Trifinery v. Banque Paribas

762 F. Supp. 1119, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6113, 1991 WL 73668
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 2, 1991
Docket90 Civ. 0673 (JES)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 762 F. Supp. 1119 (Trifinery v. Banque Paribas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trifinery v. Banque Paribas, 762 F. Supp. 1119, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6113, 1991 WL 73668 (S.D.N.Y. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SPRIZZO, District Judge.

Plaintiffs Trifinery, Petcor Services, Inc., and Petroserve Ltd. (collectively “Trifi-nery”) bring this action against Banque Paribas (“Paribas” or “the Bank”) alleging that Paribas wrongfully refused payment on a letter of credit opened by Vitol, S.A., Inc. (“Vitol”) in favor of Trifinery. Presently pending before the Court is Paribas’ motion for summary judgment. 1 For the reasons set forth below, the motion is denied.

BACKGROUND

The Underlying Transaction

This action arises out of a transaction between Trifinery and Vitol involving the sale and processing of oil, which was structured as follows: (1) Vitol agreed to sell to Trifinery 437,000 barrels of 100% Syrian straight run fuel oil of normal export quality shipped on a vessel named the “Bulk Ravenna;” (2) Trifinery was to process that crude oil into component parts known as vacuum gas oil (“VGO”), vacuum tower bottoms (“VTB”) and distillate, and was to sell those components back to Vitol; 2 and (3) Trifinery was to then repurchase the VTB from Vitol for sale to others as asphalt. See Affidavit of Sanford Brass (“Brass Aff.”) at ¶1¶ 18-22 & Exs. B-C; Affidavit of Neil E. Kelley (“Kelley Aff.”) at tiff 3, 6, 8, 10-14. However, although Trifinery agreed to sell the VTB to Vitol after processing, it was not contemplated that the VTB would ever actually leave Trifinery’s tanks, because, as noted above, the VTB would ultimately be sold back to Trifinery. See Brass Aff. at 11 81; Kelley Aff. at Ml 10, 14.

The agreement also provided that the parties would secure their respective obligations by opening letters of credit in favor of the other contracting party. Thus, Trifi-nery caused Bank Indosuez to issue a letter of credit in the amount of $3,175,800.00 to secure its payment obligations to Vitol, whereas in turn Vitol caused Banque Pari-bas to open the letter of credit at issue in this litigation in the amount of $3,504,-447.90 to secure its obligations to Trifinery. See Brass Aff. at Ml 21, 33-34, 37 & Exs. I, L; Kelley Aff. at HU 7, 9.

Subsequently, when disputes arose regarding the quality of the crude oil aboard the “Bulk Ravenna,” see Brass Aff. at 111123-26, 41-45, Trifinery and Vitol engaged in extensive negotiations which led to an agreement to reduce the amount of crude oil that Trifinery was obliged to purchase and process and a reduction in the percentages of VGO to VTB expected to be yielded from the crude oil delivered to Trifi-nery. See Brass Aff. at ÍÍ1Í 25-32 & Exs. G-H. However, when Trifinery concluded that the VTB that it could produce from the crude oil delivered by Vitol could not be sold profitably for asphalt, it notified Vitol that it would not repurchase the VTB from Vitol as agreed, but instead would attempt to market it for Vitol’s account. See Brass Aff. at 11¶ 41-43. Vitol did not consent to Trifinery’s proposed sale for Vitol’s account, but decided to take no action until the VTB was sold. See id. at Ml 44-46. Toward that end, both parties extended their letters of credit to December 15, 1989. See id. at Ml 47-48. *1121 No agreement was reached. Although Trifinery offered to pay part of the amount due for the disputed VTB and sent a partial payment in December 1989, Vitol continued to insist that Trifinery pay the entire amount due for the VTB. See id. at ¶¶ 53-57. When Trifinery failed to comply with Vitol’s demand that that sum be paid by wire transfer, Vitol drew upon and was paid $1,099,834.13 on the Bank Indosuez letter of credit, a sum that did not take into account or recognize Trifinery’s rejection of its obligation to repurchase the VTB from Vitol. See Kelley Aff. at ¶¶ 15, 17-26. In response, Trifinery unsuccessfully sought to draw down upon the Banque Paribas letter of credit based upon its contention that Vitol was obligated to pay it for the VTB it agreed to purchase from Trifinery but that Trifinery was not obliged to repurchase that VTB from Vitol.

The Banque Paribas Letter of Credit

The letter of credit issued by Banque Paribas in favor of Trifinery provided as follows:

We hereby open our irrevocable standby letter of credit No. 719430/AR in favor of Trifinery, Houston, Texas by order and for account of Vitol S.A., Inc., Stamford, Ct available at sight for an approximate amount of 3,504,447.90 U.S. Dollars against:
1. Copy(ies) of a signed commercial invoice(s) covering approximately 99,540 barrels of vacuum gasoil at USD 18.585 per barrel and/or approximately 125,610 barrels of vacuum tower bottoms at USD 11.25 per barrel and/or approximately 11,850 barrels of distillate at USD 20.37 per barrel F.O.B. basis Corpus Christi, Texas delivered during September and/or October 1989.
2. Copy of document, purportedly issued or cosigned by the independent inspector for verification of quantity per shore tank down gauge and quality. Shore tank composite quality must meet the following contractual specifications: [specifications for VGO omitted]
The specifications for the distillate and vacuum tower bottoms should be consistent with the production of straight run Syrian fuel oil.
3. Copies of an original clean on board ocean bill of lading issued or endorsed to the order of Vitol S.A., Inc. and or copies of [independent inspectors report] indicating shipper as “Trifinery” and cosig-nee as “Vitol S.A., Inc.”
4. A statement purportedly signed by an authorized representative of Trifinery stating that the invoiced product resulted 100 percent from the processing of the straight run Syrian fuel oil received by Trifinery from the vessel “Bulk Raven-na” supplied by Vitol and that the product has been delivered and that although the invoice(s) presented under this letter of credit was (were) due according to contract terms, Vitol S.A., Inc. failed to make payment and payment remains outstanding at the time of drawing.

See Affidavit of Anthony Reardon (“Rear-don Aff.”) at Ex. I. 3

On the morning of December 15, 1989, the date that the letter of credit was due to expire, Trifinery presented documents to Paribas in support of a request for payment under that letter of credit in the amount of $1,413,891 for the sale of VTB to Vitol. See Reardon Aff. at ¶ 4 & Ex. 2. The Bank determined that these documents did not comply with the terms of the letter of credit for the following reasons: (1) the invoice presented was an original whereas the letter of credit required a copy; (2) the invoice misidentified Trifinery’s place of business; (3) the two certificates of weight submitted were not identified as independent inspectors’ reports and could not be related to the September/October delivery date; and (4) the third document required by the letter of credit, an independent inspector’s report or bill of lading identifying Trifinery as the “shipper” and Vitol as the

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Bluebook (online)
762 F. Supp. 1119, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6113, 1991 WL 73668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trifinery-v-banque-paribas-nysd-1991.