Commonwealth of Australia Explanatory Memoranda

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PERSONAL PROPERTY SECURITIES (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2009


2008-2009










               THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA










                          HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES










      PERSONAL PROPERTY SECURITIES (CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS) BILL 2009










                           EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM













    (Circulated by the authority of the Attorney-General, the Honourable
                            Robert McClelland MP)

    Table of Contents

  Outline     1

  Financial impact statement   2

  Abbreviations   3

  Formal Clauses  4

  Explanation of items     5

     Schedule 1 - Fisheries legislation 5

         Amendment of the Fisheries Management Act 1991   5

         Amendment of the Torres Strait Fisheries Act 1984    8

     Schedule 2 - Intellectual property legislation  9

         Amendment of the Designs Act 2003   9

         Amendment of the Patents Act 1990   11

         Amendment of the Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994 13

         Amendment of the Trade Marks Act 1995   13

     Schedule 3 - Maritime legislation  16

         Amendment of the Admiralty Act 1988 16

         Amendment of the Marine Navigation Levy Collection Act 1989   17

         Amendment of the Marine Navigation (Regulatory Functions)
              Levy Collection Act 1991  17

         Amendment of the Navigation Act 1912    17

         Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Civil Liability) Act 1981
  19

         Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Harmful Anti-fouling
              Systems) Act 2006     19

         Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Prevention of Pollution
              from Ships) Act 1983  19

         Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Shipping Levy
              Collection) Act 1981  20

         Amendment of the Shipping Registration Act 1981  20

     Schedule 4 - Personal Property Securities Act 2009   24




     Schedule 5 - Other legislation 41

         Amendment of the Air Services Act 1995  42

         Amendment of the Bankruptcy Act 1966    42

         Amendment of the Commonwealth Inscribed Stock Act 1911    44

         Amendment of the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait
              Islander) Act 2006    45

         Amendment of the Health Insurance Act 1973  45

         Amendment of the Insurance Act 1973 46

         Amendment of the Privacy Act 1988   46

         Amendment of the Quarantine Act 1908    47

         Amendment of the Wool International Act 1993     48
   1. Outline

   1. Personal Property Securities (PPS) reform aims to address the
      complexity of over 70 Commonwealth, State and Territory laws, common
      law rules and rules of equity currently governing security interests
      in personal property.  PPS reform would provide a modern and efficient
      personal property securities framework, which is essential for any
      modern financial system.

   2. The Personal Property Securities Bill 2009 was introduced into
      Parliament on 24 June 2009.  By harmonising existing laws, the Bill
      will reduce the complexity of the existing arrangements for secured
      lending using personal property as collateral.  The Bill will also
      increase consistency in the arrangements for creating, dealing with
      and enforcing security interests in personal property.

   3. The PPS (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2009 (the Consequential Bill)
      represents the next stage in the Government's harmonisation of
      Australia's law on secured financing using personal property.

   4. Personal property is any form of property other than land or
      buildings.  The PPS Bill will apply to transactions which have the
      effect of securing a payment or other obligation by taking an interest
      in personal property, regardless of the form of the transaction, the
      nature of the debtor or the jurisdiction in which the personal
      property or parties are located.  This is known as the functional
      approach.

   5. The Consequential Bill will amend 25 Commonwealth Acts that deal with
      the creation, registration, priority, extinguishment or enforcement of
      interests in personal property.  The amendments proposed by this Bill
      will also clarify the operation of legislation that will operate
      concurrently with the PPS Bill.  This will facilitate the
      establishment of a single national regime for personal property
      securities.

   6. The Consequential Bill contains measures designed to:

       . harmonise language and concepts with the PPS Bill where
         appropriate;

       . support a seamless transition to the PPS Register to be established
         by the PPS Bill, including removing provisions providing for the
         registration of security interests on a separate Commonwealth
         register;

       . resolve conflicts between the PPS Bill and other Commonwealth
         legislation that provides for security interests or other interests
         in personal property;

       . determine the priority between Commonwealth statutory interests in
         personal property, other than security interests, and security
         interests in the same property;

       . clarify the rights of secured parties and other parties in
         particular situations including statutory detention of personal
         property that may be subject to a security interest; and

       . ensure that current rights are preserved on implementation of the
         amendments.

   7. The Consequential Bill will not amend the Corporations Act 2001, which
      will be amended by a separate Bill following a public consultation
      process.




   2. Financial impact statement

 1. The Consequential Bill will not have a financial impact on the
    operations of Government.

   3.  Abbreviations

    The following abbreviations are used in this explanatory memorandum.




    AFMA -   Australian Fisheries Management Authority

    AMSA -   Australian Maritime Safety Authority

    ARS  -   Australian Register of Ships

    ASIC -   Australian Securities and Investments Commission

    Consequential Bill     -   Personal Property Securities (Consequential
    Amendments) Bill 2009

    IP   -   Intellectual Property

    PPSA or PPS Act   -    the proposed Personal Property Securities Act
    2009

    PPS  -   Personal Property Securities








   4. Formal Clauses




    Clause 1 - Short title

 1. The Short Title of the Consequential Bill is defined here.

    Clause 2 - Commencement

    4.2  This clause provides for the commencement of the various proposed
    amendments.  More details are provided in the notes on items relating
    to the respective Schedules.  The provisions of the Consequential Bill
    will not commence at all if the Personal Property Securities Act 2009
    does not commence.

Clause 3 - Schedule(s)

    4.3  The amendments made to legislation by the Consequential Bill are
    set out in five schedules.







    Explanation of items




   5. Schedule 1 - Fisheries legislation

    Schedule 1 amends the Fisheries Management Act 1991 and the Torres
    Strait Fisheries Act 1984 to ensure that enforcement action taken under
    that legislation against goods would not be frustrated by a secured
    party enforcing against the same goods under the PPS Act.  This will
    ensure that the PPS Act does not circumvent the seizure, detention or
    forfeiture of property by the Commonwealth as a result of contravention
    of the Fisheries Management Act or Torres Strait Fisheries Act.  The
    amendments also set out the priority between statutory interests and
    PPS Act security interests.   Interests currently registered under the
    Fisheries Management Act that are PPS Act security interests will be
    migrated to the PPS Register.

    Commencement

   1. Schedule 1 will commence on the registration commencement time (the
      PPS Act registration commencement time) within the meaning of the PPS
      Act.  The PPS Act registration commencement time is the first day of
      the month that is 26 months after the month in which the PPS Bill is
      given Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister.
      The Government expects the registration commencement time will be in
      May 2011.

    Amendment of the Fisheries Management Act


    Definition of PPSA security interest

    Item 1

   2. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
      interpretation section (subsection 4(1)) of the Fisheries Management
      Act.  A PPSA security interest is a security interest to which the PPS
      Act applies or a transitional security interest to which Division 4 of
      Part 9.4 of the PPS Act applies (being an interest subject to the PPS
      Act as a result of a bankruptcy or insolvency, or where an existing
      secured party has assented to the PPS Act by voluntarily registering
      their interest on the PPS Register).

   3. The definition has been included to clarify references to 'PPSA
      security interests' in the amendments to the Fisheries Management Act.

    Definition of statutory fishing rights option

    Items 2-4

   4. These items provide for technical amendments to the Fisheries
      Management Act to include a reference in the interpretation section
      (subsection 4(1)) to the definition of 'statutory fishing rights
      option' in section 31A.

    Registration of PPSA security interests

    Items 5, 10 and 17

   5. These items recognise that from the PPS Act registration commencement
      time, PPSA security interests will be registered on the PPS Register.



   6. The amendments will end the requirement for dealings giving rise to a
      PPSA security interest in a 'statutory fishing rights option' or a
      'fishing right', to be registered on the Register of Statutory Fishing
      Rights, and will consequently mean that such dealings are effective
      despite not being registered on that register.

   7. From the PPS Act registration commencement time, interests that are
      PPSA security interests can be registered on the PPS Register.  The
      requirements to register under section 31F and section 46 of the
      Fisheries Management Act will cease to apply to PPSA security
      interests at the PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Repeal of subsection 31F(9) and subsection 46(6)

    Items 6 and 11

   8. These items repeal subsection 31F(9) and subsection 46(6) of the
      Fisheries Management Act.  These provisions allow a party to a dealing
      to lodge with AFMA the document relating to a charge over corporate
      property required to be lodged with ASIC under section 263 of the
      Corporations Act 2001, instead of the documents required under the
      Fisheries Management Act.

   9. From the PPS Act registration commencement time, a charge over
      corporate property will be a PPSA security interest and these types of
      interests will no longer be required to be registered with ASIC.

    Priority between statutory fishing rights options or fishing rights and
    PPSA security interests

    Items 7 and 12

  10. These items set out the priority between (i) section 31F interests in
      statutory fishing rights options or section 46 interests in fishing
      rights and (ii) PPSA security interests.

  11. Interests under section 31F or section 46 will have priority over
      unperfected PPSA security interests in the same property.

  12. Where an interest under section 31F or section 46 is registered on the
      Register of Statutory Fishing Rights before a PPSA security interest
      in the same property is perfected under the PPS Act, the interest
      under section 31F or section 46 will have priority over the PPSA
      security interest.

  13. Where a PPSA security interest is perfected under the PPS Act before
      an interest under section 31F or section 46 is registered on the
      Register of Statutory Fishing Rights, the PPSA security interest will
      have priority over the interest under section 31F or section 46.

  14. These items also apply subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to interests
      under section 31F and section 46 of the Fisheries Management Act.
      Applying subsection 73(2) ensures the priority between a section 31F
      interest or section 46 interest and a security interest in the same
      property is determined in accordance with the Fisheries Management Act
      after the PPS Act registration commencement time (under the rules set
      out in these items).

    Dealing with a statutory fishing rights option

    Items 8-9

  15. These items maintain current rights by ensuring that the holder of a
      statutory fishing rights option may deal with the option subject to
      any rights or interests in that option that are PPSA security
      interests or that appear on the Register of Statutory Fishing Rights.



    Dealing with a fishing right

    Items 13-14

  16. These items maintain current rights by ensuring that, except where a
      condition of a fishing right provides otherwise, the holder of a
      fishing right may deal with the fishing right subject to any rights or
      interests in the fishing right that are PPSA security interests or
      that appear on the Register of Statutory Fishing Rights.

    Repeal of subsection 50(3)

    Items 15 and 18

  17. These items remove the requirement that AFMA must notify parties with
      an interest in a fishing right under section 46 of the Fisheries
      Management Act when a notation is made on the Register of Statutory
      Fishing Rights in relation to the cancellation, suspension, revocation
      or rectification of a registration of a fishing right.  This reflects
      the fact there is no similar requirement under the PPS Act.

  18. The amendment will have a transitional effect to ensure that where the
      AFMA makes the notation giving rise to the requirement to notify
      parties before the PPS Act registration commencement time, AFMA must
      comply with the requirement to notify the relevant parties.

    Enforcement

    Item 16

  19. This item ensures that the seizure, detention or forfeiture of a boat
      or any other property under the Fisheries Management Act has effect
      despite any enforcement action taken against the property under the
      PPS Act.  Enforcement under the Fisheries Management Act will have
      effect regardless of whether the seizure, detention or forfeiture
      under that Act occurred before or after a secured party commences
      enforcement action under the PPS Act.

    Amendment of the Torres Strait Fisheries Act


    Definition of PPSA security interest

    Item 19

  20. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
      interpretation section (subsection 3(1)) of the Torres Strait
      Fisheries Act.  A PPSA security interest is a security interest to
      which the PPS Act applies or a transitional security interest to which
      Division 4 of Part 9.4 of the PPS Act applies (being an interest
      subject to the PPS Act as a result of a bankruptcy or insolvency, or
      where an existing secured party has assented to the PPS Act by
      voluntarily registering their interest on the PPS Register).

  21. The definition has been included to clarify references to 'PPSA
      security interests' in the amendments to the Torres Strait Fisheries
      Act.

    Enforcement

    Item 20

  22. This item ensures that the seizure, detention or forfeiture of a boat
      or any other property under the Torres Strait Fisheries Act has effect
      despite any enforcement action taken against the property under the
      PPS Act.  Enforcement under the Torres Strait Fisheries Act will have
      effect regardless of whether the seizure, detention or forfeiture
      under that Act occurred before or after a secured party commences
      enforcement action under the PPS Act.

    Explanation of items




    6.   Schedule 2 - Intellectual property legislation

    Schedule 2 amends the Designs Act 2003, Trade Marks Act 1995 and
    Patents Act 1990 to remove the effect of security interests registered
    on the registers established under those Acts.  The amendments will
    continue to allow PPSA security interests to be registered under the
    relevant intellectual property legislation after the PPS Act
    registration commencement time, but will provide that such registration
    may have no effect on the rights of the registered owner.

    Schedule 2 also amends the Plant Breeder's Rights Act 1994 to
    acknowledge that a security interest can be granted over a plant
    breeder's right.

    Commencement

1. Schedule 2 will commence on the PPS Act registration commencement time.
   The PPS Act registration commencement time is the first day of the month
   that is 26 months after the month in which the PPS Bill is given Royal
   Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister.  The Government
   expect the registration commencement time will be in May 2011.

Amendment of the Designs Act 2003


    Definition of a PPSA security interest

    Item 1

2. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
   definitions section (section 5) of the Designs Act.  The definition
   includes a security interest to which the PPS Act applies and a
   transitional security interest to which Division 4 of Part 9.4 of the PPS
   Act applies.

3. The definition has been included to clarify references to PPSA security
   interests in the amendments to the Designs Act.

    Amendment of section 12

    Item 2

4. Subsection 12(1) of the Designs Act provides that the rights of a
   registered owner of a design are subject to any rights appearing in the
   Register of Designs.

5. PPSA security interests will continue to be recordable on the Register
   of Designs.  This is to enable such registrants to receive notifications,
   given an opportunity to be heard, or given the opportunity to make
   submissions under subsections 50(2), 52(3) and (5), 67(2) and (3), 68(2)
   and 68(4) of the Designs Act.

6. However, item 2 will have the effect that interests that appear on the
   Register of Designs and meet the definition of a PPSA security interest,
   will not have any effect on the rights of the registered owner after the
   PPS Act registration commencement time (see item 7 for the application of
   this rule).  This amendment will encourage registration of PPSA security
   interests on the PPS Register after the PPS Act registration commencement
   time and will assist in ensuring that priority issues between PPSA
   security interests registered on either the Register of Designs or the
   PPS Register are avoided.

    Item 3

7. Subsection 12(3) of the Designs Act currently provides that equities, in
   relation to a registered design may be enforced against the registered
   owner, except to the prejudice of a purchaser in good faith for value.

8. Item 3 will have the effect that the rule in subsection 12(3) will not
   apply in relation to a PPSA security interest.  This is because the PPS
   Act will govern dealings with PPSA security interests over registered
   designs, including enforcement and taking a registered design free of an
   existing PPSA security interest (taking-free).  The note to be added
   further assists readers in identifying the relevant provisions in the PPS
   Act relating to enforcement and taking-free of an existing PPSA security
   interest.

    Amendment of section 118

    Items 4

9. Section 118 of the Designs Act currently provides that the Register of
   Designs is prima facie evidence of any particulars entered in it.

10. This item amends section 118 of the Designs Act so that this section
   does not apply in relation to any particulars recorded in the Register of
   Designs in relation to a PPSA security interest.  This amendment is
   required because whilst PPSA security interests are registrable on the
   Register of Designs, such interests will not have any effect on the
   rights of the registered owner after the PPS Act registration
   commencement time (see item 2).  Consequently, from the PPS Act
   registration commencement time onwards, the Register of Designs will not
   be prima facie evidence of PPSA security interests registered in it.

    Amendment of section 119

    Items 5 and 6

11. Section 119 of the Designs Act currently provides that a document, in
   relation to which particulars have not been entered in the Register of
   Designs, is not admissible in any proceedings as proof of the title to a
   design or to an interest in a design, unless circumstances outlined in
   paragraphs (a) or (b) of section 119 exist.

12. These items amend section 119 so that this section would not apply to
   PPSA security interests.  This amendment will allow for the operation of
   section 174 of the PPS Act, which provides that certain particulars
   relating to registrations on the PPS Register are admissible as evidence.



    Application of amendments

    Item 7

13. This item clarifies that parties with a dealing, enforcement action, or
   court proceedings in relation to a registered design (or an interest in a
   registered design) which have already started (but not yet finished) as
   at the PPS Act registration commencement time, should be able to rely on
   the rules which apply prior to the PPS Act registration commencement
   time.

14. A practical application of this amendment may be in relation to an
   interest holder that has a registration on the Register of Designs prior
   to the PPS Act registration commencement time.  That interest holder
   would consider that their interests recorded on the Register of Designs
   would constrain the registered owner's rights and that such recordings
   would be admissible as evidence.  Item 7 will ensure that this
   understanding remains valid.

    Amendments to the Patents Act


Definition of a PPSA security interest


Items 8 and 14


15. These items insert the term 'PPSA security interest' into the list of
   expressions in section 3 for the term to be defined in the Dictionary in
   Schedule 1 of the Patents Act.  The definition includes a security
   interest to which the PPS Act applies and a transitional security
   interest to which Division 4 of Part 9.4 of the PPS Act applies.

16. The definition has been included to clarify references to 'PPSA
   security interests' in the amendments to the Patents Act.

    Amendment of section 189

    Item 9

17. Subsection 189(1) of the Patents Act provides that the rights of a
   registered owner of a patent are subject to any rights appearing in the
   Register of Patents.

18. PPSA security interests will continue to be recordable on the Register
   of Patents.  However, item 9 will have the effect that interests that
   appear on the Register of Patents, and meet the definition of a PPSA
   security interest, will not have any effect on the rights of the
   registered owner after the PPS Act registration commencement time (see
   item 15 for the application of this rule).  This amendment will encourage
   registration of PPSA security interests on the PPS Register after the PPS
   Act registration commencement time, and will assist in ensuring that
   priority issues between PPSA security interest registered on either the
   Register of Patents and PPS Register are avoided.

    Item 10

19. Subsection 189(3) of the Patents Act currently provides that equities,
   in relation to a patent may be enforced against the registered owner,
   except to the prejudice of a purchaser in good faith for value.

20. Item 10 will have the effect that the rule in subsection 189(3) would
   not apply in relation to a PPSA security interest.  This is because the
   PPS Act will govern dealings with PPSA security interests over patents,
   including enforcement and taking-free of an existing PPSA security
   interest.  The note to be added further assists readers in identifying
   the relevant provisions in the PPS Act relating to enforcement and taking-
   free of an existing PPSA security interest.

Amendment of section 195


    Item 11

21. Section 195 of the Patents Act currently provides that the Register of
   Patents is prima facie evidence of any particulars entered in it.

22. This item amends section 195 of the Patents Act so that this section
   will no longer apply to PPSA security interests.  This amendment is
   required because whilst PPSA security interests will continue to be
   recordable on the Register of Patents, such interests that appear on the
   Register of Patents will not have any effect on the rights of the
   registered owner after the PPS Act registration commencement time (see
   item 9).  Consequently, from the PPS Act registration commencement time
   onwards, the Register of Patents will not provide prima facie evidence
   when it comes to PPSA security interests over patents.

    Amendment of section 196

    Items 12-13

23. Section 196 of the Patents Act currently provides that a document, of
   which particulars have not been entered in the Register of Patents, is
   not admissible to any proceedings as proof of title to a patent or to an
   interest in a patent, unless circumstances outlined in paragraphs (a) or
   (b) of section 196 exists.

24. These items amend section 196 so that this section would not apply to
   PPSA security interests.  This amendment will allow for the operation of
   section 174 of the PPS Act, which provides that certain particulars
   relating to registrations on the PPS Register are admissible as evidence.

    Application of amendments

    Item 15

25. This item clarifies that parties with a dealing, enforcement action, or
   court proceedings in relation to a patent (or an interest in a patent)
   which have already started (but not yet finished) as at the PPS Act
   registration commencement time, should be able to rely on the rules which
   apply prior to the PPS Act registration commencement time.

26. A practical application of this amendment may be in relation to an
   interest holder that has a registration on the Register of Patents prior
   to the PPS Act registration commencement time.  That interest holder
   would consider that their interests recorded on the Register of Patents
   would constrain the registered owner's rights and that such recordings
   would be admissible as evidence.  Item 15 will ensure that this
   understanding remains valid.

    Amendment of the Plant Breeder's Rights Act


    Application of the PPS Act

    Item 16

27. Section 20 of the Plant Breeder's Rights Act provides that the plant
   breeder's right is personal property.

28. This item inserts notes after section 20.  Note 1 clarifies that the
   PPS Act applies to the plant breeder's right, and any licence in the
   plant breeder's right, as intellectual property.  Note 2 informs readers
   that section 106 of the PPS Act corresponds to subsection 20(3) of the
   Plant Breeder's Rights Act.

    Item 17

29. Section 25 of the Plant Breeder's Rights Act provides that the right to
   apply for the plant breeder's right is personal property.

30. This item inserts a note after section 25 informing readers that the
   PPS Act deals with security interests in personal property, including a
   right to apply for the plant breeder's right.

31.  The PPS Act will apply of its own force over personal property.  The
   inclusion of items 16 and 17 should not be used to support the argument
   that the PPS Act does not apply to personal property provided under
   certain legislation if similar notes are not inserted in those pieces of
   legislation.

    Amendment of the Trade Marks Act


    Definition of a PPSA security interest

    Item 18

32. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
   definitions section (section 6) of the Trade Marks Act.  The definition
   includes a security interest to which the PPS Act applies and a
   transitional security interest to which Division 4 of Part 9.4 of the PPS
   Act applies.

33. The definition has been included to clarify references to PPSA security
   interests in the amendments to the Trade Marks Act.

    Amendment of section 22

    Item 19

34. Subsection 22(1) provides that the trade mark owner can deal with the
   trade mark as absolute owner and give good discharges subject only to any
   rights appearing on the Register of Trade Marks.

35. PPSA security interests will continue to be recordable on the Register
   of Trade Marks.  This is to enable such registrants to receive
   notifications, given an opportunity to be heard, or given the opportunity
   to make submissions under sections 84(2), 84A(4), 84A (5) and 111 of the
   Trade Marks Act.

36. However, item 19 will have the effect that interests that appear on the
   Register of Trade Marks and meet the definition of a PPSA security
   interest, will not have any effect on the rights of the registered owner
   after the PPS Act registration commencement time (see item 24 for the
   application of this rule).  This amendment will encourage registration of
   PPSA security interests on the PPS Register after the PPS Act
   registration commencement time, and will assist in ensuring that priority
   issues between PPSA security interests registered on either the Register
   of Trade Marks and the PPS Register are avoided.

    Item 20

37. Subsection 22(3) of the Trade Marks Act currently provides that
   equities, in relation to a registered trade mark may be enforced against
   the registered owner, except to the prejudice of a purchaser in good
   faith for value.

38. This item will have the effect that the rule in subsection 22(3) would
   not apply in relation to a PPSA security interest.  This is because the
   PPS Act will govern dealings with PPSA security interests over registered
   trade marks, including enforcement and taking-free of an existing PPSA
   security interest.  The note to be added further assists readers in
   identifying the relevant provisions in the PPS Act relating to
   enforcement and taking-free of an existing PPSA security interest.

39. It should be noted that although subsection 21(2) is somewhat similar
   to subsection 22(3) - in that both subsections are concerned with
   enforcement of equities - the former has not been amended whereas the
   latter has.  The reason for this is that subsection 21(2) recognises that
   there are different types of equities and that these equities will have
   their own enforcement rules.  This does not contradict the operation of
   the enforcement rules in the PPS Act.

40. If the equity is a PPSA security interest, then under subsection 21(2)
   the PPS Act enforcement rules will operate in relation to that equity.

41. Subsection 22(3) on the other hand authorises enforcement of an equity
   in a trade mark, subject to a restriction stated in terms of a general
   principle.  The PPS Act adequately authorises the enforcement of PPS Act
   equities in trade marks, subject to particular rules (not the general
   principle) that do not necessarily apply in relation to equities that are
   PPSA security interests.  Therefore, equities that are PPSA security
   interests are expressly excluded from the operation of subsection 22(3)
   to avoid any inconsistency between subsection 22(3) and the PPS Act.

    Amendment of section 113

    Item 21

42. Section 113 of the Trade Marks Act currently provides that if a person
   (other than the registered owner) claims to have an interest that is not
   recordable under Part 10 of the Trade Marks Act 1995 (i.e.  not an
   assignment or transmission of title), the person and the registered owner
   may together apply to have the interest recorded on the Register of Trade
   Marks.

43. This item amends section 113 so that any person can apply to the
   Registrar of Trade Marks to have the particulars of a claim to an
   interest that is not recordable under Part 10 to be recorded in the
   Register of Trade Marks.  The application must contain evidence of the
   claim asserted.

44. This item will allow a security interest holder to apply to have their
   interest recorded on the Trade Marks Register without the joinder of the
   registered owner of the trade mark.

    Amendment of section 117

    Item 22

45. Section 117 of the Trade Marks Act currently provides that if a person
   has applied for the registration of a trade mark, and another person
   claims to have an interest in, or a right in respect of, the trade mark,
   they may together apply to the Registrar of Trade Marks for a record to
   be kept of the other person's claim.

46. This item amends section 117 so that any person can apply to the
   Registrar of Trade Marks to have the particulars of a claim to an
   interest recorded on the Register of Trade Marks without the joinder of
   the applicant for the trade mark.  Consequently, a security interest
   holder can apply to have their interest recorded on the Trade Marks
   Register without the joinder of the person who has applied for the
   registration of the trade mark.

    Amendment of section 210

    Item 23

47. Section 210 of the Trade Marks Act currently provides that the Register
   of Trade Marks is prima facie evidence of any particulars entered in it.

48. This item amends sections 210 so that this section would no longer
   apply to PPSA security interests.  This amendment is required because
   whilst PPSA security interests are registrable on the Register of Trade
   Marks, such interests would not have any effect on the rights of the
   registered owner after the PPS Act registration commencement time (see
   item 19).  Consequently, from the PPS Act registration commencement time
   onwards, the Register of Trade Marks will not be prima facie evidence of
   PPSA security interests registered on it.

    Application of amendments

    Item 24

49. This item clarifies that parties with a dealing, enforcement action, or
   court proceedings in relation to a registered trade mark (or an interest
   in a registered trade mark) which have already started (but not yet
   finished) as at the PPS Act registration commencement time, should be
   able to rely on the rules which apply prior to the PPS Act registration
   commencement time.

50. A practical application of this amendment may be in relation to an
   interest holder that has a registration on the Register of Trade Marks
   prior to the PPS Act registration commencement time.  That interest
   holder would consider that their interests recorded on the Register of
   Trade Marks would constrain the registered owner's rights and that such
   recordings would be admissible as evidence.  Item 24 would ensure that
   this understanding remains valid.

    Explanation of items




    7.   Schedule 3 - Maritime legislation

Schedule 3 amends the Shipping Registration Act 1981 to restrict the
application of the Act so that it no longer applies to mortgages over
ships.  The amendments will prevent the registration on the Australian
Register of Ships (ARS) of mortgages over ships and the lodgement of
caveats in relation to PPSA security interests.  Existing mortgages on the
ARS will be migrated to the PPS Register.  The result will be that the PPS
Register will be the sole register for the registration of mortgages and
other PPSA security interests in ships.  The PPS Act will govern the
creation, enforceability and priority of security interest in ships,
including mortgages.  The power of the Supreme Courts to rectify the ARS
will be extended to the PPS Register to ensure the Court's power is not
restricted when PPSA security interests currently registered on the ARS are
migrated to the PPS Register.  Under the Admiralty Act 1988, the Federal
Court is able to exercise the same power as the Supreme Courts under the
Shipping Registration Act to rectify the ARS.  Schedule 3 includes a minor
amendment to the Admiralty Act 1988 to enable the Federal Court to also
rectify the PPS Register.

This schedule also amends the Marine Navigation Levy Collection Act 1989,
Marine Navigation (Regulatory Functions) Levy Collection Act 1991,
Protection of the Sea (Civil Liability) Act 1981, Protection of the Sea
(Civil Liability for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage) Act 2008, Protection of
the Sea (Harmful Anti-fouling Systems) Act 2006, Protection of the Sea
(Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Act 1983 and the Protection of the Sea
(Shipping Levy Collection) Act 1981 to ensure that enforcement action taken
under this legislation against goods will not be frustrated by a secured
party enforcing against the same goods under the PPS Act.

Schedule 3 amends the Navigation Act 1912 to ensure that a number of
statutory liens and charges under that Act have priority over PPSA security
interests while preserving the current priority as between non-PPSA
security interests.

    Commencement

    7.1  Schedule 3 will commence on the PPS Act registration commencement
    time.  The PPS Act registration commencement time is the first day of
    the month that is 26 months after the month in which the PPS Bill is
    given Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister.  The
    Government expect the registration commencement time will be in May
    2011.

    Amendment of the Admiralty Act


    Amendment of section 32

    Item 1

2. Section 32 of the Admiralty Act provides that in proceedings in the
   Federal Court on a proprietary maritime claim, the orders that the court
   may make include orders of the kind that a court may make under section
   59 of the Shipping Registration Act.

3. This item inserts a reference to section 59A of the Shipping
   Registration Act into section 32 of the Admiralty Act.  Section 59A will
   be inserted into the Shipping Registration Act by item 25 of schedule 3.
   Item 1 is intended to give the Federal Court the same powers with respect
   to rectification of the PPS Register as section 59A will grant to the
   State and Territory Supreme Courts.

    Amendment of the Marine Navigation Levy Collection Act


    Enforcement

    Items 2-3

4. These items insert a new subsection into section 10 of the Marine
   Navigation Levy Collection Act.  Section 10 provides that an officer of
   Customs may detain a ship for an unpaid levy, until the levy is paid.

5. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its PPSA security interest (by seizing the detained property
   under section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to
   section 10 of the Marine Navigation Levy Collection Act.

    Amendment of the Marine Navigation (Regulatory Functions) Levy
    Collection Act


    Enforcement

    Items 4-5

6. These items insert a new subsection into section 9 of the Marine
   Navigation (Regulatory Functions) Levy Collection Act.  Section 9
   provides that an officer of Customs may detain a ship for an unpaid levy,
   until the levy is paid.

7. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its PPSA security interest (by seizing the detained property
   under section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to
   section 9 of the Marine Navigation (Regulatory Functions) Levy Collection
   Act.

    Amendment of the Navigation Act

    Definition of a PPSA security interest

    Item 6

8. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
   interpretation section (subsection 6(1)) of the Navigation Act.  A PPSA
   security interest is a security interest to which the PPS Act applies or
   a transitional security interest to which Division 4 of Part 9.4 of the
   PPS Act applies (being an interest subject to the PPS Act as a result of
   a bankruptcy or insolvency, or where an existing secured party has
   assented to the PPS Act by voluntarily registering their interest on the
   PPS Register).

9. The definition has been included to clarify references to PPSA security
   interests in the amendments to the Navigation Act.

    Amendment of section 83

    Items 7-8

10. Section 83 recognises and gives statutory effect to the common law
   position that unpaid seamen have a lien over the ship for their wages.
   This lien is given priority over other liens by virtue of subsection
   83(2).

11. These items amend subsection 83(2) of the Navigation Act to clarify the
   position of the seamen's lien, by continuing its priority over all other
   liens and giving it priority over all PPSA security interests.

12. These items also apply subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to a lien under
   section 83 of the Navigation Act.  Applying subsection 73(2) ensures the
   priority between a lien under section 83 and a security interest in the
   same property is determined in accordance with the Navigation Act after
   the PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Amendment of section 128

    Item 9

13. Section 128 of the Navigation Act provides that amounts outstanding to
   an authority in relation to expenses incurred in attending to sick or
   injured seamen are a charge over the vessel.  This item inserts new
   subsections 128(2A) and 128(2B) of the Act.

14. The amendment will clarify the position of the charge, by giving it
   priority over PPSA security interests.

15. These items also apply subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to a charge
   under section 128 of the Navigation Act.  Applying subsection 73(2)
   ensures the priority between a charge under section 128 and a security
   interest in the same property is determined in accordance with the
   Navigation Act after the PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Amendment of section 298

    Item 10

16. Section 298 of the Navigation Act provides for a charge over a wreck
   for damage to land occasioned in attending to the wreck, which is
   recoverable as salvage.

17. The amendments will clarify the position of the charge, by giving it
   priority over PPSA security interests.

18. This item applies subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to a charge under
   section 298.  Applying subsection 73(2) ensures the priority between a
   charge under section 298 and a security interest in the same property is
   determined in accordance with the Navigation Act after the PPS Act
   registration commencement time.

    Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Civil Liability) Act


    Enforcement

    Item 11

19. This item inserts a new subsection into section 22 of the Protection of
   the Sea (Civil Liability) Act.  Where AMSA incurs expenses under the
   Protection of the Sea (Powers of Intervention) Act 1981, the amount is a
   charge over the ship (sections 20 and 21 of the Protection of the Sea
   (Civil Liability) Act).  Under section 22, this gives rise to a power to
   detain a ship until the amount is paid or security for payment of the
   amount is provided.

20. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its security interest (by seizing the detained property under
   section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to section
   22 of the Protection of the Sea (Civil Liability) Act.

    Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Harmful Anti-fouling Systems)
    Act


    Enforcement

    Item 12

21. This item inserts a new subsection into section 18 of the Protection of
   the Sea (Harmful Anti-fouling Systems) Act.  Section 18 gives AMSA the
   power to detain a ship if there are reasonable grounds for believing that
   an offence against this Act has been committed in respect of the ship.

22. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its security interest (by seizing the detained property under
   section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to section
   18 of the Protection of the Sea (Harmful Anti-fouling Systems) Act.

    Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Prevention of Pollution from
    Ships) Act


    Enforcement

    Item 13

23. This item inserts a new subsection into section 27A of the Protection
   of the Sea (Prevention of Pollution from Ships) Act.  Section 27A gives
   AMSA power to detain a foreign vessel in connection with pollution
   breaches.

24. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its security interest (by seizing the detained property under
   section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to section
   27A of the Protection of the Sea (Prevention of Pollution from Ships)
   Act.

    Amendment of the Protection of the Sea (Shipping Levy Collection) Act


    Enforcement

    Item 14

25. The item inserts a new subsection into section 12 of the Protection of
   the Sea (Shipping Levy Collection) Act.  Section 12 provides that a
   Collector, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901, or another
   authorised person, may detain a ship for an unpaid levy, until the levy
   is paid.

26. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its security interests (by seizing the detained property under
   section 123 of the PPS Act) while a ship is detained pursuant to section
   12 of the Protection of the Sea (Shipping Levy Collection) Act.

    Amendment of the Shipping Registration Act


Amendment of subsection 3(1) and heading of Part III


    Items 15-17

27. These items repeal the definition of mortgage, insert a definition of
   PPSA security interest and substitute 'mortgages' with 'security
   interests and other dealings' in the heading of Part III of the Shipping
   Registration Act.

28. The definition of a PPSA security interest inserted by item 16 will
   include a security interest to which the PPS Act applies but exclude a
   transitional security interest under the PPS Act.  In combination with
   the relevant operative rules, the exclusion of transitional security
   interests from the definition will ensure that parties who enter into a
   security agreement before the PPS Act registration commencement time have
   the same rights after that time.  For example, the right to lodge a
   caveat under section 47A in respect of their interest.

29. The amendments support the repeal of the Shipping Registration Act's
   comprehensive regime for ship mortgages and align the terminology used by
   the Act with the functional approach taken by the PPS Act.

Repeal of sections 38 to 44A


    Item 18

30. Sections 38 to 44A of the Shipping Registration Act establish a
   comprehensive regime for creation, registration, priority, transfer,
   enforcement and discharge of ship mortgages.

31. Item 18 is intended to repeal the comprehensive ship mortgage regime
   established by sections 38 to 44A.  Ship mortgages will be PPSA security
   interests, which could be registered on the PPS Register.

    Amendment of section 47A

    Item 20

32. Section 47A of the Shipping Registration Act permits a person who
   claims an interest in a ship or a share in a ship under an unregistered
   instrument to lodge a caveat with the Registrar of Ships.  The lodging of
   a caveat forbids entry in the ARS of any instrument relating to any
   dealing with that ship or share of the ship until notice is given to the
   caveator.

33. This item will have the effect that a person claiming an interest in a
   ship or share in a ship which is a PPSA security interest may not lodge a
   caveat with the Registrar of Ships with respect to that interest.  By
   virtue of the definition of PPSA security interest excluding transitional
   security interests, parties will be entitled to continue to lodge caveats
   in respect of security interests that arise out of a security agreement
   created before the PPS Act registration commencement time.

34. This item supports the functional approach taken by the PPS Act and the
   character of the PPS Register, which is intended to be the principal
   Australian register of security interests.  It is intended that a person
   wishing to protect a PPSA security interest in a ship could protect that
   interest by perfecting it under the PPS Act.

Amendment of paragraph 47B(1)(a) and (b)


    Item 21

35. Item 21 removes the requirement on the Registrar of Ships to notify
   mortgagees in respect of caveats entered on the ARS.  From the PPS Act
   registration commencement time, ship mortgages will be registered on the
   PPS Register instead of the ARS.

    Item 35

36. This item will ensure that the amendment under item 21 does not apply,
   and the obligation on the Registrar of Ships to notify mortgagees
   continues, where a caveat is lodged on the ARS before the PPS Act
   registration commencement time.

    Amendment of subsection 47D(3)

    Item 22

37. Except to the extent that a caveat specifies otherwise, subsection
   47D(3) of the Shipping Registration Act allows for the Registrar of Ships
   to enter into the ARS (1) the transmission of a ship, or a share in a
   ship, to a person if the person becomes entitled to the transmission  by
   operation of law, and (2) a dealing by a mortgagee of a ship or share of
   a ship, under the mortgage, where the caveator has consented or the
   caveat has lapsed.

38.  This item amends that subsection to remove the reference to the
   Registrar of Ships registering a dealing of a mortgagee.

    Amendment of subparagraph 58(1)(b)(i), paragraphs 58(3)(a) and
    66(3)(a), subsections 66(4) to (9) and (11), and section 79

Items 23, 24, 26, 27 & 30


    6.36 These items remove references to mortgages in the Shipping
    Registration Act which are redundant because of the repeal of the ship
    mortgage scheme in sections 38 to 44A.

    Insertion of s 59A

    Item 25

39. With one exception, section 59A is intended to grant substantially the
   same power to the Supreme Courts of the States and Territories with
   respect to rectification of the PPS Register as section 59 grants those
   courts with respect to rectification of the ARS.  The amendment will
   preserve the power of the courts to rectify ship mortgage registrations
   after those registrations are migrated from the ARS to the PPS Register,
   and extend their power to include the power to rectify PPS registrations
   of PPSA security interests in ships which are not ship mortgages.

40. Unlike section 59, section 59A is not intended to grant power to the
   courts to rectify omitted entries where the omitted entry relates to
   something that was required to be registered.  Unlike the Shipping
   Registration Act, the PPS Act does not impose obligations to register.

    Item 36

41. This item provides that item 25 applies in relation to a registration
   under the PPS Act with respect to a security interest regardless of when
   the security interest arises.

Amendments of section 47, subsections 74(1) and 74(2), section 81 and
subsection 82(1) of the Act


Items 19, 28, 29, 31 & 32


42. These items remove references to provisions which are repealed by this
   Schedule or which will not have a relevant affect after the PPS Act
   registration commencement time (the commencement time for items in this
   Schedule).

    Application of amendments

    Item 33

43. This item will clarify that items 15, 17 to 19 and 22 to 24 apply in
   relation to the interest of a mortgagor in a mortgage of a ship, or of a
   share in a ship, regardless of when the interest arose.  This ensures
   that at the PPS Act registration commencement time, the Shipping
   Registration Act no longer provides for mortgages over ships.

44. Any mortgages that are registered on the ARS before the PPS Act
   registration commencement time will continue to have the same priority
   they had between themselves before the PPS Act registration commencement
   time, subject to Chapter 9 (transitional provisions) of the PPS Act.  For
   example, a registered mortgage in a ship will continue to have priority
   over a later registered mortgage in the same ship where both mortgages
   were registered on the ARS before the PPS Act registration commencement
   time.

45. The transitional provisions of the PPS Act can only alter the existing
   priorities between competing interests where one of the parties becomes
   bankrupt or insolvent, or where an existing secured party has assented to
   the PPS Act by voluntarily registering their interests on the PPS
   Register.

    Item 34

46. This item will ensure that item 20 does not affect the validity or
   effectiveness of caveats lodged prior to the PPS Act registration
   commencement time.

    Item 37

47. This item provides that the requirement in subsection 66(4) of the
   Shipping Registration Act (as in force immediately before this Schedule
   commences at the PPS Act registration commencement time) to give notice
   to a mortgagee stops applying when this Schedule commences.

    Item 38

48. This item provides that items 28 and 29 do not apply to breaches of
   subsections 74(1) and 74(2) (as in force immediately before this Schedule
   commences at the PPS Act registration commencement time) that occurred
   before items 28 and 29 commence.  The contravention of sections of the
   Shipping Registration Act listed in subsections 74(1) and 74(2) is an
   offence under that Act.





    Explanation of items




  8 Schedule 4 - Personal Property Securities Act 2009

    Schedule 4 makes minor technical amendments in response to submissions
    made to the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee's inquiry
    into the provisions of PPS Bill and subsequently to the Attorney-
    General's Department.  The PPS Bill is being amended through the
    Consequential Bill, rather than by way of parliamentary amendments, to
    avoid the need for States who have given a referral of power to give a
    further referral of power in respect of the amendments.

    Commencement

1. Items 1-7, 9-35 and 37-64 of Schedule 4 will commence on the later of
   (1) the start of the day the Consequential Bill receives Royal Assent,
   and (2) immediately after the commencement of the PPS Act.

2. Items 8 and 36 of Schedule 4 will commence on the latest of (1) the
   start of the day the Consequential Bill receives Royal Assent, (2)
   immediately after the commencement of the PPS Act, and (3) the start of
   the day on which section 3 of the National Consumer Credit Protection Act
   2009 commences.

    Amendment of section 6

    Item 1

3. Section 6 of the PPS Act sets out the connection that a PPSA security
   interest (an interest in relation to personal property provided for by a
   transaction that, in substance, secures payment or performance of an
   obligation (section 12 of the PPS Act)) in goods (tangible property that
   is not financial property or investment entitlements (section 10 of the
   PPS Act)), financial property (chattel paper, currency, a document of
   title, an investment entitlement or a negotiable instrument (section 10
   of the PPS Act)) or intangible property (personal property which is not
   financial property, goods or an investment entitlement (section 10 of the
   PPS Act) must have with Australia for the PPS Act to apply.

4. Section 6(1) of the PPS Act applies the Act to a security interest in
   goods or financial property if the location of the goods or property is
   in Australia or the grantor is an Australian entity.

5. Section 6(2) of the PPS Act applies the Act to security interests in
   intangible property if the grantor is an Australian entity.

6. This item inserts a new subsection 6(1A) extending the application of
   the PPS Act to a PPSA security interest in an 'investment entitlement' if
   the investment entitlement intermediary is located in Australia or the
   grantor of the security interest is an Australian entity.  An 'investment
   entitlement' is the rights of a person in whose name an investment
   entitlement intermediary maintains an investment entitlement account
   (section 15(1) of the PPS Act).  An investment entitlement account is an
   account to which interests in financial products (within the meaning of
   the Corporations Act 2001) may be credit or debited, or an account
   maintained by a CS facility license holder (within the meaning of the
   Corporations Act) (section 15(7) of the PPS Act).

7. This item would align the application of investment entitlements with
   that of financial property under section 6(1).

    Item 2

8. Section 6(2)(e) of the PPS Act currently applies the Act to PPSA
   security interests in intangible property that are created, arise or are
   provided for by a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.  A law
   of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory means, (a) an Act of the
   Commonwealth, the State or the Territory; or (b) an instrument made under
   such an Act.  For example, it applies the Act to licences created by a
   law of a State or Territory and intellectual property created by a law of
   the Commonwealth (section 6(2) of the PPS Act).

9. This item amends section 6(2)(e) of the PPS Act so that the Act also
   applies to a PPSA security interest in intangible property that is
   created, arises or is provided for under the general law of the
   Commonwealth, a State or a Territory.  The general law of the
   Commonwealth, a State or a Territory means the principles and rules of
   the common law and equity (section 10 of the PPS Act).  For example, it
   applies the Act to a right to damages in tort.

    Amendment of section 8

    Items 3 and 4

10. Section 8(1) of the PPS Act provides that the Act does not apply to a
   number of interests (including interests prescribed by regulations).

11. Section 8(1)(d) provides that the PPS Act does not apply to any right
   of set-off or right of combination of accounts.

12. Item 3 adds the words '(within the ordinary meaning of the term
   "accounts")' to the end of section 8(1)(d).  The amendment is necessary
   because the term 'account' is defined in section 10, while the term
   'right of combination of accounts' is a term of art in banking law.
   'Right of combination of accounts' generally means the right of a banker
   to combine several accounts held by a person with a bank (which may have
   debit or credit balances) into a single account with a single net
   balance.

13. The table in section 8(2) lists a number of interests to which the PPS
   Act does apply to despite section 8(1).

14. Item 4 amends the table in section 8(2) by inserting an Item 6 at the
   end of the table.  This amendment permits regulations to apply provisions
   of the PPS Act, specified in those regulations, to security interests
   that would otherwise be excluded from coverage because they are specified
   in section?8(1).

15. The effect will be to allow regulations to be made under section 8(2)
   providing that the Act does apply (to the extent provided for by the
   regulations) to interests excluded by section 8(1).  In particular,
   regulations made under section 8(1)(l) of the Act may exclude certain
   matters from the application of the Act, while the regulations made under
   section 8(2) would provide limited exceptions to those regulations.

    Amendments to section 10

    Item 5

16. Section 10 is the Dictionary or the interpretative section of the PPS
   Act.

17. This item amends the definition of an ADI Account to an account that is
   maintained with an approved deposit-taking institution (for example, a
   banks or credit union) that is payable on demand or at some time in the
   future.  This amendment was required as the previous definition of an ADI
   Account was defined as a protected account within the meaning of the
   Banking Act 1959.  While the Banking Act definition is apt for
   specialised prudential regulation purposes, it was criticised as being
   too complex for use in relation to the PPS Act that will be used by a
   broad cross-section of the community.

    Item 6

18. This item fixes a cross-referencing error in the definition of
   'Australia' in section 10 of the PPS Act.  It replaces the reference to
   'subsection 7(4)' with a reference to 'section?7'.  This does not
   substantively alter the definition of Australia in the PPS Act.

    Item 7

19. This item inserts a definition of 'jurisdiction' into section 10 of the
   PPS Act.  The operation of this definition of jurisdiction works in
   conjunction with subsection?235(6) of the PPS Act, which is discussed
   below.

    Item 8

20. This item inserts a definition for the National Credit Code in the PPS
   Act.  Item 36 of this Schedule omits references the Consumer Credit Code
   and substitutes references to the National Credit Code proposed under the
   National Consumer Protection Bill 2009.  Items 8 and 36 of the Schedule
   will commence at the later of the commencement of balance of the Schedule
   and the commencement of section 3 of the National Consumer Credit
   Protection Act 2009.

    Item 9

21. This item amends a punctuation error in the definition of
   'registration' in section 10 of the PPS Act.  It changes the ';' at the
   end of paragraph (b) of the definition to of registration to '.'  This
   amendment does not alter the definition of 'registration'.

    Amendment to section 12

    Item 10

22. Section 12 of the PPS Act defines the term 'security interest'.

23. Section 75 of the PPS Act recognises that an ADI can take security
   interests in an ADI account held with the ADI.

24. For consistency with section 75, this item inserts a new section 12(4A)
   providing that an ADI may take a PPSA security interest in an ADI account
   that is kept with the ADI.

    Insertion of subsection 14(2A)

    Item 11

25. Section 14 of the PPS Act provides the definition of a 'purchase money
   security interest' (PMSI).  A PMSI is a PPSA security interest in
   collateral created by a seller who secures the obligation to pay the
   purchase price or a person who provides the value to purchase the
   collateral.

26. Section 14(2)(c) excludes from the definition of PMSI a PPSA security
   interest in collateral that (at the time of the interest attaching to the
   collateral) the grantor intends to use predominantly for personal,
   domestic or household purposes.  Section 14(2)(c) is intended to promote
   that availability of finance to small business, by ensuring that general
   PPSA security interests are not eroded by later PMSIs granted to acquire
   personal use assets.

27. This item inserts a new subsection 14(2A) having the effect that a
   security interest in collateral that is required or permitted by the
   regulations to be described by serial numbered may be a PMSI (regardless
   of the purpose for which the serial numbered good was acquired).  This
   provision maintains the priority that PPSA security interests in serial
   number numbered goods (such as motor vehicles) would otherwise have over
   earlier general PPSA security interests.

    Amendment of section 23

    Item 12

28. Section 23 of the PPS Act provides the Guide Statement for Part 2.3 of
   the PPS Act (Possession and control of personal property).  Possession
   generally meaning under the Act being possession by one party exclusive
   of possession by others (section 24 of the PPS Act) and control being
   variously defined under sections 25, 26, 27, 28 and 29 according to the
   collateral involved.

29. This item corrects an error in the Guide Statement by omitting 'goods
   in the possession of a common carrier' and substituting it with the
   phrase 'goods transported by a common carrier'.  This correction ensures
   that the Guide Statement is consistent with section 24(3) of the PPS Act,
   which sets out when a grantor or debtor to whom goods are transported by
   a common carrier acquires possession of the goods.

    Amendments of section 26

    Items 13-15

30. Section 26 of the PPS Act establishes when a secured party has control
   of an investment entitlement that is credited to an investment
   entitlement account.  A secured party would have control of an investment
   entitlement while there is an agreement between the secured party, the
   grantor and the intermediary to the effect that any instructions issued
   by the grantor are subject to approval by the secured party and
   permitting the secured party to deal in the entitlement without the
   consent of the grantor (section 26(1) of the PPS Act).  The secured party
   would have control of an investment entitlement even if the person in
   whose name the intermediary maintains the account retains the right to
   make substitutions for the instrument, to originate instructions to the
   issuer or to otherwise deal with the instrument (section 26(2)).

31. An 'investment entitlement' is the rights of a person in whose name an
   investment entitlement intermediary maintains an investment entitlement
   account (section 15(1) of the PPS Act).

32. An investment entitlement intermediary is a person who maintains
   investment entitlement accounts on behalf of others, or a person who
   operates securities transfer and settlement facilities under an
   Australian CS facility licence (within the meaning of the Corporations
   Act) (section 15(2) of the PPS Act).

33. An investment entitlement account is either an account to which
   interests in financial products may be credited or debited or, in the
   case of an account maintained by a CS facility licence holder, writing
   that records holdings and transfers maintained by the CS facility license
   holder in the course of operating the facility (section?15(7) of the PPS
   Act).

34. These items amend section 26 such that the definition of control in
   section 26 now reflects a more simplified approach to defining control as
   provided in the definition of 'control agreement' in Article 1 of the
   draft 'Convention on Substantive Rules regarding Intermediated
   Securities'.

35. The amended section 26 would define control with the effect that a
   secured party would have control of an investment entitlement where there
   is an agreement between the secured party, the grantor and the
   intermediary to the effect either: (i) that any instructions issued by
   the grantor to the intermediary are subject to approval by the secured
   party, or (ii) permitting the secured party to deal in the entitlement
   without the consent of the grantor in one or more specified
   circumstances.

    Amendment of subsection 32(2)

    Item 16

36. Section 32(2) of the PPS Act caps the amount available to a secured
   party enforcing against both collateral and proceeds to the market value
   of the collateral immediately before the collateral gave rise to the
   proceeds.  This cap does not apply to collateral which is an investment
   instrument.

37. This item amends section 32(2) to extend the exclusion of the cap to
   investment entitlements.

    Amendments of section 39

    Items 17 and 18

38. Section 39 of the PPS Act deals with the continuous perfection of a
   PPSA security interest when the collateral is relocated from a foreign
   jurisdiction to Australia.  It allows the period of continuous perfection
   to begin before the collateral is relocated to Australia.  This is
   important because the priority of the PPSA security interest may depend
   upon when it began to be continuously perfected.

39. Section 39(2) provides the period from which the PPSA security interest
   in the intangible property or financial property will be taken to have
   been continuously perfected under section 39(1).

40. These items substitute a new subsection 39(2) which allows the period
   of continuous perfection of the PPSA security interest to start at the
   beginning of the period during which the PPSA security interest was
   continuously perfected, registered, recorded or otherwise became
   effective against third parties under the law of the foreign jurisdiction
   before the collateral was relocated to Australia.

41. These items also insert a new subsection 39(2A) preventing secured
   parties under subsection 39(2) from taking the benefit of continuous
   perfection under Australian law where the PPSA security interest was not
   perfected, registered, recorded or otherwise enforceable under the law of
   a foreign jurisdiction immediately before relocation to Australia.

    Amendment of section 40

    Item 19

42. Section 40 of the PPS Act provides the rules for continuously
   perfecting a PPSA security interest in intangible property or financial
   property which was governed by the law of a foreign jurisdiction but
   begins to be governed by the law of Australia.

43. Subsection 40(2) provides the period from which the security interest
   in the intangible property or financial property will be taken to have
   been continuously perfected under subsection 40(1).

44. This item substitutes subsections 40(1) and (2) with the effect that
   the period of continuous perfection of the PPSA security interest in the
   collateral under subsection 40(1) starts at the beginning of the period
   during which the PPSA security interest was continuously perfected,
   registered, recorded or otherwise became effective against third parties
   under the law of the foreign jurisdiction before the collateral was
   relocated to Australia.

45. This item also inserts a new subsection 40(2A) preventing secured
   parties from taking the benefit of continuous perfection under the
   Australian law when the PPSA security interest was not perfected,
   registered, recorded or otherwise enforceable under the law of a foreign
   jurisdiction immediately before relocation.

    Amendment of section 41

    Item 20

46. Section 41 of the PPS Act provides the Guide Statement for Part 2.5 of
   the PPS Act (Taking personal property free of security interests).  This
   Guide Statement provides the rules for when personal property may be
   bought or leased free of a PPSA security interest.

47. Paragraphs (a) to (j) in the Guide Statement are a list of the
   circumstances and related rules further defined in Part 2.5 where
   personal property may be bought or leased free of a PPSA security
   interest.  These paragraphs are:

              470B(a)  unperfected security interests;

              471B(b)  personal, domestic or household property;

              472B(c)  serial number defects;

              473B(d)  certain motor vehicles;

              474B(e)  currency;

              475B(f)  taking in the ordinary course of business;

              476B(g)  taking investment interests or entitlements in the
                    ordinary course of trading;

              477B(h)  investment instruments;

              478B(i)  investment entitlements.

              479B(j)  temporarily perfected security interests;




48. This item omits the reference to 'certain motor vehicles' and
   substitutes 'motor vehicles' in order to reflect section 45 of Part 2.5
   of the PPS Act, which provides the rules for acquiring motor vehicles
   free of a PPSA security interest.

49. This item also changes the order of paragraphs (b) to (f) to reflect
   the order these rules are dealt with in Part 2.5.  This new order is
   given as:

              (b) serial number defects;

              (c) motor vehicles;

              (d) taking in the ordinary course of business;

              (e) personal, domestic or household property;

              (f) currency;

50. This item also rectifies punctuation errors in paragraphs (i) and (j).
   The '.' at the end of paragraph (i) is substituted with a ';' and the ';'
   at the end of paragraph (j) is substituted with a '.'

    Amendment of section 43

    Item 21

51. Section 43 provides that a person who acquires personal property that
   is subject to an unperfected PPSA security interest acquires it free of
   the PPSA security interest if they provide 'new value' (meaning value
   other than value provided to reduce or discharge an earlier debt or
   liability (section 10 of the PPS Act) and are not a party to the
   transaction that provides for the PPSA security interest.

52. This item amends subsection 43(1) by omitting the words 'new value' and
   substituting 'value'.  This will make the PPS Act more consistent with
   the approach taken in both the Personal Properties Securities Act (New
   Zealand) (section 52) and Personal Properties Securities Act
   (Saskatchewan) (section 20(3)), which both refer to 'value' and not 'new
   value'.

    Amendment of section 44

    Item 22

53. Section 44 of the PPS Act provides that a buyer or lessee would take
   property free of a PPSA security interest where (i) the buyer/lessee
   provides 'new value', (ii) the property is required to be registered by
   reference to a serial number, and (iii) a search by reference to the
   serial number immediately before the sale/lease would not have disclosed
   the PPSA security interest.

54. This item amends section 44(1) by removing the reference to new value,
   and substituting 'value'.  This will make the PPS Act more consistent
   with the approach taken in both the Personal Properties Securities Act
   (New Zealand) (section 55) and Personal Properties Securities Act
   (Saskatchewan) (sections 30(6) and (7)), which both refer to 'value' and
   not 'new value'.

    Item 23

55. Subsection 44(2) establishes an exception to the taking free rule in
   subsection 44(1).  This exception applies when the purchaser/lessee had
   actual knowledge that the sale or lease constitutes a breach of the
   relevant security agreement at the relevant time.  Under paragraph
   44(3)(a) the relevant time in respect of property bought or leased to be
   used for personal, domestic or household purposes is the time new value
   is first given for the sale or lease.

56. This item amends paragraph 44(3)(a) so that the timing rule in that
   provision applies when personal property is bought or leased for new
   value.

57. This item also rectifies a typographical error by amending the heading
   of section 49 of the PPS Act by omitting 'investment interest' and
   substituting it with 'investment instrument'.

    Amendment of section 51

    Item 24

58. This item corrects a typographical error by omitting a reference to 'an
   investment intermediary' and substituting a reference to 'the investment
   intermediary'.

    Amendment of section 55

    Item 25

59. Section 55 of the PPS Act sets out the default priority rules which
   apply when the PPS Act provides no other way of determining priority
   between competing PPSA security interest in the same collateral.

60. Subsection 55(4) provides that the priority between two or more PPSA
   security interests in collateral that are currently perfected is to be
   determined by the order in which the priority time (subsection 55(5) of
   the PPS Act) for each PPSA security interest occurs.

61. Subsection 55(5) sets out a number of events that can become the
   'priority time', subject to the subsection 55(6) requirement that
   perfection must be continuous.  Subsection 55(5) provides that an event
   listed in paragraphs?55(5)(a) to (c) becomes the 'priority time' if that
   time occurs earlier than any other such event in relation to a competing
   PPSA security interest.

62. The event in paragraph 55(5)(b) occurs when a secured party, or another
   person on their behalf, takes possession of the collateral.

63. This item amends paragraph 55(5)(b) so that the priority time may also
   be when the secured party first perfects the security interest by taking
   control of the collateral.

    Item 26

64. This item amends a cross-referencing error in the note to section 55 of
   the PPS Act by omitting the reference to 'subsection?33(5)' and
   substituting it with a reference to 'subsection 32(5)'.

    Amendment of section 61

    Item 27

65. Section 61 of the PPS Act provides that a secured party may voluntarily
   subordinate their PPSA security interests in collateral to any other
   interest in the collateral.  This can sometimes be necessary as a prior
   perfected PPSA security interest can limit further finance being
   available to a debtor.

66. Subsection 61(2) determines how an agreement to subordinate a PPSA
   security interest may be effective and enforceable.

67. This item amends subsection 61(2) by omitting 'An agreement to
   subordinate a security interest' and replacing it with 'The
   subordination'.  This amendment improves the consistency between
   subsections 61(1) and 61(2) by acknowledging that a subordination need
   not be by agreement, but could be by deed or other instrument.  The
   amendment makes the Act more consistent with the approach taken in the
   Personal Property Security Act 1993 (Saskatchewan) (section 40(1)).

    Item 28

68. This item amends paragraph 61(2)(b) by omitting 'the agreement' and
   substituting 'the subordination', consistently with the amendment to
   subsection 61(1) made by item 33.

    Amendment of section 64

    Item 29

69. Section 64 provides that a secured party with a non-PMSI in an account
   can claim priority over secured parties with a PMSI in the account as
   proceeds of inventory.  There are two situations, outlined in
   paragrpahs?64(1)(a) and (b), where a non-PMSI in accounts can have
   priority over a PMSI.

70. Subparagraph 64(1)(b)(i) requires notice to be given under subsection
   64(2) to each secured party in account of which a registration is
   effective at the time the priority interest (the interest to which
   subsection 64(1) applies) is perfected by registration.

71. This item amends the notice provision in subparagraph 64(1)(b)(i) so
   that the secured party seeking priority will only be required to provide
   notice to the PMSI holder over whom priority is sought (not to all other
   PMSI holders).




    Amendment of section 73

    Item 30

72. Section 73 of the PPS Act determines the priority between PPSA security
   interests under the Act and interests (other than security interests)
   which may arise under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory
   or through operation of the general law.

73. This item inserts subsections 73(7), (8) and (9) to allow the Minister
   to alter the priority of a PPSA security interest relative to an interest
   in the collateral that has arisen through the operation of the general
   law (when the interest is not of a kind affected by subsection 73(1)).

         Example

    A lien over a personal property arises by operation of the general law.
     The priority of the lien relative to PPSA security interests in the
    collateral is not determined by subsection 73(1).  The priority between
    the lien and a PPSA security interest in a personal property will be
    determined in accordance with an instrument made under subsection
    73(8), if, and only if, no law of the Commonwealth (other than the PPS
    Act and that instrument) provides for priority between the lien and the
    PPSA security interest, the instrument provides that subsection 73(7)
    applies to the lien, and the lien arises after the instrument comes
    into effect.

    If the priority between the lien and a PPSA security interest in the
    personal property is not determined in accordance with an instrument
    made under subsection 73(8), then paragraphs 8(1)(b) and (c),
    subsection 8(2), paragraph 140(2)(a) and subsection 254(1) will have
    the effect that priority between the lien and the PPSA security
    interest will be determined in accordance with the general law.

    Amendment of section 77

    Items 31-33

74. Section 77 of the PPS Act sets out priority rules for security
   interests in 'accounts' or 'financial property', where the law of the
   foreign jurisdiction that governs perfection, and the effects of
   perfection or non-perfection does not provide for the public registration
   or recording of interests, or a notice relating to the interest.

75. These items insert a reference to 'investment entitlement' into
   subsections 77(1), (2) and (3).

76. These amendments increase the scope of section 77 to apply its priority
   rules to PPSA security interests in investment entitlements.

    Amendment of section 79

    Item 34

77. Section 79 has the effect that collateral may be transferred despite a
   provision in an agreement (whether or not a security agreement)
   prohibiting the transfer or declaring a transfer to be a default of the
   security agreement.

78. This item amends subsection 79(1) to confine its effect to prohibitions
   on the transfer of the collateral that a security agreement.  The effect
   is that third party may take good title to collateral despite a provision
   in a security agreement prohibiting the transfer.  Other provisions of
   the PPS Act, particularly those in Part 2.5, address whether the person
   will take the collateral free of the PPSA security interest.

    Amendment of section 80

    Item 35

79. Section 80 of the PPS Act establishes that the rights of a transferee
   of an account or chattel paper are subject to certain other rights.

80. This item amends subsection 80(7) to remove the phrase 'collateral that
   is'.  This amendment would allow subsection 80(7) to apply when the
   account or chattel paper is not collateral before the transfer.

    Amendment of section 119

    Item 36

81. Subsection 119(1) of the PPS Act sets out how Chapter 4 of the PPS Act
   (Enforcement of security interests) applies to collateral to which the
   Consumer Credit Code of a State or Territory applies.

82. Subsection 119(2) provides that the regulations made under the PPS Act
   can provide that when a specified provision of the Consumer Credit Code
   of a State or Territory has been complied with that a specified provision
   of the PPS Act it is considered under the PPS Act to have been complied
   with.

83. This item amends both subsections 119(1) and (2) so that instead of
   referring to the 'Consumer Credit Code of a State or Territory' it refers
   to the 'National Credit Code'.  This amendment ensures that the PPS Act
   is concordant with the National Credit Code introduced under the National
   Consumer Protection Bill 2009.

    Amendment of sections 128 and 129

    Items 37 and 38

84. Paragraph 128(2)(b) and subsection 129(1) refer to the term 'commercial
   property', which is defined under section 10 to mean property other than
   'consumer property' (property held by an individual other than property
   held in the course or furtherance (to any degree) of carrying on an
   enterprise to which an ABN has been allocated).

85. These items amend paragraph 128(2)(b) and subsection 129(1) so that
   they apply to collateral that is not used predominately for personal,
   domestic or household purposes (rather than to commercial property).  The
   amendment is intended to align the PPS Act more closely with consumer
   credit laws.

    Amendment of subsection 151(1)

    Item 39

86. Subsection 151(1) of the PPS Act states that a person must not apply to
   register a 'financing statement', or a 'financing change statement', in
   relation to a PPSA security interest unless that the secured party named
   in the application believes on reasonable grounds that the collateral
   secures, or will secure, an obligation (including a payment) owed to the
   secured party named in the application.

87. A 'financial statement' means data registered (or that is to be
   registered) pursuant to an application for registration under subsection
   150(1) (section 10 of the PPS Act).

88. A 'financing change statement' means data amending a registered
   financing statement (section 10 of the PPS Act).

89. This amendment extends the effect of subsection 151(1) to PPSA security
   interests of the kinds specified in subsection 12(3) of the PPS Act which
   do not secure an obligation owed to the secured party named in the
   application.  The amended subsection 151(1) would allow a person to
   register a financing statement, or financial change statement if they
   believe on reasonable grounds that the secured party holds, or will hold,
   a PPSA security interest of the kind mentioned in subsection 12(3).

    Amendment of section 157

    Item 40

90. Section 157 of the PPS Act sets out when a secured party is required to
   give a verification statement to a grantor.  Verifications statement
   means a written statement in the approved form as defined in section 155
   of the PPS Act.

91. Subsection 157(4) provides that a contravention of subsection 157(1)
   constitutes an act or practice involving interference with the privacy of
   the individual for the purposes of section?13 of the Privacy Act 1988.

92. This item amends subsection 157(4) so that a contravention of the
   Privacy Act will only apply where notice was required to be given to an
   individual.  This amendment is required as only individuals have a right
   to privacy under the Privacy Act.

    Insertion of subsection 171(1)

    Item 41

93. Section 171 of the PPS Act sets out the criteria by which a person may
   search the register.

94. This item inserts paragraph 171(1)(da) providing for a person to search
   the register by the unique identifier allocated by the PPS Registrar to a
   registered financing statement.

    Amendment of section 235

    Items 42 and 43

95. Section 235 of the PPS Act sets out where personal property and persons
   are located for the purposes of the Act.

96. Subsection 235(1) provides that personal property is located in the
   particular jurisdiction (whether the jurisdiction of Australia or a
   foreign jurisdiction) in which the personal property is situated.

97. Item 42 amends subsection 235(1) by omitting '(whether the jurisdiction
   of Australia or a foreign jurisdiction)' in order to allow the term
   'jurisdiction', as it appears in subsection 235(1) to be affected by
   subsections 235(6) and (7) proposed to be inserted by item 43.

98. Item 43 amends section 235 to insert subsections 235(6) and (7).

99. This item introduces a definition of 'jurisdiction' for the purposes of
   the PPS Act.  To avoid confusion between the geographical and legal
   meaning of the term, the new subsection refers separately to the
   'jurisdiction' (the geographical sense) and 'laws of the jurisdiction'.

100. In the case of personal property located in Australia, subsection
   235(6) provides that the jurisdiction in which the personal property is
   located is the State or Territory in which it is situated.  In the case
   of a person located in Australia, subsection 235(6) provides that the
   jurisdiction in which the person is located is the State or Territory in
   which the individual's principal place of residence is situated.

101. In a foreign country with a federal character (that is, one which is
   divided into territorial units with separate rules of law), Item 43
   provides that the jurisdiction in which an item of personal property is
   located is the territorial unit in which it is situated.  In the case of
   a person located in a foreign country, this item provides that the
   jurisdiction is the territorial unit in which the individual's principal
   place of residence is situated (subsection 235(7)).

         Example

    The State of California is a territorial unit of the United States of
    America that has its own rules of law as distinct from those that apply
    to the United States of America generally.  If property were situated
    in a place in California, the effect of subsection 235(7) is that a
    reference to the laws of the jurisdiction would be a reference to
    Californian law, and US federal law as it applies in California.

    Amendment of section 238

    Item 44

102. Section 238 provides the main rule for determining which
   jurisdiction's laws apply to a PPSA security interest in goods.  Section
   238 currently has the effect that the perfection, and the effect of
   perfection or non-perfection, of a PPSA security interest in goods will
   be governed by the law of the place in which they are located when the
   PPSA security interest attaches to the goods, even if the goods are later
   moved to another jurisdiction.

103. This item amends subsection 238(1) so that only the validity of a PPSA
   security interest will be governed by the law of the place where the
   goods were located when the PPSA security interest attached to the goods.
    When goods are moved to another jurisdiction, the applicable law for
   validity will continue to be the jurisdiction where the goods were
   located when the PPSA security interest attached.

    Item 45

104. This item omits a reference to 'property' and substitutes 'goods', in
   order to make it clear that subsection 238(1) is concerned only with
   goods.

    Item 46

105. This item inserts a new subsection 238(1A) for determining the
   applicable law for the perfection, and effect of perfection or non-
   perfection of a PPSA security interest in goods.  The applicable law
   would be the jurisdiction in which the goods are located at the time it
   becomes necessary to consider the perfection of the PPSA security
   interest.

106. This would mean that, in determining whether there is a perfected PPSA
   security interest in the goods, it would be necessary to apply the law of
   the place where the goods were located at the relevant time, and if
   necessary to search the PPS Register of that place, and not the place
   where the goods were located when the PPSA security interest attached to
   the goods.

107. This item retains an exception in subsection 238(2) for goods which
   are about to be moved between jurisdictions.  The law of the jurisdiction
   to which the goods are moved will apply where it is reasonable to believe
   that the goods will be moved to the jurisdiction.

108. The amendment replaces the existing reference to the reasonable belief
   of a secured party with an objective test.  The effect is that a person
   with knowledge of all the circumstances should be able to determine which
   law will apply to the PPSA security interest, and that this should not
   depend on the reasonableness of the secured party's belief.

    Item 47

109. This item amends a cross-reference consequential upon the insertion of
   subsection 238(2A).

    Items 48 and 49

110. Paragraph 238(3)(b) refers to the term 'commercial property', which is
   defined in section 10 to mean property other than 'consumer property.'
   Consumer property is property held by an individual other than property
   held in the course or furtherance (to any degree) of carrying on an
   enterprise to which an ABN has been allocated.  PPSA security interests
   in commercial property used in more than one jurisdiction is governed by
   the law of the jurisdiction in which the grantor is located.

111. These items amend subsection 238(3) so that instead of applying to
   'commercial property', it applies to collateral that is not used
   predominately for personal, domestic or household purposes (rather than
   to commercial property).  The result is that PPSA security interests in
   collateral that is used predominately for personal, domestic or household
   purposes will be governed by the conflict of law rules in subsections
   238(1), (1A) and (2).

    Item 50

112. This item inserts a new subsection 238(4) that recognises the special
   circumstances of international shipping and shipping registration.
   Subsection 238(4) has the effect that the perfection and effect of
   perfection or non-perfection of a PPSA security interest in a ship is
   governed by the law of the country on whose register of ships the ship is
   registered (if the ship is registered).  Where a ship is registered on a
   primary, or chartering-out, register and a secondary, or chartering-in,
   register, subsection 238(4) has the effect that the perfection and effect
   of perfection or non-perfection of a PPSA security interest in the ship
   is governed by the law of the primary register.  This item is not
   intended to affect the rule in subsection 238(3) about the law that
   applies to determine the validity of a PPSA security interest in other
   goods that are normally moved between jurisdictions.

    Amendment of section 239

    Item 51

113. Subsections 239(4) and (5) of the PPS Act provides the conflict of
   laws rule for PPSA security interests in an ADI account.

114. A PPSA security interest in an ADI account is governed by the law of
   the jurisdiction which governs the ADI account, except where the parties
   agree in writing to apply the law of another jurisdiction, providing this
   would not be manifestly contrary to public policy.

115. This item amends subsection 239(5) to require the consent of the
   relevant ADI before the law of another jurisdiction will govern a PPSA
   security interest in an ADI account.  This amendment recognises that an
   ADI has an interest in which law applies to PPSA security interests in
   ADI accounts maintained with it, and accordingly should be given a say in
   any decision to apply the laws of another jurisdiction.

    Amendment of paragraph 265(e)

    Item 52

116. Section 265 of the PPS Act provides a Guide Statement for Chapter 8 of
   the Act (Miscellaneous).

117. This item amends paragraph 265(e) to insert the words 'and what
   constitutes knowledge'.  This corrects an omission in the Guide
   statement.

    Amendment of paragraph 267(1)(b)

    Item 53

118. Section 267 provides for the vesting of an unperfected PPSA security
   interest in the grantor on the grantor's winding up or bankruptcy
   (subsection 267(2)).

119. This item changes the timing references in paragraph 267(1)(b) to the
   particular time at which the relevant insolvency/bankruptcy event occurs-
   rather than to the beginning of the day on which it occurs.  This ensures
   that a PPSA security interest does not vest in the grantor despite being
   perfected on the same day but before the insolvency or bankruptcy event.
   The effect of this change is that the common law 'zero hour rule' does
   not apply to the vesting rule in subsection 267(2).  This 'zero hour
   rule' deems an insolvency to begin at the instant after midnight of the
   day on which the insolvency occurs.

    Amendment of subsection 267(2)

    Items 54 and 55

120. Subsection 267(2) operates to vest certain unperfected PPSA security
   interests in the grantor, if the grantor becomes bankrupt or is wound up.

121. Item 54 amends subsection 267(2) to remove the words 'unless the
   security interest is unaffected by this section because of section 268'.
   These words are unnecessary, as section?268 will operates on its own to
   establish exceptions to subsection 267(2).

122. Item 55 inserts a note after subsection 267(2) alerting the reader to
   the exceptions in section 268.

    Amendment of section 268

    Items 56 and 57

123. Section 268 of the PPS Act sets out certain interests which are
   unaffected by the vesting rule in subsection 267(2).

124. Item 56 replaces the current subsection 268(1).  The amendment expands
   the exclusion to a PPSA security interest of a transferee under a
   transfer of an account or chattel paper, if the transfer does not secure
   payment or performance of an obligation.  It would not be appropriate to
   vest a PPSA security interest in the grantor if the secured party has
   provided full value to the grantor for the transfer of the account or
   chattel paper.  To do so would give the insolvent or bankrupt grantor the
   benefit of both the value provided on the transfer and also the
   transferred account or chattel paper.

125. Item 57 omits subsection 268(3), which is incorporated into the
   amended subsection 268(1).

    Amendment of subsection 317(1)

    Item 58

126. This item omits the current words '(when a non-constitutional security
   interest becomes a constitutional security interest)' and replaces it
   with '(personal property taken free of security interest when Act starts
   to operate)'.

127. This amendment corrects the incorrect reference to the heading of
   section 251.

    Amendment of subsection 327(1)

    Items 59 and 60

128. These items correct a drafting error clarifying the scope of the
   following provisions of section 327.

    Amendment of section 338

    Item 61

129. Section 338 provides the Guide Statement for Part 9.5 of the PPS Act
   (Charges and fixed and floating charges).

130. This item corrects a drafting error clarifying that the intended
   operation of the provisions on charges and fixed and floating charges
   extends to all Commonwealth legislation.

    Amendment of subsection 339(1)

    Item 62

131. Section 339 of the PPS Act provides that transactions structured as
   fixed charges or floating charges would be treated as security interests
   under the PPS Act.

132. This item inserts a new paragraph 339(1)(c), which limits the
   application of the section by adding a requirement that 'the charge is a
   security interest to which this Act applies.'

133. This amendment ensures that section 339 applies to references to
   charges only to the extent that they are security interests.

    Amendment of subsection 340(5)

    Item 63

134. This item corrects a drafting error.

    Amendment of section 342

    Item 64

135. Item 64 corrects a drafting error.








    Explanation of items




    9.   Schedule 5 - Other legislation

    Schedule 5 amends nine pieces of Commonwealth legislation as follows:

    Amendments to the Air Services Act 1995 to protect the priority of
    statutory liens held by Air Services Australia over aircraft and ensure
    concepts under that Act and the PPS Bill are harmonised.

    Amendments to the Bankruptcy Act 1966 will ensure there are no
    inconsistencies with the PPS Bill.  This will be done by aligning the
    definition of secured creditor in the Bankruptcy Act with
    the definition of secured party in the PPS Bill.  This will mean that
    secured parties under the PPS Bill are also secured for the purposes of
    the Bankruptcy Act and that, provided they have perfected their PPSA
    security interests (interests to which the PPS Bill applies), their
    PPSA security interest would not vest in a bankrupt estate and they
    retain the right to enforce without having to prove in the bankruptcy
    with unsecured creditors.

    The amendment to the Commonwealth Inscribed Stock Act 1911 will amend a
    regulation making power which provides for the establishment of a
    register of equitable interests in stock so that it does not apply to
    security interests.  The amendment will support the transition to the
    PPS Register.

    The amendment to the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait
    Islander) Act 2006 will ensure that charges created under that Act
    continue to have the same priority following commencement of the PPS
    Act.

    The Health Insurance Act 1973 will be amended to prohibit the creation
    of a security interest in a right to payment that has been assigned to
    a medical practitioner.

    An amendment to the Insurance Act 1973 will preserve the Federal
    Court's power to determine the priority of a charge in relation to
    other interests in the same property.

    Amendments to the Privacy Act 1988 will alert readers of that
    legislation to the fact that unauthorised uses of data under the PPS
    Bill are 'interferences with privacy' under the Privacy Act and subject
    to the Privacy Commissioner's powers of investigation.

    Amendments to the Quarantine Act 1908 will give priority to statutory
    interests over PPSA security interests.  The amendments will also
    ensure that enforcement action taken under the Quarantine Act against
    goods will not be frustrated by a secured party enforcing against the
    same goods under the PPS Bill.

    The Wool International Act 1993 will be amended to support the
    transition from the register established under that Act to the PPS
    Register.  Charges would no longer be required to be registered on the
    register established under that Act.

    Commencement

1. Items 1-18 and 21-50 of Schedule 5 will commence on the PPS Act
   registration commencement time.  The PPS Act registration commencement
   time is the first day of the month that is 26 months after the month in
   which the PPS Bill is given Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined
   by the Minister.  The Government expect the registration commencement
   time will be in May 2011.

2. Items 19 and 20 of Schedule 5 will commence on the later of (1) the
   start of the day the Consequential Bill receives Royal Assent, and (2)
   immediately after the commencement of the PPS Act.

    Amendment of the Air Services Act


    Amendment of subsection 60(3)

    Items 1 and 4

3. Item 1 removes the term 'floating charge' from paragraph 60(3)(a), as
   the concept has been superseded by the term 'security interest that has
   attached to a circulating asset' under the PPS Act.

4. Under item 4, this amendment will not apply in relation to a floating
   charge if the floating charge was created before the PPS Act registration
   commencement time.

    Item 2

5. This item adds a note specifying the relevant provision in the PPS Act
   which deals with security interests that attach to circulating assets.

    Item 3

6. Section 60 sets out the effect of a statutory lien, including that it
   applies in spite of any encumbrance in respect of the aircraft, and sets
   out the priority between competing interests over the aircraft.

7. Section 60 provides that a statutory lien is subject to security
   interests created in the aircraft before the statutory lien is
   registered, where the security interest covers a debt incurred before
   that time.

8. This item applies subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to a statutory lien
   imposed under section 60.  Applying subsection 73(2) ensures the priority
   between the statutory lien and a security interest in the same property
   is determined in accordance with the Air Services Act after the PPSA
   registration commencement time.

    Amendment of the Bankruptcy Act


    Definition of PPSA grantor or debtor

    Item 5

9. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA grantor or debtor' into the
   interpretation section (subsection 5(1)) of the Bankruptcy Act.  This
   item imports the definition of a PPS Act grantor or debtor from the PPS
   Act to apply in amended sections 301 and 302.

    Definition of PPSA secured party

    Item 6

10. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA secured party' into the
   interpretation section of the Bankruptcy Act.  This item imports the
   definition of a PPS Act secured party from the PPS Act to apply in
   amended sections 301 and 302.

    Definition of PPSA security agreement

    Item 7

11. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security agreement' into the
   interpretation section of the Bankruptcy Act.  This item imports the
   definition of a PPS Act security agreement from the PPS Act to apply in
   amended sections 301 and 302.

    Definition of a PPSA security interest

    Item 8

12. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
   interpretation section of the Bankruptcy Act.  The definition of a PPSA
   security interest in this item will include a security interest to which
   the PPS Act applies but excludes a transitional security interest under
   the PPS Act.  This item imports the definition of a PPS Act security
   interest from the PPS Act to apply in amended sections 301 and 302.

Definition of a secured creditor

Item 9

13. This item amends the definition of a 'secured creditor' in the
   interpretation section of the Bankruptcy Act.  The definition of secured
   creditor is amended to include secured parties under the PPS Act who have
   perfected their security interests and also creditors who are not secured
   parties under the PPS Act (this will include future holders of charges in
   land).

14. The definition of a secured party under the PPS Act means the holder of
   an interest in personal property (excluding land) provided by any of the
   following transactions which in substance secure the payment or
   performance of an obligation: a fixed charge; a floating charge; a
   chattel mortgage; a conditional sale agreement; a hire purchase
   agreement; a pledge; a trust receipt; a consignment; a lease of goods; an
   assignment; a transfer of title; a flawed asset arrangement and the
   following transactions which may not secure payment or the performance of
   an obligation: transfers of accounts or chattel paper, commercial
   consignments and PPS leases.

15. Therefore, the inclusion of PPS Act secured parties within the
   definition of secured creditors will increase the category of secured
   creditors under the Bankruptcy Act in respect of security agreements
   entered into after the PPS Act registration commencement time.  These
   secured creditors will be able to realise or deal with the secured
   property, which will not vest in the bankrupt estate, provided they have
   perfected their security interest.


         Example


         Lessor A leases a front loader washing machine to Person A for a
         term of two years (i.e.  this is a PPS lease under section 13 of
         the PPS Act and a PPS lease is a security interest under section 12
         of the PPS Act).  Person A enters into a deed of arrangement under
         the Bankruptcy Act.  Lessor A does not prove in bankruptcy and
         instead follows the enforcement procedures under the PPS Act.
         Lessor A is entitled to do this because, following the amendments
         to the Bankruptcy Act and the amended definition of secured
         creditor, Lessor A is now a secured creditor under the Bankruptcy
         Act.

    Amendment of section 301

    Items 10-13

16. These items amend section 301 of the Bankruptcy Act to include PPS Act
   security agreement provisions entitling the PPS Act secured party to
   terminate or modify the agreement or re-possess the property, when the
   PPS Act grantor or debtor becomes a bankrupt, commits an act of
   bankruptcy or enters into a deed of assignment or arrangement under the
   Bankruptcy Act, as void provisions.

    Amendment of section 302

    Items 14-17

17. These items amend section 302 of the Bankruptcy Act to include PPS Act
   security agreement provisions which entitle the PPS Act secured party to
   exercise any power or remedy or modify the agreement if the PPS Act
   grantor or debtor becomes a bankrupt, commits an act of bankruptcy or
   executes a deed of assignment or arrangement, as void provisions.

    Application of amendments

    Item 18

18. This item provides that item 9 amending the definition of 'secured
   creditor' in the Bankruptcy Act, in line with the PPS Act, will only
   apply to bankruptcies where the date of the bankruptcy arises after the
   PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Amendment of the Commonwealth Inscribed Stock Act


    Amendment of section 24B

    Items 19-20

19. Section 24B of the Commonwealth Inscribed Stock Act allows for the
   making of regulations which would require the operator of a clearing and
   settlement facility, an incorporated company or other body corporate to
   keep a record of equitable interests in stock, and to comply with
   requirements in relation to the keeping of such a record.

20. These items have the effect of limiting the regulation making power so
   that it does not apply to security interests in stock within the meaning
   of the PPS Act and to which the PPS Act applies.  This is consistent with
   the PPS Register being the principal register of security interests in
   personal property in Australia.

21. These items will commence on the later of (1) the start of the day the
   Consequential Amendments Bill receives Royal Assent, and (2) immediately
   after the commencement of the PPS Act.  This will prevent regulations
   being made before the PPS Act registration commencement time to have
   effect after that time with the result that PPS Act security interests
   could be registered on two registers.

    Amendment of the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander)
    Act

    Amendment of sections 453-10 and 511-1

    Items 21-22

22. Paragraph 453-10(4)(b) of the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres
   Strait Islander) Act provides that the Registrar of Aboriginal and Torres
   Strait Islander Corporations may charge some or all of the remuneration,
   charges or expenses of an authorised officer who examines the books of an
   Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander corporation or related body
   corporate on the property of the corporation or related body corporate.
   It also provides that the Registrar may give the charge any priority in
   relation to existing charges on the charged property that the Registrar
   sees fit.

23. Paragraph 511-1(4)(b) provides that the Registrar may charge some or
   all of the remuneration, charges or expenses of a special administrator
   of an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander corporation on the property
   of the corporation or related body corporate.  It also provides that the
   Registrar may give the charge any priority in relation to existing
   charges on the charged property that the Registrar sees fit.

24. These items apply subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to charges created
   under paragraphs 453-10(4)(b) and 511-1(4)(b).  Applying subsection 73(2)
   ensures the priority between a charge under one of these paragraphs and a
   security interest in the same property is determined in accordance with
   the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act after the
   PPS Act registration commencement time.

25. The amendments are intended to preserve the power of the Registrar to
   give any priority that the Registrar sees fit to charges created by the
   Registrar under these two provisions, after the PPS Act registration
   commencement time.

    Amendment of the Health Insurance Act


    Insertion of section 20AA

    Item 23

26. Section 20A of the Health Insurance Act provides that a person entitled
   to receive a medicare benefit may assign that benefit to their
   practitioner.  This provision facilitates bulk billing.

27. This item is intended to prevent a person from creating a valid PPS Act
   security interest in a medicare benefit that has been assigned to a
   practitioner under section 20A.

28. The amendments made by this item also ensure that subsection 20A(5)
   will continue to have effect after the PPS Act registration commencement
   time.  That provision requires an assignment of a medicare benefit to be
   made in accordance with section 30A.

29. This item includes a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' which
   includes a security interest to which the PPS Act applies but excludes a
   transitional security interest under the PPS Act.  This ensures that
   security agreements entered into before the PPS Act registration
   commencement time are not retrospectively voided.

    Amendment of the Insurance Act


    Amendment of section 62S

    Item 24

30. Section 62S of the Insurance Act provides that the Federal Court may
   give directions about the remunerative and allowances for a judicial
   manager (a manager of a general insurer appointed by the Court) and
   determine who is liable to pay the remuneration and allowances.  The
   judicial manager's remuneration and allowances may be charged against the
   property of the relevant general insurer.  That charge will take priority
   in relation to existing charges on that property as the Court thinks fit.

31. This item applies subsection 73(2) of the PPS Act to charges created
   under section 62S.  Applying subsection 73(2) ensures the priority
   between a charge under section 62S and a security interest in the same
   property is determined in accordance with the Insurance Act after the PPS
   Act registration commencement time.

32. The amendments are intended to preserve the power of the Federal Court
   to give any priority that the Court sees fit to charges created under
   section 62S, after the PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Amendment of the Privacy Act


    Amendment of section 13

    Items 25-26

33. The note added by these items to section 13 of the Privacy Act will
   flag that subsection 157(4) and subsection 173(2) of the PPS Act make the
   following interferences with privacy under section 13 of the Privacy Act:

     - the failure of secured parties to provide notice of verification
       statements (written statements confirming the registration of their
       security interest financing statements) to the grantors;

     - the conduct of an unauthorised or prohibited search;

     - the use of personal information obtained through unauthorised or
       prohibited searches.

    Insertion of section 28B

    Items 27-29

34. These items expand the Privacy Commissioner's existing powers to
   include the power to investigate acts or practices which may be
   interferences with privacy under the PPS Act.

    Insertion of section 49A

    Item 30

35. Section 49A provides, as in the case of suspected tax file number and
   credit reporting offences, that where the Commissioner during the course
   of an investigation forms the opinion that subsection 172(3) of the PPS
   Act may have been contravened, the Commissioner must cease dealing with
   the complaint and inform the Registrar of PPS of his opinion.  If the
   Registrar of PPS notifies the Commissioner that the Registrar has decided
   not to continue under section 222 of the PPS Act (obtaining an order for
   a civil penalty), the Commissioner may continue his investigation.

    Amendment of the Quarantine Act


    Definition of PPSA security interest

    Item 31

36. This item inserts a definition of a 'PPSA security interest' into the
   interpretation section (subsection 5(1)) of the Quarantine Act.  The
   definition includes a security interest to which the PPS Act applies but
   excludes a transitional security interest under the PPS Act.

37. The definition has been included to clarify references to PPSA security
   interests in the amendments to the Quarantine Act.

    Amendment of section 65

    Items 32-33

38. Sections 64 and 65 of the Quarantine Act provide the Commonwealth with
   the power to detain items of personal property for unpaid expenses
   incurred in connection with quarantining animals, plants and other goods.

39. The amendment will ensure that a secured party does not have the power
   to enforce its security interest (by seizing the detained property under
   section 123 of the PPS Act) while a vessel is detained pursuant to
   section 65 of the Quarantine Act.

    Insertion of subsection 69A(14)

    Items 34-36

40. Under section 69A of the Quarantine Act, the Minister may approve the
   payment of compensation for goods or premises that are destroyed under or
   in accordance with the Quarantine Act.  Payment is to be made to the
   owner(s).  Subsection 69A(14) provides that the owner means a person who
   had an interest in the goods or premises at the time of destruction but
   does not include a person who has an interest by reason that they are
   entitled to a benefit of a mortgage, charge or lien in respect of the
   goods or premises unless they were in possession of the goods or had
   control of the premises at the time of destruction.

41. These items amend section 69A to ensure that for the purposes of
   determining the owner of the goods or premises, a person who, or a
   partnerships which, had an interest in goods or premises at the time of
   their destruction does not include a person or partnership that holds a
   PPSA security interest in the goods or premises unless that person or
   partnership has possession or control of the goods or premises at the
   time of destruction.

42. As subsection 69A(14) already excludes persons with an interest under a
   mortgage, charge or lien, it is not necessary to include transitional
   security interests in the definition of a 'PPSA security interest'.

    Amendment of the Wool International Act


    Amendment of subsection 22J

    Items 37-40

43. Section 22J of the Wool International Act requires that particulars of
   a charge in a unit of equity in WoolStock Australia Limited are
   registered in the register of equity holders in order for that charge to
   have effect.  This is inconsistent with the policy in the PPS Act that
   the fact that a PPSA security interest is not registered does not affect
   the validity of the security interest.

44. These items amend section 22J of the Wool International Act to ensure
   that a charge on a unit of equity in WoolStock Australia Limited is
   solely registrable on the PPS Register.

45. Item 39 adds a note specifying that a charge over a unit of equity in
   WoolStock Australia Limited may be the subject of a registration on the
   PPS Register.  In addition, a further note clarifies that the priority
   between charges over units of equity will be determined in accordance
   with the PPS Act.

    Repeal of section 22K

    Item 41

46. Section 22K of the Wool International Act sets out the priority of
   charges over units of equity.  The priority provided is similar to the
   priority rules under the PPS Act, providing priority in the order of
   registration.

47. This item repeals section 22K of the Wool International Act.  Charges
   under the Wool International Act are in the nature of a security interest
   over personal property to which the PPS Act applies.  The priority
   between competing security interests in personal property will be
   determined under the PPS Act.

    Repeal of paragraph 22L(b)

    Items 42 and 50

48. Item 42 amends section 22L of the Wool International Act.  Subsection
   22L(b) provides for the beneficiary of a charge on a unit of equity to,
   upon request, have access to an entry in the register of equity holders.
   As charges will be registered on the PPS Register, the Wool International
   Act will no longer recognise beneficiaries of charges.  The consequence
   of the amendment is that it will be necessary for the grantor to consent
   to a secured party having access to the register of equity holders under
   the Wool International Act.

49. Item 50 provides that where WoolStock Australia Limited has not
   complied with a request made by a person under paragraph 22L(b) of the
   Wool International Act, the requirement to comply with the request stops
   applying after the PPS Act registration commencement time.

    Amendment of section 22R

    Item 43

50. This item makes a technical amendment.  The note in subsection 22R(2)
   refers to subsection (5) which no longer exists.  The amendment repeals
   the note.

    Item 44-45

51. These items repeal subsection 22R(4) of the Wool International Act.
   Section 22R(4) allows for a registered equity holder to notify WoolStock
   Australia Limited to make payments to beneficiaries of charges on units
   of equity, in accordance with the priorities established under section
   22K of the Wool International Act.

    Amendment of section 22S

    Items 46 -49

52. These items amend section 22S of the Wool International Act to remove
   the requirement that WoolStock Australia Limited notify beneficiaries of
   charges in units in equity of amounts available for distribution.  This
   is as a result of the particulars of the charges no longer being
   registered on the register of equity holders under the Act.



 


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