Secured Transactions Overview

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SECURED TRANSACTIONS OVERVIEW 1.

SECURED TRANSACTIONS
I. IN BRIEF
Secured transactions is about collateral. When businesses get loans from banks,
the banks often ask for personal property (“collateral”) to secure the loans. If the
businesses default on the loans, the banks can recover some of their money by selling
the collateral. Secured transaction law, which is contained in Article 9 of the Uniform
Commercial Code, protects the banks’ rights to the collateral.
Of course, the parties in Secured Transactions questions are not always businesses
and banks. Sometimes individual people and other institutions that provide credit are
involved. But Secured Transactions law focuses on businesses and the institutions that
lend to them, so those are the parties that tend to appear in exam questions.
Under Article 9, a creditor must take two steps to gain the full protection of secured
transactions law:

1. Attach a security interest to the collateral, and


2. Perfect the security interest.
The majority of secured transactions essay questions focus on these two steps.

II. ATTACHMENT
Attaching a security interest simply means creating a valid security interest in
collateral. The most common way to attach a security interest is with a signed
security agreement. The security agreement is a written agreement that certain
personal property will serve as collateral, usually for a loan. To be valid, (1) the security
agreement must describe the collateral, (2) the party offering the collateral must have
rights in it (that is, they must own it or have some other legal rights in it), and (3) the
party gaining the security interest (usually a bank or merchant) must give value in
exchange for the security interest. For example, if a bank gives a loan to a borrower,
the loan is value. But if you try to give your friend a security interest in your lawn mower
as a gift (an awfully strange gift), that does not create a valid security interest because
your friend did not give you value in exchange for it.
There are also two ways for a security interest to attach to collateral without a security
agreement:

1. Possession, and
2. Control

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2. SECURED TRANSACTIONS OVERVIEW

If the party that wants the security interest has actual possession of the collateral, no
written security agreement is required for a security interest to attach. So, if you borrow
$200 from your friend and you agree to let your friend take your lawn mower until you
can pay the money back, your friend’s security interest attached to the collateral (that
is, the lawn mower) and there is no need for a written agreement.
Security agreements in a few types of collateral can become attached by control. For
example, if a business has a deposit account (a regular bank account) at a bank, and
that bank loans the business some money, the bank has control over the collateral
because the collateral is an account at that bank.

III. PERFECTION
Step two of gaining the maximum protection of secured transactions law is perfection.
By perfecting a security interest, the holder of the security interest puts the world
on notice that the security interest exists. When done properly, a perfected security
interest will be superior to most (but not all) interests others might have in the
collateral. In other words, if the business defaults on the loan, the bank will be first in
line to auction off the business’s collateral and recover the balance of the loan.
Most security interests are perfected when the holder of the security interest files
a financing statement at a central filing location in the state where the collateral is
located. The financing statement is a simple document that identifies the debtor and
the creditor and describes the collateral.
Once a financing statement is properly filed, the security interest is perfected and
the world is considered to have notice of the security interest. For example, imagine
Bank A gives Business One a loan, takes a security interest in all of Business One’s
office furniture as collateral, and properly files a financing statement describing the
office furniture. A month later, Bank B gives Business One a loan, also taking a security
interest in the office furniture as collateral. If Business One defaults on both loans, Bank
A will be able to use the value of the office furniture to recover some of its money. If
there is nothing left to help Bank B recover, Bank B can’t complain. Bank B should have
known about Bank A’s security interest because if Bank B had checked the records at
the filing office, it would have found the financing statement.
There are some special perfection rules for certain types of collateral:

1. Security interests in motor vehicles can be perfected only by a notation on the


security interest on the vehicle’s title.
2. Security interests in things attached to land (e.g., timber or fixtures) usually must
be perfected with filing statements that describe the land and are filed in the county
where the land is located.

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SECURED TRANSACTIONS OVERVIEW 3.

3. Security interests in most types of collateral can be perfected by possession by the


party holding the security interest.
4. Security interests in a few types of collateral (e.g., business deposit accounts) can
be perfected by control.
5. Purchase money security interests (discussed below) in consumer goods are
automatically perfected.

IV. PRIORITY
The main issue in most secured transactions questions is the order of priority of the
security interests. Two secured parties might both have loans secured by the same
collateral. If the borrower defaults on both loans, the party with the highest priority
security interest gets first dibs on the collateral. Here are the general rules:

1. Perfected security interests have priority over unperfected security interests.


2. Between two perfected security interests, the first to have been filed or perfected
has priority.
3. PMSIs (see below) have priority over non-PMSIs.
4. Perfected security interests have priority over creditors in bankruptcy.
5. A buyer in the ordinary course of business usually takes goods free of any security
interests (e.g., if a store gets a loan from a bank and gives the bank a security
interest in its inventory of refrigerators, and then you buy a refrigerator from the
store, the bank loses its security interest because you are a buyer in the ordinary
course of business).

V. CATEGORIES OF COLLATERAL
Collateral is frequently described in security agreements and exam questions by
category, so you must understand the categories. Here are the main ones:

1. Consumer goods – goods used or bought for personal or household purposes


2. Inventory – goods held for sale or lease and supplies/materials quickly used up in
business
3. Equipment – any physical goods other than consumer goods, inventory, or farm
products
4. Accounts – a right to payment (accounts receivable)
5. Deposit accounts – a bank account

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4. SECURED TRANSACTIONS OVERVIEW

VI. PURCHASE MONEY SECURITY INTERESTS


A purchase money security interest (PMSI) is a special type of security interest that
gets higher than usual priority (see priority rules). A PMSI arises when the lender loans
money to the borrower specifically for the buyer to purchase certain goods, and the
lender takes a security interest in those goods. For example, Lumber Mill owns a bunch
of machines that saw wood. Bank 1 has a perfected security interest on all of Lumber
Mill’s equipment (including these machines and any acquired in the future) due to
an existing loan. Lumber Mill needs a new machine. Bank 2 gives Lumber Mill a loan
to buy the new machine and takes a security interest in the new machine. Bank 2’s
security interest is a PMSI and, therefore, Bank 2’s security interest has priority over
Bank 1’s (even though Bank 1’s interest was perfected first).

VII. RIGHTS ON DEFAULT


Generally, if a borrower defaults on a loan that is covered by a security interest, the
secured party has a right to sell the collateral and use the funds from the sale to pay
itself the amount remaining on the loan. Secured parties can simply take the collateral
if they can do so peacefully. Or they can file an action in court to force a public sale of
the collateral.

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