Secured Transactions Flashcards
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What is a Security Interest (SI)?
An interest in personal property or fixtures that secures payment or performance of an obligation
What is an Agreement in a SI?
A consensual agreement that provides for the SI
The substance of the transaction controls, not the form
What/Who are the Parties in a Secured Transaction?
Secured party—the person in whose favor the SI is created under the security agreement
Obligor—the person who must pay (or otherwise perform) with respect to the obligation that is secured by the SI
Debtor—the person who has interest, other than the SI or other lien, in the collateral, such as its sole owner (the debtor is usually also the obligor)
What is Collateral and what are the 2 classifications
Collateral = Property subject to a SI
2 Types
- Tangible
- Other collateral—classification is determined without reference to the debtor’s use
What are the types of tangible collateral?
Goods (C.F.I.E.) and Software
Goods—anything that is moveable at time that the SI attaches; the debtor’s principal use at the time the SI attaches determines the class of the goods
– Consumer goods—goods acquired primarily for personal, family, or household purposes
– Farm products—goods that are crops or livestock or products of crops or livestock, and supplies that are used or produced in farming
– Inventory—goods, other than farm products, held for sale or lease; are furnished under a service contract; or consist of raw materials, works in process, or materials used or consumed in a business in a short period of time (e.g., fuel)
– Equipment—catchall class; consists of goods that are not consumer goods, farm products, or inventory
Software—software embedded in goods is treated as part of goods in which it is embedded; software not embedded in goods is treated as a general intangible
What are the types of other collateral?
C.D.I.IP.A.T.D.L.G
Chattel paper—one or more records that evidence both (i) a monetary obligation and (ii) a security interest in specific goods or a lease of specific goods
Document—a document of title, which confers on the holder ownership rights in goods held by a bailee
Instruments—encompasses both negotiable and nonnegotiable instruments
Investment property—includes both certificated and uncertificated securities, as well as securities accounts
Accounts—the right to payment for property sold, leased, or licensed, or services rendered
Commercial tort claims—excludes tort claims by an individual for personal injury or death
Deposit accounts
Letter-of-credit right
General intangibles—a residual category; e.g., copyrights
What type of transactions create SI? (Eligible transactions)
General rule—Art. 9 governs a transaction that creates an SI in personal property or a fixture
- Leases—covered under Art. 9 when the transaction, although in the form of a lease, is in substance a secured transaction
- Consignments—if subject to Art. 9, the consignor’s SI in the consigned goods is treated as a PMSI in inventory
- Liens—generally not generally subject to Art. 9
- Agricultural liens—unlike other liens, generally subject to Art. 9
- 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 an SI in a secured obligation (e.g., a promissory note) even though the obligation is itself secured by a transaction or interest to which Article 9 does not apply (e.g., a real property mortgage)
What are Tangible Goods?
Goods are anything that can be moved when the security interest attaches.
What is Equipment?
Equipment is anything that is not consumer goods, farm products, or inventory.
What Does Attachment Do?
It makes the security interest in the collateral enforceable?
What Are the Requirements of Attachment?
For a security interest to attach:
(i) Value given by the secured party; (ii) The debtor has rights in the collateral; and
(iii) the debtor has authenticated a security agreement that describes the collateral, or the secured party has possession or control of the collateral.
For a security agreement to attach, what is considered value?
Can be consideration sufficient to form a contract, extending credit,
accepting delivery under a preexisting contract, or in satisfaction of a preexisting claim
*The security interest can attach to collateral that the debtor acquires in the future.
Can future advances be included in collateral?
Yes, future advances may also be secured by collateral
When New Value is required to perfect a security interest or have priority, what can it consist of?
When new value is required to perfect a security interest or have priority, it can consist of:
- Money;
- Money’s worth in property, services, or new credit; or
- Release by a transferee of an interest in property previously transferred to the transferee.
When does a Debtor have rights in collateral?
Generally—the SI attaches only to the rights that the debtor has in the collateral
Consignments—if the consignor retains title to the consigned goods, the consignee does not have rights in them
For a security agreement to attach, what must the Security Agreement include?
The secured party must satisfy the Art. 9 Statute of Frauds (SoF)
- Authenticated record—the security agreement must (i) be in a record; (ii) contain a description of the collateral; and (iii) be authenticated by the debtor
– The description can list specific items or can identify the Art. 9 type of collateral (“all debtor’s equipment”) unless the collateral is consumer goods or a commercial tort claim; a super-generic description (“all debtor’s assets”) is not sufficient
– An original authenticated security agreement can serve as a new debtor’s authenticated security agreement (i.e., the new debtor need not execute another agreement) by operation of law or by contract - Possession of collateral—can satisfy the SoF; the secured party’s possession must be pursuant to the security agreement
- Control of collateral—can satisfy the SoF; the secured party’s control must be pursuant to the security agreement
Is After-Acquired collateral covered after the SI is given?
General rule—the SI may cover collateral owned when the security is granted and also collateral that the debtor acquires after the SI is given
Exceptions—an after-acquired clause is not effective for consumer goods, unless the debtor acquires them within 10 days after the secured party gives value, or a commercial tort claim
Does an SI attach to proceeds?
Proceeds—the SI attaches automatically to identifiable proceeds (i.e., whatever is acquired upon disposition of the collateral)
What are the Rights and Duties of the secured party?
Duties arising from the secured party’s possession or control of collateral—duty of care; duty to keep collateral identifiable; duty to relinquish possession or control of collateral
Rights and risks arising from the secured party’s possession or control of collateral—right to charge for reasonable expenses; risk of loss or damage is on the debtor; right to use or operate collateral; right to hold proceeds
Assignment of account rights—if the debtor assigns his right to receive payment from the account debtor to the secured party, the secured party may notify the account debtor to pay the secured party; upon receipt of notification, the account debtor may discharge her obligation only by paying the assignee
What are the rights of the Debtor?
Accounting and other information from the secured party
Notification of account debtors by secured party—when account debtors are no longer required to make payments to the secured party
What is a Purchase-Money Security Interest (PMSI) and where is it applicable?
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Goods and Software
When does a PMSI in goods exist?
PMSI in goods—exists when:
– A secured party gave value to the debtor and the debtor used the value to incur an obligation that enabled the debtor to acquire goods; or
– A secured party sold goods to the debtor, and the debtor incurred an obligation to pay the secured party all or part of the purchase price
When does a PMSI in software exist?
PMSI in software—exists 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