Article 9 UCC Secured Transactions Flashcards
Secured Party
The creditor who has a security interest in the debtor’s collateral. Can be a seller, or a buyer of accounts or chattels
Debtor
The “person” who owes payment or other performance of the secured obligation
Security Interest
The interest in the collateral (personal property, fixtures etc.), that secures payment or performance of an obligation
What type of property is subject to a security interest?
- Personal property
- Fixtures
- Sales of accounts
- Chattel paper
- Promissory notes
- General intangibles
- Commercial tort claims
Security Agreement
An agreement that creates or provides for a security interest
Collateral
The personal property or intangible interest that is the subject of the security interest
Financing Statement
Referred to as a UCC-1 form, this instrument usually is filed to give public notice to third parties of the secured party’s security interest
Article 9 UCC
used for purposes of establishing creditor’s rights in collateral.
Chattel Paper
Writing(s) that evidence both a security interest in a good (or software) and a monetary obligation to pay—example of a security agreement
Describe the criteria necessary for a security interest attachment when the collateral is not in possession of the secured party.
- A written or authenticated agreement describing collateral, signed or authenticated by the debtor
- Secured party must give the debtor something of value.
- The debtor must have rights in the collateral.
Intangibles
Any personal property other than goods, accounts, chattel paper, documents, instruments, money, deposit accounts, letters of credit, and investment property - examples: oil or book royalties, patents, copyrights
Attachment
It is the time when security interest becomes valid. It requires a security agreement and a debtor with interest in the property, and a creditor who gives value.
Describe when a creditor can have a valid oral security agreement
When the creditor is in possession of the collateral
Describe what happens to a security interest when a debtor has signed and executed a security agreement, but the collateral has not been shipped to the debtor from the seller.
The security interest does not attach until the debtor has an interest in the goods (i.e., until identification has occurred).
Define “Perfection”
A means by which a secured party gains priority to a debtor’s collateral over other third parties who also claim to have an interest in the same collateral