Under this principle, banks assume no liability or
responsibility for the form, sufficiency, accuracy, genuineness, falsification
or legal effect of any documents, or for the general and/or particular
conditions stipulated in the documents or superimposed thereon, nor do they
assume any liability or responsibility for the description, quantity, weight,
quality, condition, packing, delivery, value or existence of the goods
represented by any documents, or for the good faith or acts and/or omissions,
solvency, performance or standing of the consignor, the carriers, or the
insurers of the goods, or any other person whomsoever.[1] (Transfield Philippines, Inc. vs. Luzon Hydro
Corporation, et al., G.R. No. 146717, November 22, 2004, [Tinga])
The
so-called "independence principle" assures the seller or the
beneficiary of prompt payment independent of any breach of the main contract
and precludes the issuing bank from determining whether the main contract is
actually accomplished or not. (supra)
The
independent nature of the letter of credit may be: (a) independence in toto where the credit is independent
from the justification aspect and is a separate obligation from the underlying
agreement like for instance a typical standby; or (b) independence may be only
as to the justification aspect like in a commercial letter of credit or
repayment standby, which is identical with the same obligations under the
underlying agreement. In both cases the payment may be enjoined if in the light
of the purpose of the credit the payment of the credit would constitute
fraudulent abuse of the credit.[2] (supra)
As
discussed above, in a letter of credit transaction, such as in this case, where
the credit is stipulated as irrevocable, there is a definite undertaking by the
issuing bank to pay the beneficiary provided that the stipulated documents are
presented and the conditions of the credit are complied with.[3]
Precisely, the independence principle liberates the issuing bank from the duty
of ascertaining compliance by the parties in the main contract. As the
principle's nomenclature clearly suggests, the obligation under the letter of
credit is independent of the related and originating contract. In brief, the
letter of credit is separate and distinct from the underlying transaction.
Given
the nature of letters of credit, petitioner's argument—that it is only the
issuing bank that may invoke the independence principle on letters of
credit—does not impress this Court. To say that the independence principle may
only be invoked by the issuing banks would render nugatory the purpose for
which the letters of credit are used in commercial transactions. As it is, the
independence doctrine works to the benefit of both the issuing bank and the
beneficiary.
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