2024 -- S 2781 | |
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LC004368 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2024 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE | |
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Introduced By: Senators F. Lombardi, Burke, Tikoian, Quezada, Bissaillon, LaMountain, | |
Date Introduced: March 08, 2024 | |
Referred To: Senate Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 6A-1-201, 6A-1-204, 6A-1-301 and 6A-1-306 of the General Laws |
2 | in Chapter 6A-1 entitled "General Provisions" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 6A-1-201. General definitions. |
4 | (a) Unless the context otherwise requires, words or phrases defined in this section, or in |
5 | the additional definitions contained in other chapters of title 6A that apply to particular chapters or |
6 | parts thereof, have the meanings stated. |
7 | (b) Subject to definitions contained in other chapters of title 6A that apply to particular |
8 | chapters or parts thereof: |
9 | (1) “Action”, in the sense of a judicial proceeding, includes recoupment, counterclaim, set- |
10 | off, suit in equity, and any other proceeding in which rights are determined. |
11 | (2) “Aggrieved party” means a party entitled to pursue a remedy. |
12 | (3) “Agreement”, as distinguished from “contract”, means the bargain of the parties in fact, |
13 | as found in their language or inferred from other circumstances, including course of performance, |
14 | course of dealing, or usage of trade as provided in § 6A-1-303. |
15 | (4) “Bank” means a person engaged in the business of banking and includes a savings bank, |
16 | savings and loan association, credit union, and trust company. |
17 | (5) “Bearer” means a person in control of a negotiable electronic document of title or a |
18 | person in possession of a negotiable instrument, negotiable tangible document of title, or |
19 | certificated security that is payable to bearer or indorsed in blank. |
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1 | (6) “Bill of lading” means a document of title evidencing the receipt of goods for shipment |
2 | issued by a person engaged in the business of directly or indirectly transporting or forwarding |
3 | goods. This term does not include a warehouse receipt. |
4 | (7) “Branch” includes a separately incorporated foreign branch of a bank. |
5 | (8) “Burden of establishing” a fact means the burden of persuading the trier of fact that the |
6 | existence of the fact is more probable than its nonexistence. |
7 | (9) “Buyer in ordinary course of business” means a person that buys goods in good faith, |
8 | without knowledge that the sale violates the rights of another person in the goods, and in the |
9 | ordinary course from a person, other than a pawnbroker, in the business of selling goods of that |
10 | kind. A person buys goods in the ordinary course if the sale to the person comports with the usual |
11 | or customary practices in the kind of business in which the seller is engaged or with the seller’s |
12 | own usual or customary practices. A person that sells oil, gas, or other minerals at the wellhead or |
13 | minehead is a person in the business of selling goods of that kind. A buyer in ordinary course of |
14 | business may buy for cash, by exchange of other property, or on secured or unsecured credit, and |
15 | may acquire goods or documents of title under a preexisting contract for sale. Only a buyer that |
16 | takes possession of the goods or has a right to recover the goods from the seller under Chapter 2 |
17 | may be a buyer in ordinary course of business. “Buyer in ordinary course of business” does not |
18 | include a person that acquires goods in a transfer in bulk or as security for or in total or partial |
19 | satisfaction of a money debt. |
20 | (10) “Conspicuous”, with reference to a term, means so written, displayed, or presented |
21 | that, based on the totality of the circumstances, a reasonable person against which it is to operate |
22 | ought to have noticed it. Whether a term is “conspicuous” or not is a decision for the court. |
23 | Conspicuous terms include the following: |
24 | (A) A heading in capitals equal to or greater in size than the surrounding text, or in |
25 | contrasting type, font, or color to the surrounding text of the same or lesser size; and |
26 | (B) Language in the body of a record or display in larger type than the surrounding text, or |
27 | in contrasting type, font, or color to the surrounding text of the same size, or set off from |
28 | surrounding text of the same size by symbols or other marks that call attention to the language In |
29 | deciding whether a term is conspicuous, the court shall consider all relevant factors, including: |
30 | (A) The use of headings and text that contrast with the surrounding text; |
31 | (B) The placement of the term in the record; |
32 | (C) If terms are available only through the use of a hyperlink, in addition to the placement |
33 | of the hyperlink; |
34 | (i) Whether there is language drawing attention to the hyperlink and describing its function; |
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1 | (ii) The size and color of the text used for the hyperlink and any related language; and |
2 | (iii) Whether the text is accessible using assistive technology; |
3 | (D) The language of the heading, if any; |
4 | (E) The effort needed to access the term; and |
5 | (F) Whether the person against which the term is to operate must separately assent to or |
6 | acknowledge the term. |
7 | (11) “Consumer” means an individual who enters into a transaction primarily for personal, |
8 | family, or household purposes. |
9 | (12) “Contract”, as distinguished from “agreement”, means the total legal obligation that |
10 | results from the parties’ agreement as determined by title 6A as supplemented by any other |
11 | applicable laws. |
12 | (13) “Creditor” includes a general creditor, a secured creditor, a lien creditor, and any |
13 | representative of creditors, including an assignee for the benefit of creditors, a trustee in |
14 | bankruptcy, a receiver in equity, and an executor or administrator of an insolvent debtor’s or |
15 | assignor’s estate. |
16 | (14) “Defendant” includes a person in the position of defendant in a counterclaim, cross- |
17 | claim, or third-party claim. |
18 | (15) “Delivery”, with respect to an electronic document of title means voluntary transfer |
19 | of control and with respect to an instrument, a tangible document of title, or an authoritative tangible |
20 | copy of a record evidencing chattel paper, means voluntary transfer of possession. |
21 | (16) |
22 | “Document of title” means a record: |
23 | (i) That in the regular course of business or financing is treated as adequately evidencing |
24 | that the person in possession or control of the record is entitled to receive, control, hold, and dispose |
25 | of the record and the goods the record covers; and |
26 | (ii) That purports to be issued by or addressed to a bailee and to cover goods in the bailee’s |
27 | possession which are either identified or are fungible portions of an identified mass. The term |
28 | includes a bill of lading, transport document, dock warrant, dock receipt, warehouse receipt, and |
29 | order for delivery of goods. |
30 | An electronic document of title means a document of title evidenced by a record consisting |
31 | of information stored in an electronic medium. A tangible document of title means a document of |
32 | title evidenced by a record consisting of information that is inscribed on a tangible medium. |
33 | (16.1) "Electronic" means relating to technology having electrical, digital, magnetic, |
34 | wireless, optical, electromagnetic, or similar capabilities. |
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1 | (17) “Fault” means a default, breach, or wrongful act or omission. |
2 | (18) “Fungible goods” means: |
3 | (A) Goods of which any unit, by nature or usage of trade, is the equivalent of any other like |
4 | unit; or |
5 | (B) Goods that by agreement are treated as equivalent. |
6 | (19) “Genuine” means free of forgery or counterfeiting. |
7 | (20) “Good faith” means honesty in fact in the conduct or transaction concerned. |
8 | (21) “Holder” means: |
9 | (A) The person in possession of a negotiable instrument that is payable either to bearer or |
10 | to an identified person that is the person in possession; |
11 | (B) The person in possession of a negotiable tangible document of title if the goods are |
12 | deliverable either to bearer or to the order of the person in possession; or |
13 | (C) The person in control other than pursuant to § 6A-7-106(g) of a negotiable electronic |
14 | document of title. |
15 | (22) “Insolvency proceeding” includes an assignment for the benefit of creditors or other |
16 | proceeding intended to liquidate or rehabilitate the estate of the person involved. |
17 | (23) “Insolvent” means: |
18 | (A) Having generally ceased to pay debts in the ordinary course of business other than as |
19 | a result of bona fide dispute; |
20 | (B) Being unable to pay debts as they become due; or |
21 | (C) Being insolvent within the meaning of federal bankruptcy law. |
22 | (24) “Money” means a medium of exchange that is currently authorized or adopted by a |
23 | domestic or foreign government. The term includes a monetary unit of account established by an |
24 | intergovernmental organization or by agreement between two (2) or more countries. The term |
25 | "money" does not include an electronic record that is a medium of exchange recorded and |
26 | transferable in a system that existed and operated for the medium of exchange before the medium |
27 | of exchange was authorized or adopted by the government. |
28 | (25) “Organization” means a person other than an individual. |
29 | (26) “Party”, as distinguished from “third-party”, means a person that has engaged in a |
30 | transaction or made an agreement subject to title 6A. |
31 | (27) “Person” means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, |
32 | limited liability company, association, joint venture, government, governmental subdivision, |
33 | agency, or instrumentality, public corporation, or any other legal or commercial entity. The term |
34 | "person" includes a protected series, however denominated, of an entity if the protected series is |
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1 | established under law other than this title that limits, or limits if conditions specified under the law |
2 | are satisfied, the ability of a creditor of the entity or of any other protected series of the entity to |
3 | satisfy a claim from assets of the protected series. |
4 | (28) “Present value” means the amount as of a date certain of one or more sums payable in |
5 | the future, discounted to the date certain by use of either an interest rate specified by the parties if |
6 | that rate is not manifestly unreasonable at the time the transaction is entered into or, if an interest |
7 | rate is not so specified, a commercially reasonable rate that takes into account the facts and |
8 | circumstances at the time the transaction is entered into. |
9 | (29) “Purchase” means taking by sale, lease, discount, negotiation, mortgage, pledge, lien, |
10 | security interest, issue or reissue, gift, or any other voluntary transaction creating an interest in |
11 | property. |
12 | (30) “Purchaser” means a person that takes by purchase. |
13 | (31) “Record” means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored |
14 | in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. |
15 | (32) “Remedy” means any remedial right to which an aggrieved party is entitled with or |
16 | without resort to a tribunal. |
17 | (33) “Representative” means a person empowered to act for another, including an agent, |
18 | an officer of a corporation or association, and a trustee, executor, or administrator of an estate. |
19 | (34) “Right” includes remedy. |
20 | (35) “Security interest” means an interest in personal property or fixtures which secures |
21 | payment or performance of an obligation. “Security interest” includes any interest of a consignor |
22 | and a buyer of accounts, chattel paper, a payment intangible, or a promissory note in a transaction |
23 | that is subject to Chapter 9. “Security interest” does not include the special property interest of a |
24 | buyer of goods on identification of those goods to a contract for sale under § 6A-2-401, but a buyer |
25 | may also acquire a “security interest” by complying with Chapter 9. Except as otherwise provided |
26 | in § 6A-2-505, the right of a seller or lessor of goods under Chapter 2 or 2.1 to retain or acquire |
27 | possession of the goods is not a “security interest”, but a seller or lessor may also acquire a “security |
28 | interest” by complying with Chapter 9. The retention or reservation of title by a seller of goods |
29 | notwithstanding shipment or delivery to the buyer under § 6A-2-401 is limited in effect to a |
30 | reservation of a “security interest.” Whether a transaction in the form of a lease creates a “security |
31 | interest” is determined pursuant to § 6A-1-203. |
32 | (36) “Send” in connection with a writing, record, or notice record or notification means: |
33 | (A) To deposit in the mail, or deliver for transmission, or transmit by any other usual means |
34 | of communication with postage or cost of transmission provided for, and properly addressed and, |
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1 | in the case of an instrument, to an address specified thereon or otherwise agreed, or if there be none |
2 | addressed to any address reasonable under the circumstances; or |
3 | (B) In any other way to cause to be received any record or notice within the time it would |
4 | have arrived if properly sent. To cause the record or notification to be received within the time it |
5 | would have been received if properly sent under subsection (b)(36)(A) of this section. |
6 | (37) “Signed” includes using any symbol executed or adopted with present intention to |
7 | adopt or accept a writing. "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record: |
8 | (i) Execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or |
9 | (ii) Attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic symbol, sound, or process. |
10 | "Signed," "signing," and "signature" have corresponding meanings. |
11 | (38) “State” means a State of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the |
12 | United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the |
13 | United States. |
14 | (39) “Surety” includes a guarantor or other secondary obligor. |
15 | (40) “Term” means a portion of an agreement that relates to a particular matter. |
16 | (41) “Unauthorized signature” means a signature made without actual, implied, or apparent |
17 | authority. The term includes a forgery. |
18 | (42) “Warehouse receipt” means a document of title issued by a person engaged in the |
19 | business of storing goods for hire. The term does not include a bill of lading. |
20 | (43) “Writing” includes printing, typewriting, or any other intentional reduction to tangible |
21 | form. “Written” has a corresponding meaning. |
22 | 6A-1-204. Value. |
23 | Except as otherwise provided in chapters 3, 4, and 5, and 12 of this title, a person gives |
24 | value for rights if the person acquires them: |
25 | (1) In return for a binding commitment to extend credit or for the extension of immediately |
26 | available credit, whether or not drawn upon and whether or not a charge-back is provided for in the |
27 | event of difficulties in collection; |
28 | (2) As security for, or in total or partial satisfaction of, a preexisting claim; |
29 | (3) By accepting delivery under a preexisting contract for purchase; or |
30 | (4) In return for any consideration sufficient to support a simple contract. |
31 | 6A-1-301. Territorial applicability — Parties’ power to choose applicable law. |
32 | (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, when a transaction bears a reasonable |
33 | relation to this state and also to another state or nation, the parties may agree that the law either of |
34 | this state or of such other state or nation shall govern their rights and duties. |
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1 | (b) In the absence of an agreement effective under subsection (a), and except as provided |
2 | in subsection (c), the Uniform Commercial Code applies to transactions bearing an appropriate |
3 | relation to this state. |
4 | (c) If one of the following provisions of title 6A specifies the applicable law, that provision |
5 | governs and a contrary agreement is effective only to the extent permitted by the law so specified: |
6 | (1) Section 6A-2-402; |
7 | (2) Sections 6A-2.1-105 and 6A-2.1-106; |
8 | (3) Section 6A-4-102; |
9 | (4) Section 6A-4.1-507; |
10 | (5) Section 6A-5-116; |
11 | (6) [RESERVED] |
12 | (7) Section 6A-8-110; |
13 | (8) Sections 6A-9-301 through 6A-9-307.; |
14 | (9) Section 6A-12-107. |
15 | 6A-1-306. Waiver or renunciation of claim or right after breach. |
16 | A claim or right arising out of an alleged breach may be discharged in whole or in part |
17 | without consideration by agreement of the aggrieved party in an authenticated a signed record. |
18 | SECTION 2. Sections 6A-2-102, 6A-2-106, 6A-2-201, 6A-2-202, 6A-2-203, 6A-2-205 |
19 | and 6A-2-209 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-2 entitled "Sales" are hereby amended to read as |
20 | follows: |
21 | 6A-2-102. Scope — Certain security and other transactions excluded from this |
22 | chapter. |
23 | Unless the context otherwise requires, this chapter applies to transactions in goods; it does |
24 | not apply to any transaction which, although in the form of an unconditional contract to sell or |
25 | present sale, is intended to operate only as a security transaction, nor does this chapter impair or |
26 | repeal any statute regulating sales to consumers, farmers, or other specified classes of buyers. |
27 | (1) Unless the context otherwise requires, and except as provided in subsection (3) of this |
28 | section, this chapter applies to transactions in goods and, in the case of a hybrid transaction, it |
29 | applies to the extent provided in subsection (2) of this section. |
30 | (2) In a hybrid transaction: |
31 | (i) If the sale-of-goods aspects do not predominate, only the provisions of this chapter |
32 | which relate primarily to the sale-of-goods aspects of the transaction apply, and the provisions that |
33 | relate primarily to the transaction as a whole do not apply. |
34 | (ii) If the sale-of-goods aspects predominate, this chapter applies to the transaction, but |
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1 | does not preclude application in appropriate circumstances of other law to aspects of the transaction |
2 | which do not relate to the sale of goods. |
3 | (3) This chapter does not: |
4 | (i) Apply to a transaction that, even though in the form of an unconditional contract to sell |
5 | or present sale, operates only to create a security interest; or |
6 | (ii) Impair or repeal a statute regulating sales to consumers, farmers, or other specified |
7 | classes of buyers. |
8 | 6A-2-106. Definitions — “Contract” — “Agreement” — “Contract for sale” — “Sale” |
9 | — “Present sale” — “Conforming” to contract — “Termination” — “Cancellation”. |
10 | Definitions — “Contract” — “Agreement” — “Contract for sale” — “Sale” — “Present sale” |
11 | — “Conforming” to contract — “Termination” — “Cancellation” – “Hybrid Transaction”. |
12 | (1) In this chapter unless the context otherwise requires “contract” and “agreement” are |
13 | limited to those relating to the present or future sale of goods. “Contract for sale” includes both a |
14 | present sale of goods and a contract to sell goods at a future time. A “sale” consists in the passing |
15 | of title from the seller to the buyer for a price (§ 6A-2-401). A “present sale” means a sale which |
16 | is accomplished by the making of the contract. |
17 | (2) Goods or conduct including any part of a performance are “conforming” or conform to |
18 | the contract when they are in accordance with the obligations under the contract. |
19 | (3) “Termination” occurs when either party pursuant to a power created by agreement or |
20 | law puts an end to the contract otherwise than for its breach. On “termination” all obligations which |
21 | are still executory on both sides are discharged but any right based on prior breach or performance |
22 | survives. |
23 | (4) “Cancellation” occurs when either party puts an end to the contract for breach by the |
24 | other and its effect is the same as that of “termination” except that the cancelling party also retains |
25 | any remedy for breach of the whole contract or any unperformed balance. |
26 | (5) “Hybrid transaction” means a single transaction involving a sale of goods and: |
27 | (i) The provision of services; |
28 | (ii) A lease of other goods; or |
29 | (iii) A sale, lease, or license of property other than goods. |
30 | 6A-2-201. Formal requirements — Statute of frauds. |
31 | (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a contract for the sale of goods for the |
32 | price of five hundred dollars ($500) or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless |
33 | there is some writing a record sufficient to indicate that a contract for sale has been made between |
34 | the parties and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought or by his or her the party's |
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1 | authorized agent or broker. A writing record is not insufficient because it omits or incorrectly states |
2 | a term agreed upon but the contract is not enforceable under this paragraph subsection beyond the |
3 | quantity of goods shown in such writing the record. |
4 | (2) Between merchants if within a reasonable time a writing record in confirmation of the |
5 | contract and sufficient against the sender is received and the party receiving it has reason to know |
6 | its contents, it satisfies the requirements of subsection (1) against such the party unless written |
7 | notice in a record of objection to its contents is given within ten (10) days after it is received. |
8 | (3) A contract which does not satisfy the requirements of subsection (1) but which is valid |
9 | in other respects is enforceable, |
10 | (a) If the goods are to be specially manufactured for the buyer and are not suitable for sale |
11 | to others in the ordinary course of the seller’s business and the seller, before notice of repudiation |
12 | is received and under circumstances which reasonably indicate that the goods are for the buyer, has |
13 | made either a substantial beginning of their manufacture or commitments for their procurement; or |
14 | (b) If the party against whom enforcement is sought admits in his or her pleading, testimony |
15 | or otherwise in court that a contract for sale was made, but the contract is not enforceable under |
16 | this provision beyond the quantity of goods admitted; or |
17 | (c) With respect to goods for which payment has been made and accepted or which have |
18 | been received and accepted (§ 6A-2-606). |
19 | 6A-2-202. Final written expression — Parol or extrinsic evidence. |
20 | Terms with respect to which the confirmatory memoranda of the parties agree or which are |
21 | otherwise set forth in a writing record intended by the parties as a final expression of their |
22 | agreement with respect to such terms as are included therein may not be contradicted by evidence |
23 | of any prior agreement or of a contemporaneous oral agreement but may be explained or |
24 | supplemented, |
25 | (a) By course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade (§ 6A-1-303); and |
26 | (b) By evidence of consistent additional terms unless the court finds the writing record to |
27 | have been intended also as a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of the agreement. |
28 | 6A-2-203. Seals inoperative. |
29 | The affixing of a seal to a writing record evidencing a contract for sale or an offer to buy |
30 | or sell goods does not constitute the writing record a sealed instrument and the law with respect to |
31 | sealed instruments does not apply to such a contract or offer. |
32 | 6A-2-205. Firm offers. |
33 | An offer by a merchant to buy or sell goods in a signed writing record which by its terms |
34 | gives assurance that it will be held open is not revocable, for lack of consideration, during the time |
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1 | stated, or if no time is stated for a reasonable time, but in no event may such period of irrevocability |
2 | exceed three (3) months; but any such term of assurance on a form supplied by the offeree must be |
3 | separately signed by the offeror. |
4 | 6A-2-209. Modification, rescission, and waiver. |
5 | (1) An agreement modifying a contract within this chapter needs no consideration to be |
6 | binding. |
7 | (2) A signed agreement which excludes modification or rescission except by a signed |
8 | writing or other signed record cannot be otherwise modified or rescinded, but except as between |
9 | merchants such a requirement on a form supplied by the merchant must be separately signed by the |
10 | other party. |
11 | (3) The requirements of the statute of frauds section of this chapter (§ 6A-2-201) must be |
12 | satisfied if the contract as modified is within its provisions. |
13 | (4) Although an attempt at modification or rescission does not satisfy the requirements of |
14 | subsection (2) or (3) it can operate as a waiver. |
15 | (5) A party who has made a waiver affecting an executory portion of the contract may |
16 | retract the waiver by reasonable notification received by the other party that strict performance will |
17 | be required of any term waived, unless the retraction would be unjust in view of a material change |
18 | of position in reliance on the waiver. |
19 | SECTION 3. Sections 6A-2.1-102, 6A-2.1-103, 6A-2.1-107, 6A-2.1-201, 6A-2.1-202, 6A- |
20 | 2.1-203, 6A-2.1-205 and 6A-2.1-208 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-2.1 entitled "Leases" are |
21 | hereby amended to read as follows: |
22 | 6A-2.1-102. Scope. |
23 | (1) This chapter applies to any transaction, regardless of form, that creates a lease and, in |
24 | the case of a hybrid lease, it applies to the extent provided in subsection (b) of this section. |
25 | (2) In a hybrid lease; |
26 | (a) If the lease-of goods aspects do not predominate; |
27 | (i) Only the provisions of this chapter which relate primarily to the lease-of-goods aspects |
28 | of the transaction apply, and the provisions that relate primarily to the transaction as a whole do |
29 | not apply; |
30 | (ii) Section 6A-2.1-209 applies if the lease is a finance lease; and |
31 | (iii) Section 6A-2.1-407 applies to the promises of the lessee in a finance lease to the extent |
32 | the promises are consideration for the right to possession and use of the leased goods. |
33 | (b) If the lease-of-goods aspects predominate, this chapter applies to the transaction, but |
34 | does not preclude application in appropriate circumstances of other law to aspects of the lease |
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1 | which do not relate to the lease of goods. |
2 | 6A-2.1-103. Definitions and index of definitions. |
3 | (1) In this chapter unless the context otherwise requires: |
4 | (a) “Buyer in ordinary course of business” means a person who in good faith and without |
5 | knowledge that the sale to him or her is in violation of the ownership rights or security interest or |
6 | leasehold interest of a third party in the goods buys in ordinary course from a person in the business |
7 | of selling goods of that kind but does not include a pawnbroker. “Buying” may be for cash or by |
8 | exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured credit and includes acquiring goods or |
9 | documents of title under a preexisting contract for sale but does not include a transfer in bulk or as |
10 | security for or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt. |
11 | (b) “Cancellation” occurs when either party puts an end to the lease contract for default by |
12 | the other party. |
13 | (c) “Commercial unit” means such a unit of goods as by commercial usage is a single whole |
14 | for purposes of lease and division of which materially impairs its character or value on the market |
15 | or in use. A commercial unit may be a single chapter, as a machine, or a set of chapters, as a suite |
16 | of furniture or a line of machinery, or a quantity, as a gross or carload, or any other unit treated in |
17 | use or in the relevant market as a single whole. |
18 | (d) “Conforming” goods or performance under a lease contract means goods or |
19 | performance that are in accordance with the obligations under the lease contract. |
20 | (e) “Consumer lease” means a lease that a lessor regularly engaged in the business of |
21 | leasing or selling makes to a lessee who is an individual and who takes under the lease primarily |
22 | for a personal, family, or household purpose. |
23 | (f) “Fault” means wrongful act, omission, breach, or default. |
24 | (g) “Finance lease” means a lease with respect to which: |
25 | (i) The lessor does not select, manufacture, or supply the goods; |
26 | (ii) The lessor acquires the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods in |
27 | connection with the lease; and |
28 | (iii) One of the following occurs: |
29 | (A) The lessee receives a copy of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods or |
30 | the right to possession and use of the goods before signing the lease contract; |
31 | (B) The lessee’s approval of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods or the |
32 | right to possession and use of the goods is a condition to effectiveness of the lease contract; |
33 | (C) The lessee, before signing the lease contract, receives an accurate and complete |
34 | statement designating the promises and warranties, and any disclaimers of warranties, limitations |
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1 | or modifications of remedies, or liquidated damages, including those of a third party, such as the |
2 | manufacturer of the goods, provided to the lessor by the person supplying the goods in connection |
3 | with or as part of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods or the right to possession and |
4 | use of the goods; or |
5 | (D) If the lease is not a consumer lease, the lessor, before the lessee signs the lease contract, |
6 | informs the lessee in writing (a) of the identity of the person supplying the goods to the lessor, |
7 | unless the lessee has selected that person and directed the lessor to acquire the goods or the right to |
8 | possession and use of the goods from that person, (b) that the lessee is entitled under this chapter |
9 | to the promises and warranties, including those of any third party, provided to the lessor by the |
10 | person supplying the goods in connection with or as part of the contract by which the lessor |
11 | acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods, and (c) that the lessee may |
12 | communicate with the person supplying the goods to the lessor and receive an accurate and |
13 | complete statement of those promises and warranties, including any disclaimers and limitations of |
14 | them or of remedies. |
15 | (h) “Goods” means all things that are movable at the time of identification to the lease |
16 | contract, or are fixtures (§ 6A-2.1-309), but the term does not include money, documents, |
17 | instruments, accounts, chattel paper, general intangibles, or minerals or the like, including oil and |
18 | gas, before extraction. The term also includes the unborn young of animals. |
19 | (h.1) "Hybrid lease" means a single transaction involving a lease of goods and; |
20 | (1) The provision of services; |
21 | (2) A sale of other goods; or |
22 | (3) A sale, lease, or license of property other than goods. |
23 | (i) “Installment lease contract” means a lease contract that authorizes or requires the |
24 | delivery of goods in separate lots to be separately accepted, even though the lease contract contains |
25 | a clause “each delivery is a separate lease” or its equivalent. |
26 | (j) “Lease” means a transfer of the right to possession and use of goods for a term in return |
27 | for consideration, but a sale, including a sale on approval or a sale or return, or retention or creation |
28 | of a security interest is not a lease. Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes |
29 | a sublease. |
30 | (k) “Lease agreement” means the bargain, with respect to the lease, of the lessor and the |
31 | lessee in fact as found in their language or by implication from other circumstances including |
32 | course of dealing or usage of trade or course of performance as provided in this chapter. Unless the |
33 | context clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublease agreement. |
34 | (l) “Lease contract” means the total legal obligation that results from the lease agreement |
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1 | as affected by this chapter and any other applicable rules of law. Unless the context clearly indicates |
2 | otherwise, the term includes a sublease contract. |
3 | (m) “Leasehold interest” means the interest of the lessor or the lessee under a lease contract. |
4 | (n) “Lessee” means a person who acquires the right to possession and use of goods under |
5 | a lease. Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublessee. |
6 | (o) “Lessee in ordinary course of business” means a person who in good faith and without |
7 | knowledge that the lease to him or her is in violation of the ownership rights or security interest or |
8 | leasehold interest of a third party in the goods leases in ordinary course from a person in the |
9 | business of selling or leasing goods of that kind but does not include a pawnbroker. “Leasing” may |
10 | be for cash or by exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured credit and includes |
11 | acquiring goods or documents of title under a preexisting lease contract but does not include a |
12 | transfer in bulk or as security for or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt. |
13 | (p) “Lessor” means a person who transfers the right to possession and use of goods under |
14 | a lease. Unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublessor. |
15 | (q) “Lessor’s residual interest” means the lessor’s interest in the goods after expiration, |
16 | termination, or cancellation of the lease contract. |
17 | (r) “Lien” means a charge against or interest in goods to secure payment of a debt or |
18 | performance of an obligation, but the term does not include a security interest. |
19 | (s) “Lot” means a parcel or a single chapter that is the subject matter of a separate lease or |
20 | delivery, whether or not it is sufficient to perform the lease contract. |
21 | (t) “Merchant lessee” means a lessee that is a merchant with respect to goods of the kind |
22 | subject to the lease. |
23 | (u) “Present value” means the amount as of a date certain of one or more sums payable in |
24 | the future, discounted to the date certain. The discount is determined by the interest rate specified |
25 | by the parties if the rate was not manifestly unreasonable at the time the transaction was entered |
26 | into; otherwise, the discount is determined by a commercially reasonable rate that takes into |
27 | account the facts and circumstances of each case at the time the transaction was entered into. |
28 | (v) “Purchase” includes taking by sale, lease, mortgage, security interest, pledge, gift, or |
29 | any other voluntary transaction creating an interest in goods. |
30 | (w) “Sublease” means a lease of goods the right to possession and use of which was |
31 | acquired by the lessor as a lessee under an existing lease. |
32 | (x) “Supplier” means a person from whom a lessor buys or leases goods to be leased under |
33 | a finance lease. |
34 | (y) “Supply contract” means a contract under which a lessor buys or leases goods to be |
| LC004368 - Page 13 of 113 |
1 | leased. |
2 | (z) “Termination” occurs when either party pursuant to a power created by agreement or |
3 | law puts an end to the lease contract otherwise than for default. |
4 | (2) Other definitions applying to this chapter and the sections in which they appear are: |
5 | “Accessions”. § 6A-2.1-310(1). |
6 | “Construction mortgage”. § 6A-2.1-309(1)(d). |
7 | “Encumbrance”. § 6A-2.1-309(1)(e). |
8 | “Fixtures”. § 6A-2.1-309(1)(a). |
9 | “Fixture filing”. § 6A-2.1-309(1)(b). |
10 | “Purchase money lease”. § 6A-2.1-309(1)(c). |
11 | (3) The following definitions in other chapters apply to this Chapter: |
12 | “Account”. § 6A-9-102(a)(2). |
13 | “Between merchants”. § 6A-2-104(3). |
14 | “Buyer”. § 6A-2-103(1)(a). |
15 | “Chattel paper”. § 6A-9-102(a)(11). |
16 | “Consumer goods”. § 6A-9-102(a)(23). |
17 | “Document”. § 6A-9-102(a)(30). |
18 | “Entrusting”. § 6A-2-403(3). |
19 | “General intangibles”. § 6A-9-102(a)(42). |
20 | “Good faith”. § 6A-2-103(1)(b). |
21 | “Instrument”. § 6A-9-102(a)(47). |
22 | “Merchant”. § 6A-2-104(1). |
23 | “Mortgage”. § 6A-9-102(a)(55). |
24 | “Pursuant to commitment”. § 6A-9-102(a)(69). |
25 | “Receipt”. § 6A-2-103(1)(c). |
26 | “Sale”. § 6A-2-106(1). |
27 | “Sale on approval”. § 6A-2-326. |
28 | “Sale or return”. § 6A-2-326. |
29 | “Seller”. § 6A-2-103(1)(d). |
30 | (4) In addition, chapter 1 of this title contains general definitions and principles of |
31 | construction and interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
32 | 6A-2.1-107. Waiver or renunciation of claim or right after default. |
33 | Any claim or right arising out of an alleged default or breach of warranty may be discharged |
34 | in whole or in part without consideration by a written waiver or renunciation signed and in a signed |
| LC004368 - Page 14 of 113 |
1 | record delivered by the aggrieved party. |
2 | 6A-2.1-201. Statute of frauds. |
3 | (1) A lease contract is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless: |
4 | (a) The total payments to be made under the lease contract, excluding payments for options |
5 | to renew or buy, are less than $ 1,000; or |
6 | (b) There is a writing record, signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought or |
7 | by that party’s authorized agent, sufficient to indicate that a lease contract has been made between |
8 | the parties and to describe the goods leased and the lease term. |
9 | (2) Any description of leased goods or of the lease term is sufficient and satisfies subsection |
10 | (1)(b), whether or not it is specific, if it reasonably identifies what is described. |
11 | (3) A writing record is not insufficient because it omits or incorrectly states a term agreed |
12 | upon, but the lease contract is not enforceable under subsection (1)(b) beyond the lease term and |
13 | the quantity of goods shown in the writing record. |
14 | (4) A lease contract that does not satisfy the requirements of subsection (1), but which is |
15 | valid in other respects, is enforceable: |
16 | (a) If the goods are to be specially manufactured or obtained for the lessee and are not |
17 | suitable for lease or sale to others in the ordinary course of the lessor’s business, and the lessor, |
18 | before notice of repudiation is received and under circumstances that reasonably indicate that the |
19 | goods are for the lessee, has made either a substantial beginning of their manufacture or |
20 | commitments for their procurement; |
21 | (b) If the party against whom enforcement is sought admits in that party’s pleading, |
22 | testimony or otherwise in court that a lease contract was made, but the lease contract is not |
23 | enforceable under this provision beyond the quantity of goods admitted; or |
24 | (c) With respect to goods that have been received and accepted by the lessee. |
25 | (5) The lease term under a lease contract referred to in subsection (4) is: |
26 | (a) If there is a writing record signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought or |
27 | by that party’s authorized agent specifying the lease term, the term so specified; |
28 | (b) If the party against whom enforcement is sought admits in that party’s pleading, |
29 | testimony, or otherwise in court a lease term, the term so admitted; or |
30 | (c) A reasonable lease term. |
31 | 6A-2.1-202. Final written expression: parol or extrinsic evidence.Final expression: |
32 | Parol or extrinsic evidence. |
33 | Terms with respect to which the confirmatory memoranda of the parties agree or which are |
34 | otherwise set forth in a writing record intended by the parties as a final expression of their |
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1 | agreement with respect to such terms as are included therein may not be contradicted by evidence |
2 | of any prior agreement or of a contemporaneous oral agreement but may be explained or |
3 | supplemented: |
4 | (a) By course of dealing or usage of trade or by course of performance; and |
5 | (b) By evidence of consistent additional terms unless the court finds the writing record to |
6 | have been intended also as a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of the agreement. |
7 | 6A-2.1-203. Seals inoperative. |
8 | The affixing of a seal to a writing record evidencing a lease contract or an offer to enter |
9 | into a lease contract does not render the writing record a sealed instrument, and the law with respect |
10 | to sealed instruments does not apply to the lease contract or offer. |
11 | 6A-2.1-205. Firm offers. |
12 | An offer by a merchant to lease goods to or from another person in a signed writing record |
13 | that by its terms gives assurance it will be held open is not revocable, for lack of consideration, |
14 | during the time stated or, if no time is stated, for a reasonable time, but in no event may the period |
15 | of irrevocability exceed 3 months. Any such term of assurance on a form supplied by the offeree |
16 | must be separately signed by the offeror. |
17 | 6A-2.1-208. Modification, rescission, and waiver. |
18 | (1) An agreement modifying a lease contract needs no consideration to be binding. |
19 | (2) A signed lease agreement that excludes modification or rescission except by a signed |
20 | writing record may not be otherwise modified or rescinded, but, except as between merchants, such |
21 | a requirement on a form supplied by a merchant must be separately signed by the other party. |
22 | (3) Although an attempt at modification or rescission does not satisfy the requirements of |
23 | subsection (2), it may operate as a waiver. |
24 | (4) A party who has made a waiver affecting an executory portion of a lease contract may |
25 | retract the waiver by reasonable notification received by the other party that strict performance will |
26 | be required of any term waived, unless the retraction would be unjust in view of a material change |
27 | of position in reliance on the waiver. |
28 | SECTION 4. Sections 6A-3-104, 6A-3-105, 6A-3-401 and 6A-3-604 of the General Laws |
29 | in Chapter 6A-3 entitled "Negotiable Instruments" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
30 | 6A-3-104. Negotiable instrument. |
31 | (a) Except as provided in subsections (c) and (d), “negotiable instrument” means an |
32 | unconditional promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest or other |
33 | charges described in the promise or order, if it: |
34 | (1) Is payable to bearer or to order at the time it is issued or first comes into possession of |
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1 | a holder; |
2 | (2) Is payable on demand or at a definite time; and |
3 | (3) Does not state any other undertaking or instruction by the person promising or ordering |
4 | payment to do any act in addition to the payment of money, but the promise or order may contain |
5 | (i) an undertaking or power to give, maintain, or protect collateral to secure payment, (ii) an |
6 | authorization or power to the holder to confess judgment or realize on or dispose of collateral, or |
7 | (iii) a waiver of the benefit of any law intended for the advantage or protection of an obligor; (iv) |
8 | a term that specifies the law that governs the promise or order; or (v) an undertaking to resolve, in |
9 | a specified forum, a dispute concerning the promise or order. |
10 | (b) “Instrument” means a negotiable instrument. |
11 | (c) An order that meets all of the requirements of subsection (a), except paragraph (1), and |
12 | otherwise falls within the definition of “check” in subsection (f) is a negotiable instrument and a |
13 | check. |
14 | (d) A promise or order other than a check is not an instrument if, at the time it is issued or |
15 | first comes into possession of a holder, it contains a conspicuous statement, however expressed, to |
16 | the effect that the promise or order is not negotiable or is not an instrument governed by this chapter. |
17 | (e) An instrument is a “note” if it is a promise and is a “draft” if it is an order. If an |
18 | instrument falls within the definition of both “note” and “draft,” a person entitled to enforce the |
19 | instrument may treat it as either. |
20 | (f) “Check” means (i) a draft, other than a documentary draft, payable on demand and |
21 | drawn on a bank or (ii) a cashier’s check or teller’s check. An instrument may be a check even |
22 | though it is described on its face by another term, such as “money order.” |
23 | (g) “Cashier’s check” means a draft with respect to which the drawer and drawee are the |
24 | same bank or branches of the same bank. |
25 | (h) “Teller’s check” means a draft drawn by a bank (i) on another bank, or (ii) payable at |
26 | or through a bank. |
27 | (i) “Traveler’s check” means an instrument that (i) is payable on demand, (ii) is drawn on |
28 | or payable at or through a bank, (iii) is designated by the term “traveler’s check” or by a |
29 | substantially similar term, and (iv) requires, as a condition to payment, a countersignature by a |
30 | person whose specimen signature appears on the instrument. |
31 | (j) “Certificate of deposit” means an instrument containing an acknowledgment by a bank |
32 | that a sum of money has been received by the bank and a promise by the bank to repay the sum of |
33 | money. A certificate of deposit is a note of the bank. |
34 | 6A-3-105. Issue of instrument. |
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1 | “Issue” means: |
2 | The (1) The first delivery of an instrument by the maker or drawer, whether to a holder or |
3 | nonholder, for the purpose of giving rights on the instrument to any person.; or |
4 | (2) If agreed by the payee, the first transmission by the drawer to the payee of an image of |
5 | an item and information derived from the item that enables the depositary bank to collect the item |
6 | by transferring or presenting under federal law an electronic check. |
7 | (b) An unissued instrument, or an unissued incomplete instrument that is completed, is |
8 | binding on the maker or drawer, but nonissuance is a defense. An instrument that is conditionally |
9 | issued or is issued for a special purpose is binding on the maker or drawer, but failure of the |
10 | condition or special purpose to be fulfilled is a defense. |
11 | (c) “Issuer” applies to issued and unissued instruments and means a maker or drawer of an |
12 | instrument. |
13 | 6A-3-401. Signature. |
14 | (a) A person is not liable on an instrument unless (i) the person signed the instrument, or |
15 | (ii) the person is represented by an agent or representative who signed the instrument and the |
16 | signature is binding on the represented person under § 6A-3-402. |
17 | (b) A signature may be made (i) manually or by means of a device or machine, and (ii) by |
18 | the use of any name, including a trade or assumed name, or by a word, mark, or symbol executed |
19 | or adopted by a person with present intention to authenticate a writing. |
20 | 6A-3-604. Discharge by cancellation or renunciation. |
21 | (a) A person entitled to enforce an instrument, with or without consideration, may |
22 | discharge the obligation of a party to pay the instrument (i) by an intentional voluntary act, such as |
23 | surrender of the instrument to the party, destruction, mutilation, or cancellation of the instrument, |
24 | cancellation or striking out of the party’s signature, or the addition of words to the instrument |
25 | indicating discharge, or (ii) by agreeing not to sue or otherwise renouncing rights against the party |
26 | by a signed writing record. The obligation of a party to pay a check is not discharged solely by |
27 | destruction of the check in connection with a process in which information is extracted from the |
28 | check and an image of the check is made and, subsequently, the information and image are |
29 | transmitted for payment. |
30 | (b) Cancellation or striking out of an indorsement pursuant to subsection (a) does not affect |
31 | the status and rights of a party derived from the indorsement. |
32 | SECTION 5. Sections 6A-4.1-103, 6A-4.1-201, 6A-4.1-202, 6A-4.1-203, 6A-4.1-207, 6A- |
33 | 4.1-208, 6A-4.1-210, 6A-4.1-211 and 6A-4.1-305 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-4.1 entitled |
34 | "Funds Transfers" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
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1 | 6A-4.1-103. Payment order — Definitions. |
2 | (a) In this chapter: |
3 | (1) “Payment order” means an instruction of a sender to a receiving bank, transmitted |
4 | orally, electronically, or in writing or in a record, to pay, or to cause another bank to pay, a fixed |
5 | or determinable amount of money to a beneficiary if: |
6 | (i) The instruction does not state a condition to payment to the beneficiary other than time |
7 | of payment; |
8 | (ii) The receiving bank is to be reimbursed by debiting an account of, or otherwise receiving |
9 | payment from, the sender; and |
10 | (iii) The instruction is transmitted by the sender directly to the receiving bank or to an |
11 | agent, funds-transfer system, or communication system for transmittal to the receiving bank. |
12 | (2) “Beneficiary” means the person to be paid by the beneficiary’s bank. |
13 | (3) “Beneficiary’s bank” means the bank identified in a payment order in which an account |
14 | of the beneficiary is to be credited pursuant to the order or which otherwise is to make payment to |
15 | the beneficiary if the order does not provide for payment to an account. |
16 | (4) “Receiving bank” means the bank to which the sender’s instruction is addressed. |
17 | (5) “Sender” means the person giving the instruction to the receiving bank. |
18 | (b) If an instruction complying with subsection (a)(1) is to make more than one payment |
19 | to a beneficiary, the instruction is a separate payment order with respect to each payment. |
20 | (c) A payment order is issued when it is sent to the receiving bank. |
21 | 6A-4.1-201. Security procedure. |
22 | “Security procedure” means a procedure established by agreement of a customer and a |
23 | receiving bank for the purpose of (i) verifying that a payment order or communication amending |
24 | or cancelling a payment order is that of the customer, or (ii) detecting error in the transmission or |
25 | the content of the payment order or communication. A security procedure may impose an obligation |
26 | on the receiving bank or the customer and may require the use of algorithms or other codes, |
27 | identifying words or, numbers, symbols, sounds, biometrics, encryption, callback procedures, or |
28 | similar security devices. Comparison of a signature on a payment order or communication with an |
29 | authorized specimen signature of the customer or requiring a payment order to be sent from a |
30 | known email address, IP address, or telephone number is not by itself a security procedure. |
31 | 6A-4.1-202. Authorized and verified payment orders. |
32 | (a) A payment order received by the receiving bank is the authorized order of the person |
33 | identified as sender if that person authorized the order or is otherwise bound by it under the law of |
34 | agency. |
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1 | (b) If a bank and its customer have agreed that the authenticity of payment orders issued to |
2 | the bank in the name of the customer as sender will be verified pursuant to a security procedure, a |
3 | payment order received by the receiving bank is effective as the order of the customer whether or |
4 | not authorized, if (i) the security procedure is a commercially reasonable method of providing |
5 | security against unauthorized payment orders, and (ii) the bank provides that it accepted the |
6 | payment order in good faith and in compliance with the bank's obligations under the security |
7 | procedure and any written agreement or instruction of the customer evidenced by a record |
8 | restricting acceptance of payment orders issued in the name of the customer. The bank is not |
9 | required to follow an instruction that violates a written an agreement with the customer, evidenced |
10 | by a record, or notice of which is not received at a time and in a manner affording the bank a |
11 | reasonable opportunity to act on it before the payment order is accepted. |
12 | (c) Commercial reasonableness of a security procedure is a question of law to be |
13 | determined by considering the wishes of the customer expressed to the bank, the circumstances of |
14 | the customer known to the bank, including the mix, type, and frequency of payment orders normally |
15 | issued by the customer to the bank, alternative security procedures offered to the customer, and |
16 | security procedures in general use by customers and receiving banks similarly situated. A security |
17 | procedure is deemed to be commercially reasonable if (i) the security procedure was chosen by the |
18 | customer after the bank offered, and the customer refused, a security procedure that was |
19 | commercially reasonable for that customer, and (ii) the customer expressly agreed in writing a |
20 | record to be bound by any payment order, whether or not authorized, issued in its name and |
21 | accepted by the bank in compliance with the bank's obligations under the security procedure chosen |
22 | by the customer. |
23 | (d) The term “sender” in this chapter includes the customer in whose name a payment order |
24 | is issued if the order is the authorized order of the customer under subsection (a), or it is effective |
25 | as the order of the customer under subsection (b). |
26 | (e) This section applies to amendments and cancellations of payment orders to the same |
27 | extent it applies to payment orders. |
28 | (f) Except as provided in this section and in § 6A-4.1-203(a)(1), rights and obligations |
29 | arising under this section and § 6A-4.1-203 may not be varied by agreement. |
30 | 6A-4.1-203. Unenforceability of certain verified payment orders. |
31 | (a) If an accepted payment order is not, under § 6A-4.1-202(a), an authorized order of a |
32 | customer identified as sender, but is effective as an order of the customer pursuant to § 6A-4.1- |
33 | 202(b), the following rules apply: |
34 | (1) By express written agreement evidenced by a record, the receiving bank may limit the |
| LC004368 - Page 20 of 113 |
1 | extent to which it is entitled to enforce or retain payment of the payment order. |
2 | (2) The receiving bank is not entitled to enforce or retain payment of the payment order if |
3 | the customer proves that the order was not caused, directly or indirectly, by a person (i) entrusted |
4 | at any time with duties to act for the customer with respect to payment orders or the security |
5 | procedure, or (ii) who obtained access to transmitting facilities of the customer or who obtained, |
6 | from a source controlled by the customer and without authority of the receiving bank, information |
7 | facilitating breach of the security procedures, regardless of how the information was obtained or |
8 | whether the customer was at fault. Information includes any access device, computer software, or |
9 | the like. |
10 | (b) This section applies to amendments of payment orders to the same extent it applies to |
11 | payment orders. |
12 | 6A-4.1-207. Misdescription of beneficiary. |
13 | (a) Subject to subsection (b), if, in a payment order received by the beneficiary’s bank, the |
14 | name, bank account number, or other identification of the beneficiary refers to a nonexistent or |
15 | unidentifiable person or account, no person has rights as a beneficiary of the order and acceptance |
16 | of the order cannot occur. |
17 | (b) If a payment order received by the beneficiary’s bank identifies the beneficiary both by |
18 | name and by an identifying or bank account number and the name and number identify different |
19 | persons, the following rules apply: |
20 | (1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), if the beneficiary’s bank does not know |
21 | that the name and number refer to different persons, it may rely on the number as the proper |
22 | identification of the beneficiary of the order. The beneficiary’s bank need not determine whether |
23 | the name and number refer to the same person. |
24 | (2) If the beneficiary’s bank pays the person identified by name or knows that the name |
25 | and number identify different persons, no person has rights as beneficiary except the person paid |
26 | by the beneficiary’s bank if that person was entitled to receive payment from the originator of the |
27 | funds transfer. If no person has rights as beneficiary, acceptance of the order cannot occur. |
28 | (c) If (i) a payment order described in subsection (b) is accepted, (ii) the originator’s |
29 | payment order described the beneficiary inconsistently by name and number, and (iii) the |
30 | beneficiary’s bank pays the person identified by number as permitted by subsection (b)(1), the |
31 | following rules apply: |
32 | (1) If the originator is a bank, the originator is obliged to pay its order. |
33 | (2) If the originator is not a bank and proves that the person identified by number was not |
34 | entitled to receive payment from the originator, the originator is not obliged to pay its order unless |
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1 | the originator’s bank proves that the originator, before acceptance of the originator’s order, had |
2 | notice that payment of a payment order issued by the originator might be made by the beneficiary’s |
3 | bank on the basis of an identifying or bank account number even if it identifies a person different |
4 | from the named beneficiary. Proof of notice may be made by any admissible evidence. The |
5 | originator’s bank satisfies the burden of proof if it proves that the originator, before the payment |
6 | order was accepted, signed a writing record stating the information to which the notice relates. |
7 | (d) In a case governed by subsection (b)(1), if the beneficiary’s bank rightfully pays the |
8 | person identified by number and that person was not entitled to receive payment from the |
9 | originator, the amount paid may be recovered from that person to the extent allowed by the law |
10 | governing mistake and restitution as follows: |
11 | (1) If the originator is obliged to pay its payment order as stated in subsection (c), the |
12 | originator has the right to recover. |
13 | (2) If the originator is not a bank and is not obliged to pay its payment order, the originator’s |
14 | bank has the right to recover. |
15 | 6A-4.1-208. Misdescription of intermediary bank or beneficiary’s bank. |
16 | (a) This subsection applies to a payment order identifying an intermediary bank or the |
17 | beneficiary’s bank only by an identifying number. |
18 | (1) The receiving bank may rely on the number as the proper identification of the |
19 | intermediary or beneficiary’s bank and need not determine whether the number identifies a bank. |
20 | (2) The sender is obliged to compensate the receiving bank for any loss and expenses |
21 | incurred by the receiving bank as a result of its reliance on the number in executing or attempting |
22 | to execute the order. |
23 | (b) This subsection applies to a payment order identifying an intermediary bank or the |
24 | beneficiary’s bank both by name and an identifying number if the name and number identify |
25 | different persons. |
26 | (1) If the sender is a bank, the receiving bank may rely on the number as the proper |
27 | identification of the intermediary or beneficiary’s bank if the receiving bank, when it executes the |
28 | sender’s order, does not know that the name and number identify different persons. The receiving |
29 | bank need not determine whether the name and number refer to the same person or whether the |
30 | number refers to a bank. The sender is obliged to compensate the receiving bank for any loss and |
31 | expenses incurred by the receiving bank as a result of its reliance on the number in executing or |
32 | attempting to execute the order. |
33 | (2) If the sender is not a bank and the receiving bank proves that the sender, before the |
34 | payment order was accepted, had notice that the receiving bank might rely on the number as the |
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1 | proper identification of the intermediary or beneficiary’s bank even if it identifies a person different |
2 | from the bank identified by name, the rights and obligations of the sender and the receiving bank |
3 | are governed by subsection (b)(1), as though the sender were a bank. Proof of notice may be made |
4 | by any admissible evidence. The receiving bank satisfies the burden of proof if it proves that the |
5 | sender, before the payment order was accepted, signed a writing record stating the information to |
6 | which the notice relates. |
7 | (3) Regardless of whether the sender is a bank, the receiving bank may rely on the same as |
8 | the proper identification of the intermediary or beneficiary’s bank if the receiving bank, at the time |
9 | it executes the sender’s order, does not know that the name and number identify different persons. |
10 | The receiving bank need not determine whether the name and number refer to the same person. |
11 | (4) If the receiving bank knows that the name and number identify different persons, |
12 | reliance on either the name or the number in executing the sender’s payment order is a breach of |
13 | the obligation stated in § 6A-4.1-302(a)(1). |
14 | 6A-4.1-210. Rejection of payment order. |
15 | (a) A payment order is rejected by the receiving bank by a notice of rejection transmitted |
16 | to the sender orally, electronically, or in writing or in a record. A notice of rejection need not use |
17 | any particular words and is sufficient if it indicates that the receiving bank is rejecting the order or |
18 | will not execute or pay the order. Rejection is effective when the notice is given if transmission is |
19 | by a means that is reasonable in the circumstances. If notice of rejection is given by a means that |
20 | is not reasonable, rejection is effective when the notice is received. If an agreement of the sender |
21 | and receiving bank establishes the means to be used to reject a payment order, (i) any means |
22 | complying with the agreement is reasonable and (ii) any means not complying is not reasonable |
23 | unless no significant delay in receipt of the notice resulted from the use of the noncomplying means. |
24 | (b) This subsection applies if a receiving bank other than the beneficiary’s bank fails to |
25 | execute a payment order despite the existence on the execution date of a withdrawable credit |
26 | balance in an authorized account of the sender sufficient to cover the order. If the sender does not |
27 | receive notice of rejection of the order on the execution date and the authorized account of the |
28 | sender does not bear interest, the bank is obliged to pay interest to the sender on the amount of the |
29 | order for the number of days elapsing after the execution date to the earlier of the day the order is |
30 | canceled pursuant to § 6A-4.1-211(d) or the day the sender receives notice or learns that the order |
31 | was not executed, counting the final day of the period as an elapsed day. If the withdrawable credit |
32 | balance during that period falls below the amount of the order, the amount of interest is reduced |
33 | accordingly. |
34 | (c) If a receiving bank suspends payments, all unaccepted payment orders issued to it are |
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1 | deemed rejected at the time the bank suspends payments. |
2 | (d) Acceptance of a payment order precludes a later rejection of the order. Rejection of a |
3 | payment order precludes a later acceptance of the order. |
4 | 6A-4.1-211. Cancellation and amendment of payment order. |
5 | (a) A communication of the sender of a payment order cancelling or amending the order |
6 | may be transmitted to the receiving bank orally, electronically, or in writing or in a record. If a |
7 | security procedure is in effect between the sender and the receiving bank, the communication is not |
8 | effective to cancel or amend the order unless the communication is verified pursuant to the security |
9 | procedure or the bank agrees to the cancellation or amendment. |
10 | (b) Subject to subsection (a), a communication by the sender cancelling or amending a |
11 | payment order is effective to cancel or amend the order if notice of the communication is received |
12 | at a time and in a manner affording the receiving bank a reasonable opportunity to act on the |
13 | communication before the bank accepts the payment order. |
14 | (c) After a payment order has been accepted, cancellation or amendment of the order is not |
15 | effective unless the receiving bank agrees or a funds transfer system rule allows cancellation or |
16 | amendment without agreement of the bank. |
17 | (1) With respect to a payment order accepted by a receiving bank other than the |
18 | beneficiary’s bank, cancellation or amendment is not effective unless a conforming cancellation or |
19 | amendment of the payment order issued by the receiving bank is also made. |
20 | (2) With respect to a payment order accepted by the beneficiary’s bank, cancellation or |
21 | amendment is not effective unless the order was issued in execution of an unauthorized payment |
22 | order, or because of a mistake by a sender in the funds transfer which resulted in the issuance of a |
23 | payment order (i) that is a duplicate of a payment order previously issued by the sender, (ii) that |
24 | orders payment to a beneficiary not entitled to receive payment from the originator, or (iii) that |
25 | orders payment in an amount greater than the amount the beneficiary was entitled to receive from |
26 | the originator. If the payment order is canceled or amended, the beneficiary’s bank is entitled to |
27 | recover from the beneficiary any amount paid to the beneficiary to the extent allowed by the law |
28 | governing mistake and restitution. |
29 | (d) An unaccepted payment order is canceled by operation of law at the close of the fifth |
30 | funds transfer business day of the receiving bank after the execution date or payment date of the |
31 | order. |
32 | (e) A canceled payment order cannot be accepted. If an accepted payment order is canceled, |
33 | the acceptance is nullified and no person has any right or obligation based on the acceptance. |
34 | Amendment of the payment order is deemed to be cancellation of the original order at the time of |
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1 | amendment and issue of a new payment order in the amended form at the same time. |
2 | (f) Unless otherwise provided in an agreement of the parties or in a funds transfer system |
3 | rule, if the receiving bank, after accepting a payment order, agrees to cancellation or amendment |
4 | of the order by the sender or is bound by a funds transfer system rule allowing cancellation or |
5 | amendment without the bank’s agreement, the sender, whether or not cancellation or amendment |
6 | is effective, is liable to the bank for any loss and expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees, |
7 | incurred by the bank as a result of the cancellation or amendment or attempted cancellation or |
8 | amendment. |
9 | (g) A payment order is not revoked by the death or legal incapacity of the sender unless |
10 | the receiving bank knows of the death or of an adjudication of incapacity by a court of competent |
11 | jurisdiction and has reasonable opportunity to act before acceptance of the order. |
12 | (h) A funds transfer system rule is not effective to the extent it conflicts with subsection |
13 | (c)(2). |
14 | 6A-4.1-305. Liability for late or improper execution or failure to execute payment |
15 | order. |
16 | (a) If a funds transfer is completed but execution of a payment order by the receiving bank |
17 | in breach of § 6A-4.1-302 results in delay in payment to the beneficiary, the bank is obliged to pay |
18 | interest to either the originator or the beneficiary of the funds transfer for the period of delay caused |
19 | by the improper execution. Except as provided in subsection (c), additional damages are not |
20 | recoverable. |
21 | (b) If execution of a payment order by a receiving bank in breach of § 6A-4.1-302 results |
22 | in (i) noncompletion of the funds transfer, (ii) failure to use an intermediary bank designated by the |
23 | originator, or (iii) issuance of a payment order that does not comply with the terms of the payment |
24 | order of the originator, the bank is liable to the originator for its expenses in the funds transfer and |
25 | for incidental expenses and interest losses, to the extent not covered by subsection (a), resulting |
26 | from the improper execution. Except as provided in subsection (c), additional damages are not |
27 | recoverable. |
28 | (c) In addition to the amounts payable under subsections (a) and (b), damages, including |
29 | consequential damages, are recoverable to the extent provided in an express written agreement of |
30 | the receiving bank evidenced by a record. |
31 | (d) If a receiving bank fails to execute a payment order it was obliged by express agreement |
32 | to execute, the receiving bank is liable to the sender for its expenses in the transaction and for |
33 | incidental expenses and interest losses resulting from the failure to execute. Additional damages, |
34 | including consequential damages, are recoverable to the extent provided in an express written |
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1 | agreement of the receiving bank, evidenced by a record but are not otherwise recoverable. |
2 | (e) Reasonable attorney’s fees are recoverable if demand for compensation under |
3 | subsection (a) or (b) is made and refused before an action is brought on the claim. If a claim is |
4 | made for breach of an agreement under subsection (d) and the agreement does not provide for |
5 | damages, reasonable attorney’s fees are recoverable if demand for compensation under subsection |
6 | (d) is made and refused before an action is brought on the claim. |
7 | (f) Except as stated in this section, the liability of a receiving bank under subsections (a) |
8 | and (b) may not be varied by agreement. |
9 | SECTION 6. Sections 6A-5-104 and 6A-5-116 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-5 |
10 | entitled "Letters of Credit" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
11 | 6A-5-104. Formal requirements. |
12 | A letter of credit, confirmation, advice, transfer, amendment, or cancellation may be issued |
13 | in any form that is a signed record and is authenticated (1) by a signature or (2) in accordance with |
14 | the agreement of the parties or the standard practice referred to in § 6A-5-108(e). |
15 | 6A-5-116. Choice of law and forum. |
16 | (a) The liability of an issuer, nominated person, or adviser for action or omission is |
17 | governed by the law of the jurisdiction chosen by an agreement in the form of a record signed or |
18 | otherwise authenticated by the affected parties in the manner provided in § 6A-5-104 or by a |
19 | provision in the person’s letter of credit, confirmation, or other undertaking. The jurisdiction whose |
20 | law is chosen need not bear any relation to the transaction. |
21 | (b) Unless subsection (a) applies, the liability of an issuer, nominated person, or adviser |
22 | for action or omission is governed by the law of the jurisdiction in which the person is located. The |
23 | person is considered to be located at the address indicated in the person’s undertaking. If more than |
24 | one address is indicated, the person is considered to be located at the address from which the |
25 | person’s undertaking was issued. |
26 | (c) For the purpose of jurisdiction, choice of law, and recognition of interbranch letters of |
27 | credit, but not enforcement of a judgment, all branches of a bank are considered separate juridical |
28 | entities and a bank is considered to be located at the place where its relevant branch is considered |
29 | to be located under this subsection (d) of this section. |
30 | (d) A branch of a bank is considered to be located at the address indicated in the branch's |
31 | undertaking. If more than one address is indicated, the branch is considered to be located at the |
32 | address from which the undertaking was issued. |
33 | (c)(e) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, the liability of an issuer, nominated |
34 | person, or adviser is governed by any rules of custom or practice, such as the Uniform Customs |
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1 | and Practice for Documentary Credits, to which the letter of credit, confirmation, or other |
2 | undertaking is expressly made subject. If (1) this chapter would govern the liability of an issuer, |
3 | nominated person, or adviser under subsection (a) or (b), (2) the relevant undertaking incorporates |
4 | rules of custom or practice, and (3) there is conflict between this chapter and those rules as applied |
5 | to that undertaking, those rules govern except to the extent of any conflict with the nonvariable |
6 | provisions specified in § 6A-5-103(c). |
7 | (d)(f) If there is conflict between this chapter and chapters 3, 4, 4.1 or 9 of this title, this |
8 | chapter governs. |
9 | (e)(g) The forum for settling disputes arising out of an undertaking within this chapter may |
10 | be chosen in the manner and with the binding effect that governing law may be chosen in |
11 | accordance with subsection (a). |
12 | SECTION 7. Sections 6A-7-102 and 6A-7-106 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-7 |
13 | entitled "Documents of Title" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
14 | 6A-7-102. Definitions and index of definitions. |
15 | (a) In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires: |
16 | (1) “Bailee” means a person that by a warehouse receipt, bill of lading, or other document |
17 | of title acknowledges possession of goods and contracts to deliver them. |
18 | (2) “Carrier” means a person that issues a bill of lading. |
19 | (3) “Consignee” means a person named in a bill of lading to which or to whose order the |
20 | bill promises delivery. |
21 | (4) “Consignor” means a person named in a bill of lading as the person from which the |
22 | goods have been received for shipment. |
23 | (5) “Delivery order” means a record that contains an order to deliver goods directed to a |
24 | warehouse, carrier, or other person that in the ordinary course of business issues warehouse receipts |
25 | or bills of lading. |
26 | (6) “Good faith” means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial |
27 | standards of fair dealing. |
28 | (7) “Goods” means all things that are treated as movable for the purposes of a contract for |
29 | storage or transportation. |
30 | (8) “Issuer” means a bailee that issues a document of title or, in the case of an unaccepted |
31 | delivery order, the person that orders the possessor of goods to deliver. The term includes a person |
32 | for which an agent or employee purports to act in issuing a document if the agent or employee has |
33 | real or apparent authority to issue documents, even if the issuer did not receive any goods, the goods |
34 | were misdescribed, or in any other respect the agent or employee violated the issuer’s instructions. |
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1 | (9) “Person entitled under the document” means the holder, in the case of a negotiable |
2 | document of title, or the person to which delivery of the goods is to be made by the terms of, or |
3 | pursuant to instructions in a record under, a nonnegotiable document of title. |
4 | (10) “Record” means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or that is stored |
5 | in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. |
6 | (11) “Sign” means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record: |
7 | (A) To execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or |
8 | (B) To attach to or logically associate with the record an electronic sound, symbol, or |
9 | process. |
10 | (12) “Shipper” means a person that enters into a contract of transportation with a carrier. |
11 | (13) “Warehouse” means a person engaged in the business of storing goods for hire. |
12 | (b) Definitions in other chapters applying to this chapter and the sections in which they |
13 | appear are: |
14 | (1) "Contract for sale," § 6A-2-106. |
15 | (2) "Lessee in the ordinary course of business," § 6A-2.1-103. |
16 | (3) "Receipt" of goods, § 6A-2-103. |
17 | (c) In addition, chapter 1 contains general definitions and principles of construction and |
18 | interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
19 | 6A-7-106. Control of electronic document of title. |
20 | (a) A person has control of an electronic document of title if a system employed for |
21 | evidencing the transfer of interests in the electronic document reliably establishes that person as |
22 | the person to which the electronic document was issued or transferred. |
23 | (b) A system satisfies subsection (a), and a person is deemed to have has control of an |
24 | electronic document of title, if the document is created, stored, and assigned transferred in such a |
25 | manner that: |
26 | (1) A single authoritative copy of the document exists which is unique, identifiable, and, |
27 | except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (4), (5), and (6), unalterable; |
28 | (2) The authoritative copy identifies the person asserting control as: |
29 | (A) The person to which the document was issued; or |
30 | (B) If the authoritative copy indicates that the document has been transferred, the person |
31 | to which the document was most recently transferred; |
32 | (3) The authoritative copy is communicated to and maintained by the person asserting |
33 | control or its designated custodian; |
34 | (4) Copies or amendments that add or change an identified assignee transferee of the |
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1 | authoritative copy can be made only with the consent of the person asserting control; |
2 | (5) Each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy of a copy is readily identifiable as a |
3 | copy that is not the authoritative copy; and |
4 | (6) Any amendment of the authoritative copy is readily identifiable as authorized or |
5 | unauthorized. |
6 | (c) A system satisfies subsection (a) of this section, and a person has control of an electronic |
7 | document of title, if an authoritative electronic copy of the document, a record attached to or |
8 | logically associated with the electronic copy, or a system in which the electronic copy is recorded: |
9 | (1) Enables the person readily to identify each electronic copy as either an authoritative |
10 | copy or a nonauthoritative copy; |
11 | (2) Enables the person readily to identify itself in any way, including by name, identifying |
12 | number, cryptographic key, office, or account number, as the person to which each authoritative |
13 | electronic copy was issued or transferred; and |
14 | (3) Gives the person exclusive power, subject to subsection (d) of this section, to: |
15 | (i) Prevent others from adding or changing the person to which each authoritative electronic |
16 | copy has been issued or transferred; and |
17 | (ii) Transfer control of each authoritative electronic copy. |
18 | (d) Subject to subsection (e) of this section, a power is exclusive under subsections (c)(3)(i) |
19 | and (ii) of this section even if: |
20 | (1) The authoritative electronic copy, a record attached to, or logically associated with the |
21 | authoritative electronic copy, or a system in which the authoritative electronic copy is recorded |
22 | limits the use of the document of title or has a protocol that is programmed to cause a change, |
23 | including a transfer or loss of control; or |
24 | (2) The power is shared with another person. |
25 | (e) A power of a person is not shared with another person under subsection (d)(2) of this |
26 | section and the person’s power is not exclusive if: |
27 | (1) The person can exercise the power only if the power also is exercised by the other |
28 | person; and |
29 | (2) The other person: |
30 | (i) Can exercise the power without exercise of the power by the person; or |
31 | (ii) Is the transferor to the person of an interest in the document of title. |
32 | (f) If a person has the powers specified in subsections (c)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section, the |
33 | powers are presumed to be exclusive. |
34 | (g) A person has control of an electronic document of title if another person, other than the |
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1 | transferor to the person of an interest in the document: |
2 | (1) Has control of the document and acknowledges that it has control on behalf of the |
3 | person; or |
4 | (2) Obtains control of the document after having acknowledged that it will obtain control |
5 | of the document on behalf of the person. |
6 | (h) A person that has control under this section is not required to acknowledge that it has |
7 | control on behalf of another person. |
8 | (i) If a person acknowledges that it has or will obtain control on behalf of another person, |
9 | unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this chapter or chapter 6A-9 otherwise |
10 | provides, the person does not owe any duty to the other person and is not required to confirm the |
11 | acknowledgment to any other person. |
12 | SECTION 8. Sections 6A-8-102, 6A-8-103, 6A-8-106, 6A-8-110 and 6A-8-303 of the |
13 | General Laws in Chapter 6A-8 entitled "Investment Securities" are hereby amended to read as |
14 | follows: |
15 | 6A-8-102. Definitions. |
16 | (a) In this chapter: |
17 | (1) “Adverse claim” means a claim that a claimant has a property interest in a financial |
18 | asset and that it is a violation of the rights of the claimant for another person to hold, transfer, or |
19 | deal with the financial asset. |
20 | (2) “Bearer form,” as applied to a certificated security, means a form in which the security |
21 | is payable to the bearer of the security certificate according to its terms but not by reason of an |
22 | indorsement. |
23 | (3) “Broker” means a person defined as a broker or dealer under the federal securities laws, |
24 | but without excluding a bank acting in that capacity. |
25 | (4) “Certificated security” means a security that is represented by a certificate. |
26 | (5) “Clearing corporation” means: |
27 | (i) a person that is registered as a “clearing agency” under the federal securities laws; |
28 | (ii) A federal reserve bank; or |
29 | (iii) Any other person that provides clearance or settlement services with respect to |
30 | financial assets that would require it to register as a clearing agency under the federal securities |
31 | laws but for an exclusion or exemption from the registration requirement, if its activities as a |
32 | clearing corporation, including promulgation of rules, are subject to regulation by a federal or state |
33 | governmental authority. |
34 | (6) “Communicate” means to: |
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1 | (i) Send a signed writing record; or |
2 | (ii) Transmit information by any mechanism agreed upon by the persons transmitting and |
3 | receiving the information. |
4 | (7) “Entitlement holder” means a person identified in the records of a securities |
5 | intermediary as the person having a security entitlement against the securities intermediary. If a |
6 | person acquires a security entitlement by virtue of § 6A-8-501(b)(2) or (3), that person is the |
7 | entitlement holder. |
8 | (8) “Entitlement order” means a notification communicated to a securities intermediary |
9 | directing transfer or redemption of a financial asset to which the entitlement holder has a security |
10 | entitlement. |
11 | (9) “Financial asset,” except as otherwise provided in § 6A-8-103, means: |
12 | (i) A security; |
13 | (ii) An obligation of a person or a share, participation, or other interest in a person or in |
14 | property or an enterprise of a person, which is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on financial markets, |
15 | or which is recognized in any area in which it is issued or dealt in as a medium for investment; or |
16 | (iii) Any property that is held by a securities intermediary for another person in a securities |
17 | account if the securities intermediary has expressly agreed with the other person that the property |
18 | is to be treated as a financial asset under this chapter. |
19 | As context requires, the term means either the interest itself or the means by which a |
20 | person’s claim to it is evidenced, including a certificated or uncertificated security, a security |
21 | certificate, or a security entitlement. |
22 | (10) “Good faith,” for purposes of the obligation of good faith in the performance or |
23 | enforcement of contracts or duties within this chapter, means honesty in fact and the observance of |
24 | reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing. |
25 | (11) “Indorsement” means a signature that alone or accompanied by other words is made |
26 | on a security certificate in registered form or on a separate document for the purpose of assigning, |
27 | transferring, or redeeming the security or granting a power to assign, transfer, or redeem it. |
28 | (12) “Instruction” means a notification communicated to the issuer of an uncertificated |
29 | security which directs that the transfer of the security be registered or that the security be redeemed. |
30 | (13) “Registered form,” as applied to a certificated security, means a form in which: |
31 | (i) The security certificate specifies a person entitled to the security; and |
32 | (ii) A transfer of the security may be registered upon books maintained for that purpose by |
33 | or on behalf of the issuer, or the security certificate so states. |
34 | (14) “Securities intermediary” means: |
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1 | (i) A clearing corporation; or |
2 | (ii) A person, including a bank or broker, that in the ordinary course of its business |
3 | maintains securities accounts for others and is acting in that capacity. |
4 | (15) “Security,” except as otherwise provided in § 6A-8-103, means an obligation of an |
5 | issuer or a share, participation, or other interest in an issuer or in property or an enterprise of an |
6 | issuer: |
7 | (i) Which is represented by a security certificate in bearer or registered form, or the transfer |
8 | of which may be registered upon books maintained for that purpose by or on behalf of the issuer; |
9 | (ii) Which is one of a class or series or by its terms is divisible into a class or series of |
10 | shares, participations, interests, or obligations; and |
11 | (iii) Which: |
12 | (A) Is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on securities exchanges or securities markets; or |
13 | (B) Is a medium for investment and by its terms expressly provides that it is a security |
14 | governed by this chapter. |
15 | (16) “Security certificate” means a certificate representing a security. |
16 | (17) “Security entitlement” means the rights and property interest of an entitlement holder |
17 | with respect to a financial asset specified in part 5 of this chapter. |
18 | (18) “Uncertificated security” means a security that is not represented by a certificate. |
19 | (b) Other The following definitions applying to in this chapter and the sections in which |
20 | they appear are other chapters of this title apply to this chapter: |
21 | "Appropriate person" § 6A-8-107 |
22 | "Control" § 6A-8-106 |
23 | "Controllable account" § 6A-9-102 |
24 | "Controllable electronic record" § 6A-12-102 |
25 | "Controllable payment intangible" § 6A-9-102 |
26 | "Delivery" § 6A-8-301 |
27 | "Investment company security" § 6A-8-103 |
28 | "Issuer" § 6A-8-201 |
29 | "Overissue" § 6A-8-210 |
30 | "Protected purchaser" § 6A-8-303 |
31 | "Securities account" § 6A-8-501 |
32 | (c) In addition, chapter 1 of this title contains general definitions and principles of |
33 | construction and interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
34 | (d) The characterization of a person, business, or transaction for purposes of this chapter |
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1 | does not determine the characterization of the person, business, or transaction for purposes of any |
2 | other law, regulation, or rule. |
3 | 6A-8-103. Rules for determining whether certain obligations and interests are |
4 | securities or financial assets. |
5 | (a) A share or similar equity interest issued by a corporation, business trust, joint stock |
6 | company, or similar entity is a security. |
7 | (b) An “investment company security” is a security. “Investment company security” means |
8 | a share or similar equity interest issued by an entity that is registered as an investment company |
9 | under the federal investment company laws, an interest in a unit investment trust that is so |
10 | registered, or a face-amount certificate issued by a face-amount certificate company that is so |
11 | registered. Investment company security does not include an insurance policy or endowment policy |
12 | or annuity contract issued by an insurance company. |
13 | (c) An interest in a partnership or limited liability company is not a security unless it is |
14 | dealt in or traded on securities exchanges or in securities markets, its terms expressly provide that |
15 | it is a security governed by this chapter, or it is an investment company security. However, an |
16 | interest in a partnership or limited liability company is a financial asset if it is held in a securities |
17 | account. |
18 | (d) A writing that is a security certificate is governed by this chapter and not by chapter 3 |
19 | of this title, even though it also meets the requirements of that chapter. However, a negotiable |
20 | instrument governed by chapter 3 of this title is a financial asset if it is held in a securities account. |
21 | (e) An option or similar obligation issued by a clearing corporation to its participants is not |
22 | a security, but is a financial asset. |
23 | (f) A commodity contract, as defined in § 6A-9-102(a)(15), is not a security or a financial |
24 | asset. |
25 | (g) A document of title is not a financial asset unless subsection 6A-8-102(a)(9)(iii) applies. |
26 | (h) A controllable account, controllable electronic record, or controllable payment |
27 | intangible is not a financial asset unless § 6A-8-102(a)(9)(iii) applies. |
28 | 6A-8-106. Control. |
29 | (a) A purchaser has “control” of a certificated security in bearer form if the certificated |
30 | security is delivered to the purchaser. |
31 | (b) A purchaser has “control” of a certificated security in registered form if the certificated |
32 | security is delivered to the purchaser, and: |
33 | (1) the certificate is indorsed to the purchaser or in blank by an effective indorsement; or |
34 | (2) the certificate is registered in the name of the purchaser, upon original issue or |
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1 | registration of transfer by the issuer. |
2 | (c) A purchaser has “control” of an uncertificated security if: |
3 | (1) the uncertificated security is delivered to the purchaser; or |
4 | (2) the issuer has agreed that it will comply with instructions originated by the purchaser |
5 | without further consent by the registered owner. |
6 | (d) A purchaser has “control” of a security entitlement if: |
7 | (1) the purchaser becomes the entitlement holder; |
8 | (2) the securities intermediary has agreed that it will comply with entitlement orders |
9 | originated by the purchaser without further consent by the entitlement holder; or |
10 | (3) another person has control of the security entitlement on behalf of the purchaser or, |
11 | having previously acquired control of the security entitlement, acknowledges that it has control on |
12 | behalf of the purchaser person, other than the transferor to the purchaser of an interest in the security |
13 | entitlement: |
14 | (i) has control of the security entitlement and acknowledges that it has control on behalf of |
15 | the purchaser; or |
16 | (ii) obtains control of the security entitlement after having acknowledged that it will obtain |
17 | control of the security entitlement on behalf of the purchaser. |
18 | (e) If an interest in a security entitlement is granted by the entitlement holder to the |
19 | entitlement holder’s own securities intermediary, the securities intermediary has control. |
20 | (f) A purchaser who has satisfied the requirements of subsection (c) or (d) has control even |
21 | if the registered owner in the case of subsection (c) or the entitlement holder in the case of |
22 | subsection (d) retains the right to make substitutions for the uncertificated security or security |
23 | entitlement, to originate instructions or entitlement orders to the issuer or securities intermediary, |
24 | or otherwise to deal with the uncertificated security or security entitlement. |
25 | (g) An issuer or a securities intermediary may not enter into an agreement of the kind |
26 | described in subsection (c)(2) or (d)(2) without the consent of the registered owner or entitlement |
27 | holder, but an issuer or a securities intermediary is not required to enter into such an agreement |
28 | even though the registered owner or entitlement holder so directs. An issuer or securities |
29 | intermediary that has entered into such an agreement is not required to confirm the existence of the |
30 | agreement to another party unless requested to do so by the registered owner or entitlement holder. |
31 | (h) A person that has control under this section is not required to acknowledge that it has |
32 | control on behalf of a purchaser. |
33 | (i) If a person acknowledges that it has or will obtain control on behalf of a purchaser, |
34 | unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this chapter or chapter 6A-9 otherwise |
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1 | provides, the person does not owe any duty to the purchaser and is not required to confirm the |
2 | acknowledgment to any other person. |
3 | 6A-8-110. Applicability — Choice of law. |
4 | (a) The local law of the issuer’s jurisdiction, as specified in subsection (d), governs: |
5 | (1) the validity of a security; |
6 | (2) the rights and duties of the issuer with respect to registration of transfer; |
7 | (3) the effectiveness of registration of transfer by the issuer; |
8 | (4) whether the issuer owes any duties to an adverse claimant to a security; and |
9 | (5) whether an adverse claim can be asserted against a person to whom transfer of a |
10 | certificated or uncertificated security is registered or a person who obtains control of an |
11 | uncertificated security. |
12 | (b) The local law of the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction, as specified in subsection |
13 | (e), governs: |
14 | (1) acquisition of a security entitlement from the securities intermediary; |
15 | (2) the rights and duties of the securities intermediary and entitlement holder arising out of |
16 | a security entitlement; |
17 | (3) whether the securities intermediary owes any duties to an adverse claimant to a security |
18 | entitlement; and |
19 | (4) whether an adverse claim can be asserted against a person who acquires a security |
20 | entitlement from the securities intermediary or a person who purchases a security entitlement or |
21 | interest therein from an entitlement holder. |
22 | (c) The local law of the jurisdiction in which a security certificate is located at the time of |
23 | delivery governs whether an adverse claim can be asserted against a person to whom the security |
24 | certificate is delivered. |
25 | (d) “Issuer’s jurisdiction” means the jurisdiction under which the issuer of the security is |
26 | organized or, if permitted by the law of that jurisdiction, the law of another jurisdiction specified |
27 | by the issuer. An issuer organized under the law of this State may specify the law of another |
28 | jurisdiction as the law governing the matters specified in subsection (a)(2) through (5). |
29 | (e) The following rules determine a “securities intermediary’s jurisdiction” for purposes of |
30 | this section: |
31 | (1) If an agreement between the securities intermediary and its entitlement holder |
32 | governing the securities account expressly provides that a particular jurisdiction is the securities |
33 | intermediary’s jurisdiction for purposes of this part, this chapter, or this title, that jurisdiction is the |
34 | securities intermediary’s jurisdiction. |
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1 | (2) If paragraph (1) does not apply and an agreement between the securities intermediary |
2 | and its entitlement holder governing the securities account expressly provides that the agreement |
3 | is governed by the law of a particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the securities intermediary’s |
4 | jurisdiction. |
5 | (3) If neither paragraph (1) nor paragraph (2) applies and an agreement between the |
6 | securities intermediary and its entitlement holder governing the securities account expressly |
7 | provides that the securities account is maintained at an office in a particular jurisdiction, that |
8 | jurisdiction is the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction. |
9 | (4) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction is |
10 | the jurisdiction in which the office identified in an account statement as the office serving the |
11 | entitlement holder’s account is located. |
12 | (5) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction is |
13 | the jurisdiction in which the chief executive office of the securities intermediary is located. |
14 | (f) A securities intermediary’s jurisdiction is not determined by the physical location of |
15 | certificates representing financial assets, or by the jurisdiction in which is organized the issuer of |
16 | the financial asset with respect to which an entitlement holder has a security entitlement, or by the |
17 | location of facilities for data processing or other record keeping concerning the account. |
18 | (g) The local law of the issuer’s jurisdiction or the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction |
19 | governs a matter or transaction specified in subsections (a) or (b) of this section even if the matter |
20 | or transaction does not bear any relation to the jurisdiction. |
21 | 6A-8-303. Protected purchaser. |
22 | (a) “Protected purchaser” means a purchaser of a certificated or uncertificated security, or |
23 | of an interest therein, who: |
24 | (1) gives value; |
25 | (2) does not have notice of any adverse claim to the security; and |
26 | (3) obtains control of the certificated or uncertificated security. |
27 | (b) In addition to acquiring the rights of a purchaser, a A protected purchaser also acquires |
28 | its interest in the security free of any adverse claim. |
29 | SECTION 9. Sections 6A-9-102, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105, 6A-9-203, 6A-9-204, 6A-9-207, |
30 | 6A-9-208, 6A-9-209, 6A-9-210, 6A-9-301, 6A-9-304, 6A-9-305, 6A-9-310, 6A-9-312, 6A-9-313, |
31 | 6A-9-314, 6A-9-316, 6A-9-317, 6A-9-323, 6A-9-324, 6A-9-330, 6A-9-331, 6A-9-332, 6A-9-334, |
32 | 6A-9-341, 6A-9-404, 6A-9-406, 6A-9-408, 6A-9-509, 6A-9-513, 6A-9-601, 6A-9-605, 6A-9-608, |
33 | 6A-9-611, 6A-9-613, 6A-9-614, 6A-9-615, 6A-9-616, 6A-9-619, 6A-9-620, 6A-9-621, 6A-9-624 |
34 | and 6A-9-628 of the General Laws in Chapter 6A-9 entitled "Secured Transactions" are hereby |
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1 | amended to read as follows: |
2 | 6A-9-102. Definitions. |
3 | (a) Chapter 9 definitions. In this chapter: |
4 | (1) “Accession” means goods that are physically united with other goods in such a manner |
5 | that the identity of the original goods is not lost. |
6 | (2) “Account”, except as used in “account for”, "account statement", account to", |
7 | "commodity account in subsection (a)(14) of this section", "customer's account", "deposit account |
8 | in subsection (a)(29) of this section", "on account of", and "statement of account" means a right to |
9 | payment of a monetary obligation, whether or not earned by performance, (i) for property that has |
10 | been or is to be sold, leased, licensed, assigned, or otherwise disposed of, (ii) for services rendered |
11 | or to be rendered, (iii) for a policy of insurance issued or to be issued, (iv) for a secondary obligation |
12 | incurred or to be incurred, (v) for energy provided or to be provided, (vi) for the use or hire of a |
13 | vessel under a charter or other contract, (vii) arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or |
14 | information contained on or for use with the card, or (viii) as winnings in a lottery or other game |
15 | of chance operated or sponsored by a State, governmental unit of a State, or person licensed or |
16 | authorized to operate the game by a State or governmental unit of a State. The term includes |
17 | controllable accounts and health-care-insurance receivables. The term does not include (i) rights to |
18 | payment evidenced by chattel paper or an instrument, (ii) commercial tort claims, (iii) deposit |
19 | accounts, (iv) investment property, (v) letter-of-credit rights or letters of credit, or (vi) rights to |
20 | payment for money or funds advanced or sold, other than rights arising out of the use of a credit or |
21 | charge card or information contained on or for use with the card, or (vii) rights to payment |
22 | evidenced by an instrument. |
23 | (3) “Account debtor” means a person obligated on an account, chattel paper, or general |
24 | intangible. The term does not include persons obligated to pay a negotiable instrument, even if the |
25 | negotiable instrument constitutes part of evidences chattel paper. |
26 | (4) “Accounting”, except as used in “accounting for”, means a record: |
27 | (i) Authenticated Signed by a secured party; |
28 | (ii) Indicating the aggregate unpaid secured obligations as of a date not more than 35 days |
29 | earlier or 35 days later than the date of the record; and |
30 | (iii) Identifying the components of the obligations in reasonable detail. |
31 | (5) “Agricultural lien” means an interest in farm products: |
32 | (i) Which secures payment or performance of an obligation for: |
33 | (A) Goods or services furnished in connection with a debtor’s farming operation; or |
34 | (B) Rent on real property leased by a debtor in connection with its farming operation; |
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1 | (ii) Which is created by statute in favor of a person that: |
2 | (A) In the ordinary course of its business furnished goods or services to a debtor in |
3 | connection with a debtor’s farming operation; or |
4 | (B) Leased real property to a debtor in connection with the debtor’s farming operation; and |
5 | (iii) Whose effectiveness does not depend on the person’s possession of the personal |
6 | property. |
7 | (6) “As-extracted collateral” means: |
8 | (i) Oil, gas, or other minerals that are subject to a security interest that: |
9 | (A) Is created by a debtor having an interest in the minerals before extraction; and |
10 | (B) Attaches to the minerals as extracted; or |
11 | (ii) Accounts arising out of the sale at the wellhead or minehead of oil, gas, or other |
12 | minerals in which the debtor had an interest before extraction. |
13 | (7) “Authenticate” means: |
14 | (i) To sign; or |
15 | (ii) With present intent to adopt or accept a record, to attach to or logically associate with |
16 | the record an electronic sound, symbol, or process. [RESERVED] |
17 | (7.1) “Assignee” except as used in “assignee for benefit of creditors,” means a person: |
18 | (i) In whose favor a security interest that secures an obligation is created or provided for |
19 | under a security agreement, whether or not the obligation is outstanding; or |
20 | (ii) To which an account, chattel paper, payment intangible, or promissory note has been |
21 | sold. The term includes a person to which a security interest has been transferred by a secured party. |
22 | (7.2) “Assignor” means a person that |
23 | (i) Under a security agreement creates or provides for a security interest that secures an |
24 | obligation; or |
25 | (ii) Sells an account, chattel paper, payment intangible, or promissory note. The term |
26 | includes a secured party that has transferred a security interest to another person. |
27 | (8) “Bank” means an organization that is engaged in the business of banking. The term |
28 | includes savings banks, savings and loan associations, credit unions, and trust companies. |
29 | (9) “Cash proceeds” means proceeds that are money, checks, deposit accounts, or the like. |
30 | (10) “Certificate of title” means a certificate of title with respect to which a statute provides |
31 | for the security interest in question to be indicated on the certificate as a condition or result of the |
32 | security interest’s obtaining priority over the rights of a lien creditor with respect to the collateral. |
33 | The term includes another record maintained as an alternative to a certificate of title by the |
34 | governmental unit that issues certificates of title if a statute permits the security interest in question |
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1 | to be indicated on the record as a condition or result of the security interest’s obtaining priority over |
2 | the rights of a lien creditor with respect to the collateral. |
3 | (11) “Chattel paper” means: a record or records that evidence both a monetary obligation |
4 | and a security interest in specific goods, a security interest in specific goods and software used in |
5 | the goods, a security interest in specific goods and license of software used in the goods, a lease of |
6 | specific goods, or a lease of specific goods and license of software used in the goods. In this |
7 | paragraph, “monetary obligation” means a monetary obligation secured by the goods or owed under |
8 | a lease of the goods and includes a monetary obligation with respect to software used in the goods. |
9 | The term does not include (i) charters or other contracts involving the use or hire of a vessel or (ii) |
10 | records that evidence a right to payment arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or |
11 | information contained on or for use with the card. If a transaction is evidenced by records that |
12 | include an instrument or series of instruments, the group of records taken together constitutes |
13 | chattel paper. |
14 | (i) A right to payment of a monetary obligation secured by specific goods, if the right to |
15 | payment and security agreement are evidenced by a record; or |
16 | (ii) A right to payment of a monetary obligation owed by a lessee under a lease agreement |
17 | with respect to specific goods and a monetary obligation owed by the lessee in connection with the |
18 | transaction giving rise to the lease, if: |
19 | (A) The right to payment and lease agreement are evidenced by a record; and |
20 | (B) The predominant purpose of the transaction giving rise to the lease was to give the |
21 | lessee the right to possession and use of the goods. |
22 | The term "chattel paper" does not include a right to payment arising out of a charter or |
23 | other contract involving the use or hire of a vessel or a right to payment arising out of the use of a |
24 | credit or charge card or information contained on or for use with the card. |
25 | (12) “Collateral” means the property subject to a security interest or agricultural lien. The |
26 | term includes: |
27 | (i) Proceeds to which a security interest attaches; |
28 | (ii) Accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, and promissory notes that have been sold; |
29 | and |
30 | (iii) Goods that are the subject of a consignment. |
31 | (13) “Commercial tort claim” means a claim arising in tort with respect to which: |
32 | (i) The claimant is an organization; or |
33 | (ii) The claimant is an individual and the claim: |
34 | (A) Arose in the course of the claimant’s business or profession; and |
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1 | (B) Does not include damages arising out of personal injury to or the death of an individual. |
2 | (14) “Commodity account” means an account maintained by a commodity intermediary in |
3 | which a commodity contract is carried for a commodity customer. |
4 | (15) “Commodity contract” means a commodity futures contract, an option on a |
5 | commodity futures contract, a commodity option, or another contract if the contract or option is: |
6 | (i) Traded on or subject to the rules of a board of trade that has been designated as a contract |
7 | market for such a contract pursuant to federal commodities laws; or |
8 | (ii) Traded on a foreign commodity board of trade, exchange, or market, and is carried on |
9 | the books of a commodity intermediary for a commodity customer. |
10 | (16) “Commodity customer” means a person for which a commodity intermediary carries |
11 | a commodity contract on its books. |
12 | (17) “Commodity intermediary” means a person that: |
13 | (i) Is registered as a futures commission merchant under federal commodities law; or |
14 | (ii) In the ordinary course of its business provides clearance or settlement services for a |
15 | board of trade that has been designated as a contract market pursuant to federal commodities law. |
16 | (18) “Communicate” means: |
17 | (i) To send a written or other tangible record; |
18 | (ii) To transmit a record by any means agreed upon by the persons sending and receiving |
19 | the record; or |
20 | (iii) In the case of transmission of a record to or by a filing office, to transmit a record by |
21 | any means prescribed by filing-office rule. |
22 | (19) “Consignee” means a merchant to which goods are delivered in a consignment. |
23 | (20) “Consignment” means a transaction, regardless of its form, in which a person delivers |
24 | goods to a merchant for the purpose of sale and: |
25 | (i) The merchant: |
26 | (A) Deals in goods of that kind under a name other than the name of the person making |
27 | delivery; |
28 | (B) Is not an auctioneer; and |
29 | (C) Is not generally known by its creditors to be substantially engaged in selling the goods |
30 | of others; |
31 | (ii) With respect to each delivery, the aggregate value of the goods is $1,000 or more at the |
32 | time of delivery; |
33 | (iii) The goods are not consumer goods immediately before delivery; and |
34 | (iv) The transaction does not create a security interest that secures an obligation. |
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1 | (21) “Consignor” means a person that delivers goods to a consignee in a consignment. |
2 | (22) “Consumer debtor” means a debtor in a consumer transaction. |
3 | (23) “Consumer goods” means goods that are used or bought for use primarily for personal, |
4 | family, or household purposes. |
5 | (24) “Consumer-goods transaction” means a consumer transaction in which: |
6 | (i) An individual incurs an obligation primarily for personal, family, or household |
7 | purposes; and |
8 | (ii) A security interest in consumer goods secures the obligation. |
9 | (25) “Consumer obligor” means an obligor who is an individual and who incurred the |
10 | obligation as part of a transaction entered into primarily for personal, family, or household |
11 | purposes. |
12 | (26) “Consumer transaction” means a transaction in which (i) an individual incurs an |
13 | obligation primarily for personal, family, or household purposes, (ii) a security interest secures the |
14 | obligation, and (iii) the collateral is held or acquired primarily for personal, family, or household |
15 | purposes. The term includes consumer-goods transactions. |
16 | (27) “Continuation statement” means an amendment of a financing statement which: |
17 | (i) Identifies, by its file number, the initial financing statement to which it relates; and |
18 | (ii) Indicates that it is a continuation statement for, or that it is filed to continue the |
19 | effectiveness of, the identified financing statement. |
20 | (27.1) “Controllable account” means an account evidenced by a controllable electronic |
21 | record that provides that the account debtor undertakes to pay the person that has control under § |
22 | 6A-12-105 of the controllable electronic record. |
23 | (27.2) “Controllable payment intangible” means a payment intangible evidenced by a |
24 | controllable electronic record that provides that the account debtor undertakes to pay the person |
25 | that has control under § 6A-12-105 of the controllable electronic record. |
26 | (28) “Debtor” means: |
27 | (i) A person having an interest, other than a security interest or other lien, in the collateral, |
28 | whether or not the person is an obligor; |
29 | (ii) A seller of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes; or |
30 | (iii) A consignee. |
31 | (29) “Deposit account” means a demand, time, savings, passbook, or similar account |
32 | maintained with a bank. The term does not include investment property or accounts evidenced by |
33 | an instrument. |
34 | (30) “Document” means a document of title or a receipt of the type described in § 6A-7- |
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1 | 201(b). |
2 | (31) “Electronic chattel paper” means chattel paper evidenced by a record or records |
3 | consisting of information stored in an electronic medium. [RESERVED] |
4 | (31.1) “Electronic money” means money in an electronic form. |
5 | (32) “Encumbrance” means a right, other than an ownership interest, in real property. The |
6 | term includes mortgages and other liens on real property. |
7 | (33) “Equipment” means goods other than inventory, farm products, or consumer goods. |
8 | (34) “Farm products” means goods, other than standing timber, with respect to which the |
9 | debtor is engaged in a farming operation and which are: |
10 | (i) Crops grown, growing, or to be grown, including: |
11 | (A) Crops produced on trees, vines, and bushes; and |
12 | (B) Aquatic goods, including seaweeds, produced in aquacultural operations; |
13 | (ii) Livestock, born or unborn, including fish, shellfish and other aquatic goods produced |
14 | in aquacultural operations; |
15 | (iii) Supplies used or produced in a farming operation; or |
16 | (iv) Products of crops or livestock in their unmanufactured states. |
17 | (35) “Farming operation” means raising, cultivating, propagating, fattening, grazing, or |
18 | any other farming, livestock, or aquacultural operation. |
19 | (36) “File number” means the number assigned to an initial financing statement pursuant |
20 | to § 6A-9-519(a). |
21 | (37) “Filing office” means an office designated in § 6A-9-501 as the place to file a |
22 | financing statement. |
23 | (38) “Filing-office rule” means a rule adopted pursuant to § 6A-9-526. |
24 | (39) “Financing statement” means a record or records composed of an initial financing |
25 | statement and any filed record relating to the initial financing statement. |
26 | (40) “Fixture filing” means the filing of a financing statement covering goods that are or |
27 | are to become fixtures and satisfying § 6A-9-502(a) and (b). The term includes the filing of a |
28 | financing statement covering goods of a transmitting utility which are or are to become fixtures. |
29 | (41) “Fixtures” means goods that have become so related to particular real property that an |
30 | interest in them arises under real property law. |
31 | (42) “General intangible” means any personal property, including things in action, other |
32 | than accounts, chattel paper, commercial tort claims, deposit accounts, documents, goods, |
33 | instruments, investment property, letter-of-credit rights, letters of credit, money, and oil, gas, or |
34 | other minerals before extraction. The term includes controllable electronic records payment |
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1 | intangibles and software. |
2 | (43) “Good faith” means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial |
3 | standards of fair dealing. |
4 | (44) “Goods” means all things that are movable when a security interest attaches. The term |
5 | includes (i) fixtures, (ii) standing timber that is to be cut and removed under a conveyance or |
6 | contract for sale, (iii) the unborn young of animals, (iv) crops grown, growing, or to be grown, even |
7 | if the crops are produced on trees, vines, or bushes, and (v) manufactured homes. The term also |
8 | includes a computer program embedded in goods and any supporting information provided in |
9 | connection with a transaction relating to the program if (i) the program is associated with the goods |
10 | in such a manner that it customarily is considered part of the goods, or (ii) by becoming the owner |
11 | of the goods, a person acquires a right to use the program in connection with the goods. The term |
12 | does not include a computer program embedded in goods that consist solely of the medium in which |
13 | the program is embedded. The term also does not include accounts, chattel paper, commercial tort |
14 | claims, deposit accounts, documents, general intangibles, instruments, investment property, letter- |
15 | of-credit rights, letters of credit, money, or oil, gas, or other minerals before extraction. |
16 | (45) “Governmental unit” means a subdivision, agency, department, county, parish, |
17 | municipality, or other unit of the government of the United States, a State, or a foreign country. |
18 | The term includes an organization having a separate corporate existence if the organization is |
19 | eligible to issue debt on which interest is exempt from income taxation under the laws of the United |
20 | States. |
21 | (46) “Health-care-insurance receivable” means an interest in or claim under a policy of |
22 | insurance which is a right to payment of a monetary obligation for health-care goods or services |
23 | provided or to be provided. |
24 | (47) “Instrument” means a negotiable instrument or any other writing that evidences a right |
25 | to the payment of a monetary obligation, is not itself a security agreement or lease, and is of a type |
26 | that in ordinary course of business is transferred by delivery with any necessary indorsement or |
27 | assignment. The term does not include (i) investment property, (ii) letters of credit, or (iii) writings |
28 | that evidence a right to payment arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or information |
29 | contained on or for use with the card, or (iv) writings that evidence chattel paper. |
30 | (48) “Inventory” means goods, other than farm products, which: |
31 | (i) Are leased by a person as lessor; |
32 | (ii) Are held by a person for sale or lease or to be furnished under a contract of service; |
33 | (iii) Are furnished by a person under a contract of service; or |
34 | (iv) Consist of raw materials, work in process, or materials used or consumed in a business. |
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1 | (49) “Investment property” means a security, whether certificated or uncertificated, |
2 | security entitlement, securities account, commodity contract, or commodity account. |
3 | (50) “Jurisdiction of organization”, with respect to a registered organization, means the |
4 | jurisdiction under whose law the organization is formed or organized. |
5 | (51) “Letter-of-credit right” means a right to payment or performance under a letter of |
6 | credit, whether or not the beneficiary has demanded or is at the time entitled to demand payment |
7 | or performance. The term does not include the right of a beneficiary to demand payment or |
8 | performance under a letter of credit. |
9 | (52) “Lien creditor” means: |
10 | (i) A creditor that has acquired a lien on the property involved by attachment, levy, or the |
11 | like; |
12 | (ii) An assignee for benefit of creditors from the time of assignment; |
13 | (iii) A trustee in bankruptcy from the date of the filing of the petition; or |
14 | (iv) A receiver in equity from the time of appointment. |
15 | (53) “Manufactured home” means a structure, transportable in one or more sections, which, |
16 | in the traveling mode, is eight body feet or more in width or 40 body feet or more in length, or, |
17 | when erected on site, is 320 or more square feet, and which is built on a permanent chassis and |
18 | designed to be used as a dwelling with or without a permanent foundation when connected to the |
19 | required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating, air-conditioning, and electrical systems |
20 | contained therein. The term includes any structure that meets all of the requirements of this |
21 | paragraph except the size requirements and with respect to which the manufacturer voluntarily files |
22 | a certification required by the United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and |
23 | complies with the standards established under Title 42 of the United States Code. |
24 | (54) “Manufactured-home transaction” means a secured transaction: |
25 | (i) That creates a purchase-money security interest in a manufactured home, other than a |
26 | manufactured home held as inventory; or |
27 | (ii) In which a manufactured home, other than a manufactured home held as inventory, is |
28 | the primary collateral. |
29 | (54.1) “Money” has the meaning in § 6A-1-201, but does not include: |
30 | (i) A deposit account; or |
31 | (ii) Money in an electronic form that cannot be subjected to control under § 6A-9-105.1. |
32 | (55) “Mortgage” means a consensual interest in real property, including fixtures, which |
33 | secures payment or performance of an obligation. |
34 | (56) “New debtor” means a person that becomes bound as debtor under § 6A-9-203(d) by |
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1 | a security agreement previously entered into by another person. |
2 | (57) “New value” means (i) money, (ii) money’s worth in property, services, or new credit, |
3 | or (iii) release by a transferee of an interest in property previously transferred to the transferee. The |
4 | term does not include an obligation substituted for another obligation. |
5 | (58) “Noncash proceeds” means proceeds other than cash proceeds. |
6 | (59) “Obligor” means a person that, with respect to an obligation secured by a security |
7 | interest in or an agricultural lien on the collateral, (i) owes payment or other performance of the |
8 | obligation, (ii) has provided property other than the collateral to secure payment or other |
9 | performance of the obligation, or (iii) is otherwise accountable in whole or in part for payment or |
10 | other performance of the obligation. The term does not include issuers or nominated persons under |
11 | a letter of credit. |
12 | (60) “Original debtor”, except as used in § 6A-9-310(c), means a person that, as debtor, |
13 | entered into a security agreement to which a new debtor has become bound under § 6A-9-203(d). |
14 | (61) “Payment intangible” means a general intangible under which the account debtor’s |
15 | principal obligation is a monetary obligation. The term includes a controllable payment intangible. |
16 | (62) “Person related to”, with respect to an individual, means: |
17 | (i) The spouse of the individual; |
18 | (ii) A brother, brother-in-law, sister, or sister-in-law of the individual; |
19 | (iii) An ancestor or lineal descendant of the individual or the individual’s spouse; or |
20 | (iv) Any other relative, by blood or marriage, of the individual or the individual’s spouse |
21 | who shares the same home with the individual. |
22 | (63) “Person related to”, with respect to an organization, means: |
23 | (i) A person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with |
24 | the organization; |
25 | (ii) An officer or director of, or a person performing similar functions with respect to, the |
26 | organization; |
27 | (iii) An officer or director of, or a person performing similar functions with respect to, a |
28 | person described in subparagraph (i); |
29 | (iv) The spouse of an individual described in subparagraph (i), (ii), or (iii); or |
30 | (v) An individual who is related by blood or marriage to an individual described in |
31 | subparagraph (i), (ii), (iii), or (iv) and shares the same home with the individual. |
32 | (64) “Proceeds”, except as used in § 6A-9-609(b), means the following property: |
33 | (i) Whatever is acquired upon the sale, lease, license, exchange, or other disposition of |
34 | collateral; |
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1 | (ii) Whatever is collected on, or distributed on account of, collateral; |
2 | (iii) Rights arising out of collateral; |
3 | (iv) To the extent of the value of collateral, claims arising out of the loss, nonconformity, |
4 | or interference with the use of, defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to, the collateral; or |
5 | (v) To the extent of the value of collateral and to the extent payable to the debtor or the |
6 | secured party, insurance payable by reason of the loss or nonconformity of, defects or infringement |
7 | of rights in, or damage to, the collateral. |
8 | (65) “Promissory note” means an instrument that evidences a promise to pay a monetary |
9 | obligation, does not evidence an order to pay, and does not contain an acknowledgment by a bank |
10 | that the bank has received for deposit a sum of money or funds. |
11 | (66) “Proposal” means a record authenticated signed by a secured party which includes the |
12 | terms on which the secured party is willing to accept collateral in full or partial satisfaction of the |
13 | obligation it secures pursuant to §§ 6A-9-620, 6A-9-621, and 6A-9-622. |
14 | (67) “Public-finance transaction” means a secured transaction in connection with which: |
15 | (i) Debt securities are issued; |
16 | (ii) All or a portion of the securities issued have an initial stated maturity of at least 20 |
17 | years; and |
18 | (iii) The debtor, obligor, secured party, account debtor or other person obligated on |
19 | collateral, assignor or assignee of a secured obligation, or assignor or assignee of a security interest |
20 | is a State or a governmental unit of a State. |
21 | (68) “Public organic record” means a record that is available to the public for inspection |
22 | and is: |
23 | (i) A record of consisting of the record initially filed with or issued by a state or the United |
24 | States to form or organize an organization and any record filed with or issued by the state of the |
25 | United States which amends or restates the initial record; |
26 | (ii) An organic record of a business trust consisting of the record initially filed with a state |
27 | and any record filed with the state which amends or restates the initial record, if a statute of the |
28 | state governing business trusts requires that the record be filed with the state; or |
29 | (iii) A record consisting of legislation enacted by the legislature of a state or the Congress |
30 | of the United States which forms or organizes an organization, any record amending the legislation, |
31 | and any record filed with or issued by the state or the United States which amends or restates the |
32 | name of the organization. |
33 | (69) “Pursuant to commitment”, with respect to an advance made or other value given by |
34 | a secured party, means pursuant to the secured party’s obligation, whether or not a subsequent event |
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1 | of default or other event not within the secured party’s control has relieved or may relieve the |
2 | secured party from its obligation. |
3 | (70) “Record”, except as used in “for record”, “of record”, “record or legal title”, and |
4 | “record owner”, means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or which is stored in an |
5 | electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. |
6 | (71) “Registered organization” means an organization formed or organized solely under |
7 | the law of a single State or the United States by the filing of a public organic record with, the |
8 | issuance of a public organic record by, or the enactment of legislation by the state or United States. |
9 | The term includes a business trust that is formed or organized under the law of a single state if a |
10 | statute of the state governing business trusts requires that the business trust’s organic record be |
11 | filed with the state. |
12 | (72) “Secondary obligor” means an obligor to the extent that: |
13 | (i) The obligor’s obligation is secondary; or |
14 | (ii) The obligor has a right of recourse with respect to an obligation secured by collateral |
15 | against the debtor, another obligor, or property of either. |
16 | (73) “Secured party” means: |
17 | (i) A person in whose favor a security interest is created or provided for under a security |
18 | agreement, whether or not any obligation to be secured is outstanding; |
19 | (ii) A person that holds an agricultural lien; |
20 | (iii) A consignor; |
21 | (iv) A person to which accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes |
22 | have been sold; |
23 | (v) A trustee, indenture trustee, agent, collateral agent, or other representative in whose |
24 | favor a security interest or agricultural lien is created or provided for; or |
25 | (vi) A person that holds a security interest arising under § 6A-2-401, 6A-2-505, 6A-2- |
26 | 711(3), 6A-2.1-508(5), 6A-4-210, or 6A-5-118. |
27 | (74) “Security agreement” means an agreement that creates or provides for a security |
28 | interest. |
29 | (75) “Send”, in connection with a record or notification, means: |
30 | (i) To deposit in the mail, deliver for transmission, or transmit by any other usual means of |
31 | communication, with postage or cost of transmission provided for, addressed to any address |
32 | reasonable under the circumstances; or |
33 | (ii) To cause the record or notification to be received within the time that it would have |
34 | been received if properly sent under subparagraph (i). [RESERVED] |
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1 | (76) “Software” means a computer program and any supporting information provided in |
2 | connection with a transaction relating to the program. The term does not include a computer |
3 | program that is included in the definition of goods. |
4 | (77) “State” means a State of the United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the |
5 | United States Virgin Islands, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the |
6 | United States. |
7 | (78) “Supporting obligation” means a letter-of-credit right or secondary obligation that |
8 | supports the payment or performance of an account, chattel paper, a document, a general intangible, |
9 | an instrument, or investment property. |
10 | (79) “Tangible chattel paper” means chattel paper evidenced by a record or records |
11 | consisting of information that is inscribed on a tangible medium. [RESERVED] |
12 | (79.1) “Tangible money” means money in a tangible form. |
13 | (80) “Termination statement” means an amendment of a financing statement which: |
14 | (i) Identifies, by its file number, the initial financing statement to which it relates; and |
15 | (ii) Indicates either that it is a termination statement or that the identified financing |
16 | statement is no longer effective. |
17 | (81) “Transmitting utility” means a person primarily engaged in the business of: |
18 | (i) Operating a railroad, subway, street railway, or trolley bus; |
19 | (ii) Transmitting communications electrically, electromagnetically, or by light; |
20 | (iii) Transmitting goods by pipeline or sewer; or |
21 | (iv) Transmitting or producing and transmitting electricity, steam, gas, or water. |
22 | (b) Definitions in other chapters. “Control” as provided in § 6A-7-106 and the following |
23 | definitions in other chapters apply to this chapter: |
24 | “Applicant”. § 6A-5-102. |
25 | “Beneficiary”. § 6A-5-102. |
26 | “Broker”. § 6A-8-102. |
27 | “Certificated security”. § 6A-8-102. |
28 | “Check”. § 6A-3-104. |
29 | “Clearing corporation”. § 6A-8-102. |
30 | “Contract for sale”. § 6A-2-106. |
31 | “Controllable electronic record” § 6A-12-102. |
32 | “Customer”. § 6A-4-104. |
33 | “Entitlement holder”. § 6A-8-102. |
34 | “Financial asset”. § 6A-8-102. |
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1 | “Holder in due course”. § 6A-3-302. |
2 | “Issuer” (with respect to a letter of credit or letter-of-credit right). § 6A-5-102. |
3 | “Issuer” (with respect to a security). § 6A-8-201. |
4 | “Issuer” (with respect to documents of title). § 6A-7-102. |
5 | “Lease”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
6 | “Lease agreement”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
7 | “Lease contract”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
8 | “Leasehold interest”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
9 | “Lessee”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
10 | “Lessee in ordinary course of business”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
11 | “Lessor”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
12 | “Lessor’s residual interest”. § 6A-2.1-103. |
13 | “Letter of credit”. § 6A-5-102. |
14 | “Merchant”. § 6A-2-104. |
15 | “Negotiable instrument”. § 6A-3-104. |
16 | “Nominated person”. § 6A-5-102. |
17 | “Note”. § 6A-3-104. |
18 | “Proceeds of a letter of credit”. § 6A-5-114. |
19 | “Protected purchaser” § 6A-8-303. |
20 | “Prove”. § 6A-3-103. |
21 | “Qualifying purchaser” § 6A-12-102. |
22 | “Sale”. § 6A-2-106. |
23 | “Securities account”. § 6A-8-501. |
24 | “Securities intermediary”. § 6A-8-102. |
25 | “Security”. § 6A-8-102. |
26 | “Security certificate”. § 6A-8-102. |
27 | “Security entitlement”. § 6A-8-102. |
28 | “Uncertificated security”. § 6A-8-102. |
29 | (c) Chapter 1 definitions and principles. Chapter 1 of this title contains general |
30 | definitions and principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
31 | 6A-9-104. Control of deposit account. |
32 | (a) Requirements for control. A secured party has control of a deposit account if: |
33 | (1) the secured party is the bank with which the deposit account is maintained; |
34 | (2) the debtor, secured party, and bank have agreed in an authenticated a signed record that |
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1 | the bank will comply with instructions originated by the secured party directing disposition of the |
2 | funds in the deposit account without further consent by the debtor; or |
3 | (3) the secured party becomes the bank’s customer with respect to the deposit account; or |
4 | (4) Another person, other than the debtor: |
5 | (i) Has control of the deposit account and acknowledges that it has control on behalf of the |
6 | secured party; or |
7 | (ii) Obtains control of the deposit account after having acknowledged that it will obtain |
8 | control of the deposit account on behalf of the secured party. |
9 | (b) Debtor’s right to direct disposition. A secured party that has satisfied subsection (a) has |
10 | control, even if the debtor retains the right to direct the disposition of funds from the deposit |
11 | account. |
12 | 6A-9-105. Control of electronic chattel paper Control of electronic copy of record |
13 | evidencing chattel paper. |
14 | (a) General rule: control of electronic chattel paper. A secured party has control of an |
15 | electronic chattel paper if a system employed for evidencing the transfer of interests in the chattel |
16 | paper reliably establishes the secured party as the person to which the chattel paper was assigned. |
17 | electronic copy of record evidencing chattel paper. A purchaser has control of an authoritative |
18 | electronic copy of a record evidencing chattel paper if a system employed for evidencing the |
19 | assignment of interests in the chattel paper reliably establishes the purchaser as the person to which |
20 | the authoritative electronic copy was assigned. |
21 | (b) Specific facts giving control. A system satisfies subsection (a) if the record or records |
22 | comprising the chattel paper are created, stored, and assigned in such a manner that: |
23 | (1) A single authoritative copy of the record or records exists which is unique, identifiable |
24 | and, except as otherwise provided in paragraphs (4), (5), and (6), unalterable; |
25 | (2) The authoritative copy identifies the secured party as the assignee of the record or |
26 | records; |
27 | (3) The authoritative copy is communicated to and maintained by the secured party or its |
28 | designated custodian; |
29 | (4) Copies or amendments that add or change an identified assignee of the authoritative |
30 | copy can be made only with the consent of the secured party; |
31 | (5) Each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy of a copy is readily identifiable as a |
32 | copy that is not the authoritative copy; and |
33 | (6) Any amendment of the authoritative copy is readily identifiable as authorized or |
34 | unauthorized. |
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1 | (b) Single authoritative copy. A system satisfies subsection (a) of this section if the record |
2 | or records evidencing the chattel paper are created, stored, and assigned in a manner that: |
3 | (1) A single authoritative copy of the record or records exists which is unique, identifiable, |
4 | and, except as otherwise provided in subsections (b)(4), (b)(5), and (b)(6), of this section |
5 | unalterable; |
6 | (2) The authoritative copy identifies the purchaser as the assignee of the record or records; |
7 | (3) The authoritative copy is communicated to and maintained by the purchaser or its |
8 | designated custodian; |
9 | (4) Copies or amendments that add or change an identified assignee of the authoritative |
10 | copy can be made only with the consent of the purchaser; |
11 | (5) Each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy of a copy is readily identifiable as a |
12 | copy that is not the authoritative copy; and |
13 | (6) Any amendment of the authoritative copy is readily identifiable as authorized or |
14 | unauthorized. |
15 | (c) One or more authoritative copies. A system satisfies subsection (a) of this section, and |
16 | a purchaser has control of an authoritative electronic copy of a record evidencing chattel paper, if |
17 | the electronic copy, a record attached to or logically associated with the electronic copy, or a system |
18 | in which the electronic copy is recorded: |
19 | (1) Enables the purchaser readily to identify each electronic copy as either an authoritative |
20 | copy or a nonauthoritative copy; |
21 | (2) Enables the purchaser readily to identify itself in any way, including by name, |
22 | identifying number, cryptographic key, office, or account number, as the assignee of the |
23 | authoritative electronic copy; and |
24 | (3) Gives the purchaser exclusive power, subject to subsection (d) of this section, to: |
25 | (i) Prevent others from adding or changing an identified assignee of the authoritative |
26 | electronic copy; and |
27 | (ii) Transfer control of the authoritative electronic copy. |
28 | (d) Meaning of exclusive. Subject to subsection (e) of this section, a power is exclusive |
29 | under subsections (c)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section even if: |
30 | (1) The authoritative electronic copy, a record attached to or logically associated with the |
31 | authoritative electronic copy, or a system in which the authoritative electronic copy is recorded |
32 | limits the use of the authoritative electronic copy or has a protocol programmed to cause a change, |
33 | including a transfer or loss of control; or |
34 | (2) The power is shared with another person. |
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1 | (e) When power not shared with another person. A power of a purchaser is not shared with |
2 | another person under subsection (d)(2) of this section and the purchaser’s power is not exclusive |
3 | if: |
4 | (1) The purchaser can exercise the power only if the power also is exercised by the other |
5 | person; and |
6 | (2) The other person: |
7 | (i) Can exercise the power without exercise of the power by the purchaser; or |
8 | (ii) Is the transferor to the purchaser of an interest in the chattel paper. |
9 | (f) Presumption of exclusivity of certain powers. If a purchaser has the powers specified in |
10 | subsections (c)(3)(i) and (ii) of this section, the powers are presumed to be exclusive. |
11 | (g) Obtaining control through another person. A purchaser has control of an authoritative |
12 | electronic copy of a record evidencing chattel paper if another person, other than the transferor to |
13 | the purchaser of an interest in the chattel paper: |
14 | (1) Has control of the authoritative electronic copy and acknowledges that it has control on |
15 | behalf of the purchaser; or |
16 | (2) Obtains control of the authoritative electronic copy after having acknowledged that it |
17 | will obtain control of the electronic copy on behalf of the purchaser. |
18 | 6A-9-203. Attachment and enforceability of security interest; proceeds; supporting |
19 | obligations; formal requisites. |
20 | (a) Attachment. A security interest attaches to collateral when it becomes enforceable |
21 | against the debtor with respect to the collateral, unless an agreement expressly postpones the time |
22 | of attachment. |
23 | (b) Enforceability. Except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) through (i), a security |
24 | interest is enforceable against the debtor and third parties with respect to the collateral only if: |
25 | (1) Value has been given; |
26 | (2) The debtor has rights in the collateral or the power to transfer rights in the collateral to |
27 | a secured party; and |
28 | (3) One of the following conditions is met: |
29 | (i) The debtor has authenticated signed a security agreement that provides a description of |
30 | the collateral and, if the security interest covers timber to be cut, a description of the land concerned; |
31 | (ii) The collateral is not a certificated security and is in the possession of the secured party |
32 | under § 6A-9-313 pursuant to the debtor’s security agreement; |
33 | (iii) The collateral is a certificated security in registered form and the security certificate |
34 | has been delivered to the secured party under § 6A-8-301 pursuant to the debtor’s security |
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1 | agreement; or |
2 | (iv) The collateral is controllable accounts, controllable electronic records, controllable |
3 | payment intangibles, deposit accounts, electronic chattel paper documents, electronic money, |
4 | investment property, or letter-of-credit rights, or electronic documents, and the secured party has |
5 | control under §§ 6A-7-106, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105, 6A-9-105.1, 6A-9-106, or 6A-9-107 , or 6A-9- |
6 | 107.1 pursuant to the debtor’s security agreement; or |
7 | (v) The collateral is chattel paper and the secured party has possession and control under § |
8 | 6A-9-314.1 pursuant to the debtor’s security agreement. |
9 | (c) Other UCC provisions. Subsection (b) is subject to § 6A-4-210 on the security interest |
10 | of a collecting bank, § 6A-5-118 on the security interest of a letter-of-credit issuer or nominated |
11 | person, § 6A-9-110 on a security interest arising under chapter 2 or 2.1, and § 6A-9-206 on security |
12 | interests in investment property. |
13 | (d) When person becomes bound by another person’s security agreement. A person |
14 | becomes bound as debtor by a security agreement entered into by another person if, by operation |
15 | of law other than this chapter or by contract: |
16 | (1) The security agreement becomes effective to create a security interest in the person’s |
17 | property; or |
18 | (2) The person becomes generally obligated for the obligations of the other person, |
19 | including the obligation secured under the security agreement, and acquires or succeeds to all or |
20 | substantially all of the assets of the other person. |
21 | (e) Effect of new debtor becoming bound. If a new debtor becomes bound as debtor by a |
22 | security agreement entered into by another person: |
23 | (1) The agreement satisfies subsection (b)(3) with respect to existing or after-acquired |
24 | property of the new debtor to the extent the property is described in the agreement; and |
25 | (2) Another agreement is not necessary to make a security interest in the property |
26 | enforceable. |
27 | (f) Proceeds and supporting obligations. The attachment of a security interest in collateral |
28 | gives the secured party the rights to proceeds provided by § 6A-9-315 and is also attachment of a |
29 | security interest in a supporting obligation for the collateral. |
30 | (g) Lien securing right to payment. The attachment of a security interest in a right to |
31 | payment or performance secured by a security interest or other lien on personal or real property is |
32 | also attachment of a security interest in the security interest, mortgage, or other lien. |
33 | (h) Security entitlement carried in securities account. The attachment of a security interest |
34 | in a securities account is also attachment of a security interest in the security entitlements carried |
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1 | in the securities account. |
2 | (i) Commodity contracts carried in commodity account. The attachment of a security |
3 | interest in a commodity account is also attachment of a security interest in the commodity contracts |
4 | carried in the commodity account. |
5 | 6A-9-204. After-acquired property; future advances. |
6 | (a) After-acquired collateral. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), a security |
7 | agreement may create or provide for a security interest in after-acquired collateral. |
8 | (b) When after-acquired property clause not effective. A Subject to subsection (c)(1) of |
9 | this section, a security interest does not attach under a term constituting an after-acquired property |
10 | clause to: |
11 | (1) Consumer goods, other than an accession when given as additional security, unless the |
12 | debtor acquires rights in them within 10 days after the secured party gives value; or |
13 | (2) A commercial tort claim. |
14 | (c) Limitation on subsection (b) of this section. Subsection (b) of this section does not |
15 | prevent a security interest from attaching: |
16 | (1) To consumer goods as proceeds under § 6A-9-315(a) or commingled goods under § |
17 | 6A-9-336(c); |
18 | (2) To a commercial tort claim as proceeds under § 6A-9-315(a); or |
19 | (3) Under an after-acquired property clause to property that is proceeds of consumer goods |
20 | or a commercial tort claim. |
21 | (c)(d) Future advances and other value. A security agreement may provide that collateral |
22 | secures, or that accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes are sold in |
23 | connection with, future advances or other value, whether or not the advances or value are given |
24 | pursuant to commitment. |
25 | 6A-9-207. Rights and duties of secured party having possession or control of |
26 | collateral. |
27 | (a) Duty of care when secured party in possession. Except as otherwise provided in |
28 | subsection (d), a secured party shall use reasonable care in the custody and preservation of collateral |
29 | in the secured party’s possession. In the case of chattel paper or an instrument, reasonable care |
30 | includes taking necessary steps to preserve rights against prior parties unless otherwise agreed. |
31 | (b) Expenses, risks, duties, and rights when secured party in possession. Except as |
32 | otherwise provided in subsection (d), if a secured party has possession of collateral: |
33 | (1) Reasonable expenses, including the cost of insurance and payment of taxes or other |
34 | charges, incurred in the custody, preservation, use, or operation of the collateral are chargeable to |
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1 | the debtor and are secured by the collateral; |
2 | (2) The risk of accidental loss or damage is on the debtor to the extent of a deficiency in |
3 | any effective insurance coverage; |
4 | (3) The secured party shall keep the collateral identifiable, but fungible collateral may be |
5 | commingled; and |
6 | (4) The secured party may use or operate the collateral: |
7 | (i) For the purpose of preserving the collateral or its value; |
8 | (ii) As permitted by an order of a court having competent jurisdiction; or |
9 | (iii) Except in the case of consumer goods, in the manner and to the extent agreed by the |
10 | debtor. |
11 | (c) Duties and rights when secured party in possession or control. Except as otherwise |
12 | provided in subsection (d), a secured party having possession of collateral or control of collateral |
13 | under §§ 6A-7-106, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105, 6A-9-105.1, 6A-9-106, or 6A-9-107, or 6A-9-107.1: |
14 | (1) May hold as additional security any proceeds, except money or funds, received from |
15 | the collateral; |
16 | (2) Shall apply money or funds received from the collateral to reduce the secured |
17 | obligation, unless remitted to the debtor; and |
18 | (3) May create a security interest in the collateral. |
19 | (d) Buyer of certain rights to payment. If the secured party is a buyer of accounts, chattel |
20 | paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes or a consignor: |
21 | (1) Subsection (a) does not apply unless the secured party is entitled under an agreement: |
22 | (i) To charge back uncollected collateral; or |
23 | (ii) Otherwise to full or limited recourse against the debtor or a secondary obligor based on |
24 | the nonpayment or other default of an account debtor or other obligor on the collateral; and |
25 | (2) Subsections (b) and (c) do not apply. |
26 | 6A-9-208. Additional duties of secured party having control of collateral. |
27 | (a) Applicability of section. This section applies to cases in which there is no outstanding |
28 | secured obligation and the secured party is not committed to make advances, incur obligations, or |
29 | otherwise give value. |
30 | (b) Duties of secured party after receiving demand from debtor. Within 10 days after |
31 | receiving an authenticated a signed demand by the debtor: |
32 | (1) A secured party having control of a deposit account under § 6A-9-104(a)(2) shall send |
33 | to the bank with which the deposit account is maintained an authenticated statement a signed record |
34 | that releases the bank from any further obligation to comply with instructions originated by the |
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1 | secured party; |
2 | (2) A secured party having control of a deposit account under § 6A-9-104(a)(3) shall: |
3 | (i) Pay the debtor the balance on deposit in the deposit account; or |
4 | (ii) Transfer the balance on deposit into a deposit account in the debtor’s name; |
5 | (3) A secured party, other than a buyer, having control of electronic chattel paper under § |
6 | 6A-9-105 shall: |
7 | (i) Communicate the authoritative copy of the electronic chattel paper to the debtor or its |
8 | designated custodian; |
9 | (ii) If the debtor designates a custodian that is the designated custodian with which the |
10 | authoritative copy of the electronic chattel paper is maintained for the secured party, communicate |
11 | to the custodian an authenticated record releasing the designated custodian from any further |
12 | obligation to comply with instructions originated by the secured party and instructing the custodian |
13 | to comply with instructions originated by the debtor; and |
14 | (iii) Take appropriate action to enable the debtor or its designated custodian to make copies |
15 | of or revisions to the authoritative copy which add or change an identified assignee of the |
16 | authoritative copy without the consent of the secured party; A secured party, other than a buyer, |
17 | having control of electronic chattel paper under § 6A-9-105 of an authoritative electronic copy of |
18 | a record evidencing chattel paper shall transfer control of the electronic copy to the debtor or a |
19 | person designated by the debtor; |
20 | (4) A secured party having control of investment property under § 6A-8-106(d)(2) or 6A- |
21 | 9-106(b) shall send to the securities intermediary or commodity intermediary with which the |
22 | security entitlement or commodity contract is maintained an authenticated a signed record that |
23 | releases the securities intermediary or commodity intermediary from any further obligation to |
24 | comply with entitlement orders or directions originated by the secured party; |
25 | (5) A secured party having control of a letter-of-credit right under § 6A-9-107 shall send |
26 | to each person having an unfulfilled obligation to pay or deliver proceeds of the letter of credit to |
27 | the secured party an authenticated a signed release from any further obligation to pay or deliver |
28 | proceeds of the letter of credit to the secured party; and |
29 | (6) A secured party having control of an electronic document shall: |
30 | (a) Give control of the electronic document to the debtor or its designated custodian; |
31 | (b) If the debtor designates a custodian that is the designated custodian with which the |
32 | authoritative copy of the electronic document is maintaining for the secured party, communicate to |
33 | the custodian an authenticated record releasing the designated custodian from any further obligation |
34 | to comply with instructions originated by the secured party and instructing the custodian to comply |
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1 | with instructions originated by the debtor; and |
2 | (c) Take appropriate action to enable the debtor or its designated custodian to make copies |
3 | of or revisions to the authoritative copy which add or change an identified assignee of the |
4 | authoritative copy without the consent of the secured party. A secured party having control under |
5 | § 6A-7-106 of an authoritative electronic copy of an electronic document of title shall transfer |
6 | control of the electronic copy to the debtor or a person designated by the debtor; |
7 | (7) A secured party having control under § 6A-9-105.1 of electronic money shall transfer |
8 | control of the electronic money to the debtor or a person designated by the debtor; and |
9 | (8) A secured party having control under § 6A-12-105 of a controllable electronic record, |
10 | other than a buyer of a controllable account or controllable payment intangible evidenced by the |
11 | controllable electronic record, shall transfer control of the controllable electronic record to the |
12 | debtor or a person designated by the debtor. |
13 | 6A-9-209. Duties of secured party if account debtor has been notified of assignment. |
14 | (a) Applicability of section. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), this section |
15 | applies if: |
16 | (1) There is no outstanding secured obligation; and |
17 | (2) The secured party is not committed to make advances, incur obligations, or otherwise |
18 | give value. |
19 | (b) Duties of secured party after receiving demand from debtor. Within 10 days after |
20 | receiving an authenticated a signed demand by the debtor, a secured party shall send to an account |
21 | debtor that has received notification under §§ 6A-9-406(a) or 6A-12-106(b) of an assignment to |
22 | the secured party as assignee under § 6A-9-406(a) an authenticated a signed record that releases |
23 | the account debtor from any further obligation to the secured party. |
24 | (c) Inapplicability to sales. This section does not apply to an assignment constituting the |
25 | sale of an account, chattel paper, or payment intangible. |
26 | 6A-9-210. Request for accounting; request regarding list of collateral or statement of |
27 | account. |
28 | (a) Definitions. In this section: |
29 | (1) “Request” means a record of a type described in paragraph (2), (3), or (4). |
30 | (2) “Request for an accounting” means a record authenticated signed by a debtor requesting |
31 | that the recipient provide an accounting of the unpaid obligations secured by collateral and |
32 | reasonably identifying the transaction or relationship that is the subject of the request. |
33 | (3) “Request regarding a list of collateral” means a record authenticated signed by a debtor |
34 | requesting that the recipient approve or correct a list of what the debtor believes to be the collateral |
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1 | securing an obligation and reasonably identifying the transaction or relationship that is the subject |
2 | of the request. |
3 | (4) “Request regarding a statement of account” means a record authenticated signed by a |
4 | debtor requesting that the recipient approve or correct a statement indicating what the debtor |
5 | believes to be the aggregate amount of unpaid obligations secured by collateral as of a specified |
6 | date and reasonably identifying the transaction or relationship that is the subject of the request. |
7 | (b) Duty to respond to requests. Subject to subsections (c), (d), (e), and (f), a secured party, |
8 | other than a buyer of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes or a |
9 | consignor, shall comply with a request within 14 days after receipt: |
10 | (1) In the case of a request for an accounting, by authenticating signing and sending to the |
11 | debtor an accounting; and |
12 | (2) In the case of a request regarding a list of collateral or a request regarding a statement |
13 | of account, by authenticating signing and sending to the debtor an approval or correction. |
14 | (c) Request regarding list of collateral; statement concerning type of collateral. A secured |
15 | party that claims a security interest in all of a particular type of collateral owned by the debtor may |
16 | comply with a request regarding a list of collateral by sending to the debtor an authenticated a |
17 | signed record including a statement to that effect within 14 days after receipt. |
18 | (d) Request regarding list of collateral; no interest claimed. A person that receives a request |
19 | regarding a list of collateral, claims no interest in the collateral when it receives the request, and |
20 | claimed an interest in the collateral at an earlier time shall comply with the request within 14 days |
21 | after receipt by sending to the debtor an authenticated a signed record: |
22 | (1) Disclaiming any interest in the collateral; and |
23 | (2) If known to the recipient, providing the name and mailing address of any assignee of |
24 | or successor to the recipient’s interest in the collateral. |
25 | (e) Request for accounting or regarding statement of account; no interest in obligation |
26 | claimed. A person that receives a request for an accounting or a request regarding a statement of |
27 | account, claims no interest in the obligations when it receives the request, and claimed an interest |
28 | in the obligations at an earlier time shall comply with the request within 14 days after receipt by |
29 | sending to the debtor an authenticated a signed record: |
30 | (1) Disclaiming any interest in the obligations; and |
31 | (2) If known to the recipient, providing the name and mailing address of any assignee of |
32 | or successor to the recipient’s interest in the obligations. |
33 | (f) Charges for responses. A debtor is entitled without charge to one response to a request |
34 | under this section during any six-month period. The secured party may require payment of a charge |
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1 | not exceeding $ 25 for each additional response. |
2 | 6A-9-301. Law governing perfection and priority of security interests. |
3 | Except as otherwise provided in §§ 6A-9-303 through 6A-9-306 6A-9-306.2, the following |
4 | rules determine the law governing perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the |
5 | priority of a security interest in collateral: |
6 | (1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, while a debtor is located in a jurisdiction, |
7 | the local law of that jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and |
8 | the priority of a security interest in collateral. |
9 | (2) While collateral is located in a jurisdiction, the local law of that jurisdiction governs |
10 | perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a possessory security |
11 | interest in that collateral. |
12 | (3) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (4), while tangible negotiable documents, |
13 | goods, instruments, money, or tangible chattel paper or tangible money is located in a jurisdiction, |
14 | the local law of that jurisdiction governs: |
15 | (i) Perfection of a security interest in the goods by filing a fixture filing; |
16 | (ii) Perfection of a security interest in timber to be cut; and |
17 | (iii) The effect of perfection or nonperfection and the priority of a nonpossessory security |
18 | interest in the collateral. |
19 | (4) The local law of the jurisdiction in which the wellhead or minehead is located governs |
20 | perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in as- |
21 | extracted collateral. |
22 | 6A-9-304. Law governing perfection and priority of security interests in deposit |
23 | accounts. |
24 | (a) Law of bank’s jurisdiction governs. The local law of a bank’s jurisdiction governs |
25 | perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in a |
26 | deposit account maintained with that bank even if the transaction does not bear any relation to the |
27 | bank's jurisdiction. |
28 | (b) Bank’s jurisdiction. The following rules determine a bank’s jurisdiction for purposes |
29 | of this part: |
30 | (1) If an agreement between the bank and its customer governing the deposit account |
31 | expressly provides that a particular jurisdiction is the bank’s jurisdiction for purposes of this part, |
32 | this chapter, or the Uniform Commercial Code, that jurisdiction is the bank’s jurisdiction. |
33 | (2) If paragraph (1) does not apply and an agreement between the bank and its customer |
34 | governing the deposit account expressly provides that the agreement is governed by the law of a |
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1 | particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the bank’s jurisdiction. |
2 | (3) If neither paragraph (1) nor paragraph (2) applies and an agreement between the bank |
3 | and its customer governing the deposit account expressly provides that the deposit account is |
4 | maintained at an office in a particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the bank’s jurisdiction. |
5 | (4) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the bank’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction |
6 | in which the office identified in an account statement as the office serving the customer’s account |
7 | is located. |
8 | (5) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the bank’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction |
9 | in which the chief executive office of the bank is located. |
10 | 6A-9-305. Law governing perfection and priority of security interests in investment |
11 | property. |
12 | (a) Governing law: general rules. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), the |
13 | following rules apply: |
14 | (1) While a security certificate is located in a jurisdiction, the local law of that jurisdiction |
15 | governs perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest |
16 | in the certificated security represented thereby. |
17 | (2) The local law of the issuer’s jurisdiction as specified in § 6A-8-110(d) governs |
18 | perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in an |
19 | uncertificated security. |
20 | (3) The local law of the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction as specified in § 6A-8-110(e) |
21 | governs perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest |
22 | in a security entitlement or securities account. |
23 | (4) The local law of the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction governs perfection, the |
24 | effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in a commodity contract |
25 | or commodity account. |
26 | (5) Subsections (a)(2), (a)(3) and (a)(4) of this section apply even if the transaction does |
27 | not bear any relation to the jurisdiction. |
28 | (b) Commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction. The following rules determine a commodity |
29 | intermediary’s jurisdiction for purposes of this part: |
30 | (1) If an agreement between the commodity intermediary and commodity customer |
31 | governing the commodity account expressly provides that a particular jurisdiction is the commodity |
32 | intermediary’s jurisdiction for purposes of this part, this chapter, or the Uniform Commercial Code, |
33 | that jurisdiction is the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction. |
34 | (2) If paragraph (1) does not apply and an agreement between the commodity intermediary |
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1 | and commodity customer governing the commodity account expressly provides that the agreement |
2 | is governed by the law of a particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the commodity intermediary’s |
3 | jurisdiction. |
4 | (3) If neither paragraph (1) nor paragraph (2) applies and an agreement between the |
5 | commodity intermediary and commodity customer governing the commodity account expressly |
6 | provides that the commodity account is maintained at an office in a particular jurisdiction, that |
7 | jurisdiction is the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction. |
8 | (4) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction |
9 | is the jurisdiction in which the office identified in an account statement as the office serving the |
10 | commodity customer’s account is located. |
11 | (5) If none of the preceding paragraphs applies, the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction |
12 | is the jurisdiction in which the chief executive office of the commodity intermediary is located. |
13 | (c) When perfection governed by law of jurisdiction where debtor located. The local law |
14 | of the jurisdiction in which the debtor is located governs: |
15 | (1) Perfection of a security interest in investment property by filing; |
16 | (2) Automatic perfection of a security interest in investment property created by a broker |
17 | or securities intermediary; and |
18 | (3) Automatic perfection of a security interest in a commodity contract or commodity |
19 | account created by a commodity intermediary. |
20 | 6A-9-310. When filing required to perfect security interest or agricultural lien; |
21 | security interests and agricultural liens to which filing provisions do not apply. |
22 | (a) General rule: perfection by filing. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) and § |
23 | 6A-9-312(b), a financing statement must be filed to perfect all security interests and agricultural |
24 | liens. |
25 | (b) Exceptions: filing not necessary. The filing of a financing statement is not necessary to |
26 | perfect a security interest: |
27 | (1) That is perfected under § 6A-9-308(d), (e), (f), or (g); |
28 | (2) That is perfected under § 6A-9-309 when it attaches; |
29 | (3) In property subject to a statute, regulation, or treaty described in § 6A-9-311(a); |
30 | (4) In goods in possession of a bailee which is perfected under § 6A-9-312(d)(1) or (2); |
31 | (5) In certificated securities, documents, goods, or instruments which is perfected without |
32 | filing, control or possession under § 6A-9-312(e), (f), or (g); |
33 | (6) In collateral in the secured party’s possession under § 6A-9-313; |
34 | (7) In a certificated security which is perfected by delivery of the security certificate to the |
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1 | secured party under § 6A-9-313; |
2 | (8) In controllable accounts, controllable electronic records, controllable payment |
3 | intangibles, deposit accounts, electronic chattel paper, electronic documents, investment property, |
4 | or letter-of-credit rights which is perfected by control under § 6A-9-314; |
5 | (9) In chattel paper which is perfected by possession and control under § 6A-9-314.1; |
6 | (9)(10) In proceeds which is perfected under § 6A-9-315; or |
7 | (10)(11) That is perfected under § 6A-9-316. |
8 | (c) Assignment of perfected security interest. If a secured party assigns a perfected security |
9 | interest or agricultural lien, a filing under this chapter is not required to continue the perfected status |
10 | of the security interest against creditors of and transferees from the original debtor. |
11 | 6A-9-312. Perfection of security interests in chattel paper, deposit accounts, |
12 | documents, goods covered by documents, instruments, investment property, letter-of-credit |
13 | rights, and money; perfection by permissive filing; temporary perfection without filing or |
14 | transfer of possession Perfection of security interests in chattel paper, controllable accounts, |
15 | controllable electronic records, controllable payment intangibles, deposit accounts, |
16 | negotiable documents, goods covered by documents, instruments, investment property, |
17 | letter-of-credit rights, and money; perfection by permissive filing; temporary perfection |
18 | without filing or transfer of possession. |
19 | (a) Perfection by filing permitted. A security interest in chattel paper, negotiable |
20 | documents, controllable accounts, controllable electronic records, controllable payment |
21 | intangibles, instruments, or investment property, or negotiable documents may be perfected by |
22 | filing. |
23 | (b) Control or possession of certain collateral. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9- |
24 | 315(c) and (d) for proceeds: |
25 | (1) A security interest in a deposit account may be perfected only by control under § 6A- |
26 | 9-314; |
27 | (2) And except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-308(d), a security interest in a letter-of- |
28 | credit right may be perfected only by control under § 6A-9-314; and |
29 | (3) A security interest in tangible money may be perfected only by the secured party’s |
30 | taking possession under § 6A-9-313; and |
31 | (4) A security interest in electronic money may be perfected only by control under § 6A- |
32 | 9-314. |
33 | (c) Goods covered by negotiable document. While goods are in the possession of a bailee |
34 | that has issued a negotiable document covering the goods: |
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1 | (1) A security interest in the goods may be perfected by perfecting a security interest in the |
2 | document; and |
3 | (2) A security interest perfected in the document has priority over any security interest that |
4 | becomes perfected in the goods by another method during that time. |
5 | (d) Goods covered by nonnegotiable document. While goods are in the possession of a |
6 | bailee that has issued a nonnegotiable document covering the goods, a security interest in the goods |
7 | may be perfected by: |
8 | (1) Issuance of a document in the name of the secured party; |
9 | (2) The bailee’s receipt of notification of the secured party’s interest; or |
10 | (3) Filing as to the goods. |
11 | (e) Temporary perfection: new value. A security interest in certificated securities, |
12 | negotiable documents, or instruments is perfected without filing or the taking of possession or |
13 | control for a period of 20 days from the time it attaches to the extent that it arises for new value |
14 | given under an authenticated a signed security agreement. |
15 | (f) Temporary perfection: goods or documents made available to debtor. A perfected |
16 | security interest in a negotiable document or goods in possession of a bailee, other than one that |
17 | has issued a negotiable document for the goods, remains perfected for 20 days without filing if the |
18 | secured party makes available to the debtor the goods or documents representing the goods for the |
19 | purpose of: |
20 | (1) Ultimate sale or exchange; or |
21 | (2) Loading, unloading, storing, shipping, transshipping, manufacturing, processing, or |
22 | otherwise dealing with them in a manner preliminary to their sale or exchange. |
23 | (g) Temporary perfection: delivery of security certificate or instrument to debtor. A |
24 | perfected security interest in a certificated security or instrument remains perfected for 20 days |
25 | without filing if the secured party delivers the security certificate or instrument to the debtor for the |
26 | purpose of: |
27 | (1) Ultimate sale or exchange; or |
28 | (2) Presentation, collection, enforcement, renewal, or registration of transfer. |
29 | (h) Expiration of temporary perfection. After the 20-day period specified in subsection (e), |
30 | (f), or (g) expires, perfection depends upon compliance with this chapter. |
31 | 6A-9-313. When possession by or delivery to secured party perfects security interest |
32 | without filing. |
33 | (a) Perfection by possession or delivery. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), a |
34 | secured party may perfect a security interest in tangible negotiable documents, goods, instruments, |
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1 | negotiable tangible documents or tangible money, or tangible chattel paper by taking possession of |
2 | the collateral. A secured party may perfect a security interest in certificated securities by taking |
3 | delivery of the certificated securities under § 6A-8-301. |
4 | (b) Goods covered by certificate of title. With respect to goods covered by a certificate of |
5 | title issued by this State, a secured party may perfect a security interest in the goods by taking |
6 | possession of the goods only in the circumstances described in § 6A-9-316(d). |
7 | (c) Collateral in possession of person other than debtor. With respect to collateral other |
8 | than certificated securities and goods covered by a document, a secured party takes possession of |
9 | collateral in the possession of a person other than the debtor, the secured party, or a lessee of the |
10 | collateral from the debtor in the ordinary course of the debtor’s business, when: |
11 | (1) The person in possession authenticates signs a record acknowledging that it holds |
12 | possession of the collateral for the secured party’s benefit; or |
13 | (2) The person takes possession of the collateral after having authenticated signed a record |
14 | acknowledging that it will hold possession of the collateral for the secured party’s benefit. |
15 | (d) Time of perfection by possession; continuation of perfection. If perfection of a security |
16 | interest depends upon possession of the collateral by a secured party, perfection occurs no not |
17 | earlier than the time the secured party takes possession and continues only while the secured party |
18 | retains possession. |
19 | (e) Time of perfection by delivery; continuation of perfection. A security interest in a |
20 | certificated security in registered form is perfected by delivery when delivery of the certificated |
21 | security occurs under § 6A-8-301 and remains perfected by delivery until the debtor obtains |
22 | possession of the security certificate. |
23 | (f) Acknowledgment not required. A person in possession of collateral is not required to |
24 | acknowledge that it holds possession for a secured party’s benefit. |
25 | (g) Effectiveness of acknowledgment; no duties or confirmation. If a person acknowledges |
26 | that it holds possession for the secured party’s benefit: |
27 | (1) The acknowledgment is effective under subsection (c) or § 6A-8-301(a), even if the |
28 | acknowledgment violates the rights of a debtor; and |
29 | (2) Unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this chapter otherwise provides, |
30 | the person does not owe any duty to the secured party and is not required to confirm the |
31 | acknowledgment to another person. |
32 | (h) Secured party’s delivery to person other than debtor. A secured party having possession |
33 | of collateral does not relinquish possession by delivering the collateral to a person other than the |
34 | debtor or a lessee of the collateral from the debtor in the ordinary course of the debtor’s business if |
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1 | the person was instructed before the delivery or is instructed contemporaneously with the delivery: |
2 | (1) To hold possession of the collateral for the secured party’s benefit; or |
3 | (2) To redeliver the collateral to the secured party. |
4 | (i) Effect of delivery under subsection (h); no duties or confirmation. A secured party does |
5 | not relinquish possession, even if a delivery under subsection (h) violates the rights of a debtor. A |
6 | person to which collateral is delivered under subsection (h) does not owe any duty to the secured |
7 | party and is not required to confirm the delivery to another person unless the person otherwise |
8 | agrees or law other than this chapter otherwise provides. |
9 | 6A-9-314. Perfection by control. |
10 | (a) Perfection by control. A security interest in investment property, deposit accounts, |
11 | letter-of-credit rights, electronic chattel paper or electronic documents controllable accounts, |
12 | controllable electronic records, controllable payment intangibles, deposit accounts, electronic |
13 | documents, electronic money, investment property, or letter-of-credit rights may be perfected by |
14 | control of the collateral under §§ 6A-7-106, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105 6A-9-105.1, 6A-9-106, or 6A-9- |
15 | 107, or 6A-9-107.1. |
16 | (b) Specified collateral: time of perfection by control; continuation of perfection. A security |
17 | interest in deposit accounts, electronic chattel paper, letter-of-credit rights or electronic documents |
18 | controllable accounts, controllable electronic records, controllable payment intangibles, deposit |
19 | accounts, electronic documents, electronic money, or letter-of-credit rights is perfected by control |
20 | under §§ 6A-7-106, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105, 6A-9-105.1, or 6A-9-107 or 6A-9-107.1 when not earlier |
21 | than the time the secured party obtains control and remains perfected by control only while the |
22 | secured party retains control. |
23 | (c) Investment property: time of perfection by control; continuation of perfection. A |
24 | security interest in investment property is perfected by control under § 6A-9-106 from not earlier |
25 | than the time the secured party obtains control and remains perfected by control until: |
26 | (1) The secured party does not have control; and |
27 | (2) One of the following occurs: |
28 | (i) If the collateral is a certificated security, the debtor has or acquires possession of the |
29 | security certificate; |
30 | (ii) If the collateral is an uncertificated security, the issuer has registered or registers the |
31 | debtor as the registered owner; or |
32 | (iii) If the collateral is a security entitlement, the debtor is or becomes the entitlement |
33 | holder. |
34 | 6A-9-316. Effect of change in governing law. |
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1 | (a) General rule: effect on perfection of change in governing law. A security interest |
2 | perfected pursuant to the law of the jurisdiction designated in § §§ 6A-9-301(1), or 6A-9-305(c), |
3 | 6A-9-306.1(d) or 6A-9-306.2(b) remains perfected until the earliest of: |
4 | (1) The time perfection would have ceased under the law of that jurisdiction; |
5 | (2) The expiration of four months after a change of the debtor’s location to another |
6 | jurisdiction; or |
7 | (3) The expiration of one year after a transfer of collateral to a person that thereby becomes |
8 | a debtor and is located in another jurisdiction. |
9 | (b) Security interest perfected or unperfected under law of new jurisdiction. If a security |
10 | interest described in subsection (a) becomes perfected under the law of the other jurisdiction before |
11 | the earliest time or event described in that subsection, it remains perfected thereafter. If the security |
12 | interest does not become perfected under the law of the other jurisdiction before the earliest time |
13 | or event, it becomes unperfected and is deemed never to have been perfected as against a purchaser |
14 | of the collateral for value. |
15 | (c) Possessory security interest in collateral moved to new jurisdiction. A possessory |
16 | security interest in collateral, other than goods covered by a certificate of title and as-extracted |
17 | collateral consisting of goods, remains continuously perfected if: |
18 | (1) The collateral is located in one jurisdiction and subject to a security interest perfected |
19 | under the law of that jurisdiction; |
20 | (2) Thereafter the collateral is brought into another jurisdiction; and |
21 | (3) Upon entry into the other jurisdiction, the security interest is perfected under the law of |
22 | the other jurisdiction. |
23 | (d) Goods covered by certificate of title from this state. Except as otherwise provided in |
24 | subsection (e), a security interest in goods covered by a certificate of title which is perfected by any |
25 | method under the law of another jurisdiction when the goods become covered by a certificate of |
26 | title from this State remains perfected until the security interest would have become unperfected |
27 | under the law of the other jurisdiction had the goods not become so covered. |
28 | (e) When subsection (d) security interest becomes unperfected against purchasers. A |
29 | security interest described in subsection (d) becomes unperfected as against a purchaser of the |
30 | goods for value and is deemed never to have been perfected as against a purchaser of the goods for |
31 | value if the applicable requirements for perfection under § 6A-9-311(b) or 6A-9-313 are not |
32 | satisfied before the earlier of: |
33 | (1) The time the security interest would have become unperfected under the law of the |
34 | other jurisdiction had the goods not become covered by a certificate of title from this State; or |
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1 | (2) The expiration of four months after the goods had become so covered. |
2 | (f) Change in jurisdiction of chattel paper, controllable electronic record, bank, issuer, |
3 | nominated person, securities intermediary, or commodity intermediary. A security interest in |
4 | chattel paper, controllable accounts, controllable electronic records, controllable payment |
5 | intangibles, deposit accounts, letter-of-credit rights, or investment property which is perfected |
6 | under the law of the chattel paper's jurisdiction, the controllable electronic record's jurisdiction, the |
7 | bank’s jurisdiction, the issuer’s jurisdiction, a nominated person’s jurisdiction, the securities |
8 | intermediary’s jurisdiction, or the commodity intermediary’s jurisdiction, as applicable, remains |
9 | perfected until the earlier of: |
10 | (1) The time the security interest would have become unperfected under the law of that |
11 | jurisdiction; or |
12 | (2) The expiration of four months after a change of the applicable jurisdiction to another |
13 | jurisdiction. |
14 | (g) Subsection (f) security interest perfected or unperfected under law of new jurisdiction. |
15 | If a security interest described in subsection (f) becomes perfected under the law of the other |
16 | jurisdiction before the earlier of the time or the end of the period described in that subsection, it |
17 | remains perfected thereafter. If the security interest does not become perfected under the law of the |
18 | other jurisdiction before the earlier of that time or the end of that period, it becomes unperfected |
19 | and is deemed never to have been perfected as against a purchaser of the collateral for value. |
20 | (h) Effect on filed financing statement of change in governing law. The following rules |
21 | apply to collateral to which a security interest attaches within four (4) months after the debtor |
22 | changes its location to another jurisdiction: |
23 | (1) A financing statement filed before the change pursuant to the law of the jurisdiction |
24 | designated in subdivision 6A-9-301(1) or subsection 6A-9-305(c) is effective to perfect a security |
25 | interest in the collateral if the financing statement would have been effective to perfect a security |
26 | interest in the collateral had the debtor not changed its location. |
27 | (2) If a security interest perfected by a financing statement that is effective under |
28 | subdivision (1) becomes perfected under the law of the other jurisdiction before the earlier of the |
29 | time the financing statement would have become ineffective under the law of the jurisdiction |
30 | designated in subdivision 6A-9-301(1) or subsection 6A-9-305(c) or the expiration of the four (4) |
31 | month period, it remains perfected thereafter. If the security interest does not become perfected |
32 | under the law of the other jurisdiction before the earlier time or event, it becomes unperfected and |
33 | is deemed never to have been perfected as against a purchaser of the collateral for value. |
34 | (i) Effect of change in governing law on financing statement filed against original debtor. |
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1 | If a financing statement naming an original debtor is filed pursuant to the law of the jurisdiction |
2 | designated in subdivision 6A-9-301(1) or subsection 6A-9-305(c) and the new debtor is located in |
3 | another jurisdiction, the following rules apply: |
4 | (1) The financing statement is effective to perfect a security interest in collateral acquired |
5 | by the new debtor before, and within four (4) months after, the new debtor becomes bound under |
6 | subsection 6A-9-203(d), if the financing statement would have been effective to perfect a security |
7 | interest in the collateral had the collateral been acquired by the original debtor. |
8 | (2) A security interest perfected by the financing statement and which becomes perfected |
9 | under the law of the other jurisdiction before the earlier of the time the financing statement would |
10 | have become ineffective under the law of the jurisdiction designated in subdivision 6A-9-301(1) or |
11 | subsection 6A-9-305(c) or the expiration of the four (4) month period remains perfected thereafter. |
12 | A security interest that is perfected by the financing statement but which does not become perfected |
13 | under the law of the other jurisdiction before the earlier time or event becomes unperfected and is |
14 | deemed never to have been perfected as against a purchaser of the collateral for value. |
15 | 6A-9-317. Interests that take priority over or take free of security interest or |
16 | agricultural lien. |
17 | (a) Conflicting security interests and rights of lien creditors. A security interest or |
18 | agricultural lien is subordinate to the rights of: |
19 | (1) A person entitled to priority under § 6A-9-322; and |
20 | (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e), a person that becomes a lien creditor |
21 | before the earlier of the time: (i) the security interest or agricultural lien is perfected; or (ii) one of |
22 | the conditions specified in § 6A-9-203(b)(3) is met and a financing statement covering the collateral |
23 | is filed. |
24 | (b) Buyers that receive delivery. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e), a buyer, |
25 | other than a secured party, of tangible chattel paper, tangible documents, goods, instruments, |
26 | tangible documents, or a certificated security takes free of a security interest or agricultural lien if |
27 | the buyer gives value and receives delivery of the collateral without knowledge of the security |
28 | interest or agricultural lien and before it is perfected. |
29 | (c) Lessees that receive delivery. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e), a lessee |
30 | of goods takes free of a security interest or agricultural lien if the lessee gives value and receives |
31 | delivery of the collateral without knowledge of the security interest or agricultural lien and before |
32 | it is perfected. |
33 | (d) Licensees and buyers of certain collateral. A Subject to subsection (f) through (i) of this |
34 | section, a licensee of a general intangible or a buyer, other than a secured party, of collateral other |
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1 | than tangible chattel papers, tangible documents, electronic money, goods, instruments, tangible |
2 | documents, or a certificated security takes free of a security interest if the licensee or buyer gives |
3 | value without knowledge of the security interest and before it is perfected. |
4 | (e) Purchase-money security interest. Except as otherwise provided in §§ 6A-9-320 and |
5 | 6A-9-321, if a person files a financing statement with respect to a purchase-money security interest |
6 | before or within 20 days after the debtor receives delivery of the collateral, the security interest |
7 | takes priority over the rights of a buyer, lessee, or lien creditor which arise between the time the |
8 | security interest attaches and the time of filing. |
9 | (f) Buyers of chattel paper. A buyer, other than a secured party, of chattel paper takes free |
10 | of a security interest if, without knowledge of the security interest and before it is perfected, the |
11 | buyer gives value and: |
12 | (1) Receives delivery of each authoritative tangible copy of the record evidencing the |
13 | chattel paper; and |
14 | (2) If each authoritative electronic copy of the record evidencing the chattel paper can be |
15 | subjected to control under § 6A-9-105, obtains control of each authoritative electronic copy. |
16 | (g) Buyers of electronic documents. A buyer of an electronic document takes free of a |
17 | security interest if, without knowledge of the security interest and before it is perfected, the buyer |
18 | gives value and, if each authoritative electronic copy of the document can be subjected to control |
19 | under § 6A-7-106, obtains control of each authoritative electronic copy. |
20 | (h) Buyers of controllable electronic records. A buyer of a controllable electronic record |
21 | takes free of a security interest if, without knowledge of the security interest and before it is |
22 | perfected, the buyer gives value and obtains control of the controllable electronic record. |
23 | (i) Buyers of controllable accounts and controllable payment intangibles. A buyer, other |
24 | than a secured party, of a controllable account or a controllable payment intangible takes free of a |
25 | security interest if, without knowledge of the security interest and before it is perfected, the buyer |
26 | gives value and obtains control of the controllable account or controllable payment intangible. |
27 | 6A-9-323. Future advances. |
28 | (a) When priority based on time of advance. Except as otherwise provided in subsection |
29 | (c), for purposes of determining the priority of a perfected security interest under § 6A-9-322(a)(1), |
30 | perfection of the security interest dates from the time an advance is made to the extent that the |
31 | security interest secures an advance that: |
32 | (1) Is made while the security interest is perfected only: |
33 | (i) Under § 6A-9-309 when it attaches; or |
34 | (ii) Temporarily under § 6A-9-312(e), (f), or (g); and |
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1 | (2) Is not made pursuant to a commitment entered into before or while the security interest |
2 | is perfected by a method other than under § 6A-9-309 or § 6A-9-312(e), (f), or (g). |
3 | (b) Lien creditor. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), a security interest is |
4 | subordinate to the rights of a person that becomes a lien creditor to the extent that the security |
5 | interest secures an advance made more than 45 days after the person becomes a lien creditor unless |
6 | the advance is made: |
7 | (1) Without knowledge of the lien; or |
8 | (2) Pursuant to a commitment entered into without knowledge of the lien. |
9 | (c) Buyer of receivables. Subsections (a) and (b) do not apply to a security interest held by |
10 | a secured party that is a buyer of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes |
11 | or a consignor. |
12 | (d) Buyer of goods. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e), a buyer of goods other |
13 | than a buyer in ordinary course of business takes free of a security interest to the extent that it |
14 | secures advances made after the earlier of: |
15 | (1) The time the secured party acquires knowledge of the buyer’s purchase; or |
16 | (2) 45 days after the purchase. |
17 | (e) Advances made pursuant to commitment: priority of buyer of goods. Subsection (d) |
18 | does not apply if the advance is made pursuant to a commitment entered into without knowledge |
19 | of the buyer’s purchase and before the expiration of the 45-day period. |
20 | (f) Lessee of goods. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (g), a lessee of goods, other |
21 | than a lessee in ordinary course of business, takes the leasehold interest free of a security interest |
22 | to the extent that it secures advances made after the earlier of: |
23 | (1) The time the secured party acquires knowledge of the lease; or |
24 | (2) 45 days after the lease contract becomes enforceable. |
25 | (g) Advances made pursuant to commitment: priority of lessee of goods. Subsection (f) |
26 | does not apply if the advance is made pursuant to a commitment entered into without knowledge |
27 | of the lease and before the expiration of the 45-day period. |
28 | 6A-9-324. Priority of purchase-money security interests. |
29 | (a) General rule: purchase-money priority. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (g), |
30 | a perfected purchase-money security interest in goods other than inventory or livestock has priority |
31 | over a conflicting security interest in the same goods, and, except as otherwise provided in § 6A- |
32 | 9-327, a perfected security interest in its identifiable proceeds also has priority, if the purchase- |
33 | money security interest is perfected when the debtor receives possession of the collateral or within |
34 | 20 days thereafter. |
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1 | (b) Inventory purchase-money priority. Subject to subsection (c) and except as otherwise |
2 | provided in subsection (g), a perfected purchase-money security interest in inventory has priority |
3 | over a conflicting security interest in the same inventory, has priority over a conflicting security |
4 | interest in chattel paper or an instrument constituting proceeds of the inventory and in proceeds of |
5 | the chattel paper, if so provided in § 6A-9-330, and, except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-327, |
6 | also has priority in identifiable cash proceeds of the inventory to the extent the identifiable cash |
7 | proceeds are received on or before the delivery of the inventory to a buyer, if: |
8 | (1) The purchase-money security interest is perfected when the debtor receives possession |
9 | of the inventory; |
10 | (2) The purchase-money secured party sends an authenticated a signed notification to the |
11 | holder of the conflicting security interest; |
12 | (3) The holder of the conflicting security interest receives the notification within five years |
13 | before the debtor receives possession of the inventory; and |
14 | (4) The notification states that the person sending the notification has or expects to acquire |
15 | a purchase-money security interest in inventory of the debtor and describes the inventory. |
16 | (c) Holders of conflicting inventory security interests to be notified. Subsections (b)(2) |
17 | through (4) apply only if the holder of the conflicting security interest had filed a financing |
18 | statement covering the same types of inventory: |
19 | (1) If the purchase-money security interest is perfected by filing, before the date of the |
20 | filing; or |
21 | (2) If the purchase-money security interest is temporarily perfected without filing or |
22 | possession under § 6A-9-312(f), before the beginning of the 20-day period thereunder. |
23 | (d) Livestock purchase-money priority. Subject to subsection (e) and except as otherwise |
24 | provided in subsection (g), a perfected purchase-money security interest in livestock that are farm |
25 | products has priority over a conflicting security interest in the same livestock, and, except as |
26 | otherwise provided in § 6A-9-327, a perfected security interest in their identifiable proceeds and |
27 | identifiable products in their unmanufactured states also has priority, if: |
28 | (1) The purchase-money security interest is perfected when the debtor receives possession |
29 | of the livestock; |
30 | (2) The purchase-money secured party sends an authenticated a signed notification to the |
31 | holder of the conflicting security interest; |
32 | (3) The holder of the conflicting security interest receives the notification within six months |
33 | before the debtor receives possession of the livestock; and |
34 | (4) The notification states that the person sending the notification has or expects to acquire |
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1 | a purchase-money security interest in livestock of the debtor and describes the livestock. |
2 | (e) Holders of conflicting livestock security interests to be notified. Subsections (d)(2) |
3 | through (4) apply only if the holder of the conflicting security interest had filed a financing |
4 | statement covering the same types of livestock: |
5 | (1) If the purchase-money security interest is perfected by filing, before the date of the |
6 | filing; or |
7 | (2) If the purchase-money security interest is temporarily perfected without filing or |
8 | possession under § 6A-9-312(f), before the beginning of the 20-day period thereunder. |
9 | (f) Software purchase-money priority. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (g), a |
10 | perfected purchase-money security interest in software has priority over a conflicting security |
11 | interest in the same collateral, and, except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-327, a perfected security |
12 | interest in its identifiable proceeds also has priority, to the extent that the purchase-money security |
13 | interest in the goods in which the software was acquired for use has priority in the goods and |
14 | proceeds of the goods under this section. |
15 | (g) Conflicting purchase-money security interests. If more than one security interest |
16 | qualifies for priority in the same collateral under subsection (a), (b), (d), or (f): |
17 | (1) A security interest securing an obligation incurred as all or part of the price of the |
18 | collateral has priority over a security interest securing an obligation incurred for value given to |
19 | enable the debtor to acquire rights in or the use of collateral; and |
20 | (2) In all other cases, § 6A-9-322(a) applies to the qualifying security interests. |
21 | 6A-9-330. Priority of purchaser of chattel paper or instrument. |
22 | (a) Purchaser’s priority: security interest claimed merely as proceeds. A purchaser of |
23 | chattel paper has priority over a security interest in the chattel paper which is claimed merely as |
24 | proceeds of inventory subject to a security interest if: |
25 | (1) In good faith and in the ordinary course of the purchaser’s business, the purchaser gives |
26 | new value, and takes possession of each authoritative tangible copy of the record evidencing the |
27 | chattel paper or and obtains control of the chattel paper under § 6A-9-105 of each authoritative |
28 | electronic copy of the record evidencing the chattel paper; and |
29 | (2) The chattel paper does authoritative copies of the record evidencing the chattel paper |
30 | do not indicate that it the chattel paper has been assigned to an identified assignee other than the |
31 | purchaser. |
32 | (b) Purchaser’s priority: other security interests. A purchaser of chattel paper has priority |
33 | over a security interest in the chattel paper which is claimed other than merely as proceeds of |
34 | inventory subject to a security interest if the purchaser gives new value, and takes possession of |
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1 | each authoritative tangible copy of the record evidencing the chattel paper, or and obtains control |
2 | of under § 6A-9-105 of each authoritative electronic copy of the record evidencing the chattel paper |
3 | under § 6A-9-105 in good faith, in the ordinary course of the purchaser’s business, and without |
4 | knowledge that the purchase violates the rights of the secured party. |
5 | (c) Chattel paper purchaser’s priority in proceeds. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A- |
6 | 9-327, a purchaser having priority in chattel paper under subsection (a) or (b) also has priority in |
7 | proceeds of the chattel paper to the extent that: |
8 | (1) Section 6A-9-322 provides for priority in the proceeds; or |
9 | (2) The proceeds consist of the specific goods covered by the chattel paper or cash proceeds |
10 | of the specific goods, even if the purchaser’s security interest in the proceeds is unperfected. |
11 | (d) Instrument purchaser’s priority. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-331(a), a |
12 | purchaser of an instrument has priority over a security interest in the instrument perfected by a |
13 | method other than possession if the purchaser gives value and takes possession of the instrument |
14 | in good faith and without knowledge that the purchase violates the rights of the secured party. |
15 | (e) Holder of purchase-money security interest gives new value. For purposes of |
16 | subsections (a) and (b), the holder of a purchase-money security interest in inventory gives new |
17 | value for chattel paper constituting proceeds of the inventory. |
18 | (f) Indication of assignment gives knowledge. For purposes of subsections (b) and (d), if |
19 | the authoritative copies of the record evidencing chattel paper or an instrument indicates indicate |
20 | that it the chattel paper or instrument has been assigned to an identified secured party other than |
21 | the purchaser, a purchaser of the chattel paper or instrument has knowledge that the purchase |
22 | violates the rights of the secured party. |
23 | 6A-9-331. Priority of rights of purchasers of instruments, documents, and securities |
24 | under other chapters; priority of interests in financial assets and security entitlements under |
25 | chapter 8 Priority of rights of purchasers of controllable accounts, controllable electronic |
26 | records, controllable payment intangibles, documents, instruments and securities under |
27 | other chapters; priority of interests in financial assets and security entitlements and |
28 | protection against assertion of claim under chapters 8 and 12. |
29 | (a) Rights under chapters 3, 7, and 8, and 12 not limited. This chapter does not limit the |
30 | rights of a holder in due course of a negotiable instrument, a holder to which a negotiable document |
31 | of title has been duly negotiated, or a protected purchaser of a security or a qualifying purchaser of |
32 | a controllable account, controllable electronic record, or controllable payment intangible. These |
33 | holders or purchasers take priority over an earlier security interest, even if perfected, to the extent |
34 | provided in chapters 3, 7, and 8, and 12. |
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1 | (b) Protection under chapter chapters 8 and 12. This chapter does not limit the rights of or |
2 | impose liability on a person to the extent that the person is protected against the assertion of a claim |
3 | under chapter 8 or 12. |
4 | (c) Filing not notice. Filing under this chapter does not constitute notice of a claim or |
5 | defense to the holders, or purchasers, or persons described in subsections (a) and (b). |
6 | 6A-9-332. Transfer of money; transfer of funds from deposit account Transfer of |
7 | tangible money; transfer of funds from deposit account. |
8 | (a) Transferee of tangible money. A transferee of tangible money takes the money free of |
9 | a security interest unless the transferee acts if the transferee receives the funds without acting in |
10 | collusion with the debtor in violating the rights of the secured party. |
11 | (b) Transferee of funds from deposit account. A transferee of funds from a deposit account |
12 | takes the funds free of a security interest in the deposit account unless the transferee acts if the |
13 | transferee receives the funds without acting in collusion with the debtor in violating the rights of |
14 | the secured party. |
15 | (c) Transferee of electronic money. A transferee of electronic money takes the money free |
16 | of a security interest if the transferee obtains control of the money without acting in collusion with |
17 | the debtor in violating the rights of the secured party. |
18 | 6A-9-334. Priority of security interests in fixtures and crops. |
19 | (a) Security interest in fixtures under this chapter. A security interest under this chapter |
20 | may be created in goods that are fixtures or may continue in goods that become fixtures. A security |
21 | interest does not exist under this chapter in ordinary building materials incorporated into an |
22 | improvement on land. |
23 | (b) Security interest in fixtures under real-property law. This chapter does not prevent |
24 | creation of an encumbrance upon fixtures under real property law. |
25 | (c) General rule: subordination of security interest in fixtures. In cases not governed by |
26 | subsections (d) through (h), a security interest in fixtures is subordinate to a conflicting interest of |
27 | an encumbrancer or owner of the related real property other than the debtor. |
28 | (d) Fixtures purchase-money priority. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), a |
29 | perfected security interest in fixtures has priority over a conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or |
30 | owner of the real property if the debtor has an interest of record in or is in possession of the real |
31 | property and: |
32 | (1) The security interest is a purchase-money security interest; |
33 | (2) The interest of the encumbrancer or owner arises before the goods become fixtures; and |
34 | (3) The security interest is perfected by a fixture filing before the goods become fixtures |
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1 | or within 20 days thereafter. |
2 | (e) Priority of security interest in fixtures over interests in real property. A perfected |
3 | security interest in fixtures has priority over a conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of |
4 | the real property if: |
5 | (1) The debtor has an interest of record in the real property or is in possession of the real |
6 | property and the security interest: |
7 | (i) Is perfected by a fixture filing before the interest of the encumbrancer or owner is of |
8 | record; and |
9 | (ii) Has priority over any conflicting interest of a predecessor in title of the encumbrancer |
10 | or owner; |
11 | (2) Before the goods become fixtures, the security interest is perfected by any method |
12 | permitted by this chapter and the fixtures are readily removable: |
13 | (i) Factory or office machines; |
14 | (ii) Equipment that is not primarily used or leased for use in the operation of the real |
15 | property; or |
16 | (iii) Replacements of domestic appliances that are consumer goods; |
17 | (3) The conflicting interest is a lien on the real property obtained by legal or equitable |
18 | proceedings after the security interest was perfected by any method permitted by this chapter; or |
19 | (4) The security interest is: |
20 | (i) Created in a manufactured home in a manufactured-home transaction; and |
21 | (ii) Perfected pursuant to a statute described in § 6A-9-311(a)(2). |
22 | (f) Priority based on consent, disclaimer, or right to remove. A security interest in fixtures, |
23 | whether or not perfected, has priority over a conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of |
24 | the real property if: |
25 | (1) The encumbrancer or owner has, in an authenticated a signed record, consented to the |
26 | security interest or disclaimed an interest in the goods as fixtures; or |
27 | (2) The debtor has a right to remove the goods as against the encumbrancer or owner. |
28 | (g) Continuation of paragraph (f)(2) priority. The priority of the security interest under |
29 | paragraph (f)(2) continues for a reasonable time if the debtor’s right to remove the goods as against |
30 | the encumbrancer or owner terminates. |
31 | (h) Priority of construction mortgage. A mortgage is a construction mortgage to the extent |
32 | that it secures an obligation incurred for the construction of an improvement on land, including the |
33 | acquisition cost of the land, if a recorded record of the mortgage so indicates. Except as otherwise |
34 | provided in subsections (e) and (f), a security interest in fixtures is subordinate to a construction |
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1 | mortgage if a record of the mortgage is recorded before the goods become fixtures and the goods |
2 | become fixtures before the completion of the construction. A mortgage has this priority to the same |
3 | extent as a construction mortgage to the extent that it is given to refinance a construction mortgage. |
4 | (i) Priority of security interest in crops. A perfected security interest in crops growing on |
5 | real property has priority over a conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of the real |
6 | property if the debtor has an interest of record in or is in possession of the real property. |
7 | 6A-9-341. Bank’s rights and duties with respect to deposit account. |
8 | Except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-340(c), and unless the bank otherwise agrees in an |
9 | authenticated a signed record, a bank’s rights and duties with respect to a deposit account |
10 | maintained with the bank are not terminated, suspended, or modified by: |
11 | (1) The creation, attachment, or perfection of a security interest in the deposit account; |
12 | (2) The bank’s knowledge of the security interest; or |
13 | (3) The bank’s receipt of instructions from the secured party. |
14 | 6A-9-404. Rights acquired by assignee; claims and defenses against assignee. |
15 | (a) Assignee’s rights subject to terms, claims, and defenses; exceptions. Unless an account |
16 | debtor has made an enforceable agreement not to assert defenses or claims, and subject to |
17 | subsections (b) through (e), the rights of an assignee are subject to: |
18 | (1) All terms of the agreement between the account debtor and assignor and any defense |
19 | or claim in recoupment arising from the transaction that gave rise to the contract; and |
20 | (2) Any other defense or claim of the account debtor against the assignor which accrues |
21 | before the account debtor receives a notification of the assignment authenticated signed by the |
22 | assignor or the assignee. |
23 | (b) Account debtor’s claim reduces amount owed to assignee. Subject to subsection (c) and |
24 | except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the claim of an account debtor against an assignor |
25 | may be asserted against an assignee under subsection (a) only to reduce the amount the account |
26 | debtor owes. |
27 | (c) Rule for individual under other law. This section is subject to law other than this chapter |
28 | which establishes a different rule for an account debtor who is an individual and who incurred the |
29 | obligation primarily for personal, family, or household purposes. |
30 | (d) Omission of required statement in consumer transaction. In a consumer transaction, if |
31 | a record evidences the account debtor’s obligation, law other than this chapter requires that the |
32 | record include a statement to the effect that the account debtor’s recovery against an assignee with |
33 | respect to claims and defenses against the assignor may not exceed amounts paid by the account |
34 | debtor under the record, and the record does not include such a statement, the extent to which a |
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1 | claim of an account debtor against the assignor may be asserted against an assignee is determined |
2 | as if the record included such a statement. |
3 | (e) Inapplicability to health-care-insurance receivable. This section does not apply to an |
4 | assignment of a health-care-insurance receivable. |
5 | 6A-9-406. Discharge of account debtor; notification of assignment; identification and |
6 | proof of assignment; restrictions on assignment of accounts, chattel paper, payment |
7 | intangibles, and promissory notes ineffective. |
8 | (a) Discharge of account debtor; effect of notification. Subject to subsections (b) through |
9 | (i) and (l), an account debtor on an account, chattel paper, or a payment intangible may discharge |
10 | its obligation by paying the assignor until, but not after, the account debtor receives a notification, |
11 | authenticated signed by the assignor or the assignee, that the amount due or to become due has been |
12 | assigned and that payment is to be made to the assignee. After receipt of the notification, the |
13 | account debtor may discharge its obligation by paying the assignee and may not discharge the |
14 | obligation by paying the assignor. |
15 | (b) When notification ineffective. Subject to subsection subsections (h) and (l), notification |
16 | is ineffective under subsection (a): |
17 | (1) If it does not reasonably identify the rights assigned; |
18 | (2) To the extent that an agreement between an account debtor and a seller of a payment |
19 | intangible limits the account debtor’s duty to pay a person other than the seller and the limitation |
20 | is effective under law other than this chapter; or |
21 | (3) At the option of an account debtor, if the notification notifies the account debtor to |
22 | make less than the full amount of any installment or other periodic payment to the assignee, even |
23 | if: |
24 | (i) Only a portion of the account, chattel paper, or payment intangible has been assigned to |
25 | that assignee; |
26 | (ii) A portion has been assigned to another assignee; or |
27 | (iii) The account debtor knows that the assignment to that assignee is limited. |
28 | (c) Proof of assignment. Subject to subsection subsections (h) and (l), if requested by the |
29 | account debtor, an assignee shall seasonably furnish reasonable proof that the assignment has been |
30 | made. Unless the assignee complies, the account debtor may discharge its obligation by paying the |
31 | assignor, even if the account debtor has received a notification under subsection (a). |
32 | (d) Term restricting assignment generally ineffective. In this subsection, "promissory note" |
33 | includes a negotiable instrument that evidences chattel paper. Except as otherwise provided in |
34 | subsection subsections (e) and (k) and § 6A-2.1-303 and § 6A-9-407, and subject to subsection (h), |
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1 | a term in an agreement between an account debtor and an assignor or in a promissory note is |
2 | ineffective to the extent that it: |
3 | (1) Prohibits, restricts, or requires the consent of the account debtor or person obligated on |
4 | the promissory note to the assignment or transfer of, or the creation, attachment, perfection, or |
5 | enforcement of a security interest in, the account, chattel paper, payment intangible, or promissory |
6 | note; or |
7 | (2) Provides that the assignment or transfer or the creation, attachment, perfection, or |
8 | enforcement of the security interest may give rise to a default, breach, right of recoupment, claim, |
9 | defense, termination, right of termination, or remedy under the account, chattel paper, payment |
10 | intangible, or promissory note. |
11 | (e) Inapplicability of subsection (d) to certain sales. Subsection (d) does not apply to the |
12 | sale of a payment intangible or promissory note, other than a sale pursuant to a disposition under § |
13 | 6A-9-610 or an acceptance of collateral under § 6A-9-620. |
14 | (f) Legal restrictions on assignment generally ineffective. Except as otherwise provided in |
15 | subsection (k) and §§ 6A-2.1-303 and 6A-9-407 and subject to subsections (h) and (i), a rule of |
16 | law, statute, or regulation that prohibits, restricts, or requires the consent of a government, |
17 | governmental body or official, or account debtor to the assignment or transfer of, or creation of a |
18 | security interest in, an account or chattel paper is ineffective to the extent that the rule of law, |
19 | statute, or regulation: |
20 | (1) Prohibits, restricts, or requires the consent of the government, governmental body or |
21 | official, or account debtor to the assignment or transfer of, or the creation, attachment, perfection, |
22 | or enforcement of a security interest in the account or chattel paper; or |
23 | (2) Provides that the assignment or transfer or the creation, attachment, perfection, or |
24 | enforcement of the security interest may give rise to a default, breach, right of recoupment, claim, |
25 | defense, termination, right of termination, or remedy under the account or chattel paper. |
26 | (g) Subsection (b)(3) not waivable. Subject to subsection subsections (h) and (l) of this |
27 | section, an account debtor may not waive or vary its option under subsection (b)(3). |
28 | (h) Rule for individual under other law. This section is subject to law other than this chapter |
29 | which establishes a different rule for an account debtor who is an individual and who incurred the |
30 | obligation primarily for personal, family, or household purposes. |
31 | (i) Inapplicability to health-care-insurance receivable. This section does not apply to an |
32 | assignment of a health-care-insurance receivable. |
33 | (j) Section prevails over inconsistent law. This section prevails over any statutes, rules, and |
34 | regulations inconsistent with this section. |
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1 | (k) Inapplicability to interests in certain entities. Subsections (d), (f), and (j) of this section |
2 | do not apply to a security interest in an ownership interest in a general partnership, limited |
3 | partnership, or limited liability company. |
4 | (l) Inapplicability of certain subsections. Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (g) of this section do |
5 | not apply to a controllable account or controllable payment intangible. |
6 | 6A-9-408. Restrictions on assignment of promissory notes, health-care insurance |
7 | receivables, and certain general intangibles ineffective. |
8 | (a) Term restricting assignment generally ineffective. Except as otherwise provided in |
9 | subsection subsections (b) and (f), a term in a promissory note or in an agreement between an |
10 | account debtor and a debtor which relates to a health-care-insurance receivable or a general |
11 | intangible, including a contract, permit, license, or franchise, and which term prohibits, restricts, or |
12 | requires the consent of the person obligated on the promissory note or the account debtor to, the |
13 | assignment or transfer of, or creation, attachment, or perfection of a security interest in, the |
14 | promissory note, health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible, is ineffective to the extent |
15 | that the term: |
16 | (1) Would impair the creation, attachment, or perfection of a security interest; or |
17 | (2) Provides that the assignment or transfer or the creation, attachment, or perfection of the |
18 | security interest may give rise to a default, breach, right of recoupment, claim, defense, termination, |
19 | right of termination, or remedy under the promissory note, health-care-insurance receivable, or |
20 | general intangible. |
21 | (b) Applicability of subsection (a) to sales of certain rights to payment. Subsection (a) |
22 | applies to a security interest in a payment intangible or promissory note only if the security interest |
23 | arises out of a sale of the payment intangible or promissory note, other than a sale pursuant to a |
24 | disposition under § 6A-9-610 or an acceptance of collateral under § 6A-9-620. |
25 | (c) Legal restrictions on assignment generally ineffective. A Except as otherwise provided |
26 | in subsection (f) of this section, rule of law, statute, or regulation that prohibits, restricts, or requires |
27 | the consent of a government, governmental body or official, person obligated on a promissory note, |
28 | or account debtor to the assignment or transfer of, or creation of a security interest in, a promissory |
29 | note, health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible, including a contract, permit, license, |
30 | or franchise between an account debtor and a debtor, is ineffective to the extent that the rule of law, |
31 | statute, or regulation: |
32 | (1) Would impair the creation, attachment, or perfection of a security interest; or |
33 | (2) Provides that the assignment or transfer or the creation, attachment, or perfection of the |
34 | security interest may give rise to a default, breach, right of recoupment, claim, defense, termination, |
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1 | right of termination, or remedy under the promissory note, health-care-insurance receivable, or |
2 | general intangible. |
3 | (d) Limitation on ineffectiveness under subsections (a) and (c). To the extent that a term in |
4 | a promissory note or in an agreement between an account debtor and a debtor which relates to a |
5 | health-care-insurance receivable or general intangible or a rule of law, statute, or regulation |
6 | described in subsection (c) would be effective under law other than this chapter but is ineffective |
7 | under subsection (a) or (c), the creation, attachment, or perfection of a security interest in the |
8 | promissory note, health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible: |
9 | (1) Is not enforceable against the person obligated on the promissory note or the account |
10 | debtor; |
11 | (2) Does not impose a duty or obligation on the person obligated on the promissory note |
12 | or the account debtor; |
13 | (3) Does not require the person obligated on the promissory note or the account debtor to |
14 | recognize the security interest, pay or render performance to the secured party, or accept payment |
15 | or performance from the secured party; |
16 | (4) Does not entitle the secured party to use or assign the debtor’s rights under the |
17 | promissory note, health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible, including any related |
18 | information or materials furnished to the debtor in the transaction giving rise to the promissory |
19 | note, health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible; |
20 | (5) Does not entitle the secured party to use, assign, possess, or have access to any trade |
21 | secrets or confidential information of the person obligated on the promissory note or the account |
22 | debtor; and |
23 | (6) Does not entitle the secured party to enforce the security interest in the promissory note, |
24 | health-care-insurance receivable, or general intangible. |
25 | (e) Section prevails over inconsistent law. This section prevails over any statutes, rules, |
26 | and regulations inconsistent with this section. |
27 | (f) Inapplicability to interests in certain entities. This section does not apply to a security |
28 | interest in an ownership interest in a general partnership, limited partnership, or limited liability |
29 | company. |
30 | (g) "Promissory note." In this section, "promissory note" includes a negotiable instrument |
31 | that evidences chattel paper. |
32 | 6A-9-509. Persons entitled to file a record. |
33 | (a) Person entitled to file record. A person may file an initial financing statement, |
34 | amendment that adds collateral covered by a financing statement, or amendment that adds a debtor |
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1 | to a financing statement only if: |
2 | (1) The debtor authorizes the filing in an authenticated a signed record or pursuant to |
3 | subsection (b) or (c); or |
4 | (2) The person holds an agricultural lien that has become effective at the time of filing and |
5 | the financing statement covers only collateral in which the person holds an agricultural lien. |
6 | (b) Security agreement as authorization. By authenticating signing or becoming bound as |
7 | debtor by a security agreement, a debtor or new debtor authorizes the filing of an initial financing |
8 | statement, and an amendment, covering: |
9 | (1) The collateral described in the security agreement; and |
10 | (2) Property that becomes collateral under § 6A-9-315(a)(2), whether or not the security |
11 | agreement expressly covers proceeds. |
12 | (c) Acquisition of collateral as authorization. By acquiring collateral in which a security |
13 | interest or agricultural lien continues under § 6A-9-315(a)(1), a debtor authorizes the filing of an |
14 | initial financing statement, and an amendment, covering the collateral and property that becomes |
15 | collateral under § 6A-9-315(a)(2). |
16 | (d) Person entitled to file certain amendments. A person may file an amendment other than |
17 | an amendment that adds collateral covered by a financing statement or an amendment that adds a |
18 | debtor to a financing statement only if: |
19 | (1) The secured party of record authorizes the filing; or |
20 | (2) The amendment is a termination statement for a financing statement as to which the |
21 | secured party of record has failed to file or send a termination statement as required by § 6A-9- |
22 | 513(a) or (c), the debtor authorizes the filing, and the termination statement indicates that the debtor |
23 | authorized it to be filed. |
24 | (e) Multiple secured parties of record. If there is more than one secured party of record for |
25 | a financing statement, each secured party of record may authorize the filing of an amendment under |
26 | subsection (d). |
27 | 6A-9-513. Termination statement. |
28 | (a) Consumer goods. A secured party shall cause the secured party of record for a financing |
29 | statement to file a termination statement for the financing statement if the financing statement |
30 | covers consumer goods and: |
31 | (1) There is no obligation secured by the collateral covered by the financing statement and |
32 | no commitment to make an advance, incur an obligation, or otherwise give value; or |
33 | (2) The debtor did not authorize the filing of the initial financing statement. |
34 | (b) Time for compliance with subsection (a). To comply with subsection (a), a secured |
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1 | party shall cause the secured party of record to file the termination statement: |
2 | (1) Within one month after there is no obligation secured by the collateral covered by the |
3 | financing statement and no commitment to make an advance, incur an obligation, or otherwise give |
4 | value; or |
5 | (2) If earlier, within twenty (20) days after the secured party receives an authenticated a |
6 | signed demand from a debtor. |
7 | (c) Other collateral. In cases not governed by subsection (a), within 20 days after a secured |
8 | party receives an authenticated a signed demand from a debtor, the secured party shall cause the |
9 | secured party of record for a financing statement to send to the debtor a termination statement for |
10 | the financing statement or file the termination statement in the filing office if: |
11 | (1) Except in the case of a financing statement covering accounts or chattel paper that has |
12 | been sold or goods that are the subject of a consignment, there is no obligation secured by the |
13 | collateral covered by the financing statement and no commitment to make an advance, incur an |
14 | obligation, or otherwise give value; |
15 | (2) The financing statement covers accounts or chattel paper that has been sold but as to |
16 | which the account debtor or other person obligated has discharged its obligation; |
17 | (3) The financing statement covers goods that were the subject of a consignment to the |
18 | debtor but are not in the debtor’s possession; or |
19 | (4) The debtor did not authorize the filing of the initial financing statement. |
20 | (d) Effect of filing termination statement. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-510, |
21 | upon the filing of a termination statement with the filing office, the financing statement to which |
22 | the termination statement relates ceases to be effective. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9- |
23 | 510, for purposes of §§ 6A-9-519(g), 6A-9-522(a), and 6A-9-523(c), the filing with the filing office |
24 | of a termination statement relating to a financing statement that indicates that the debtor is a |
25 | transmitting utility also causes the effectiveness of the financing statement to lapse. |
26 | 6A-9-601. Rights after default; judicial enforcement; consignor or buyer of accounts, |
27 | chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes. |
28 | (a) Rights of secured party after default. After default, a secured party has the rights |
29 | provided in this part and, except as otherwise provided in § 6A-9-602, those provided by agreement |
30 | of the parties. A secured party: |
31 | (1) May reduce a claim to judgment, foreclose, or otherwise enforce the claim, security |
32 | interest, or agricultural lien by any available judicial procedure; and |
33 | (2) If the collateral is documents, may proceed either as to the documents or as to the goods |
34 | they cover. |
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1 | (b) Rights and duties of secured party in possession or control. A secured party in |
2 | possession of collateral or control of collateral under § 6A-7-106, 6A-9-104, 6A-9-105, 6A-9-105.1 |
3 | 6A-9-106, or 6A-9-107 or 6A-9-107.1 has the rights and duties provided in § 6A-9-207. |
4 | (c) Rights cumulative; simultaneous exercise. The rights under subsections (a) and (b) are |
5 | cumulative and may be exercised simultaneously. |
6 | (d) Rights of debtor and obligor. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (g) and § 6A- |
7 | 9-605, after default, a debtor and an obligor have the rights provided in this part and by agreement |
8 | of the parties. |
9 | (e) Lien of levy after judgment. If a secured party has reduced its claim to judgment, the |
10 | lien of any levy that may be made upon the collateral by virtue of an execution based upon the |
11 | judgment relates back to the earliest of: |
12 | (1) The date of perfection of the security interest or agricultural lien in the collateral; |
13 | (2) The date of filing a financing statement covering the collateral; or |
14 | (3) Any date specified in a statute under which the agricultural lien was created. |
15 | (f) Execution sale. A sale pursuant to an execution is a foreclosure of the security interest |
16 | or agricultural lien by judicial procedure within the meaning of this section. A secured party may |
17 | purchase at the sale and thereafter hold the collateral free of any other requirements of this chapter. |
18 | (g) Consignor or buyer of certain rights to payment. Except as otherwise provided in § 6A- |
19 | 9-607(c), this part imposes no duties upon a secured party that is a consignor or is a buyer of |
20 | accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes. |
21 | 6A-9-605. Unknown debtor or secondary obligor. |
22 | A(a) In general: No duty owed by secured party. Except as provided in subsection (b) of |
23 | this section, a secured party does not owe a duty based on its status as secured party: |
24 | (1) To a person that is a debtor or obligor, unless the secured party knows: |
25 | (i) That the person is a debtor or obligor; |
26 | (ii) The identity of the person; and |
27 | (iii) How to communicate with the person; or |
28 | (2) To a secured party or lienholder that has filed a financing statement against a person, |
29 | unless the secured party knows: |
30 | (i) That the person is a debtor; and |
31 | (ii) The identity of the person. |
32 | (b) Exception: Secured party owes duty to debtor or obligor. A secured party owes a duty |
33 | based on its status as a secured party to a person if, at the time the secured party obtains control of |
34 | collateral that is a controllable account, controllable electronic record, or controllable payment |
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1 | intangible or at the time the security interest attaches to the collateral, whichever is later: |
2 | (1) The person is a debtor or obligor; and |
3 | (2) The secured party knows that the information in subsection (a)(1)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this |
4 | section relating to the person is not provided by the collateral, a record attached to or logically |
5 | associated with the collateral, or the system in which the collateral is recorded. |
6 | 6A-9-608. Application of proceeds of collection or enforcement; liability for deficiency |
7 | and right to surplus. |
8 | (a) Application of proceeds, surplus, and deficiency if obligation secured. If a security |
9 | interest or agricultural lien secures payment or performance of an obligation, the following rules |
10 | apply: |
11 | (1) A secured party shall apply or pay over for application the cash proceeds of collection |
12 | or enforcement under § 6A-9-607 in the following order to: |
13 | (i) The reasonable expenses of collection and enforcement and, to the extent provided for |
14 | by agreement and not prohibited by law, reasonable attorney’s fees and legal expenses incurred by |
15 | the secured party; |
16 | (ii) The satisfaction of obligations secured by the security interest or agricultural lien under |
17 | which the collection or enforcement is made; and |
18 | (iii) The satisfaction of obligations secured by any subordinate security interest in or other |
19 | lien on the collateral subject to the security interest or agricultural lien under which the collection |
20 | or enforcement is made if the secured party receives an authenticated a signed demand for proceeds |
21 | before distribution of the proceeds is completed. |
22 | (2) If requested by a secured party, a holder of a subordinate security interest or other lien |
23 | shall furnish reasonable proof of the interest or lien within a reasonable time. Unless the holder |
24 | complies, the secured party need not comply with the holder’s demand under paragraph (1)(iii). |
25 | (3) A secured party need not apply or pay over for application noncash proceeds of |
26 | collection and enforcement under § 6A-9-607 unless the failure to do so would be commercially |
27 | unreasonable. A secured party that applies or pays over for application noncash proceeds shall do |
28 | so in a commercially reasonable manner. |
29 | (4) A secured party shall account to and pay a debtor for any surplus, and the obligor is |
30 | liable for any deficiency. |
31 | (b) No surplus or deficiency in sales of certain rights to payment. If the underlying |
32 | transaction is a sale of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes, the debtor |
33 | is not entitled to any surplus, and the obligor is not liable for any deficiency. |
34 | 6A-9-611. Notification before disposition of collateral. |
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1 | (a) “Notification date.” In this section, “notification date” means the earlier of the date on |
2 | which: |
3 | (1) A secured party sends to the debtor and any secondary obligor an authenticated a signed |
4 | notification of disposition; or |
5 | (2) The debtor and any secondary obligor waive the right to notification. |
6 | (b) Notification of disposition required. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), a |
7 | secured party that disposes of collateral under § 6A-9-610 shall send to the persons specified in |
8 | subsection (c) a reasonable authenticated signed notification of disposition. |
9 | (c) Persons to be notified. To comply with subsection (b), the secured party shall send an |
10 | authenticated a signed notification of disposition to: |
11 | (1) The debtor; |
12 | (2) Any secondary obligor; and |
13 | (3) If the collateral is other than consumer goods: |
14 | (i) Any other person from which the secured party has received, before the notification |
15 | date, an authenticated a signed notification of a claim of an interest in the collateral; |
16 | (ii) Any other secured party or lienholder that, 10 days before the notification date, held a |
17 | security interest in or other lien on the collateral perfected by the filing of a financing statement |
18 | that: |
19 | (A) Identified the collateral; |
20 | (B) Was indexed under the debtor’s name as of that date; and |
21 | (C) Was filed in the office in which to file a financing statement against the debtor covering |
22 | the collateral as of that date; and |
23 | (iii) Any other secured party that, 10 days before the notification date, held a security |
24 | interest in the collateral perfected by compliance with a statute, regulation, or treaty described in § |
25 | 6A-9-311(a). |
26 | (d) Subsection (b) inapplicable: perishable collateral; recognized market. Subsection (b) |
27 | does not apply if the collateral is perishable or threatens to decline speedily in value or is of a type |
28 | customarily sold on a recognized market. |
29 | (e) Compliance with subsection (c)(3)(ii). A secured party complies with the requirement |
30 | for notification prescribed by subsection (c)(3)(ii) if: |
31 | (1) Not later than 20 days or earlier than 30 days before the notification date, the secured |
32 | party requests, in a commercially reasonable manner, information concerning financing statements |
33 | indexed under the debtor’s name in the office indicated in subsection (c)(3)(ii); and |
34 | (2) Before the notification date, the secured party: |
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1 | (i) Did not receive a response to the request for information; or |
2 | (ii) Received a response to the request for information and sent an authenticated a signed |
3 | notification of disposition to each secured party or other lienholder named in that response whose |
4 | financing statement covered the collateral. |
5 | 6A-9-613. Contents and form of notification before disposition of collateral — |
6 | General. |
7 | (a) Contents and form of notification. Except in a consumer-goods transaction, the |
8 | following rules apply: |
9 | (1) The contents of a notification of disposition are sufficient if the notification: |
10 | (i) Describes the debtor and the secured party; |
11 | (ii) Describes the collateral that is the subject of the intended disposition; |
12 | (iii) States the method of intended disposition; |
13 | (iv) States that the debtor is entitled to an accounting of the unpaid indebtedness and states |
14 | the charge, if any, for an accounting; and |
15 | (v) States the time and place of a public disposition or the time after which any other |
16 | disposition is to be made. |
17 | (2) Whether the contents of a notification that lacks any of the information specified in |
18 | paragraph (1) are nevertheless sufficient is a question of fact. |
19 | (3) The contents of a notification providing substantially the information specified in |
20 | paragraph (1) are sufficient, even if the notification includes: |
21 | (i) Information not specified by that paragraph; or |
22 | (ii) Minor errors that are not seriously misleading. |
23 | (4) A particular phrasing of the notification is not required. |
24 | (5) The following form of notification and the form appearing in § 6A-9-614(3) 6A-9- |
25 | 614(a)(3), when completed in accordance with the instructions in subsection (b) of this section and |
26 | § 6A-9-614(b), each provides sufficient information: |
27 | NOTIFICATION OF DISPOSITION OF COLLATERAL |
28 | To: [Name of debtor, obligor, or other person to which the notification is sent] |
29 | From: [Name, address, and telephone number of secured party] |
30 | Name of Debtor(s): [Include only if debtor(s) are not an addressee] |
31 | [For a public disposition:] |
32 | We will sell [or lease or license, as applicable] the [describe collateral] [to the highest qualified |
33 | bidder] in public as follows: |
34 | Day and Date: |
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1 | Time: |
2 | Place: |
3 | [For a private disposition:] |
4 | We will sell [or lease or license, as applicable] the [describe collateral] privately sometime |
5 | after [day and date]. |
6 | You are entitled to an accounting of the unpaid indebtedness secured by the property that |
7 | we intend to sell [or lease or license, as applicable] [for a charge of $ ]. You may request |
8 | an accounting by calling us at [telephone number] |
9 | End of Form |
10 | (Date) |
11 | NOTIFICATION OF DISPOSITION OF COLLATERAL |
12 | To: (Name of debtor, obligor, or other person to which the notification is sent) |
13 | From: (Name, address, and telephone number of secured party) |
14 | (1) Name of any debtor that is not an addressee: (Name of each debtor) |
15 | (2) We will sell (describe collateral) (to the highest qualified bidder) at public sale. A sale |
16 | could include a lease or license. The sale will be held as follows: |
17 | (Date) |
18 | (Time) |
19 | (Place) |
20 | (3) We will sell (describe collateral) at private sale sometime after (date). A sale could |
21 | include a lease or license. |
22 | (4) You are entitled to an accounting of the unpaid indebtedness secured by the property |
23 | that we intend to sell or, as applicable, lease or license. |
24 | (5) If you request an accounting you must pay a charge of $ (amount). |
25 | (6) You may request an accounting by calling us at (telephone number). |
26 | [End of Form] |
27 | (b) Instructions for form of notification. The following instructions apply to the form of |
28 | notification in subsection (a)(5) of this section: |
29 | (1) The instructions in this subsection refer to the numbers in braces before items in the |
30 | form of notification in subsection (a)(5) of this section. Do not include the numbers or braces in the |
31 | notification. The numbers and braces are used only for the purpose of these instructions. |
32 | (2) Include and complete item (1) only if there is a debtor that is not an addressee of the |
33 | notification and list the name or names. |
34 | (3) Include and complete either item (2), if the notification relates to a public disposition |
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1 | of the collateral, or item (3), if the notification relates to a private disposition of the collateral. If |
2 | item (2) is included, include the words “to the highest qualified bidder” only if applicable. |
3 | (4) Include and complete items (4) and (6). |
4 | (5) Include and complete item (5) only if the sender will charge the recipient for an |
5 | accounting. |
6 | 20236A-9-614. Contents and form of notification before disposition of collateral — |
7 | Consumer-goods transaction. |
8 | (a) Contents and form of notification. In a consumer-goods transaction, the following rules |
9 | apply: |
10 | (1) A notification of disposition must provide the following information: |
11 | (i) The information specified in § 6A-9-613(1) 6A-9-613(a)(1); |
12 | (ii) A description of any liability for a deficiency of the person to which the notification is |
13 | sent; |
14 | (iii) A telephone number from which the amount that must be paid to the secured party to |
15 | redeem the collateral under § 6A-9-623 is available; and |
16 | (iv) A telephone number or mailing address from which additional information concerning |
17 | the disposition and the obligation secured is available. |
18 | (2) A particular phrasing of the notification is not required. |
19 | (3) The following form of notification, when completed in accordance with the instructions |
20 | in subsection (b) of this section, provides sufficient information: |
21 | [Name and address of secured party] |
22 | [Date] |
23 | NOTICE OF OUR PLAN TO SELL PROPERTY |
24 | [Name and address of any obligor who is also a debtor] |
25 | Subject: [Identification of Transaction] |
26 | We have your [describe collateral], because you broke promises in our agreement. |
27 | [For a public disposition:] |
28 | We will sell [describe collateral] at public sale. A sale could include a lease or |
29 | license. The sale will be held as follows: |
30 | Date: |
31 | Time: |
32 | Place: |
33 | You may attend the sale and bring bidders if you want. |
34 | [For a private disposition:] |
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1 | We will sell [describe collateral] at private sale sometime after [date]. A sale could include |
2 | a lease or license. |
3 | The money that we get from the sale (after paying our costs) will reduce the amount you |
4 | owe. If we get less money than you owe, you [will or will not, as applicable] still owe us the |
5 | difference. If we get more money than you owe, you will get the extra money, unless we must pay |
6 | it to someone else. |
7 | You can get the property back at any time before we sell it by paying us the full amount |
8 | you owe (not just the past due payments), including our expenses. To learn the exact amount you |
9 | must pay, call us at [telephone number]. |
10 | If you want us to explain to you in writing how we have figured the amount that you owe |
11 | us, you may call us at [telephone number] [or write us at [secured party’s address] ] and request a |
12 | written explanation. [We will charge you $ for the explanation if we sent you another written |
13 | explanation of the amount you owe us within the last six months.] |
14 | If you need more information about the sale call us at [telephone number] [or write us at |
15 | [secured party’s address] ]. |
16 | We are sending this notice to the following other people who have an interest in [describe |
17 | collateral] or who owe money under your agreement: |
18 | [Names of all other debtors and obligors, if any] |
19 | [End of Form] |
20 | (Name and address of secured party) |
21 | (Date) |
22 | NOTICE OF OUR PLAN TO SELL PROPERTY |
23 | (Name and address of any obligor who is also a debtor) |
24 | Subject: (Identify transaction) |
25 | We have your (describe collateral), because you broke promises in our agreement. |
26 | (1) We will sell (describe collateral) at public sale. A sale could include a lease or license. |
27 | The sale will be held as follows: |
28 | (Date) |
29 | (Time) |
30 | (Place) |
31 | You may attend the sale and bring bidders if you want. |
32 | (2) We will sell (describe collateral) at private sale sometime after (date). A sale could |
33 | include a lease or license. |
34 | (3) The money that we get from the sale, after paying our costs, will reduce the amount |
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1 | you owe. If we get less money than you owe, you (will or will not, as applicable) still owe us the |
2 | difference. If we get more money than you owe, you will get the extra money, unless we must pay |
3 | it to someone else. |
4 | (4) You can get the property back at any time before we sell it by paying us the full amount |
5 | you owe, not just the past due payments, including our expenses. To learn the exact amount you |
6 | must pay, call us at (telephone number). |
7 | (5) If you want us to explain to you in (writing) (writing or in (description of electronic |
8 | record) (description of electronic record) how we have figured the amount that you owe us, (6) Call |
9 | us at (telephone number) (or) (write us at (secured party’s address)) (or contact us by (description |
10 | of electronic communication method)) (7) and Request (a written explanation) (a written |
11 | explanation or an explanation in (description of electronic record)) (an explanation in (description |
12 | of electronic record)). |
13 | (8) We will charge you $ (amount) for the explanation if we sent you another written |
14 | explanation of the amount you owe us within the last six (6) months. |
15 | (9) If you need more information about the sale (call us at (telephone number)) (or) (write |
16 | us at (secured party’s address)) (or contact us by (description of electronic communication |
17 | method)). |
18 | (10) We are sending this notice to the following other people who have an interest in |
19 | (describe collateral) or who owe money under your agreement: |
20 | (Names of all other debtors and obligors, if any) |
21 | [End of Form] |
22 | (b) Instructions for form of notification. The following instructions apply to the form of |
23 | notification in subsection (a)(3) of this section: |
24 | (1) The instructions in this subsection refer to the numbers in braces before items in the |
25 | form of notification in subsection (a)(3) of this section. Do not include the numbers or braces in the |
26 | notification. The numbers and braces are used only for the purpose of these instructions. |
27 | (2) Include and complete either item (1), if the notification relates to a public disposition |
28 | of the collateral, or item (2), if the notification relates to a private disposition of the collateral. |
29 | (3) Include and complete items (3), (4), (5), (6), and (7). |
30 | (4) In item (5), include and complete any one of the three (3) alternative methods for the |
31 | explanation writing, writing or electronic record, or electronic record. |
32 | (5) In item (6), include the telephone number. In addition, the sender may include and |
33 | complete either or both of the two (2) additional alternative methods of communication writing or |
34 | electronic communication for the recipient of the notification to communicate with the sender. |
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1 | Neither of the two additional methods of communication is required to be included. |
2 | (6) In item (7), include and complete the method or methods for the explanation writing, |
3 | writing or electronic record, or electronic record included in item (5). |
4 | (7) Include and complete item (8) only if a written explanation is included in item (5) as a |
5 | method for communicating the explanation and the sender will charge the recipient for another |
6 | written explanation. |
7 | (8) In item (9), include either the telephone number or the address or both the telephone |
8 | number and the address. In addition, the sender may include and complete the additional method |
9 | of communication electronic communication for the recipient of the notification to communicate |
10 | with the sender. The additional method of electronic communication is not required to be included. |
11 | (9) If item (10) does not apply, insert “None” after “agreement:”. |
12 | (4) A notification in the form of paragraph (3) is sufficient, even if additional information |
13 | appears at the end of the form. |
14 | (5) A notification in the form of paragraph (3) is sufficient, even if it includes errors in |
15 | information not required by paragraph (1), unless the error is misleading with respect to rights |
16 | arising under this chapter. |
17 | (6) If a notification under this section is not in the form of paragraph (3), law other than |
18 | this chapter determines the effect of including information not required by paragraph (1). |
19 | 6A-9-615. Application of proceeds of disposition; liability for deficiency and right to |
20 | surplus. |
21 | (a) Application of proceeds. A secured party shall apply or pay over for application the |
22 | cash proceeds of disposition under § 6A-9-610 in the following order to: |
23 | (1) The reasonable expenses of retaking, holding, preparing for disposition, processing, |
24 | and disposing, and, to the extent provided for by agreement and not prohibited by law, reasonable |
25 | attorney’s fees and legal expenses incurred by the secured party; |
26 | (2) The satisfaction of obligations secured by the security interest or agricultural lien under |
27 | which the disposition is made; |
28 | (3) The satisfaction of obligations secured by any subordinate security interest in or other |
29 | subordinate lien on the collateral if: |
30 | (i) The secured party receives from the holder of the subordinate security interest or other |
31 | lien an authenticated a signed demand for proceeds before distribution of the proceeds is completed; |
32 | and |
33 | (ii) In a case in which a consignor has an interest in the collateral, the subordinate security |
34 | interest or other lien is senior to the interest of the consignor; and |
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1 | (4) A secured party that is a consignor of the collateral if the secured party receives from |
2 | the consignor an authenticated a signed demand for proceeds before distribution of the proceeds is |
3 | completed. |
4 | (b) Proof of subordinate interest. If requested by a secured party, a holder of a subordinate |
5 | security interest or other lien shall furnish reasonable proof of the interest or lien within a reasonable |
6 | time. Unless the holder does so, the secured party need not comply with the holder’s demand under |
7 | subsection (a)(3). |
8 | (c) Application of noncash proceeds. A secured party need not apply or pay over for |
9 | application noncash proceeds of disposition under § 6A-9-610 unless the failure to do so would be |
10 | commercially unreasonable. A secured party that applies or pays over for application noncash |
11 | proceeds shall do so in a commercially reasonable manner. |
12 | (d) Surplus or deficiency if obligation secured. If the security interest under which a |
13 | disposition is made secures payment or performance of an obligation, after making the payments |
14 | and applications required by subsection (a) and permitted by subsection (c): |
15 | (1) Unless subsection (a)(4) requires the secured party to apply or pay over cash proceeds |
16 | to a consignor, the secured party shall account to and pay a debtor for any surplus; and |
17 | (2) The obligor is liable for any deficiency. |
18 | (e) No surplus or deficiency in sales of certain rights to payment. If the underlying |
19 | transaction is a sale of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or promissory notes: |
20 | (1) The debtor is not entitled to any surplus; and |
21 | (2) The obligor is not liable for any deficiency. |
22 | (f) Calculation of surplus or deficiency in disposition to person related to secured party. |
23 | The surplus or deficiency following a disposition is calculated based on the amount of proceeds |
24 | that would have been realized in a disposition complying with this part to a transferee other than |
25 | the secured party, a person related to the secured party, or a secondary obligor if: |
26 | (1) The transferee in the disposition is the secured party, a person related to the secured |
27 | party, or a secondary obligor; and |
28 | (2) The amount of proceeds of the disposition is significantly below the range of proceeds |
29 | that a complying disposition to a person other than the secured party, a person related to the secured |
30 | party, or a secondary obligor would have brought. |
31 | (g) Cash proceeds received by junior secured party. A secured party that receives cash |
32 | proceeds of a disposition in good faith and without knowledge that the receipt violates the rights of |
33 | the holder of a security interest or other lien that is not subordinate to the security interest or |
34 | agricultural lien under which the disposition is made: |
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1 | (1) Takes the cash proceeds free of the security interest or other lien; |
2 | (2) Is not obligated to apply the proceeds of the disposition to the satisfaction of obligations |
3 | secured by the security interest or other lien; and |
4 | (3) Is not obligated to account to or pay the holder of the security interest or other lien for |
5 | any surplus. |
6 | 6A-9-616. Explanation of calculation of surplus or deficiency. |
7 | (a) Definitions. In this section: |
8 | (1) “Explanation” means a writing record that: |
9 | (i) States the amount of the surplus or deficiency; |
10 | (ii) Provides an explanation in accordance with subsection (c) of how the secured party |
11 | calculated the surplus or deficiency; |
12 | (iii) States, if applicable, that future debits, credits, charges, including additional credit |
13 | service charges or interest, rebates, and expenses may affect the amount of the surplus or |
14 | deficiency; and |
15 | (iv) Provides a telephone number or mailing address from which additional information |
16 | concerning the transaction is available. |
17 | (2) “Request” means a record: |
18 | (i) Authenticated Signed by a debtor or consumer obligor; |
19 | (ii) Requesting that the recipient provide an explanation; and |
20 | (iii) Sent after disposition of the collateral under § 6A-9-610. |
21 | (b) Explanation of calculation. In a consumer-goods transaction in which the debtor is |
22 | entitled to a surplus or a consumer obligor is liable for a deficiency under § 6A-9-615, the secured |
23 | party shall: |
24 | (1) Send an explanation to the debtor or consumer obligor, as applicable, after the |
25 | disposition and: |
26 | (i) Before or when the secured party accounts to the debtor and pays any surplus or first |
27 | makes written demand in a record on the consumer obligor after the disposition for payment of the |
28 | deficiency; and |
29 | (ii) Within 14 days after receipt of a request; or |
30 | (2) In the case of a consumer obligor who is liable for a deficiency, within 14 days after |
31 | receipt of a request, send to the consumer obligor a record waiving the secured party’s right to a |
32 | deficiency. |
33 | (c) Required information. To comply with subsection (a)(1)(ii), a writing an explanation |
34 | must provide the following information in the following order: |
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1 | (1) The aggregate amount of obligations secured by the security interest under which the |
2 | disposition was made, and, if the amount reflects a rebate of unearned interest or credit service |
3 | charge, an indication of that fact, calculated as of a specified date: |
4 | (i) If the secured party takes or receives possession of the collateral after default, not more |
5 | than 35 days before the secured party takes or receives possession; or |
6 | (ii) If the secured party takes or receives possession of the collateral before default or does |
7 | not take possession of the collateral, not more than 35 days before the disposition; |
8 | (2) The amount of proceeds of the disposition; |
9 | (3) The aggregate amount of the obligations after deducting the amount of proceeds; |
10 | (4) The amount, in the aggregate or by type, and types of expenses, including expenses of |
11 | retaking, holding, preparing for disposition, processing, and disposing of the collateral, and |
12 | attorney’s fees secured by the collateral which are known to the secured party and relate to the |
13 | current disposition; |
14 | (5) The amount, in the aggregate or by type, and types of credits, including rebates of |
15 | interest or credit service charges, to which the obligor is known to be entitled and which are not |
16 | reflected in the amount in paragraph (1); and |
17 | (6) The amount of the surplus or deficiency. |
18 | (d) Substantial compliance. A particular phrasing of the explanation is not required. An |
19 | explanation complying substantially with the requirements of subsection (a) is sufficient, even if it |
20 | includes minor errors that are not seriously misleading. |
21 | (e) Charges for responses. A debtor or consumer obligor is entitled without charge to one |
22 | response to a request under this section during any six-month period in which the secured party did |
23 | not send to the debtor or consumer obligor an explanation pursuant to subsection (b)(1). The |
24 | secured party may require payment of a charge not exceeding $ 25 for each additional response. |
25 | 6A-9-619. Transfer of record or legal title. |
26 | (a) “Transfer statement.” In this section, “transfer statement” means a record authenticated |
27 | signed by a secured party stating: |
28 | (1) That the debtor has defaulted in connection with an obligation secured by specified |
29 | collateral; |
30 | (2) That the secured party has exercised its post-default remedies with respect to the |
31 | collateral; |
32 | (3) That, by reason of the exercise, a transferee has acquired the rights of the debtor in the |
33 | collateral; and |
34 | (4) The name and mailing address of the secured party, debtor, and transferee. |
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1 | (b) Effect of transfer statement. A transfer statement entitles the transferee to the transfer |
2 | of record of all rights of the debtor in the collateral specified in the statement in any official filing, |
3 | recording, registration, or certificate-of-title system covering the collateral. If a transfer statement |
4 | is presented with the applicable fee and request form to the official or office responsible for |
5 | maintaining the system, the official or office shall: |
6 | (1) Accept the transfer statement; |
7 | (2) Promptly amend its records to reflect the transfer; and |
8 | (3) If applicable, issue a new appropriate certificate of title in the name of the transferee. |
9 | (c) Transfer not a disposition; no relief of secured party’s duties. A transfer of the record |
10 | or legal title to collateral to a secured party under subsection (b) or otherwise is not of itself a |
11 | disposition of collateral under this chapter and does not of itself relieve the secured party of its |
12 | duties under this chapter. |
13 | 6A-9-620. Acceptance of collateral in full or partial satisfaction of obligation; |
14 | compulsory disposition of collateral. |
15 | (a) Conditions to acceptance in satisfaction. Except as otherwise provided in subsection |
16 | (g), a secured party may accept collateral in full or partial satisfaction of the obligation it secures |
17 | only if: |
18 | (1) The debtor consents to the acceptance under subsection (c); |
19 | (2) The secured party does not receive, within the time set forth in subsection (d), a |
20 | notification of objection to the proposal authenticated signed by: |
21 | (i) A person to which the secured party was required to send a proposal under § 6A-9-621; |
22 | or |
23 | (ii) Any other person, other than the debtor, holding an interest in the collateral subordinate |
24 | to the security interest that is the subject of the proposal; |
25 | (3) If the collateral is consumer goods, the collateral is not in the possession of the debtor |
26 | when the debtor consents to the acceptance; and |
27 | (4) Subsection (e) does not require the secured party to dispose of the collateral or the |
28 | debtor waives the requirement pursuant to § 6A-9-624. |
29 | (b) Purported acceptance ineffective. A purported or apparent acceptance of collateral |
30 | under this section is ineffective unless: |
31 | (1) The secured party consents to the acceptance in an authenticated signed record or sends |
32 | a proposal to the debtor; and |
33 | (2) The conditions of subsection (a) are met. |
34 | (c) Debtor’s consent. For purposes of this section: |
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1 | (1) A debtor consents to an acceptance of collateral in partial satisfaction of the obligation |
2 | it secures only if the debtor agrees to the terms of the acceptance in a record authenticated signed |
3 | after default; and |
4 | (2) A debtor consents to an acceptance of collateral in full satisfaction of the obligation it |
5 | secures only if the debtor agrees to the terms of the acceptance in a record authenticated signed |
6 | after default or the secured party: |
7 | (i) Sends to the debtor after default a proposal that is unconditional or subject only to a |
8 | condition that collateral not in the possession of the secured party be preserved or maintained; |
9 | (ii) In the proposal, proposes to accept collateral in full satisfaction of the obligation it |
10 | secures; and |
11 | (iii) Does not receive a notification of objection authenticated signed by the debtor within |
12 | 20 days after the proposal is sent. |
13 | (d) Effectiveness of notification. To be effective under subsection (a)(2), a notification of |
14 | objection must be received by the secured party: |
15 | (1) In the case of a person to which the proposal was sent pursuant to § 6A-9-621, within |
16 | 20 days after notification was sent to that person; and |
17 | (2) In other cases: |
18 | (i) Within 20 days after the last notification was sent pursuant to § 6A-9-621; or |
19 | (ii) If a notification was not sent, before the debtor consents to the acceptance under |
20 | subsection (c). |
21 | (e) Mandatory disposition of consumer goods. A secured party that has taken possession |
22 | of collateral shall dispose of the collateral pursuant to § 6A-9-610 within the time specified in |
23 | subsection (f) if: |
24 | (1) 60 percent of the cash price has been paid in the case of a purchase-money security |
25 | interest in consumer goods; or |
26 | (2) 60 percent of the principal amount of the obligation secured has been paid in the case |
27 | of a non-purchase-money security interest in consumer goods. |
28 | (f) Compliance with mandatory disposition requirement. To comply with subsection (e), |
29 | the secured party shall dispose of the collateral: |
30 | (1) Within 90 days after taking possession; or |
31 | (2) Within any longer period to which the debtor and all secondary obligors have agreed in |
32 | an agreement to that effect entered into and authenticated signed after default. |
33 | (g) No partial satisfaction in consumer transaction. In a consumer transaction, a secured |
34 | party may not accept collateral in partial satisfaction of the obligation it secures. |
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1 | 6A-9-621. Notification of proposal to accept collateral. |
2 | (a) Persons to which proposal to be sent. A secured party that desires to accept collateral |
3 | in full or partial satisfaction of the obligation it secures shall send its proposal to: |
4 | (1) Any person from which the secured party has received, before the debtor consented to |
5 | the acceptance, an authenticated a signed notification of a claim of an interest in the collateral; |
6 | (2) Any other secured party or lienholder that, 10 days before the debtor consented to the |
7 | acceptance, held a security interest in or other lien on the collateral perfected by the filing of a |
8 | financing statement that: |
9 | (i) Identified the collateral; |
10 | (ii) Was indexed under the debtor’s name as of that date; and |
11 | (iii) Was filed in the office or offices in which to file a financing statement against the |
12 | debtor covering the collateral as of that date; and |
13 | (3) Any other secured party that, 10 days before the debtor consented to the acceptance, |
14 | held a security interest in the collateral perfected by compliance with a statute, regulation, or treaty |
15 | described in § 6A-9-311(a). |
16 | (b) Proposal to be sent to secondary obligor in partial satisfaction. A secured party that |
17 | desires to accept collateral in partial satisfaction of the obligation it secures shall send its proposal |
18 | to any secondary obligor in addition to the persons described in subsection (a). |
19 | 6A-9-624. Waiver. |
20 | (a) Waiver of disposition notification. A debtor or secondary obligor may waive the right |
21 | to notification of disposition of collateral under § 6A-9-611 only by an agreement to that effect |
22 | entered into and authenticated signed after default. |
23 | (b) Waiver of mandatory disposition. A debtor may waive the right to require disposition |
24 | of collateral under § 6A-9-620(e) only by an agreement to that effect entered into and authenticated |
25 | signed after default. |
26 | (c) Waiver of redemption right. Except in a consumer-goods transaction, a debtor or |
27 | secondary obligor may waive the right to redeem collateral under § 6A-9-623 only by an agreement |
28 | to that effect entered into and authenticated signed after default. |
29 | 6A-9-628. Nonliability and limitation on liability of secured party; liability of |
30 | secondary obligor. |
31 | (a) Limitation of liability of secured party for noncompliance with chapter. Unless Subject |
32 | to subsection (f) of this section, unless a secured party knows that a person is a debtor or obligor, |
33 | knows the identity of the person, and knows how to communicate with the person: |
34 | (1) The secured party is not liable to the person, or to a secured party or lienholder that has |
| LC004368 - Page 97 of 113 |
1 | filed a financing statement against the person, for failure to comply with this chapter; and |
2 | (2) The secured party’s failure to comply with this chapter does not affect the liability of |
3 | the person for a deficiency. |
4 | (b) Limitation of liability based on status as secured party. A Subject to subsection (f) of |
5 | this section, a secured party is not liable because of its status as secured party: |
6 | (1) To a person that is a debtor or obligor, unless the secured party knows: |
7 | (i) That the person is a debtor or obligor; |
8 | (ii) The identity of the person; and |
9 | (iii) How to communicate with the person; or |
10 | (2) To a secured party or lienholder that has filed a financing statement against a person, |
11 | unless the secured party knows: |
12 | (i) That the person is a debtor; and |
13 | (ii) The identity of the person. |
14 | (c) Limitation of liability if reasonable belief that transaction not a consumer-goods |
15 | transaction or consumer transaction. A secured party is not liable to any person, and a person’s |
16 | liability for a deficiency is not affected, because of any act or omission arising out of the secured |
17 | party’s reasonable belief that a transaction is not a consumer-goods transaction or a consumer |
18 | transaction or that goods are not consumer goods, if the secured party’s belief is based on its |
19 | reasonable reliance on: |
20 | (1) A debtor’s representation concerning the purpose for which collateral was to be used, |
21 | acquired, or held; or |
22 | (2) An obligor’s representation concerning the purpose for which a secured obligation was |
23 | incurred. |
24 | (d) Limitation of liability for statutory damages. A secured party is not liable to any person |
25 | under § 6A-9-625(c)(2) for its failure to comply with § 6A-9-616. |
26 | (e) Limitation of multiple liability for statutory damages. A secured party is not liable under |
27 | § 6A-9-625(c)(2) more than once with respect to any one secured obligation. |
28 | (f) Exception: Limitation of liability under subsections (a) and (b) of this section does not |
29 | apply. Subsections (a) and (b) of this section do not apply to limit the liability of a secured party to |
30 | a person if, at the time the secured party obtains control of collateral that is a controllable account, |
31 | controllable electronic record, or controllable payment intangible or at the time the security interest |
32 | attaches to the collateral, whichever is later: |
33 | (1) The person is a debtor or obligor; and |
34 | (2) The secured party knows that the information in subsection (b)(1)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this |
| LC004368 - Page 98 of 113 |
1 | section relating to the person is not provided by the collateral, a record attached to or logically |
2 | associated with the collateral, or the system in which the collateral is recorded. |
3 | SECTION 10. Chapter 6A-9 of the General Laws entitled "Secured Transactions" is hereby |
4 | amended by adding thereto the following sections: |
5 | 6A-9-105.1. Control of electronic money. |
6 | (a) General rule: control of electronic money. A person has control of electronic money if: |
7 | (1) The electronic money, a record attached to or logically associated with the electronic |
8 | money, or a system in which the electronic money is recorded gives the person: |
9 | (i) Power to avail itself of substantially all the benefit from the electronic money; and |
10 | (ii) Exclusive power, subject to subsection (b) of this section, to: |
11 | (A) Prevent others from availing themselves of substantially all the benefit from the |
12 | electronic money; and |
13 | (B) Transfer control of the electronic money to another person or cause another person to |
14 | obtain control of other electronic money as a result of the transfer of the electronic money; and |
15 | (2) The electronic money, a record attached to or logically associated with the electronic |
16 | money, or a system in which the electronic money is recorded enables the person readily to identify |
17 | itself in any way, including by name, identifying number, cryptographic key, office, or account |
18 | number, as having the powers under subsection (a)(1) of this section. |
19 | (b) Meaning of exclusive. Subject to subsection (c) of this section, a power is exclusive |
20 | under subsections (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section even if: |
21 | (1) The electronic money, a record attached to or logically associated with the electronic |
22 | money, or a system in which the electronic money is recorded limits the use of the electronic money |
23 | or has a protocol programmed to cause a change, including a transfer or loss of control; or |
24 | (2) The power is shared with another person. |
25 | (c) When power not shared with another person. A power of a person is not shared with |
26 | another person under subsection (b)(2) of this section and the person’s power is not exclusive if: |
27 | (1) The person can exercise the power only if the power also is exercised by the other |
28 | person; and |
29 | (2) The other person: |
30 | (i) Can exercise the power without exercise of the power by the person; or |
31 | (ii) Is the transferor to the person of an interest in the electronic money. |
32 | (d) Presumption of exclusivity of certain powers. If a person has the powers specified in |
33 | subsections (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section, the powers are presumed to be exclusive. |
34 | (e) Control through another person. A person has control of electronic money if another |
| LC004368 - Page 99 of 113 |
1 | person, other than the transferor to the person of an interest in the electronic money: |
2 | (1) Has control of the electronic money and acknowledges that it has control on behalf of |
3 | the person; or |
4 | (2) Obtains control of the electronic money after having acknowledged that it will obtain |
5 | control of the electronic money on behalf of the person. |
6 | 6A-9-107.1. Control of controllable electronic record, controllable account, or |
7 | controllable payment intangible. |
8 | (a) Control under § 6A-12-105. A secured party has control of a controllable electronic |
9 | record as provided in § 6A-12-105. |
10 | (b) Control of controllable account and controllable payment intangible. A secured party |
11 | has control of a controllable account or controllable payment intangible if the secured party has |
12 | control of the controllable electronic record that evidences the controllable account or controllable |
13 | payment intangible. |
14 | 6A-9-107.2. No requirement to acknowledge or confirm; No duties. |
15 | (a) No requirement to acknowledge. A person that has control under §§ 6A-9-104, 6A-9- |
16 | 105, or 6A-9-105.1 is not required to acknowledge that it has control on behalf of another person. |
17 | (b) No duties or confirmation. If a person acknowledges that it has or will obtain control |
18 | on behalf of another person, unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this chapter |
19 | otherwise provides, the person does not owe any duty to the other person and is not required to |
20 | confirm the acknowledgment to any other person. |
21 | 6A-9-306.1. Law governing perfection and priority of security interests in chattel |
22 | paper. |
23 | (a) Chattel paper evidenced by authoritative electronic copy. Except as provided in |
24 | subsection (d) of this section, if chattel paper is evidenced only by an authoritative electronic copy |
25 | of the chattel paper or is evidenced by an authoritative electronic copy and an authoritative tangible |
26 | copy, the local law of the chattel paper’s jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of perfection or |
27 | nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in the chattel paper, even if the transaction does |
28 | not bear any relation to the chattel paper’s jurisdiction. |
29 | (b) Chattel paper’s jurisdiction. The following rules determine the chattel paper’s |
30 | jurisdiction under this section: |
31 | (1) If the authoritative electronic copy of the record evidencing chattel paper, or a record |
32 | attached to or logically associated with the electronic copy and readily available for review, |
33 | expressly provides that a particular jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction for purposes of |
34 | this part, this chapter, or this title, that jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction. |
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1 | (2) If subsection (b)(1) of this section does not apply and the rules of the system in which |
2 | the authoritative electronic copy is recorded are readily available for review and expressly provide |
3 | that a particular jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction for purposes of this part, this chapter, |
4 | or this title, that jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction. |
5 | (3) If subsection (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section do not apply and the authoritative |
6 | electronic copy, or a record attached to or logically associated with the electronic copy and readily |
7 | available for review, expressly provides that the chattel paper is governed by the law of a particular |
8 | jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction. |
9 | (4) If subsections (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3) of this section do not apply and the rules of the |
10 | system in which the authoritative electronic copy is recorded are readily available for review and |
11 | expressly provide that the chattel paper or the system is governed by the law of a particular |
12 | jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the chattel paper’s jurisdiction. |
13 | (5) If subsections (b)(1) through (b)(4) of this section do not apply, the chattel paper’s |
14 | jurisdiction is the jurisdiction in which the debtor is located. |
15 | (c) Chattel paper evidenced by authoritative tangible copy. If an authoritative tangible copy |
16 | of a record evidences chattel paper and the chattel paper is not evidenced by an authoritative |
17 | electronic copy, while the authoritative tangible copy of the record evidencing chattel paper is |
18 | located in a jurisdiction, the local law of that jurisdiction governs: |
19 | (1) Perfection of a security interest in the chattel paper by possession under § 6A-9-314.1; |
20 | and |
21 | (2) The effect of perfection or nonperfection and the priority of a security interest in the |
22 | chattel paper. |
23 | (d) When perfection governed by law of jurisdiction where debtor located. The local law |
24 | of the jurisdiction in which the debtor is located governs perfection of a security interest in chattel |
25 | paper by filing. |
26 | 6A-9-306.2. Law governing perfection and priority of security interests in controllable |
27 | accounts, controllable electronic records, and controllable payment intangibles. |
28 | (a) Governing law: general rules. Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, the |
29 | local law of the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction specified in § 6A-12-107(c) and (d) |
30 | governs perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest |
31 | in a controllable electronic record and a security interest in a controllable account or controllable |
32 | payment intangible evidenced by the controllable electronic record. |
33 | (b) When perfection governed by law of jurisdiction where debtor located. The local law |
34 | of the jurisdiction in which the debtor is located governs: |
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1 | (1) Perfection of a security interest in a controllable account, controllable electronic record, |
2 | or controllable payment intangible by filing; and |
3 | (2) Automatic perfection of a security interest in a controllable payment intangible created |
4 | by a sale of the controllable payment intangible. |
5 | 6A-9-314.1. Perfection by possession and control of chattel paper. |
6 | (a) Perfection by possession and control. A secured party may perfect a security interest in |
7 | chattel paper by taking possession of each authoritative tangible copy of the record evidencing the |
8 | chattel paper and obtaining control of each authoritative electronic copy of the electronic record |
9 | evidencing the chattel paper. |
10 | (b) Time of perfection; continuation of perfection. A security interest is perfected under |
11 | subsection (a) of this section not earlier than the time the secured party takes possession and obtains |
12 | control and remains perfected under subsection (a) of this section only while the secured party |
13 | retains possession and control. |
14 | (c) Application of § 6A-9-313 to perfection by possession of chattel paper, § 6A-9-313(c) |
15 | and (f) through (i) applies to perfection by possession of an authoritative tangible copy of a record |
16 | evidencing chattel paper. |
17 | 6A-9-326.1. Priority of security interest in controllable account, controllable |
18 | electronic record, and controllable payment intangible. |
19 | A security interest in a controllable account, controllable electronic record, or controllable |
20 | payment intangible held by a secured party having control of the account, electronic record, or |
21 | payment intangible has priority over a conflicting security interest held by a secured party that does |
22 | not have control. |
23 | SECTION 11. Title 6A of the General Laws entitled "UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE" |
24 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
25 | CHAPTER 12 |
26 | CONTROLLABLE ELECTRONIC RECORDS |
27 | 6A-12-101. Short title. |
28 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as "Uniform Commercial Code-Controllable |
29 | Electronic Records." |
30 | 6A-12-102. Definitions. |
31 | (a) Chapter 12 of title 6A definitions. In this chapter: |
32 | (1) “Controllable electronic record” means a record stored in an electronic medium that |
33 | can be subjected to control under § 6A-12-105. The term does not include a controllable account, |
34 | a controllable payment intangible, a deposit account, an electronic copy of a record evidencing |
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1 | chattel paper, an electronic document of title, electronic money, investment property, or a |
2 | transferable record. |
3 | (2) “Qualifying purchaser” means a purchaser of a controllable electronic record or an |
4 | interest in a controllable electronic record that obtains control of the controllable electronic record |
5 | for value, in good faith, and without notice of a claim of a property right in the controllable |
6 | electronic record. |
7 | (3) “Transferable record” has the meaning provided for that term in: |
8 | (i) Section 201(a)(1) of the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, |
9 | 15 U.S.C. Section 7021(a)(1); or |
10 | (ii) Section 42-127.1-16(a) of the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act. |
11 | (4) “Value” has the meaning provided in § 6A-3-303(a), as if references in that subsection |
12 | to an “instrument” were references to a controllable account, controllable electronic record, or |
13 | controllable payment intangible. |
14 | (b) Definitions in chapter 6A-9. The definitions in chapter 6A-9 of “account debtor”, |
15 | “controllable account”, “controllable payment intangible”, “chattel paper”, “deposit account”, |
16 | “electronic money”, and “investment property” apply to this chapter. |
17 | (c) Chapter 6A-1 definitions and principles. Chapter 6A-1 contains general definitions and |
18 | principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
19 | 6A-12-103. Relation to chapter 9 and consumer laws. |
20 | (a) Chapter 6A-9 governs in case of conflict. If there is conflict between this chapter and |
21 | Chapter 6A-9, Chapter 6A-9 governs. |
22 | (b) Applicable consumer law and other laws. A transaction subject to this chapter is subject |
23 | to: |
24 | (1) Any applicable rule of law that establishes a different rule for consumers; |
25 | (2) Any other statute or regulation that regulates the rates, charges, agreements, and |
26 | practices for loans, credit sales, or other extensions of credit; and |
27 | (3) Any consumer-protection statute or regulation. |
28 | 6A-12-104. Rights in controllable account, controllable electronic record, and |
29 | controllable payment intangible. |
30 | (a) Applicability of section to controllable account and controllable payment intangible. |
31 | This section applies to the acquisition and purchase of rights in a controllable account or |
32 | controllable payment intangible, including the rights and benefits under subsections (c), (d), (e), |
33 | (g), and (h) of this section of a purchaser and qualifying purchaser, in the same manner this section |
34 | applies to a controllable electronic record. |
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1 | (b) Control of controllable account and controllable payment intangible. To determine |
2 | whether a purchaser of a controllable account or a controllable payment intangible is a qualifying |
3 | purchaser, the purchaser obtains control of the account or payment intangible if it obtains control |
4 | of the controllable electronic record that evidences the account or payment intangible. |
5 | (c) Applicability of other law to acquisition of rights. Except as provided in this section, |
6 | law other than this chapter determines whether a person acquires a right in a controllable electronic |
7 | record and the right the person acquires. |
8 | (d) Shelter principle and purchase of limited interest. A purchaser of a controllable |
9 | electronic record acquires all rights in the controllable electronic record that the transferor had or |
10 | had power to transfer, except that a purchaser of a limited interest in a controllable electronic record |
11 | acquires rights only to the extent of the interest purchased. |
12 | (e) Rights of qualifying purchaser. A qualifying purchaser acquires its rights in the |
13 | controllable electronic record free of a claim of a property right in the controllable electronic record. |
14 | (f) Limitation of rights of qualifying purchaser in other property. Except as provided in |
15 | subsections (a) and (e) of this section for a controllable account and a controllable payment |
16 | intangible or law other than this chapter, a qualifying purchaser takes a right to payment, right to |
17 | performance, or other interest in property evidenced by the controllable electronic record subject |
18 | to a claim of a property right in the right to payment, right to performance, or other interest in |
19 | property. |
20 | (g) No-action protection for qualifying purchaser. An action may not be asserted against a |
21 | qualifying purchaser based on both a purchase by the qualifying purchaser of a controllable |
22 | electronic record and a claim of a property right in another controllable electronic record, whether |
23 | the action is framed in conversion, replevin, constructive trust, equitable lien, or other theory. |
24 | (h) Filing not notice. Filing of a financing statement under chapter 6A-9 is not notice of a |
25 | claim of a property right in a controllable electronic record. |
26 | 6A-12-105. Control of controllable electronic record. |
27 | (a) General rule: control of controllable electronic record. A person has control of a |
28 | controllable electronic record if the electronic record, a record attached to or logically associated |
29 | with the electronic record, or a system in which the electronic record is recorded: |
30 | (1) Gives the person: |
31 | (i) Power to avail itself of substantially all the benefit from the electronic record; and |
32 | (ii) Exclusive power, subject to subsection (b) of this section, to: |
33 | (A) Prevent others from availing themselves of substantially all the benefit from the |
34 | electronic record; and |
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1 | (B) Transfer control of the electronic record to another person or cause another person to |
2 | obtain control of another controllable electronic record as a result of the transfer of the electronic |
3 | record; and |
4 | (2) Enables the person readily to identify itself in any way, including by name, identifying |
5 | number, cryptographic key, office, or account number, as having the powers specified in subsection |
6 | (a)(1). |
7 | (b) Meaning of exclusive. Subject to subsection (c) of this section, a power is exclusive |
8 | under subsection (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section even if: |
9 | (1) The controllable electronic record, a record attached to or logically associated with the |
10 | electronic record, or a system in which the electronic record is recorded, limits the use of the |
11 | electronic record or has a protocol programmed to cause a change, including a transfer or loss of |
12 | control or a modification of benefits afforded by the electronic record; or |
13 | (2) The power is shared with another person. |
14 | (c) When power not shared with another person. A power of a person is not shared with |
15 | another person under subsection (b)(2) of this section and the person’s power is not exclusive if: |
16 | (1) The person can exercise the power only if the power also is exercised by the other |
17 | person; and |
18 | (2) The other person: |
19 | (i) Can exercise the power without exercise of the power by the person; or |
20 | (ii) Is the transferor to the person of an interest in the controllable electronic record or a |
21 | controllable account or controllable payment intangible evidenced by the controllable electronic |
22 | record. |
23 | (d) Presumption of exclusivity of certain powers. If a person has the powers specified in |
24 | subsection (a)(1)(ii)(A) and (B) of this section, the powers are presumed to be exclusive. |
25 | (e) Control through another person. A person has control of a controllable electronic record |
26 | if another person, other than the transferor to the person of an interest in the controllable electronic |
27 | record or a controllable account or controllable payment intangible evidenced by the controllable |
28 | electronic record: |
29 | (1) Has control of the electronic record and acknowledges that it has control on behalf of |
30 | the person; or |
31 | (2) Obtains control of the electronic record after having acknowledged that it will obtain |
32 | control of the electronic record on behalf of the person. |
33 | (f) No requirement to acknowledge. A person that has control under this section is not |
34 | required to acknowledge that it has control on behalf of another person. |
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1 | (g) No duties or confirmation. If a person acknowledges that it has or will obtain control |
2 | on behalf of another person, unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this chapter or |
3 | chapter 6A-9 otherwise provides, the person does not owe any duty to the other person and is not |
4 | required to confirm the acknowledgment to any other person. |
5 | 6A-12-106. Discharge of account debtor on controllable account or controllable |
6 | payment intangible. |
7 | (a) Discharge of account debtor. An account debtor on a controllable account or |
8 | controllable payment intangible may discharge its obligation by paying: |
9 | (1) The person having control of the controllable electronic record that evidences the |
10 | controllable account or controllable payment intangible; or |
11 | (2) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a person that formerly had control |
12 | of the controllable electronic record. |
13 | (b) Content and effect of notification. Subject to subsection (d) of this section, the account |
14 | debtor may not discharge its obligation by paying a person that formerly had control of the |
15 | controllable electronic record if the account debtor receives a notification that: |
16 | (1) Is signed by a person that formerly had control or the person to which control was |
17 | transferred; |
18 | (2) Reasonably identifies the controllable account or controllable payment intangible; |
19 | (3) Notifies the account debtor that control of the controllable electronic record that |
20 | evidences the controllable account or controllable payment intangible was transferred; |
21 | (4) Identifies the transferee, in any reasonable way, including by name, identifying number, |
22 | cryptographic key, office, or account number; and |
23 | (5) Provides a commercially reasonable method by which the account debtor is to pay the |
24 | transferee. |
25 | (c) Discharge following effective notification. After receipt of a notification that complies |
26 | with subsection (b) of this section, the account debtor may discharge its obligation by paying in |
27 | accordance with the notification and may not discharge the obligation by paying a person that |
28 | formerly had control. |
29 | (d) When notification ineffective. Subject to subsection (h) of this section, notification is |
30 | ineffective under subsection (b) of this section: |
31 | (1) Unless, before the notification is sent, the account debtor and the person that, at that |
32 | time, had control of the controllable electronic record that evidences the controllable account or |
33 | controllable payment intangible agree in a signed record to a commercially reasonable method by |
34 | which a person may furnish reasonable proof that control has been transferred; |
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1 | (2) To the extent an agreement between the account debtor and seller of a payment |
2 | intangible limits the account debtor’s duty to pay a person other than the seller and the limitation |
3 | is effective under law other than this chapter; or |
4 | (3) At the option of the account debtor, if the notification notifies the account debtor to: |
5 | (i) Divide a payment; |
6 | (ii) Make less than the full amount of an installment or other periodic payment; or |
7 | (iii) Pay any part of a payment by more than one method or to more than one person. |
8 | (e) Proof of transfer of control. Subject to subsection (h) of this section, if requested by the |
9 | account debtor, the person giving the notification under subsection (b) of this section seasonably |
10 | shall furnish reasonable proof, using the method in the agreement referred to in subsection (d)(1) |
11 | of this section, that control of the controllable electronic record has been transferred. Unless the |
12 | person complies with the request, the account debtor may discharge its obligation by paying a |
13 | person that formerly had control, even if the account debtor has received a notification under |
14 | subsection (b) of this section. |
15 | (f) What constitutes reasonable proof. A person furnishes reasonable proof under |
16 | subsection (e) of this section that control has been transferred if the person demonstrates, using the |
17 | method in the agreement referred to in subsection (d)(1) of this section, that the transferee has the |
18 | power to: |
19 | (1) Avail itself of substantially all the benefit from the controllable electronic record; |
20 | (2) Prevent others from availing themselves of substantially all the benefit from the |
21 | controllable electronic record; and |
22 | (3) Transfer the powers specified in subsections (f)(1) and (f)(2) of this section to another |
23 | person. |
24 | (g) Rights not waivable. Subject to subsection (h) of this section, an account debtor may |
25 | not waive or vary its rights under subsections (d)(1) and (e) of this section or its option under |
26 | subsection (d)(3) of this section. |
27 | (h) Rule for individual under other law. This section is subject to law other than this chapter |
28 | which establishes a different rule for an account debtor who is an individual and who incurred the |
29 | obligation primarily for personal, family, or household purposes. |
30 | 6A-12-107. Governing law. |
31 | (a) Governing law: general rule. Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, the |
32 | local law of a controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction governs a matter covered by this chapter. |
33 | (b) Governing law: § 6A-12-106. For a controllable electronic record that evidences a |
34 | controllable account or controllable payment intangible, the local law of the controllable electronic |
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1 | record’s jurisdiction governs a matter covered by § 6A-12-106 unless an effective agreement |
2 | determines that the local law of another jurisdiction governs. |
3 | (c) Controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction. The following rules determine a |
4 | controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction under this section: |
5 | (1) If the controllable electronic record, or a record attached to or logically associated with |
6 | the controllable electronic record and readily available for review, expressly provides that a |
7 | particular jurisdiction is the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction for purposes of this chapter |
8 | or this title, that jurisdiction is the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction. |
9 | (2) If subsection (c)(1) of this section does not apply and the rules of the system in which |
10 | the controllable electronic record is recorded are readily available for review and expressly provide |
11 | that a particular jurisdiction is the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction for purposes of this |
12 | chapter or this title, that jurisdiction is the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction. |
13 | (3) If subsections (c)(1) and (c)(2) of this section do not apply and the controllable |
14 | electronic record, or a record attached to or logically associated with the controllable electronic |
15 | record and readily available for review, expressly provides that the controllable electronic record |
16 | is governed by the law of a particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the controllable electronic |
17 | record’s jurisdiction. |
18 | (4) If subsections (c)(1), (c)(2) and (c)(3) of this section do not apply and the rules of the |
19 | system in which the controllable electronic record is recorded are readily available for review and |
20 | expressly provide that the controllable electronic record or the system is governed by the law of a |
21 | particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction. |
22 | (5) If subsections (c)(1) through (c)(4) of this section do not apply, the controllable |
23 | electronic record’s jurisdiction is the District of Columbia. |
24 | (d) Applicability of chapter 12. If subsection (c)(5) of this section applies and chapter 12 |
25 | of title 6A is not in effect in the District of Columbia without material modification, the governing |
26 | law for a matter covered by this chapter is the law of the District of Columbia as though chapter 12 |
27 | of title 6A were in effect in the District of Columbia without material modification. In this |
28 | subsection, “Chapter 12” means Article 12 of Uniform Commercial Code Amendments (2022). |
29 | (e) Relation of matter or transaction to controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction not |
30 | necessary. To the extent subsections (a) and (b) of this section provide that the local law of the |
31 | controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction governs a matter covered by this chapter, that law |
32 | governs even if the matter or a transaction to which the matter relates does not bear any relation to |
33 | the controllable electronic record’s jurisdiction. |
34 | (f) Rights of purchasers determined at time of purchase. The rights acquired under § 6A- |
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1 | 12-104 by a purchaser or qualifying purchaser are governed by the law applicable under this section |
2 | at the time of purchase. |
3 | SECTION 12. Title 6A of the General Laws entitled "UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE" |
4 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
5 | CHAPTER 11 |
6 | TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS FOR UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE AMENDMENTS |
7 | (2022) |
8 | PART 1 |
9 | GENERAL PROVISIONS AND DEFINITIONS |
10 | 6A-11-101. Short title. |
11 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as "Transitional Provisions for Uniform |
12 | Commercial Code Amendments (2022)". |
13 | 6A-11-102. Definitions. |
14 | (a) Chapter 11 of title 6A definitions. In this chapter: |
15 | (1) “Adjustment date” means July 1, 2025. |
16 | (2) “Amendatory act” means the public law by which this chapter is added to this title. |
17 | (3) “Chapter 12” means chapter 12 of this title. |
18 | (4) “Chapter 12 property” means a controllable account, controllable electronic record, or |
19 | controllable payment intangible. |
20 | (b) Definitions in other chapters. The following definitions in other chapters of this title |
21 | apply to this chapter: |
22 | “Controllable account” § 6A-9-102. |
23 | “Controllable electronic record” § 6A-12-102. |
24 | “Controllable payment intangible” § 6A-9-102. |
25 | “Electronic money” § 6A-9-102. |
26 | “Financing statement” § 6A-9-102. |
27 | (c) Chapter 1 of title 6A definitions and principles. Chapter 1 of title 6A contains general |
28 | definitions and principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout this chapter. |
29 | PART 2 |
30 | GENERAL TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS |
31 | 6A-11-201. Saving Clause. |
32 | Except as provided in Part 3 of this chapter, a transaction validly entered into before |
33 | January 1, 2024 and the rights, duties, and interests flowing from the transaction remain valid |
34 | thereafter and may be terminated, completed, consummated, or enforced as required or permitted |
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1 | by law other than this title or, if applicable, this title, as though the amendatory act had not taken |
2 | effect. |
3 | PART 3 |
4 | TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS FOR CHAPTER 9 AND 12 |
5 | 6A-11-301. Saving Clause. |
6 | (a) Pre-effective-date transaction, lien, or interest. Except as provided in this part, chapter |
7 | 9 as amended by the amendatory act and chapter 12 apply to a transaction, lien, or other interest in |
8 | property, even if the transaction, lien, or interest was entered into, created, or acquired before |
9 | January 1, 2024. |
10 | (b) Continuing validity. Except as provided in subsection (c) of this section and § 6A-11- |
11 | 301 through § 6A-11-306: |
12 | (1) A transaction, lien, or interest in property that was validly entered into, created, or |
13 | transferred before January 1, 2024 and was not governed by this title, but would be subject to |
14 | chapter 9 of title 6A as amended by the amendatory act or chapter 12 of title 6A if it had been |
15 | entered into, created, or transferred on or after January 1, 2024, including the rights, duties, and |
16 | interests flowing from the transaction, lien, or interest, remains valid on and after January 1, 2024; |
17 | and |
18 | (2) The transaction, lien, or interest may be terminated, completed, consummated, and |
19 | enforced as required or permitted by the amendatory act or by the law that would apply if the |
20 | amendatory act had not taken effect. |
21 | (c) Pre-effective-date proceeding. The amendatory act does not affect an action, case, or |
22 | proceeding commenced before January 1, 2024. |
23 | 6A-11-302. Security interest perfected before effective date. |
24 | (a) Continuing perfection: perfection requirements satisfied. A security interest that is |
25 | enforceable and perfected immediately before January 1, 2024, is a perfected security interest under |
26 | the amendatory act if, on January 1, 2024, the requirements for enforceability and perfection under |
27 | the amendatory act are satisfied without further action. |
28 | (b) Continuing perfection: enforceability or perfection requirements not satisfied. If a |
29 | security interest is enforceable and perfected immediately before January 1, 2024, but the |
30 | requirements for enforceability or perfection under the amendatory act are not satisfied on January |
31 | 1, 2024, the security interest: |
32 | (1) Is a perfected security interest until the earlier of the time perfection would have ceased |
33 | under the law in effect immediately before January 1, 2024 or the adjustment date; |
34 | (2) Remains enforceable thereafter only if the security interest satisfies the requirements |
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1 | for enforceability under § 6A-9-203, as amended by the amendatory act, before the adjustment date; |
2 | and |
3 | (3) Remains perfected thereafter only if the requirements for perfection under the |
4 | amendatory act are satisfied before the time specified in subsection (b)(1) of this section. |
5 | 6A-11-303. Security interest unperfected before effective date. |
6 | A security interest that is enforceable immediately before January 1, 2024, but is |
7 | unperfected at that time: |
8 | (1) Remains an enforceable security interest until the adjustment date; |
9 | (2) Remains enforceable thereafter if the security interest becomes enforceable under § 6A- |
10 | 9-203, as amended by the amendatory act, on January 1, 2024, or before the adjustment date; and |
11 | (3) Becomes perfected: |
12 | (i) Without further action, on January 1, 2024, if the requirements for perfection under the |
13 | amendatory act are satisfied before or at that time; or |
14 | (ii) When the requirements for perfection are satisfied if the requirements are satisfied after |
15 | that time. |
16 | 6A-11-304. Effectiveness of actions taken before effective date. |
17 | (a) Pre-effective-date action; attachment and perfection before adjustment date. If action, |
18 | other than the filing of a financing statement, is taken before January 1, 2024, and the action would |
19 | have resulted in perfection of the security interest had the security interest become enforceable |
20 | before January 1, 2024, the action is effective to perfect a security interest that attaches under the |
21 | amendatory act before the adjustment date. An attached security interest becomes unperfected on |
22 | the adjustment date unless the security interest becomes a perfected security interest under the |
23 | amendatory act before the adjustment date. |
24 | (b) Pre-effective-date filing. The filing of a financing statement before January 1, 2024, is |
25 | effective to perfect a security interest on January 1, 2024, to the extent the filing would satisfy the |
26 | requirements for perfection under the amendatory act. |
27 | (c) Pre-effective-date enforceability action. The taking of an action before January 1, 2024, |
28 | is sufficient for the enforceability of a security interest on January 1, 2024, if the action would |
29 | satisfy the requirements for enforceability under the amendatory act. |
30 | 6A-11-305. Priority. |
31 | (a) Determination of priority. Subject to subsections (b) and (c) of this section, the |
32 | amendatory act determines the priority of conflicting claims to collateral. |
33 | (b) Established priorities. Subject to subsection (c) of this section, if the priorities of claims |
34 | to collateral were established before January 1, 2024, chapter 9 of title 6A as in effect before |
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1 | January 1, 2024, determines priority. |
2 | (c) Determination of certain priorities on adjustment date. On the adjustment date, to the |
3 | extent the priorities determined by chapter 9 of title 6A as amended by the amendatory act modify |
4 | the priorities established before January 1, 2024, the priorities of claims to chapter 12 of title 6A |
5 | property and electronic money established before January 1, 2024, cease to apply. |
6 | 6A-11-306. Priority of claims when priority rules of chapter 9 do not apply. |
7 | (a) Determination of priority. Subject to subsections (b) and (c) of this section, chapter 12 |
8 | of title 6A determines the priority of conflicting claims to chapter 12 of title 6A property when the |
9 | priority rules of chapter 9 of title 6A as amended by the amendatory act do not apply. |
10 | (b) Established priorities. Subject to subsection (c) of this section, when the priority rules |
11 | of chapter 9 of title 6A as amended by the amendatory act do not apply and the priorities of claims |
12 | to chapter 12 of title 6A property were established before January 1, 2024, law other than chapter |
13 | 12 of title 6A determines priority. |
14 | (c) Determination of certain priorities on adjustment date. When the priority rules of |
15 | chapter 9 of title 6 A as amended by the amendatory act do not apply, to the extent the priorities |
16 | determined by the amendatory act modify the priorities established before January 1, 2024, the |
17 | priorities of claims to Chapter 12 of title 6A property established before January 1, 2024, cease to |
18 | apply on the adjustment date. |
19 | PART 4 |
20 | OFFICIAL COMMENTS |
21 | 6A-11-401. Official comments. |
22 | It is the intention of the general assembly that the official comments to the Uniform |
23 | Commercial Code Amendments (2022) as approved and recommended for enactment in all the |
24 | States by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 2022 represent the |
25 | express legislative intent of the general assembly and shall be used as a guide for interpretation of |
26 | the provisions of this title. |
27 | SECTION 13. Nothing in this act may be construed to support, endorse, create, or |
28 | implement a national digital currency. |
29 | SECTION 14. This act shall take effect on the earlier of passage or July 1, 2024. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO THE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE | |
*** | |
1 | This act would provide amendments to the Uniform Commercial Code for emerging |
2 | technologies. |
3 | This act would take effect on the earlier of passage or July 1, 2024. |
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