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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> Company Security Interests (Consultation Paper) [2004] EWLC 176 (13 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2004/176.html Cite as: [2004] EWLC 176 |
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A consultative report
London: TSO
The Law Commission was set up by section 1 of the Law Commissions Act 1965 for the purpose of promoting the reform of the law.
The Law Commissioners are:
The Honourable Mr Justice Toulson, Chairman
Professor Hugh Beale QC, FBA
Mr Stuart Bridge
Professor Martin Partington CBE
Judge Alan Wilkie QC
The Chief Executive of the Law Commission is Steve Humphreys and its offices are at Conquest House, 37-38 John Street, Theobalds Road, London WC1N 2BQ.
This consultative report, completed on 13 August 2004, is circulated for comment and criticism only. It does not represent the final views of the Law Commission.
The Law Commission would be grateful for comments on this consultative report before 23 November 2004. Comments may be sent either –
By post to:
James Robinson
Law Commission
Conquest House
37-38 John Street
Theobalds Road
London
WC1N 2BQ
Tel: 020-7453-1201
Fax: 020-7453-1297
By e-mail to:
[email protected]
It would be helpful if, where possible, comments sent by post could also be sent on disk, or by e-mail to the above address, in any commonly used format.
All responses to this consultative report will be treated as public documents, and may be made available to third parties, unless the respondent specifically asks that the response, or a particular part of it, should be treated as confidential.
The text of this consultative report is available on the Internet at:
http://www.lawcom.gov.uk
254-161-07
THE LAW COMMISSION
COMPANY SECURITY INTERESTS
CONTENTS
Paragraph | |
Executive Summary | Summary |
PART 1: INTRODUCTION | 1.1 |
The importance of credit and of security | 1.6 |
Terms of reference | 1.9 |
The 2002 consultation paper | 1.10 |
Further consultation | 1.13 |
Structure of this consultative report | 1.18 |
The draft regulations | 1.19 |
Summary of the scheme | 1.23 |
Scotland | 1.31 |
Consultation questions | 1.33 |
Acknowledgements | 1.35 |
PART 2: CRITICAL ISSUES | Part 2 |
Introduction | 2.1 |
Replacing the scheme of registration and priority for company charges | 2.3 |
Weaknesses of the current scheme | 2.3 |
Amendment of the current scheme or adoption of notice-filing? | 2.7 |
The notice-filing scheme for company charges in outline | 2.12 |
A note on terminology | 2.12 |
Attachment and perfection | 2.13 |
The scheme | 2.17 |
Scope | 2.18 |
Attachment and perfection | 2.21 |
Filing | 2.24 |
Searching | 2.27 |
Financing change statements | 2.28 |
The effect of errors | 2.29 |
Effect of failure to perfect | 2.31 |
Obtaining additional information about the SI | 2.33 |
Priority as between competing SIs | 2.35 |
Priority as against buyers or lessees | 2.38 |
Support for the notice-filing scheme for company charges | 2.41 |
Advantages of the notice-filing scheme | 2.43 |
Major reservations of consultees | 2.44 |
Registration of the charge document | 2.45 |
Reduction of information that is publicly available | 2.46 |
Financing statements compared to particulars of charge | 2.47 |
Specialist registers | 2.48 |
Registration will be voluntary | 2.52 |
Filing before an SI is created | 2.53 |
Conclusion on 'loss of information' overall | 2.55 |
The floating charge | 2.56 |
Would the cost outweigh the benefits? | 2.61 |
Unincorporated businesses | 2.70 |
Quasi-security devices | 2.81 |
Sales of receivables | 2.87 |
Title-retention devices | 2.89 |
The advantages of title-retention devices | 2.92 |
Vehicles | 2.92 |
Finance leases | 2.92 |
Operating leases of over one year | 2.96 |
Other equipment | 2.99 |
Inventory supplied under a retention of title clause | 2.102 |
Re-characterisation | 2.107 |
Re-characterisation (1): the supplier may lose its title | 2.108 |
Re-characterisation (2): the right to any surplus | 2.110 |
Re-characterisation (3): tax consequences | 2.111 |
Companies only | 2.120 |
Costs and benefits | 2.123 |
Conclusions on quasi-securities | 2.128 |
Financial collateral | 2.138 |
Shares and other forms of investment property | 2.140 |
An outline of the notice-filing/control scheme for investment property | 2.149 |
SIs over bank accounts | 2.154 |
Outline of scheme for bank accounts | 2.158 |
A statement of the parties' rights and obligations | 2.160 |
An outline of the statement of rights and remedies | 2.168 |
Good faith | 2.172 |
Mandatory rules | 2.183 |
Conclusion on the legislative statement of rights and remedies | 2.188 |
Conclusions on principal issues | 2.192 |
PART 3: THE SCHEME IN FULL | Part 3 |
Structure of this Part | 3.4 |
Scope of the scheme | 3.6 |
Companies | 3.7 |
Unregistered companies | 3.8 |
The person creating the SI and the 'debtor' | 3.9 |
Agents and trustees | 3.15 |
Personal property | 3.17 |
Goods | 3.18 |
Instruments and documents of title | 3.20 |
Accounts | 3.21 |
Intangibles and money | 3.22 |
'Chattel paper' | 3.25 |
Security interests | 3.26 |
'In-substance' SIs | 3.30 |
'Deemed' SIs | 3.34 |
Leases that do not have a security purpose | 3.37 |
Commercial consignments that do not have a security purpose | 3.41 |
Sales of accounts and promissory notes | 3.44 |
'Deemed' SIs and the definition of 'debtor' | 3.50 |
SIs in 'supporting obligations' | 3.51 |
Partial and total exclusions from the overall scheme | 3.58 |
Effectiveness of a security agreement, attachment and perfection | 3.68 |
Effectiveness of security agreement | 3.70 |
Attachment of SIs | 3.71 |
Should the security agreement have to be in writing? | 3.75 |
Returned and repossessed goods: reattachment | 3.83 |
Perfection of SIs | 3.86 |
Methods of perfection in detail | 3.92 |
Perfection by filing | 3.94 |
Temporary perfection | 3.95 |
Automatic perfection | 3.96 |
Perfection by possession and perfection by bailees | 3.99 |
Possession by a debtor who has attorned to secured party | 3.102 |
Possession of goods by bailees | 3.103 |
Seized or repossessed goods | 3.106 |
Trust receipts and temporary perfection | 3.108 |
Filing | 3.113 |
Financing Statement | 3.118 |
Debtor's name and registration number | 3.119 |
Name and address of the secured party | 3.122 |
A description of the collateral | 3.124 |
'Sufficient' collateral descriptions | 3.126 |
Collateral type as a searchable field | 3.128 |
Duration of the filing | 3.130 |
Other matters | 3.133 |
Who files? | 3.137 |
Filing for future SIs | 3.138 |
Consent of the debtor to filing | 3.140 |
'Last-minute' filing | 3.142 |
Verification statement | 3.147 |
Effect of failure to file or perfect by other means | 3.151 |
Financing change statements | 3.154 |
Correction of errors and removal of unwanted filings | 3.158 |
Transfer of secured party's interest | 3.161 |
Errors in the financing statement | 3.163 |
Effect of unauthorised or accidental discharge | 3.169 |
Searching | 3.171 |
System failure | 3.175 |
SIs over vehicles | 3.176 |
Proceeds | 3.182 |
Definition of proceeds | 3.182 |
Right to proceeds of disposition | 3.183 |
Perfection of right over proceeds | 3.186 |
Obtaining additional information about the SI | 3.188 |
Priority between competing SIs | 3.198 |
'Residual' priority rules | 3.201 |
Specific priority rules | 3.204 |
Purchase-money SIs | 3.204 |
Definition of PMSI | 3.206 |
Conditions for PMSI status | 3.211 |
Inventory | 3.213 |
Non-inventory collateral | 3.215 |
Cross-collateralisation | 3.220 |
Conflicting PMSIs | 3.221 |
PMSIs over proceeds and conflicting SIs | 3.222 |
Priority rules for farming? | 3.224 |
Protection of transferees of 'negotiable' collateral | 3.229 |
Transferees of money | 3.232 |
Transferees of negotiable documents of title | 3.236 |
Priority in transferred collateral | 3.237 |
Transfers by the secured party | 3.237 |
Transfer by the debtor | 3.239 |
Changes in the debtor's name | 3.247 |
Liens | 3.249 |
Priority as against execution creditors | 3.250 |
Priority as against buyers or lessees | 3.253 |
Unperfected SIs | 3.255 |
Sales of goods in the ordinary course of business | 3.257 |
Low price goods bought for private purposes | 3.261 |
Motor vehicles and other serial-numbered goods | 3.263 |
Other priority situations | 3.264 |
Fixtures | 3.265 |
Crops | 3.269 |
Accessions and commingled/processed goods | 3.274 |
Accessions | 3.275 |
Commingled goods | 3.278 |
'Processed' goods | 3.279 |
Liability in damages | 3.283 |
SIs and the 'specialist' registries | 3.289 |
Land | 3.295 |
Rights to payment arising in connection with land | 3.310 |
Aircraft | 3.313 |
Ships | 3.323 |
Enforcement of ship mortgages | 3.334 |
Intellectual Property | 3.337 |
SIs over assets abroad or created by 'foreign' companies | 3.343 |
Companies registered in England and Wales | 3.347 |
Possessory SIs | 3.349 |
Non-possessory SIs over goods | 3.350 |
Companies incorporated outside the UK | 3.364 |
Scotland | 3.373 |
Transitional provisions | 3.384 |
Commencement | 3.385 |
A transitional period? | 3.387 |
Pre-commencement registered charges | 3.388 |
Pre-commencement unregistrable charges | 3.394 |
Pre-commencement quasi-securities | 3.398 |
A transitional period | 3.399 |
No transitional period | 3.402 |
Conclusion on quasi-securities | 3.405 |
Insolvency issues | 3.410 |
PART 4: FINANCIAL COLLATERAL AND PROCEEDS OF LETTERS OF CREDIT | Part 4 |
Introduction | 4.1 |
Types of investment securities | 4.6 |
Basic principles | 4.14 |
'Control' means a right to realise or appropriate the collateral | 4.15 |
Control trumps other forms of perfection | 4.19 |
A bona fide purchaser for value who takes control of investment property in such a way that no one else can also have control of it takes free of other interests | 4.21 |
As between SIs perfected by control, priority is in the order in which control is obtained | 4.25 |
Provisional recommendation on basic principles | 4.27 |
Investment property | 4.30 |
Definition of investment property | 4.31 |
Investment securities | 4.38 |
'Control' | 4.38 |
Certificated securities | 4.40 |
Certificated securities in bearer form | 4.40 |
Certificated securities in registered form | 4.42 |
Uncertificated securities | 4.49 |
Uncertificated securities held through CREST | 4.49 |
Uncertificated securities where title depends on the issuer's register | 4.50 |
Securities held through an intermediary | 4.51 |
Security taken by intermediaries | 4.55 |
Securities accounts | 4.56 |
Control of investment securities: a summary | 4.57 |
Disclosure of the control agreement | 4.58 |
Security given by intermediaries | 4.59 |
Debtor may retain right to deal with security entitlement | 4.62 |
Security agreement in writing | 4.66 |
Right of use/on-pledging | 4.68 |
Priority as between competing SIs over investment securities | 4.70 |
Control trumps other forms of perfection | 4.70 |
Rules of priority for competing SIs over investment securities where both the SIs are perfected by control | 4.71 |
Protected purchasers | 4.72 |
SIs created in favour of intermediaries | 4.74 |
SIs created by intermediaries | 4.76 |
Buyers of investment securities | 4.77 |
Temporary perfection of SIs over certificated securities | 4.82 |
The 'broker's lien' | 4.84 |
Commodities | 4.88 |
Bank accounts | 4.93 |
Why include bank accounts within the scheme? | 4.97 |
SIs created without the agreement of the bank | 4.102 |
SIs where there is a 'control' agreement | 4.106 |
Basic principles | 4.111 |
The scheme for bank accounts in detail | 4.113 |
Definitions | 4.113 |
What amounts to control | 4.115 |
Bank's agreement required for control | 4.120 |
Disclosure of the control agreement | 4.121 |
Priority | 4.122 |
Transferability of funds | 4.127 |
Bank's right of set-off | 4.130 |
Bank's obligations to debtor | 4.131 |
Proceeds of letters of credit | 4.133 |
Background | 4.133 |
The Revised Article 9 approach to letter-of-credit rights | 4.140 |
Control | 4.141 |
Perfection as proceeds | 4.144 |
Should we adopt the Article 9 notion of control over letter-of-credit rights? | 4.145 |
PART 5: A STATEMENT OF THE RIGHTS AND REMEDIES UNDER A SECURITY AGREEMENT | Part 5 |
Introduction | 5.1 |
Summary of provisional recommendations | 5.6 |
Scope of the statement of rights and remedies | 5.10 |
Application to 'in-substance' SIs | 5.10 |
Other limitations on the scope of the statement of rights and remedies | 5.13 |
Financial collateral | 5.13 |
Ships | 5.14 |
SIs over both personal property and land | 5.15 |
Secured party acting through a receiver | 5.17 |
Essential provisions: surplus and deficit | 5.18 |
Distribution of any surplus | 5.18 |
Payment to subordinate secured parties | 5.22 |
Payment into court | 5.28 |
Deficiency | 5.29 |
Desirable provisions | 5.30 |
Effect of prohibition on assignment | 5.31 |
Duties of parties under the security agreement but before default | 5.40 |
Care in custody and preservation of collateral | 5.41 |
Income, etc. from collateral | 5.43 |
Right of use | 5.44 |
Rights and remedies on default | 5.47 |
No effect on judicial remedies | 5.48 |
Collection rights | 5.49 |
Where the SI secures payment or performance of an obligation | 5.49 |
Outright sales of receivables | 5.52 |
'Non-cash' proceeds | 5.53 |
Taking possession on default | 5.54 |
Taking possession: general | 5.55 |
Collateral that cannot readily be moved or stored | 5.58 |
Assembly of the collateral | 5.61 |
Power of sale | 5.62 |
Method of sale or disposition | 5.64 |
Disposition to be made in a commercially reasonable manner | 5.65 |
Non-cash proceeds | 5.69 |
Purchase by the secured party at a private sale | 5.71 |
Notice requirements | 5.73 |
The period of notice | 5.81 |
Form and content | 5.82 |
Parties to be notified | 5.85 |
Effect of disposition | 5.87 |
Retention of collateral by secured party ('foreclosure') | 5.88 |
Redemption | 5.94 |
Remedies are cumulative | 5.96 |
Appointment of receiver and secured party acting through receiver | 5.99 |
Provisions not recommended | 5.102 |
Interpretation of acceleration clause | 5.103 |
Taking possession on anticipated default | 5.105 |
Measure of damages when lease is ineffective because unperfected | 5.108 |
An account of the distribution | 5.110 |
Reinstatement of security agreement | 5.111 |
Receivers | 5.114 |
Applications to court | 5.119 |
Financial collateral | 5.120 |
Security financial collateral arrangements | 5.121 |
Title transfer financial collateral arrangements | 5.126 |
Good faith and commercial reasonableness | 5.134 |
Determining whether conduct was commercially reasonable | 5.136 |
Mandatory or default rules? | 5.142 |
Protection of the debtor | 5.145 |
The Ontario and Saskatchewan PPSAs | 5.147 |
The New Zealand PPSA | 5.148 |
The UCC Revised Article 9 | 5.152 |
The provisions that should be mandatory | 5.156 |
The right to be notified before the collateral is sold | 5.157 |
The right to receive the surplus | 5.160 |
Notice before acceptance of collateral in full or partial satisfaction of obligation | 5.164 |
The right to redeem collateral | 5.165 |
Exclusion and restriction of liability | 5.166 |
Waiver | 5.170 |
PART 6: LIST OF PROVISIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS AND CONSULTATION QUESTIONS | Part 6 |
APPENDIX A: DRAFT REGULATIONS | Appendix A |
APPENDIX B: CHANGES NEEDED TO THE DRAFT REGULATIONS TO OMIT TITLE-RETENTION DEVICES | Appendix B |
Necessary changes | B.4 |
Provisions that might be omitted | B.7 |
PMSIs | B.7 |
The statement of rights and remedies | B.8 |
Consultation question | B.9 |