The UCC Comes to Nepal, Part III: US Trade Preferences for Nepal Lead to US Law Choices

U.S. Grants Trade Preferences to Nepal

On February 24, 2016, U.S. President Barack Obama signed into law the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015. This new law presents new opportunities for Nepali traders. The law authorizes certain trade preferences for Nepal, allowing duty-free benefits for up to 66 different items, such as carpets, headgear, shawls, scarves, and travel goods. The package of trade preferences is part of the continuing U.S. response to the 2015 earthquakes. A few administrative procedures remain before the law takes effect. President Obama must certify that Nepal is eligible based on the same requirements as the African Growth and Opportunity Act of 2000 (“AGOA”) and the U.S. International Trade Commission must decide whether the law poses any negative implications for the U.S. economy. This article examines two of the most important laws on the international sale of goods in the U.S. and what these laws mean for traders in Nepal.

The UCC

In the U.S., most sales of goods are governed by one of two laws: a domestic code or an international treaty. The domestic law is Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code, or the “UCC.” The UCC was initially proposed by the Uniform Law Commission and the American Law Institute in 1952 and since that time, 49 of the 50 United States of America have adopted Article 2. The U.S., a common law jurisdiction, has several decades’ worth of legal precedent and state court interpretations of this law. The UCC applies by default between U.S. parties, but as you will soon see below, Article 2 can also apply to many international sales of goods as well.

The CISG

The international law for sales of goods is the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, the “CISG” for short. In 1969, the United Nations Commission on International Trade (UNCITRAL) began drafting what became the CISG in 1980. It came into force in 1988 after the first ten countries ratified the treaty. Currently, there are 84 signatory countries, including the United States. Trade between CISG countries, a list that also includes China, Russia, Australia, Brazil, and most of the European Union, represent three-quarters of the world’s trade.

To call this law an “international law” in the U.S. is misleading. It is true that many countries negotiated this law and have since ratified it. But when the U.S. ratified this treaty, it automatically became part of U.S. domestic law. Yet this is hardly the end of the story. The CISG, by its terms, applies to transactions of goods between parties of contracting states (unless the parties choose a different law in their contract). And, according to CISG Article 1(1)(b), the CISG also applies “when the rules of private international law lead to the application of the law of a Contracting State.” Private international law is another term for the “conflict of laws.” In plain English, these are the laws that decide which law a court or tribunal will apply when more than one law could apply. In practice, the CISG will apply to many transactions of goods when at least one party is from CISG country.

The United States, however, is special. The U.S. only agreed to sign the CISG treaty on the reservation that it would not be bound by CISG Article 1(1)(b). This was a necessary concession that the other CISG countries made so that the U.S. would ultimately sign the treaty. Effectively, this reservation allows U.S. courts to apply the UCC in disputes between a U.S. party and a party from a country that has not ratified the CISG, such as Nepal or India. Furthermore, U.S. courts, lacking the decades of experience with the CISG, often look to UCC cases to help them decide even CISG disputes. This home field advantage for domestic laws is hardly unique to the U.S., but this is why the UCC should always be kept in mind when making a deal with a U.S. based trading partner.

What does this mean for Nepal’s Traders?

What does this mean for a Nepalese trader who wants to take advantage the new U.S. trade preferences? It means that Nepal law could apply to their contract (though it seems unlikely that an American party would willingly agree to this), but so could U.S. law: either the UCC or the CISG. One law is not necessarily better than the other; both can offer a client strategic advantages depending on the terms and structure of the deal. American attorneys often prefer the UCC over the CISG (just a Nepalese attorney might prefer Nepali law), but this is often due to the individual attorney’s own familiarity with the UCC rather than the client’s strategic interests. An attorney who is well-versed in both legal regimes can show his or her client the practical effects of including or excluding the default provisions of each statute. More importantly, such an attorney can pick the best law and draft a contract minimizing the legal risks that a client engaged in overseas trade may face. Whether the UCC or the CISG governs a contract can affect not only the negation, formation, terms, and interpretations of the parties’ contract itself, but also affects what remedies are available to either party should something go wrong and what steps a wronged party may have to take before they can take advantage of those remedies.

The UCC Comes to Nepal, Part II

While enacted in 2006, Nepal’s Secured Transaction Act has never been fully implemented.  That is about to change this November when the Secured Transaction Registry Office finally comes online (literally: for the first time in Nepal, the people will have free online access to personal property loan records).

This new legal regime presents a lot of new opportunities for those who are ready for it and a lot of new challenges for those who are not. Over the past two weekends, I have been assisting Mr. Gandhi Pandit, the Founding Partner of Gandhi & Associates, and Mr. Raju Man Singh Malla, a former Secretary in the Government of Nepal, in facilitating training seminars on this new law for senior and high level officials working in the credit departments of Nepal’s banking institutions at the National Banking Institute in Kathmandu.  Both attorneys were involved with drafting the law and Attorney Malla continues to be instrumental in drafting its regulations.

I will be co-authoring with Attorney Pandit a more detailed analysis of this exciting development in Nepali law and what it means in an upcoming article we are expecting to publish in a local business magazine.  In the meantime, below are a few quick points to peak your interest.

The Secured Transactions Act of 2063 is based on U.S. law. 

Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code (“UCC”), on which the Nepali law is based, was developed during the 1940s in the United States and began to be enacted state-by-state in the 1950s.  A uniform system of laws would prove to be crucial to the modernization of interstate commerce in an increasingly connected country, but its initial adoption and eventual success was far from assured at the time.

The U.S. legal system is itself based on the English common law system, where law is made by judges sitting in courts applying legal precedents to the facts before them.  This is quite different than a civil law system based on codes like the UCC.  What is more is that this law was made in the 1940s, in the midst of World War II, and Germany was a civil law country.

While Pennsylvania and Massachusetts were the first states to adopt Article 9 of the UCC, it was not until New York, the most important jurisdiction for banking, adopted Article 9 that the years of efforts by such legal luminaries as Karl Llewellyn and Grant Gilmore began to bear real fruit.  And it took much longer than they had ever imagined.

While there are many protections for creditors inherent in the law, early drafts of the model law also had a lot of protections written in for consumers as well which gave Wall Street some pause.  Without support from its banking constituency, the proposed law hit a brick wall in the New York legislature.  A long, careful study of the law was undertaken and many compromises were made, but it passed.

Nepal will also face some unique challenges as it implements its own new secured transactions law.  But these challenges are necessary for Nepal to take what is a borrowed legal concept and make it its own.  Because that is what this is all about.

Secured transactions are for everyone, not just bankers.

Did you read this far without understanding what a “secured transaction” is?  With apologies to my friends in the law who recently (or not so recently) survived their bar exams, simply put a secured transaction is a loan backed by collateral.

If you make a loan to someone and want to be sure that they will pay you back, you can ask for more than just their good word.  You can agree that something of theirs will be sold to make you whole again if they do not pay you back on their own.  Secured transaction law enforces this agreement for you.

And if you get there first, then you can get paid before any one else does. That is the point of the registry system: to let everyone else know that you’ve got dibs (priority).

Small businesses will have access to credit like never before.

Even the drafters of the UCC had no idea the extent of the goldmine they were sitting on.  For what was at the time a relatively obscure lending practice, took off in a big way: inventory lending.  Growing businesses need working capital if they want to continue to grow and they can get it when they can use their inventory as collateral, both to take out loans from lending institutions, but also to buy new inventory on credit from their suppliers.  Coupled with the concept of the “floating lien” (when collateral includes not only what inventory they currently have in stock but future inventory as well), inventory lending went from a mere radar blip to now accounting for as more or more in total loan value than the traditional banks do in the U.S.  This could become a game-changer in Nepal as well.

Nepal has at least one distinct advantage over the U.S. in this new law.

Nepal will benefit from having a national registry system.  The UCC has been enacted in all 50 United States.  That means that the U.S. has at least 50 different personal property securities registries (this number is actually much higher when we take into account “fixtures”).  As U.S. citizens and residents are free to shift from state to state, this creates real headaches for lenders.

Nepal will face its own political challenges in regard to its newfound federalism, but thankfully the Secured Transactions Registry will not be one of them.

 

The Uniform Commercial Code Comes to Nepal

In two month’s time, Nepal will be implementing a new secured transactions legal regime based on Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.  This weekend I accompanied two senior partners of my new law firm, Gandhi Pandit, founding partner of Gandhi & Associates, and Raju Man Sing Malla, former Secretary of the Government of Nepal, as they facilitated a program at the National Banking Institute (NBI) of Nepal.  The program is designed introduce the Secured Transactions Act, 2063 and its new national registration system to official’s involved in credit and loan transactions in Nepal’s banking and finance institutions.  NBI is located in Naxal and, being on the sixth floor, has lovely views of Kathmandu City.

Introduction to Secured Transaction Act 2063 & effective implementation of the Secured Transactions Registry

 

Effective Implimentation of the Secured Transaction Registry

Posted by National Banking Institute on Monday, October 5, 2015