GARZA, Circuit Judge:
American bank did not notify German bank of difficulty in payment on international collection order which came due on arrival of goods in Houston; the collection order was eventually dishonored. The district court held that the American bank did not know, and had no duty to inquire, whether goods had arrived, and entered take nothing judgment. Because we find that the American bank was on notice of the possibility of dishonor and should have told the German bank of the problem in collection, we REVERSE.
FACTS
In January of 1986, J & J Wine, an American company, ordered a shipment of wine from a German firm, Rheinberg Kellerei GmbH, through an importer, Frank Sutton & Co.1 Payment was to be made through an international letter of collection handled by Edekabank in Germany and Brooksfield National Bank of Commerce Bank in San Antonio (“NBC Bank”).2 On March 27, NBC Bank received the letter of collection, bill of lading and invoices from Edeka.3 The letter of collection noted that payment was due “on arrival of goods in Houston harbor,” and called for NBC Bank to notify Sutton “in case of any difficulty of lack payment.” The invoices noted an estimated time of arrival: April 2, 1986. NBC Bank then presented the documents to J & J Wine on March 27.
There is some dispute as to what, exactly, J & J Wine told NBC Bank about its financial situation at the time, but it is sure that J & J Wine did not pay the amount due, and instead asked NBC Bank to hold the letter for a time while J & J Wine worked to raise the money for payment. NBC Bank did not notify Edeka or Sutton of J & J Wine’s failure to pay on presentment. In fact, NBC Bank did nothing further until early May, when Sutton informed them that the wine was still at the Houston port and NBC Bank cabled Edeka for further instructions.
The wine had arrived in Houston on March 31, but NBC Bank did not receive notice of that. Because J & J Wine had not taken delivery of it, the wine sat, exposed, at Houston harbor in metal containers until it had deteriorated completely. U.S. Customs agents eventually sold it at auction.4 [483]*483J & J Wine subsequently went out of business, and Rheinberg Kellerei was never paid for the wine.
Rheinberg Kellerei then brought this suit, alleging that NBC Bank had negligently failed to inform it of J & J Wine’s failure to pay, and that because of that negligence, the wine had spoiled at Houston harbor. After a bench trial, the district court entered a take-nothing judgment for NBC Bank.5 The court reasoned that, because payment was not due until the wine’s arrival, and NBC Bank had no notice of that arrival and no duty to inquire further, NBC Bank had no knowledge that J & J Wine was in breach of the payment terms. For that reason, the district court held that NBC Bank could not be held liable for failure to inform Edeka of J & J Wine’s default.
Complaining that the district court improperly applied the requirements of the International Rules for Collection (the “Rules”) and erred in construing the letter of collection itself, Rheinberg Kellerei brought this appeal.
DISCUSSION
I. Duty to Inform
NBC Bank presented the letter of collection and the other documents to J & J Wine for payment on March 27, 1986, before the wine had arrived and before the payment was due. Rheinberg Kellerei argues that, regardless of whether NBC Bank knew when the wine had arrived, once NBC Bank presented the documents, it had a duty to inform Edeka of any problem in collecting J & J Wine’s payment. We agree. That duty arises both from the Rules and the collection letter itself.
A. Letter of Collection
The letter, which is the primary source of responsibility in this case, instructs NBC Bank to notify Sutton “in case of any difficulty of lack payment.” 6 The district court found that section demanded notice only if there were a “lack of payment or failure to pay.” Likewise, NBC Bank emphasizes that the trigger for notice is a lack of payment.
What the court below and NBC Bank ignore is the word “difficulty.” The letter did not instruct NBC Bank to notify Sutton only if there were a default, or a failure to pay, or a lack of payment. Rather, NBC Bank was called on to act also if there were any difficulty in collecting payment. And the request that NBC Bank hold the letter while J & J Wine sought financing certainly posed a difficulty in collection. Once NBC Bank knew that J & J Wine had asked for time to come up with the money, it should have notified Sutton in accordance with the letter’s instructions.
The Rules specify that any special instructions posted on a letter of collection should be “complete and precise.” General Provisions, sec. C. While the instructions given on this letter could have been in clearer language, they are sufficiently precise to make NBC Bank aware of its duty to notify Sutton once difficulty arose in the collection.
B. International Rules for Collection
Article 20(iii)(c) of the Rules provides that the “collecting bank [NBC Bank] must send without delay advice of non-payment or advice of non-acceptance to the bank from whom the collecting order was received [Edeka].” The court below and NBC Bank submit that section called on NBC Bank to notify Edeka if J & J Wine had not paid on the letter at the time it came due: on arrival of the goods in Houston harbor. And, they argue, since NBC Bank had no actual notice of the arrival of the goods, it did not breach that duty to notify.
[484]*484The issue, it seems, is the definition of “non-payment” as it is used in Art. 20(iii)(c). Does it refer to a failure to pay on presentment? Does it require an affirmative statement of intent not to pay? Must the due date have arrived? No court has yet defined the term and its attendant duties, so we must look for guidance elsewhere.7
The Rules were adopted to aid in “defining, simplifying and harmonizing the practices and terminology used in international banking.” I.C.C. Banking Commission, Statement of Services to Business. They serve, for the international banking community, the same function as the Uniform Commercial Code does for domestic players. There is no reason, then, to ignore the U.C.C. as an advisory source.
Section 4.502 of the U.C.C. governs payment of “on arrival” drafts, such as were presented in our case. Tex.Bus. & Com. Code Ann., sec. 4.502 (Tex.U.C.C.) (Vernon’s 1968). Under that section, a bank such as NBC Bank may, but need not, present the documents to the buyer before the goods arrive. But if the buyer does not pay at that time, the bank must notify the seller’s bank: “Refusal to pay or accept because the goods have not arrived is not dishonor; the bank must notify its trans-feror of such refusal but need not present the draft again_” U.C.C. sec. 4.502 (emphasis added). The U.C.C. imposes on the presenting bank a duty to notify the seller’s bank of any delay or failure to pay on presentment of an “on arrival” draft, whether or not the draft is yet due.
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GARZA, Circuit Judge:
American bank did not notify German bank of difficulty in payment on international collection order which came due on arrival of goods in Houston; the collection order was eventually dishonored. The district court held that the American bank did not know, and had no duty to inquire, whether goods had arrived, and entered take nothing judgment. Because we find that the American bank was on notice of the possibility of dishonor and should have told the German bank of the problem in collection, we REVERSE.
FACTS
In January of 1986, J & J Wine, an American company, ordered a shipment of wine from a German firm, Rheinberg Kellerei GmbH, through an importer, Frank Sutton & Co.1 Payment was to be made through an international letter of collection handled by Edekabank in Germany and Brooksfield National Bank of Commerce Bank in San Antonio (“NBC Bank”).2 On March 27, NBC Bank received the letter of collection, bill of lading and invoices from Edeka.3 The letter of collection noted that payment was due “on arrival of goods in Houston harbor,” and called for NBC Bank to notify Sutton “in case of any difficulty of lack payment.” The invoices noted an estimated time of arrival: April 2, 1986. NBC Bank then presented the documents to J & J Wine on March 27.
There is some dispute as to what, exactly, J & J Wine told NBC Bank about its financial situation at the time, but it is sure that J & J Wine did not pay the amount due, and instead asked NBC Bank to hold the letter for a time while J & J Wine worked to raise the money for payment. NBC Bank did not notify Edeka or Sutton of J & J Wine’s failure to pay on presentment. In fact, NBC Bank did nothing further until early May, when Sutton informed them that the wine was still at the Houston port and NBC Bank cabled Edeka for further instructions.
The wine had arrived in Houston on March 31, but NBC Bank did not receive notice of that. Because J & J Wine had not taken delivery of it, the wine sat, exposed, at Houston harbor in metal containers until it had deteriorated completely. U.S. Customs agents eventually sold it at auction.4 [483]*483J & J Wine subsequently went out of business, and Rheinberg Kellerei was never paid for the wine.
Rheinberg Kellerei then brought this suit, alleging that NBC Bank had negligently failed to inform it of J & J Wine’s failure to pay, and that because of that negligence, the wine had spoiled at Houston harbor. After a bench trial, the district court entered a take-nothing judgment for NBC Bank.5 The court reasoned that, because payment was not due until the wine’s arrival, and NBC Bank had no notice of that arrival and no duty to inquire further, NBC Bank had no knowledge that J & J Wine was in breach of the payment terms. For that reason, the district court held that NBC Bank could not be held liable for failure to inform Edeka of J & J Wine’s default.
Complaining that the district court improperly applied the requirements of the International Rules for Collection (the “Rules”) and erred in construing the letter of collection itself, Rheinberg Kellerei brought this appeal.
DISCUSSION
I. Duty to Inform
NBC Bank presented the letter of collection and the other documents to J & J Wine for payment on March 27, 1986, before the wine had arrived and before the payment was due. Rheinberg Kellerei argues that, regardless of whether NBC Bank knew when the wine had arrived, once NBC Bank presented the documents, it had a duty to inform Edeka of any problem in collecting J & J Wine’s payment. We agree. That duty arises both from the Rules and the collection letter itself.
A. Letter of Collection
The letter, which is the primary source of responsibility in this case, instructs NBC Bank to notify Sutton “in case of any difficulty of lack payment.” 6 The district court found that section demanded notice only if there were a “lack of payment or failure to pay.” Likewise, NBC Bank emphasizes that the trigger for notice is a lack of payment.
What the court below and NBC Bank ignore is the word “difficulty.” The letter did not instruct NBC Bank to notify Sutton only if there were a default, or a failure to pay, or a lack of payment. Rather, NBC Bank was called on to act also if there were any difficulty in collecting payment. And the request that NBC Bank hold the letter while J & J Wine sought financing certainly posed a difficulty in collection. Once NBC Bank knew that J & J Wine had asked for time to come up with the money, it should have notified Sutton in accordance with the letter’s instructions.
The Rules specify that any special instructions posted on a letter of collection should be “complete and precise.” General Provisions, sec. C. While the instructions given on this letter could have been in clearer language, they are sufficiently precise to make NBC Bank aware of its duty to notify Sutton once difficulty arose in the collection.
B. International Rules for Collection
Article 20(iii)(c) of the Rules provides that the “collecting bank [NBC Bank] must send without delay advice of non-payment or advice of non-acceptance to the bank from whom the collecting order was received [Edeka].” The court below and NBC Bank submit that section called on NBC Bank to notify Edeka if J & J Wine had not paid on the letter at the time it came due: on arrival of the goods in Houston harbor. And, they argue, since NBC Bank had no actual notice of the arrival of the goods, it did not breach that duty to notify.
[484]*484The issue, it seems, is the definition of “non-payment” as it is used in Art. 20(iii)(c). Does it refer to a failure to pay on presentment? Does it require an affirmative statement of intent not to pay? Must the due date have arrived? No court has yet defined the term and its attendant duties, so we must look for guidance elsewhere.7
The Rules were adopted to aid in “defining, simplifying and harmonizing the practices and terminology used in international banking.” I.C.C. Banking Commission, Statement of Services to Business. They serve, for the international banking community, the same function as the Uniform Commercial Code does for domestic players. There is no reason, then, to ignore the U.C.C. as an advisory source.
Section 4.502 of the U.C.C. governs payment of “on arrival” drafts, such as were presented in our case. Tex.Bus. & Com. Code Ann., sec. 4.502 (Tex.U.C.C.) (Vernon’s 1968). Under that section, a bank such as NBC Bank may, but need not, present the documents to the buyer before the goods arrive. But if the buyer does not pay at that time, the bank must notify the seller’s bank: “Refusal to pay or accept because the goods have not arrived is not dishonor; the bank must notify its trans-feror of such refusal but need not present the draft again_” U.C.C. sec. 4.502 (emphasis added). The U.C.C. imposes on the presenting bank a duty to notify the seller’s bank of any delay or failure to pay on presentment of an “on arrival” draft, whether or not the draft is yet due.
If section 4.502 were applied to our case, NBC Bank would have a duty to notify Edeka of J & J Wine’s failure to pay the letter of collection when it was presented on March 27, even though the goods were not yet in Houston harbor and the payment was not yet due. This is not to say that J & J Wine was in default at that time or had dishonored the letter. Rather, the notice is an act of prudence, an exercise in due care. And, as the aims of the Rules and the U.C.C. are more than consistent, and both demand the exercise of due care, we find that the Rules impose the same duty. NBC Bank should have notified Edeka of J & J Wine’s failure to pay at presentment, as that failure constituted a “non-payment” under Art. 20(iii)(c).
NBC Bank and the court below rely heavily on the fact that NBC Bank had no actual knowledge of the wine’s arrival in Houston, and had no duty to inquire further. We agree with those premises, but do not feel they affect NBC Bank’s duty to notify. That duty arose — under both the Rules and the letter itself — when J & J Wine failed to pay on presentment and asked for time. Arrival of the wine did not trigger it. And NBC Bank cannot avoid liability by hiding from knowledge of arrival and claiming that ignorance as a defense.
II. Damages
State law governs the measure of damages in a case such as this one. Gathercrest, Ltd. v. First American Bank & Trust, 805 F.2d 995, 997 (11th Cir.1986). Tex.Bus. & Com.Code Ann., sec. 2.709(a) (Tex.U.C.C.) (Vernon’s 1968) gives the relevant standard: “the seller may recover, together with any incidental damages under the next section, the price (1) of goods accepted or of conforming goods lost or damaged ... after risk of their loss has passed to the buyer.” 8 Risk of loss had passed to J & J Wine when the goods arrived at Houston harbor and were available for J & J Wine to take delivery. Tex. Bus. & Com.Code Ann., sec. 2.509(a)(2) (Tex.U.C.C.) (Vernon’s 1968). The district court found that because the wine was [485]*485exposed for such a long period in Houston harbor, it was “ ‘over cooked’ and had deteriorated, lost its original flavor, freshness, was flat and should not be sold into the market that it was intended.” Since the goods were so damaged, Rheinberg Keller-ei is entitled to the contract price plus the unpaid freight costs, as provided in U.C.C. section 2.709(a)(1).9
NBC Bank is entitled to a credit for the net proceeds of any resale of the damaged wine. U.C.C. sec. 2.709(b). Customs agents sold the wine at auction, but we have no evidence before us of the price paid or the net amount remaining after customs fees, wharfage, and the costs of the auction were paid. For that reason, we remand this case to the district court for the limited purpose of calculating that net amount. After finding that net amount, the district court should enter judgment for Rheinberg Kellerei for the contract price plus freight charges, less the net proceeds of the customs auction.
CONCLUSION
NBC Bank had a duty to notify Edeka or Sutton, which was triggered when J & J Wine failed to pay the letter of collection on presentment and asked for more time. That duty arose from two sources: the Rules and the letter itself. Though payment was not due until the wine arrived in Houston harbor, that arrival was not a triggering event for the duty to arise, and lack of knowledge of it is no defense. The judgment of the district court is, therefore, REVERSED, and this cause is REMANDED for calculation of damages.
It is so ordered.