Secured Transactions Flashcards
Secured Transaction Definition
-secured party
-debtor
-obligor
A secured transaction under Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 9
involves a loan or purchase that is secured by collateral. The relationship typically involves two parties, a debtor and a creditor. The debtor gives the creditor a security interest in the debtor’s specific property (collateral) to assure that the debtor will perform (repay the loan, pay the purchase price).
Secured Party—A secured party is the person in whose favor a security interest is created under the security agreement. Usually, the secured party is the person who has loaned money or extended credit to the obligor. For example, a bank that loans money to a business is a typical secured party.
Obligor—An obligor is a person who must pay (or otherwise perform) with respect to the obligation that is secured by a security interest in the collateral. For example, a business that receives a loan from the bank is a typical obligor.
Debtor—A debtor is a person who has an interest, other than a security interest or other lien, in the collateral, such as the sole owner of the collateral. Although the debtor is usually also the obligor, the debtor need not be.
Collateral & Classification
Property subject to a security interest is called “collateral.” The characterization of collateral can affect the validity of a security interest, the way in which a security interest can be perfected, and the rights of a third party in the collateral, such as a buyer of collateral.
Tangible collateral (goods) & intangible collateral
A classification can change over the lifetime of the property.
Tangible collateral (goods)
“Goods” encompasses anything that is “moveable at the time that a security interest attaches.” There are four classes of goods:
- Consumer Goods: purchased for personal, family, or household use
- Farm Products: crops or livestock owned by a farmer
- Inventory: goods held for sale or lease, or used/consumed in a business in a short time period (also raw materials used in a business)
- Equipment: goods for use primarily in a business (e.g. machinery, office furniture)
*When the obligor uses the property for multiple purposes, the principal use to which the obligor puts the property determines the class of the goods.
Intangible collateral (non-goods)
Intangible collateral includes nine classes of personal property. Most frequently tested are accounts & deposit account.
- Account: “Accounts” include the right to payment for goods sold, property licensed, or services rendered. Also included is a right to payment for the issuance of an insurance policy, the use of a credit or charge card, or winning a lottery.
- Deposit account: A “deposit account” includes a savings, passbook, time, or demand account maintained with a bank.
Others:
-Negotiable Instrument: commercial paper such as a promissory note or check
-Chattel Paper: a record evidencing a security interest or lease in specific goods
-Documents: document of title, bill of lading, warehouse receipt
-Investment Property: stocks, bonds, mutual funds
-Tort claims of a business
-Letter of Credit Right: right to payment or performance under letter of credit
-General Intangibles: copyrights, patents, software not embedded within a good (Software embedded in goods is treated as part of goods in which it is embedded)
Eligible transactions
-general rule
-leases, consignments, liens, purchases, real property transactions
General Rule: Article 9 governs a transaction that creates, by agreement, a security interest in personal property or a fixture. In addition, a lease, consignment, agricultural lien, and even a purchase of personal property may be subject to Article 9.
Leases:
-covered by Art. 9 when, although in the form of a lease, the transaction is in substance a secured transaction. Determination is made on a case by case basis.
-There are several rules for when a lease can create a security interest. The most frequently tested rule is: “A transaction in the form of a lease creates a security interest if lease payments must be made for the full term of the lease and are not subject to termination and the lessee has an option to become the owner of the goods for nominal (a small amount of money) consideration at the conclusion of the lease agreement.”
Consignments: if subject to Art. 9, consignor’s SI in the consigned goods is treated as a PMSI in inventory
Liens: generally not subject to Art. 9, except agricultural liens generally are
-Article 9 does not apply to real property liens (e.g. mortgages), statutory liens (e.g. mechanic’s lien), or judicial liens (e.g. judgment lien)
Purchases: generally, the sale of personal property is not subject to Art. 9
Real property transactions: not generally subject to Art. 9, but can apply to a SI in a secured obligation (promissory note) even though the obligation is itself secured by a transaction or interest to which Art. 9 does not apply (e.g. a real property mortgage)
Attachment
Once attachment occurs, the creditor will be a secured party and have rights against the debtor. Attachment refers to the creditor’s lien attaching to the collateral.
Required Elements:
1. value given by the secured party,
2. the debtor has rights in the collateral, and
3. the debtor has authenticated a security agreement that describes the collateral, or the secured party has possession or control of the collateral
Value given by secured party
Value Given—The secured party must give value for the security interest. Value may be given:
o By providing consideration sufficient to support a simple contract;
o By extending credit, either immediately or under a binding commitment to do so;
o By, as a buyer, accepting delivery under a preexisting contract, thereby converting a contingent obligation into a fixed obligation; or
o In satisfaction of, or as security for, part or all of a preexisting claim.
*A typical exam question will present a bank that provides a loan to a business. The loan money would be considered the “value given”.
Debtor has rights
An ownership interest in or right to possession of the collateral
*A typical exam question will present a business that gives the bank an interest in the business’ “Inventory and Equipment”. The “Inventory and Equipment” would be the collateral and the business must actually have a right (usually takes the form of ownership) in the collateral.
*if consignor retains title to consigned goods, consignee does not have rights in them.
*if use someone else’s equipment in business without their permission, debtor doesn’t have rights in it
Security Agreement or Possession/Control of Collateral
The debtor has authenticated a security agreement that describes the collateral, or the secured party has possession or control of the collateral pursuant to a security agreement.
The security agreement must meet the following requirements:
1. It must be in a record, such as a written or typed document,
2. Contain a description of the collateral (“all equipment” is fine but not if about consumer goods or commercial tort claim (“all debtor’s assets” is not sufficient, nor is “all personal property” - super generic); and
3. Be authenticated (typically signed) by the debtor.
Possession or control of collateral: the secured party’s possession/control must be pursuant to the security agreement
* If the secured party has possession or control of the collateral pursuant to a security agreement, then a security agreement in the form of a record is not required; an oral agreement suffices.
Future advance & after-acquired collateral
The security agreement can include a future advance clause, providing that the collateral will secure any future advances (additional loans) given by the secured party
After‐acquired collateral: A security interest may apply not only to the collateral that the debtor owns at the time the security is granted, but also to collateral that the debtor acquires in the future (e.g. a business may give a bank an interest in “all Inventory now owned or hereafter acquired”).
-Exception: An after‐acquired clause is not effective if the collateral is consumer goods, unless the debtor acquires them within 10 days after the secured party gives value.
Proceeds from collateral
A security interest in collateral automatically attaches to identifiable proceeds from the sale, exchange, or other disposition of the collateral.
E.g. a secured party acquires a security interest in a debtor’s inventory. The debtor sells items of inventory in exchange for checks. The secured party’s security interest will attach to the checks if they are identifiable as proceeds.
If a security interest in collateral is perfected, and then the collateral is sold for cash proceeds (or checks or deposit account), the secured party will have a perfected security interest in the proceeds.
Accessions & commingled goods
Accessions are goods that are physically united with other goods in such a manner that the identity of the original goods is not lost
E.g. memory installed in a computer, or tires installed on a car.
A security interest that is created in collateral that becomes an accession is not lost due to the collateral becoming an accession.
vs. commingled goods: physically united with other goods such that their identity is lost in a product or mass
*no SI in specific goods that have been commingled, but an SI may attached to the product or mass that results from commingling
*for existing SI in collateral that is commingled, the SI is transferred to the resulting product or mass
Purchase-money security interest (PMSI)
A PMSI gives lenders a security interest in goods that have been purchased with funds borrowed from them or purchased on credit from them.
A PMSI is subject to special rules with respect to perfection and priority.
A PMSI may exist only with respect to two types of collateral—goods (including fixtures) and software.
A PMSI in goods:
- A secured party gave value (e.g., made a loan) to the debtor and the debtor uses the loan to acquire rights in or use of the collateral; or
- A secured party sells the collateral to the debtor, and the debtor enters an agreement requiring it to pay the secured party all or part of the purchase price (i.e., a sale of goods on credit).
E.g. of first kind: A, an automobile dealer, sells B, the debtor, an automobile. B does not have the full purchase price of the automobile. B goes to C, a bank, and borrows money to purchase the automobile. In exchange for the loan, B gives C a security interest in the automobile (the collateral) that she is purchasing from A. Pursuant to the agreement with C, B is to make payments to C until the loan for the automobile has been paid in full. C has a PMSI in the automobile.
E.g. of second kind: A, an automobile dealer, sells B, the debtor, an automobile and agrees to finance the automobile because B does not have the full purchase price. B, pursuant to the agreement, is to make payments on a monthly basis until the automobile has been paid in full and gives A a security interest in the automobile (the collateral). A has a PMSI in the automobile.
PMSI in software: only when the debtor acquired his interest in software in an integrated transaction in which the debtor also acquired an interest in goods (e.g. a computer), and the debtor acquired that interest in the software for the principal purpose of using the software in the goods
Perfection of security interest
“Perfection” of a security interest protects the secured party against third-party claims.
A security interest is “perfected” upon attachment of the interest and compliance with one of the methods of perfection:
- Filing of a financing statement,
- Possession of the collateral,
- Control over the collateral, or
- Automatic perfection (either temporary or permanent),
*If there is another statute that governs perfection of a security interest, that statute may provide another method of perfection.
*there can be no perfection without attachment
Filing: requirements, timing/expiration, mistakes, name change, location change, items with certificates of title
The primary objective of filing is to give interested parties notice of the
existence of the security interest.
A security interest in collateral may be perfected by filing a financing statement with the secretary of state where the debtor or real property is located.
Filing doesn’t perfect the following: deposit account, money, or letter of credit rights
Requirements:
1. Debtor’s name (as it appears on current driver’s license),
2. Secured party’s name (or representative), and
3. Type of collateral (the same description from security agreement suffices or can be more generic “all assets”)
Timing/expiration: The financing statement will be effective on the date of filing. A financing statement is effective for 5 years and may be continued for another 5 years by filing a continuation statement within 6 months prior to the expiration of the statement.
Mistake in debtor’s name:
-mistake in debtor’s name that is seriously misleading will make the perfection ineffective unless a standard index search would nonetheless disclose the financing statement
(mistake in secured party’s name doesn’t affect perfection)
Name change: secured party must file an amendment within 4 months after a name change by the debtor, otherwise any collateral acquired after 4 months will not be covered by the financing statement
Location change: if debtor relocates to another state, secured party must file in the new state within 4 months or the SI will become unperfected after 4 months
Items with certificates of title (e.g. vehicles) that are not classified as inventory cannot be perfected by filing; the lien must be noted on the certificate of title
Possession of collateral (for perfection)
Can function as both attachment and perfection
Perfection by possession allowed for a good, negotiable document, instrument, money, or tangible chattel paper
Possession not sufficient for an account, deposit account, general intangible or tort claim