The central issue--how wide that fraud exception should be--is what this book explores in depth.This author compares and critically examines the application of the fraud exception in four major trade jurisdictions the United States, England, Canada, and Australia. With an overall focus on how each jurisdiction s fraud tests treat the autonomy of standby letters of credit, she builds her arguments on such relevant sources and concepts as the following:
- when it can be shown that the beneficiary has no bona fide belief--in the validity of its claim
- demand guarantees;
- international initiatives (ICC Rules and the UN Convention on Independent Guarantee and Standby Letters of Credit);
- the Sztejn Rule;
- parameters of the "fraud in the transaction" defence
- "materiality" standard;
- prerequisites for injunctive relief;
- arguing "fraud in the formation of the contract";
- performance bond cases;
- applying the "breach of good faith" defence;
- "negative stipulation" in the underlying contract; and
- equitable versus statutory/broader notion of unconscionability.
The presentation includes detailed summaries and analyses of leading cases in all four jurisdictions.