Illinois Statutes
§ 5-106 — Issuance, amendment, cancellation, and duration
Illinois § 5-106
JurisdictionIllinois
TopicBUSINESS AND EMPLOYMENT
Ch. 810COMMERCIAL CODE
Act 810 ILCS 5/Uniform Commercial Code.
Art.Article 5 - Letters Of Credit
This text of Illinois § 5-106 (Issuance, amendment, cancellation, and duration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
810 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5-106 (2026).
Text
(a)A letter of credit is issued and becomes enforceable according to its terms against the issuer when the issuer sends or otherwise transmits it to the person requested to advise or to the beneficiary. A letter of credit is revocable only if it so provides.
(b)After a letter of credit is issued, rights and obligations of a beneficiary, applicant, confirmer, and issuer are not affected by an amendment or cancellation to which that person has not consented except to the extent the letter of credit provides that it is revocable or that the issuer may amend or cancel the letter of credit without that consent.
(c)If there is no stated expiration date or other provision that determines its duration, a letter of credit expires one year after its stated date of issuance or, if none is stated,
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Legislative History
(Source: P.A. 89-534, eff. 1-1-97.)
Nearby Sections
15
§ 5-101
Short title§ 5-102
Definitions§ 5-103
Scope§ 5-104
Formal requirements§ 5-105
Consideration§ 5-109
Fraud and forgery§ 5-110
Warranties§ 5-111
Remedies§ 5-112
Transfer of letter of credit§ 5-113
Transfer by operation of law§ 5-114
Assignment of proceeds§ 5-115
Statute of limitationsCite This Page — Counsel Stack
Bluebook (online)
Illinois § 5-106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/il/810/5-106.