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Vol. 74, No. 2, February 2001
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Legislative Watch
State Bar Urges Adoption of UCC Revised Article 9
The State Bar Board
of Governors urges the Wisconsin Legislature to adopt the Uniform Commercial
Code Revised Article 9 - Secured Transactions (1999). Wisconsin must enact
the revision by July 1, 2001, to avoid conflict of law issues between states.
by Ralph Anzivino
Ralph
Anzivino, Case Western Reserve 1971, teaches contracts, UCC, and bankruptcy
at Marquette University Law School. He has written several treatises
and books on UCC and bankruptcy law and numerous other articles. He
serves as a State Bar Business Law Section board member and contributing
editor to the Insolvency Newsletter, and as vice chair of the UCC
Committee.
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REVISED ARTICLE 9 OF THE Uniform Commercial Code currently is being considered
by the Wisconsin Legislature for adoption. The Uniform Law Commissioners,
in conjunction with the American Law Institute, completed the revision
in 1999. Thus far, it has been adopted by 28 states and is under consideration
in 14 others. The effective date for all states to have Revised Article
9 enacted is July 1, 2001, without which potentially serious "conflict
of law" issues may arise. Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code was
last revised in 1972 and has been adopted in every state. The State Bar
of Wisconsin has recommended that the Wisconsin Legislature adopt the
current revision.
Revised Article 9 is a substantial improvement to personal property
financing. Since 1972, personal property financing has grown enormously
in amount, number of transactions, and variety of types of personal property
available as collateral. Consistent with its predecessor, Revised Article
9 draws heavily on current commercial practices for its revisions. There
are significant changes in scope, substantive rules, and procedures. The
following briefly summarizes some of the revisions.
Scope
Revised Article 9 expands the "scope" of Article 9. The kinds of property
in which a security interest can be taken by a creditor under Revised
Article 9 increases over those available under old Article 9. Some of
the new kinds of collateral available are sales of payment intangibles
and promissory notes, security interests created by governmental debtors,
health insurance receivables, consignments, and commercial tort claims.
Certain kinds of transactions that did not come under old Article 9 now
come under Revised Article 9. For example, nonpossessory, statutory agricultural
liens now come under Article 9 for determination of perfection and priority.
Attachment
The current rules for the creation and attachment of the security interest
remain substantially the same under Revised Article 9. Attachment continues
to require a security agreement, value, and that the debtor have rights
in the collateral. Revised Article 9 clarifies that the exception to the
signature requirement where the secured party has possession "pursuant
to agreement" means that the agreement must be a security agreement. Revised
Article 9 also clarifies that a description in the security agreement
can be by "type"(for example, equipment), but generic descriptions are
not acceptable (for example, all the debtor's personal property). As with
old Article 9, a security interest attaches to proceeds, but Revised Article
9 expands the definition of proceeds.
Perfection
Under Revised Article 9, filing a financing statement remains the dominant
way to perfect a security interest in most kinds of personal property.
Revised Article 9, however, greatly expands the kinds of collateral where
a secured party can use filing to perfect. For example, filing now can
perfect instruments and investment property. As in the past, different
methods of perfection are not mutually exclusive. "Control" is a new method
of perfection for letter of credit rights and deposit accounts. Under
old Article 9, control was available only to perfect security interests
in investment property. A creditor has control when the secured party
has the authority to transfer the property without the debtor's consent.
Possession continues as an alternative method of perfection and is the
only method for perfecting a security interest in money that is not proceeds.
Automatic perfection for a purchase money security interest is increased
from 10 days to 20 days in Revised Article 9. Thereafter, another method
of perfection must be used to continue the perfected security interest.
As in the past, the purchase money security interest in consumer goods
remains perfected automatically for the duration of the security interest.
Choice of Law
Revised Article 9 changes the rules for the location of filing a financing
statement. Old Article 9 required the filing of a financing statement
in the state where the goods were located, and in the state of the debtor's
chief executive office for intangible collateral, such as accounts and
general intangibles. Revised Article 9 specifies only one place to file
for all collateral, and that is the state of the debtor's location. Revised
Article 9 further defines a debtor's location. For an entity created by
a filing within a state, the entity's location is that state. For example,
a debtor incorporated in Delaware, with its chief executive office in
Chicago, would file the financing statement in Delaware for all collateral
where filing was a means of perfection. For an entity not created by a
filing, the entity's location is the place of its chief executive office.
Finally, for an individual, the individual's location is that person's
residence. Experience suggests that collateral shifts location much easier
than does the debtor's location.
The Filing System
Revised Article 9 endorses a full commitment to centralized filing -
one place in every state where financing statements are filed. Under Revised
Article 9, the only local filing of financing statements occurs in the
real estate records for fixtures. Fixtures are items of personal property
that become physically part of the real estate, and are treated as part
of the real estate until severed from it.
Revised Article 9 also anticipates a filing system that will evolve
from the world of filed documents to the world of electronic communications
and records. In a dramatic change, Revised Article 9 has eliminated the
requirement that the debtor sign the financing statement. This change
will facilitate the electronic filing of financing statements and electronic
searches. The paper filing of financing statements already is disappearing
in many states where electronic filing is available. Revised Article 9
encourages this transition from paper to electronic filing without further
revision.
Revised Article 9 also makes filing office operations more ministerial
than old Article 9. The office that files financing statements has no
responsibility for the accuracy of information on the statements and is
fully absolved from any liability for the contents of any statements received
and filed. Revised Article 9 contains a statutory rule to determine when
a mistake in the debtor's name is so incorrect as to render the financing
statement ineffective (unperfected). A financing statement is effective
if a computer search run under the debtor's correct name turns up the
financing statement with the incorrect name. If it does not, then the
financing statement is ineffective. A court has no discretion to determine
that the incorrect name is not seriously misleading. The computer search
logic used by the state's filing office becomes the legal standard for
an error in the debtor's name.
Consumer Transactions
Revised Article 9 clearly distinguishes between consumer and commercial
transactions. It contains many provisions providing special rules in consumer
transactions. A consumer transaction is defined in the traditional manner
as one involving a personal, family, or household purpose. Some examples
of consumer provisions are: a consumer cannot waive redemption rights
in a security agreement; a consumer buyer of goods who prepays in whole
or in part has an enforceable interest in the purchased goods and may
obtain the goods as a remedy; a consumer is entitled to disclosure of
the amount of any deficiency assessed against him or her, and the method
for calculating the deficiency; and a secured creditor may not accept
collateral as partial satisfaction of a consumer obligation, so that choosing
strict foreclosure as a remedy means that no deficiency may be assessed
against the debtor.
Default and Enforcement
Default and enforcement provisions, which are triggered by the debtor's
default, prescribe the procedures for repossessing the collateral and
selling it to satisfy the debt. Revised Article 9 includes new rules dealing
with "secondary" obligors (guarantors), new special rules for some of
the new kinds of property subject to security interests, new rules for
the interests of subordinate creditors with security interests in the
same property, and new rules for aspects of enforcement when the debtor
is a consumer debtor.
Some of the specific new rules are: a secured party is obliged to notify
a secondary obligor when there is a default, and a secondary obligor generally
cannot waive rights by becoming a secondary obligor; a secured party who
repossesses goods and sells them is subject to the usual warranties that
are part of any sale; junior secured creditors and lienholders must be
notified when a secured party repossesses collateral; and if a secured
party sells collateral at a low price to an insider buyer, the price that
the goods should have obtained in a commercially reasonable sale, rather
than the actual price, is the price that will be used in calculating the
deficiency. The latter rule has no application in a consumer transaction.
Transition Rules
The many changes in Revised Article 9 make the transition rules complex.
The proposed uniform effective date of July 1, 2001, is intended to reduce
the disruptive effect of transitioning from old Article 9 to Revised Article
9 between states. There are many transition rules contained in Revised
Article 9 that may or may not be applicable, depending upon the facts
of each situation. One common transition problem will illustrate how a
transition rule will be applied. How will a security interest perfected
by filing under old Article 9 fare under Revised Article 9 once it goes
into effect? The filing of an effective financing statement under old
Article 9 remains effective under Revised Article 9 (including after acquired
property) until the earlier of the normal lapse of the financing statement
or five years after the effective date of Revised Article 9. A corollary
transition rule provides that the filing of a financing statement prior
to the effective date of Revised Article 9 is effective to perfect a security
interest under Revised Article 9 if the description requirements are satisfied
under Revised Article 9 and the filing is in the correct state as required
by Revised Article 9.
Conclusion
There are many reasons to support the adoption of Revised Article 9.
First and foremost, uniformity between the states in commercial transactions
must be maintained. By July 1, 2001, nearly all of the states will have
adopted Revised Article 9. Paper-based transactions are giving way to
electronic transactions. Revised Article 9 facilitates this change. New
kinds of property and transactions have been developed since Article 9
was last amended in 1972. The scope of Article 9 is increased to facilitate
these new kinds of collateral. Revised Article 9 substantially improves
the perfection by filing method by prescribing the debtor's location rather
than the location of the collateral as the appropriate place to file.
Particularly for businesses as opposed to individuals, the location of
the collateral changes more often than the location of the debtor, resulting
in a more reliable filing system. Statutory, nonpossessory liens, which
typically have no public notice requirement, have proliferated since 1972.
These liens often conflict with security interests. Revised Article 9
brings these liens into coverage for the purpose of providing public notice
and setting priorities between creditors. Finally, Revised Article 9 addresses
certain consumer financing issues that have never been addressed by old
Article 9.
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