Exxon Company, U.S.A., a Division of Exxon Corporation, Cross-Appellant v. Banque De Paris Et Des Pays-Bas, Cross-Appellee

867 F.2d 1524, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 132, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3854, 1989 WL 19860
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1989
Docket87-2007
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 867 F.2d 1524 (Exxon Company, U.S.A., a Division of Exxon Corporation, Cross-Appellant v. Banque De Paris Et Des Pays-Bas, Cross-Appellee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Exxon Company, U.S.A., a Division of Exxon Corporation, Cross-Appellant v. Banque De Paris Et Des Pays-Bas, Cross-Appellee, 867 F.2d 1524, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 132, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3854, 1989 WL 19860 (5th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

On remand, the Supreme Court of the United States has directed us to consider Kerr Construction Co. v. Plains National Bank 1 and, taking that decision into account, to reconsider our prior opinion. 2 Because these cases raise an important issue of Texas state law left unsettled by Kerr, a case which may or may not control the outcome of Exxon, we, as a court exercising diversity jurisdiction, have decided to certify the decisive question in this case to the Supreme Court of Texas.

I.

In Exxon, we held that a bank’s obligations under a letter of credit issued in *1525 good faith terminate on the date of expiration specified in the letter even when that date precedes the date on which the underlying contract will be completed. The underlying contract in Exxon consisted of an agreement by Houston Oil & Refining to deliver to Exxon 558,000 barrels of crude oil “during September through December 1981.” To guarantee its performance, Houston obtained a letter of credit from Banque de Paris payable upon Exxon’s presentation of enumerated documents, including certification that Houston “has failed to deliver to Exxon ... 558,000 barrels ... between September and December, 1981.” The letter of credit set October 31, 1981 as its expiry date. Exxon could have insisted on amendments to the letter if it found any provisions unacceptable, but it did not do so. The record reveals that all parties understood that the expiry date occurred before the end of the term in which Houston could satisfy its underlying contractual obligations to Exxon.

We determined that the letter of credit issued by Banque de Paris to Exxon contained no ambiguity; “[t]he expiry date in the letter of credit is as certain as words permit.” 3 Because “[t]he length of time that an issuer remains liable for a failure to perform by its customer is ... a matter of critical importance to the issuing bank, to the customer who must pay for the credit, and to the regulatory authorities,” the “need for a precise expiration date is particularly acute when a standby letter of credit is issued.” 4 We, therefore, held that the letter “required no construction and that it terminated on its express expiry date.” 5

As a federal court sitting only by virtue of diversity jurisdiction, we are bound to follow Texas law in this case. After we had decided Exxon, the Court of Appeals for the Seventh District of Texas published Kerr, a case addressing a “single issue”: the “due date of [a] letter of credit.” 6 The letter of credit at issue in Kerr, dated September 17, 1984, “authorize[d]” its beneficiary “to draw” on the creditor bank if Kerr Construction “has defaulted or failed within ten (10) months to complete” its underlying contractual obligations. The letter of credit stipulated that it “shall be extended without amendment for an additional period of six (6) months from the expiration date hereof unless thirty (30) days prior to such expiration date” the bank elects not to renew it. The letter concluded: “[Y]our drafts ... will be duly honored if presented to us on or before January 1, 1985 ...”

The Texas intermediate appellate court found that “[t]he contract remained uncompleted on 17 July 1985, ten months after the date of the letter[,]” and that the “initial due date” of January 1 “was automatically extended until 1 July 1985.” 7 In an opinion that initially remained unpublished, the court determined that “there is an irreconcilable conflict” between the “condition precedent to the Bank’s liability” — the date of completion of the underlying contract, and the extended July 1 due date. 8 Because the court found the underlying contract “the most significant and essential provision in the [letter of credit] agreement,” 9 it held that the beneficiary of the letter of credit could draft against that letter until the date specified for performance of the underlying contract even though that date extended beyond the expiry date.

The Supreme Court of Texas denied Kerr’s application for appeal with the notation “Writ Denied,” and refused to publish the appellate court’s opinion. The Seventh *1526 District Court subsequently published Kerr.

II.

Before determining the applicability of Kerr to the facts presented in Exxon, we must first decide the status of the Kerr opinion as a correct exposition of Texas state law. The parties differ with respect to the meaning this court should give to the Kerr opinion, considering the manner in which the Texas Supreme Court phrased its denial of writ in. that case.

Under Rule 133 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, the State Supreme Court may decline to hear a case in one of two ways: the court may “refuse” the writ, connoting that the “judgment of the court of appeals is correct and ... the principles of law declared in the opinion ... are correctly determined;” alternatively, the court may state “Writ Denied” to convey that it

is not satisfied that the opinion of the court of appeals in all respects has correctly declared the law, but is of the opinion that the application presents no error of law which requires reversal or which is of such importance to the jurisprudence of the State as to require correction .. , 10

By denying, rather than refusing, the writ in Kerr, the Texas Supreme Court may have intimated that the appellate court’s opinion contained an error of law. If this was the effect of the Texas court action, we are unable to detect what uncorrected error, if any, lurked in the Seventh District’s opinion, and we are, therefore, unable to embrace its legal reasoning and conclusions as a correct enunciation of the single issue of state law with which it dealt.

It is possible that the Texas Supreme Court may have declined to correct the mistake in Kerr because the appellate court’s unpublished decision did not affect the jurisprudence of the state since, under state law, 11 unpublished state court opinions cannot be “cited as authority by counsel or by a court.” The Texas Supreme Court refused to publish Kerr, and the state appellate court published its opinion only after the State Supreme Court had denied Kerr a writ. Thus, it is not clear whether or not the Texas Supreme Court would consider Kerr a proper elaboration of Texas law on letters of credit. Were it to be confronted with the issue raised in Kerr

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867 F.2d 1524, 8 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. 2d (West) 132, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 3854, 1989 WL 19860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-company-usa-a-division-of-exxon-corporation-cross-appellant-v-ca5-1989.