman was therefore entitled to payment under the letter.4 The Bank’s answer denied that the terms and conditions of the letter of credit had been met and raised, among: others, the defense that all invoices for decanters dated before September 1, 1979 had been paid.5 The Bank also filed a counterclaim for attorney’s fees. Roman moved for summary judgment, arguing on the basis of Intraworld Industries, Inc. v. Girard Trust Bank, 461 Pa. 348, 336 A.2d 316 (1975), that the Bank’s defense was unavailing because the obligations of the Bank on a letter of credit did not depend on performance of the underlying contract. App. 28a—3la.IV.
Roman’s letter of credit provides, and both parties agree, that it is to be governed by the Uniform Commercial Code of Pennsylvania. The district court read the Bank’s seventh defense as raising a claim of fraudulent documents or fraud in the transaction under 12A P.S. § 5—114(2). App. 57a.9 Thus, the court properly applied the standards for “fraud in the transaction” or “fraud in the documents” developed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in applications of Section 5-114(2)(b).
We conclude that, if the documents presented by [the beneficiary of the letter of credit] are genuine in the sense of having some basis in fact, an injunction must be refused. An injunction is proper only if [the beneficiary], comparable to the beneficiary in Sztejn, has no bona fide claim to payment under the lease.
[a] party who relies on fraud or forgery has the burden in the first instance of proving the facts upon which the alleged fraud or forgery is based, and these facts must be established by evidence that is clear, direct, precise and convincing.
V.
Roman also contends, however, that the district court incorrectly applied the Intraworld standard. Roman argues, first, that1.
2.
3.
4.
Thus, our independent review of the rec- ord satisfies us that the district court’s find- ing, that fraud by Roman sufficient to in- voke the exception of Section 5—114(2) had been shown by clear and convincing evi- dence, was not clearly erroneous. See Krasnov v. Dinan, 465 F.2d 1298 (8d Cir. 1972); Hunt v. Pan American Energy, Inc., 540 F.2d 894, 901 (8th Cir.1976) (clearly erroneous standard applied in context of “clear and convincing” state evidentiary burden). Because we must therefore accept those findings, we conclude, as did the district court, that Roman’s attempt to draw on the letter of credit “had no basis in fact.” Because Mr. Roman knew that the pre-September 11, 1979 invoices had already been paid, he could have had “no bona fide claim to payment.” See Intraworld, supra, 461 Pa., at 361, 336 A.2d, at 325.VI.
I
II
An issuer must honor a draft or demand for payment which complies with the terms of the relevant credit regardless of whether the goods or documents conform to the underlying contract for sale or other contract between the customer and beneficiary.
The cardinal precept that a letter of credit is independent of, and to be construed without reference to, other contracts or arrangements, excludes adjudication of collateral controversies. A showing, however convincing, that there has been a breach of a collateral contract has no relevance to a dispute about the proper performance of a letter of credit contract. A transaction within the purview of Section 5-114 must, therefore, be so intimately related to the independent letter of credit contract as to be an implied term of that contract.
III
IV
In sum, I believe that the conduct of the seller here, however questionable, is not the kind of fraud that would justify the grant of an injunction against the honor of a letter of credit. In any event, because of the role letters of credit play in modern commerce, disappointed parties to the transactions underlying these letters should be compelled to resolve their disputes in a court of law. Equitable injunctions restraining banks from honoring letters of credit should be confined to narrowly limited circumstances so as to preserve the integrity and efficiency of this method of financing commercial transactions.1.Paragraph five of the letter provided: Drafts, when presented for negotiation, must be accompanied by the following documents: (a) Your invoice: (b) Your signed statement certifying that Michter’s Distillery, Inc., has not paid in full such invoice rendered on the above mentioned purchase order in accordance with your normal terms and policies, and the amount due and payable to you by reason of the nonpayment of such purchase order.
2.On June 26, 1979 Michter’s changed its name to Distillery Road, Inc. and sold its assets, including the right to use the name Michter’s Distillery, to T.D. Veru, Inc. The Bank was assured by Veru that all obligations of Michter’s incurred before July 26, 1979 would be paid by Veru.
3One invoice dated August 8, 1979 and four invoices dated August 20, 1979.
4Roman had previously filed an action de- manding payment, from istillery Road, Inc. and the guarantors of Michter’s Distillery, for some of the five invoices, dated after September 11, 1979, to which oman had allocated Veru’s wire payment. Civ. No. 79-1583 (M.D. Pa.). Roman had also counterclaimed for payment of these same goods, in response to Veru’s claim based on allegedly defective merchandise and unfair competition. Civ. No. 80-0026 (M.D.Pa.). On December 4, 1980, Roman filed a motion asking to consolidate the present action with Civ. No. 79-1583 and with Roman’s counterclaim in Civ. No. 80-0026. This motion was denied by order of January 9, 1981.
5This contention was set forth as Defendant’s Seventh Defense, and was stated as follows: 15. It is believed and therefore averred that all invoices to plaintiff for ceramic decanters, prior to September 1, 1979 have been paid in full.
612A P.S. § 5-114(2) provides:
(2) Unless otherwise agreed when documents appear on their face to comply with the terms of a credit but a required document does not in fact conform to the warranties made on negotiation or transfer of a document of title (Section 7-507) or of a security (Section 8-306) or is forged or fraudulent or there is fraud in the transaction
(a) the issuer must honor the draft or demand for payment if honor is demanded by a negotiating bank or other holder of the draft or demand which has taken the draft or demand under the credit and under circumstances which would make it a holder in due course (Section 3-302) and in an appropriate case would make it a person to whom a document of title has been duly negotiated (Section 7-502) or a bona fide purchaser of a security (Section 8-302); and
(b) in all other cases as against its customer, an issuer acting in good faith may honor the draft or demand for payment despite notification from the customer of fraud, forgery or other defect not apparent on the face of the documents but a court of appropriate jurisdiction may enjoin such honor.
(emphasis added)
7The court noted that, although § 5—114(2)(b) provides expressly only that the bank may honor the draft, and may be enjoined from honoring, the Code also provides that the bank may refuse to honor. App. 209a (citing U.C.C. § 5-114 Comment (2): ‘When, however, no innocent third parties as defined in subsection (a) are involved the issuer is no longer under a duty to honor.”) (emphasis added).
8Upon Roman’s subsequent motion to enter judgment in favor of Roman on the Bank’s counterclaim for attorney’s fees, the court dismissed the Bank’s counterclaim without prejudice. No appeal from that order is before us.
9Roman contends that the Bank’s seventh defense fails to set forth affirmatively the defense of fraud, as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c), and that it fails to state with particularity the circumstances constituting fraud, as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). Roman did not raise this contention until its second motion for summary judgment, filed after the court had filed its detailed statement of the applicable law and of the factual issues in dispute. Thus, if Roman did not waive this contention, it is at any rate clear, both from Roman’s own memoranda addressed to the trial court discussing the detailed factual issues, and from the careful discussion provided by the district court, that Roman was in no way prejudicted.
10Intraworld involved a controversy that concerned whether, under the law of Switzerland, the lessor, Cymbalista, had terminated a lease of a Swiss hotel thus releasing the lessee, Intraworld, from payment of rent under the lease. Allegedly contingent on this question was the question whether the Swiss lessor could draw upon a letter of credit that the Girard Trust Bank had issued as security in connection with the lease. Because of the context in which the controversy arose (the denial of a preliminary injunction), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court was required to determine only if there was “an apparently reasonable ground”’ for the trial court’s refusal of the injunction. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that because Intraworld, in this situation, had failed to show that Cymbalista lacked a bona fide claim to rent, there was “an apparently reasonable ground for refusing an injunction.” Intraworld, supra, 461 Pa., at 363, 336 A.2d, at 327. Thus, despite the preliminary injunction context, the court did hold that the party relying on section 5-114(2) must show "no bona fide claim to payment” before the issuing bank may refuse to honor a draft on a letter of credit.
11The court stated: Letters of credit have long served as a financial device in international sales of goods. The primary purpose of a letter of credit is to provide assurance to the seller of goods, (i.e., the “beneficiary,” see 12A P-.S. § 5-103(1)(d)) of prompt payment upon presentation of documents. A seller who would otherwise have only the solvency and good faith of his buyer as assurance of payment may, with a letter of credit, rely cn the full responsibility of a bank. Promptness is assured by the engagement of the bank to honor drafts upon the presentation of documents. The great utility of letters of credit flows from the independence of the issuer-bank’s engagement from the underlying contract between beneficiary and customer. Longstanding case law has established that, unless otherwise agreed, the issuer deals only in documents. If the documents presented conform to the requirements of the credit, the issuer may and must honor demands for payment, regardless of whether the goods conform to the underlying contract between beneficiary and customer. Intraworld Indus., supra, 461 Pa., at 357, 336 A.2d, at 323 (footnote omitted).
12The court stated: In light of the basic rule of the independence of the issuer’s engagement and the importance of this rule to the effectuation of the purposes of the letter of credit, we think that the circumstances which will justify an injunction against honor must be narrowly limited to situations of fraud in which the wrongdoing of the beneficiary has so vitiated the entire transaction that the legitimate purposes of the independence of the issuer’s obligation would no longer be served. A court of equity has the limited duty of ‘guaranteeing that [the beneficiary] not be allowed to take unconscientious advantage of the situation and run off with plaintiff’s money on a pro forma declaration which has absolutely no basis in fact.’ Dynamics Corp. of America v. Citizens and Southern National Bank, 356 F.Supp. 991, 999 (N.D.Ga.1973) (emphasis supplied). Id., 461 Pa., at 359, 336 A.2d, at 324-25.
13Sztejn, on which great reliance was placed in Intraworld, involved a letter of credit issued to secure payment for a shipment of bristles. The complaint alleged that, although the documents accompanying the draft on their face conformed to the letter of credit, in fact, they were fraudulent because they represented not bristles, but boxes of worthless material fraudulently filled and shipped by the vendor of the alleged goods. The plaintiff buyer sought to enjoin payment to the seller on a draft drawn under the letter of credit; the bank moved to dismiss the plaintiff’s action for failure to state a claim for relief. The Sztejn court denied the bank’s motion to dismiss the plaintiff's complaint. It held that, where the seller was deemed to be fraudulent and the bank was deemed to have been given notice of the fraud in presentation of the draft, payment of the draft would properly be enjoined.
14Judge Adams expresses concern that issuing banks will “be placed in the position of having to develop ... a record” of the sort developed by the district court in this case, before they may safely refuse, on grounds of fraud, to hon- or drafts on letters of credit. At 1218—1219. We observe, however, that the obligations placed on issuing banks with respect to notice of relevant facts are prescribed by the UCC itself. 12A P.S. § 1-201(26) provides in relevant part: A person “notifies” or “gives” a notice or notification to another by taking such steps as may be reasonably required to inform the other in ordinary course whether or not such other actually comes to know of it. 12A P.S. § 1-201(25) provides in relevant part: A person has “notice” of a fact when (a) he has actual knowledge of it; or (b) he has received a notice or notification of it; or (c) from all the facts and circumstances known to him at the time in question he has reason to know that it exists. In the present case, Mr. Davis, a guarantor of Michter’s account to Roman, phoned Mr. Buch- er, the senior vice president of the bank who had issued the letter of credit to Roman, and informed him that all invoices dated before September 1979 had been paid and that the obligation of the bank under the letter had therefore terminated. App. 412a—16a (testimony of Mr. Bucher). The district court was cor- rect in concluding that a phone call to the responsible bank official by a customer well known to him was “such [a] step[ ] as may be reasonably required to inform” the bank that the invoices had been paid, and that Roman’s draft was therefore an attempt to be paid twice for these invoices. App. 208a—09a.
15The district court opinion characterizes the contradictions in Roman’s position: On one hand, Mr. Roman swears that the agreement reached at the meeting was for Veru to pay only for all invoices dated on or before September 11, 1979. This position is echoed by all parties in this proceeding and is supported by the available documents. (PX—2; PX—4.) We are firmly convinced that this was the agreement. On the other hand, Mr. Roman dispatched the October 18, 1979 letter in which he claimed that the agreement reached at the meeting was to pay for most, but not all, of the pre-September 11, 1979 [invoices], for all five invoices dated after September 11, 1979, and for some item of Mr. Roman’s creation, a pro forma invoice. When questioned about Veru’s receipt of the October 18, 1979 letter and whether it led to any discussions, Mr. Bower responded: A. Yes, we immediately recognized it was absolutely not what we agreed to. Q. And— A. We thought it rather comical that Mr. Roman would find us paying invoices that had yet to even be billed, “pro formas,” while at the same time leaving open invoices that are more than 30 days old. It is ridiculous on its face. (Bower 38-39.) We agree with Mr. Bower’s assessment of the alleged allocation.
App. 200a.
16The court stated: Mr. Roman, however, intentionally misapplied the payment to all five post-September 11, 1979 invoices and the fictional pro forma invoice. He knew that Veru had satisfied its agreement with Roman and had paid for all pre-September 1, 1979 invoices, but he juggled Roman’s record and the payment to show that five of those invoices remained unpaid. Having done so, he attempted to be paid twice for those invoices by drawing on the letter of credit.
App. 205a.
17In Easton, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court explained the clear, direct, precise and convincing evidence standard as follows: The meaning of [the requirement of clear and convincing evidence] is that ‘[plaintiffs’] witnesses must be found to be credible, that the facts to which they testify are distinctly remembered and the details thereof narrated exactly and in due order, and that their testimony is so clear, direct, weighty, and convincing as to enable the jury to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of the precise facts in issue.’ Broida, to Use of Day v. Travelers Insurance Co., supra, 316 Pa. [444] at 448, 175 A. [492] at page 494. Easton v. Washington County Insurance Co., 391 Pa. 28, 137 A.2d 332, 337 (1957).
1See Skilton, Some Comments on the Com- ments to the Uniform Commercial Code, 1966 Wis.L.Rev. 597.