Secured Transactions Flashcards
Scope of Article 9
Applies to any transaction intended to create a security interest in personal property or fixtures (not mortgages on real property).
A security interest gives a creditor (secured party) the right to sell a debtor’s property in order to satisfy a debt.
Collateral
Collateral refers to the property in which a security interest is created, and it extends to identifiable proceeds from the property that serves as collateral.
Types of Collateral
- Goods. Goods are all things that are moveable when a security interest attaches.
- Consumer Goods. Consumer goods are goods that are used mainly for personal, family, or household purposes.
- Inventory. Inventory includes goods that are kept by a person for sale or lease.
- Accounts. A security interest in a debtor’s “accounts” covers any right to payment of a monetary obligation, whether or not earned by performance, for property that has been or is to be sold (i.e., accounts receivable). A secured party can collect directly from the person who owes the debtor if the debtor defaults.
Requirements for Attachment
- There is a valid security agreement memorializing the security interest;
- The debtor possesses rights in collateral beyond mere possession; AND
- The creditor extends value to the debtor.
=> Security Interest is Enforcable
Perfection Defined
Once the security interest attaches, it is enforceable.
Perfection of the interest only enhances the secured party’s rights to the property serving as collateral.
Three methods to Perfect a security Interest
Filing, Possession, and Automatic Perfection
Perfection by Filing
The filing of a financing statement or the security agreement with the state by an authorized party is the primary method of perfection.
Perfection By Taking Possession
A secured party may perfect a security interest in negotiable documents, goods, instruments, or money by taking mere possession of such items.
Automatic Perfection
a. A purchase-money security interest in consumer goods; AND
b. An assignment of accounts that does not transfer a significant part of the assignor’s outstanding accounts.
Priority: Perfected vs. Unperfected
a perfected security interest has priority over a conflicting unperfected security interest in the same collateral.
Priority: Multiple Perfected Creditors
The first to file or perfect obtains priority
knowledge of a prior unperfected interest will not prevent a potential secured party from filing first to obtain priority.
Exception to Priority Rules:
Buyer in the Ordinary Course of Business
Protected, even though their interest in the property is created after the attachment or perfection of a security interest.
Buyers in the ordinary course of business take the collateral free of the security interest created by the seller.
The protected buyer may sell the purchased collateral to a third-party free of the secured party’s security interest.
Buyer in the Ordinary Course, Defined
A person who:
- In good faith and without knowledge that the sale to him is in violation of the security interest of a third party;
- Buys in the ordinary course from a person in the business of selling goods of that kind.
Exception to Priority Rules:
Buyer of Consumer Goods
Takes the goods free of a security interest, even if perfected, if the buyer buys:
1. Without knowledge of the security interest;
2. For value;
3. Primarily for the buyer’s personal, family, or
household purposes; AND
4. Before the filing of a financing statement covering the goods.
Exception to Priority Rules:
PMSI
PMSIs have priority over prior perfected security interests if the PMSI is properly executed.