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2008-2009 THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA SENATE Personal Property Securities Bill 2009 REPLACEMENT EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM (Circulated by the authority of the Attorney-General, the Honourable Robert McClelland MP) THIS MEMORANDUM REPLACES THE EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM PRESENTED TO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ON 24 JUNE 2009 table of contents table of contents 2 GLOSSARY 6 OUTLINE 11 FINANCIAL IMPACT STATEMENT 13 CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION 14 PRELIMINARY 14 GENERAL APPLICATION OF THIS ACT 15 CHAPTER 2 - GENERAL RULES RELATING TO SECURITY INTERESTS 17 SECURITY AGREEMENTS 17 SECURITY INTERESTS 18 Enforceability against debtors 19 Enforceability against third parties 19 Perfection 20 Possession and control of personal property 21 POSSESSION 21 Control 22 Attachment and perfection: specific rules 24 PROCEEDS AND TRANSFER 24 Attachment of security interest to proceeds 24 Perfection of security interest in proceeds 25 Transfers of property 26 Collateral returned to grantor or debtor 27 Collateral returned from bailee 27 Negotiable instruments and investment instruments 27 Following sale or lease 27 Accounts and chattel paper 27 Relocation of collateral or grantor to Australia etc 28 Main rule 28 Intangible and financial property 28 Taking personal property free of security interests 28 UNPERFECTED SECURITY INTERESTS 29 Serially numbered personal property 29 Special rules relating to motor vehicle purchases 31 Incorrect or missing serial number 31 Transactions in the ordinary course of business 33 Low value consumer property 34 Security interests in currency 35 Security interests in investment instrument or entitlement in the ordinary course of trading 35 Security interests in investment instruments 35 Security interests in investment entitlements 35 Temporarily perfected security interests 35 Rights of secured party and transferee 36 Priority between Security Interests 36 PRIORITY OF SECURITY INTERESTS GENERALLY 36 Default priority rules 38 Priority of security interests perfected by control 39 Advances 41 Purchase money security interests 41 NON-PURCHASE MONEY SECURITY INTERESTS IN ACCOUNTS 44 Priority of security interests in transferred collateral 45 Priority of creditors and purchasers of negotiable instruments, chattel paper and negotiable documents of title 47 Priority of other interests 48 Priority between security interests and declared statutory interests 48 Priority of execution creditors 49 Returned goods 49 Priority where no foreign register 50 Transfer and assignment of interests in collateral 50 TRANSFER OF COLLATERAL 50 Rights on transfer of account or chattel paper 50 Modification or substitution of contract 50 Rights on transfer of account or chattel paper 51 Chapter 3 - Specific Rules For Certain Security Interests 53 AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS 53 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SECURITY INTEREST IN CROPS AND INTEREST IN LAND 53 Accessions 54 PRIORITY RULES 54 Enforcement of security interests in accessions 56 Processed or commingled goods 56 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 58 IMPLIED REFERENCES TO INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY 58 Security interests in intellectual property licences 58 Chapter 4 - Enforcement of Security Interests 59 GENERAL RULES 59 EXCLUSIONS 59 Exercise of rights 59 Collateral used for consumer purposes 60 Contracting out 60 Relationship with other laws 61 Consumer Credit Code 62 Enforcement rights where there are multiple secured parties 67 Notice 67 Enforcement of liquid assets 68 Seizure and disposal or retention of collateral 68 SEIZING COLLATERAL 68 Seizure by parties with a higher priority 69 Disposing of collateral (including by purchasing collateral) 70 Disposal by sale 70 Disposal by lease 71 Purchase of collateral by the secured party 71 Duties owed by a secured party when disposing of collateral 72 Statements of account 73 Retaining collateral 73 Objection to purchase or retention 74 Rules applying after enforcement 74 REDEMPTION 75 Reinstatement of the security agreement 75 Chapter 5 - Personal Property Securities Register 76 ESTABLISHMENT OF THE REGISTER 77 REGISTRATION 78 Registration with respect to security interests 79 GRANTORS, SECURED PARTIES AND GIVING OF NOTICES 80 Collateral descriptions 81 Serial numbered goods - motor vehicles and other goods 81 Allocation of a single class and other descriptors prescribed by regulation 82 Proceeds 82 End times, default end times and renewal of registrations 83 Subordination, purchase money security interests and matters prescribed by the regulations 83 Verification statements and registration events 84 Effective registration 86 Defects in registrations 86 Registration continues despite certain defects 88 Requirement to end the registration of certain property 88 Failure to pay maintenance fee 89 Searching the register 89 SEARCH CRITERIA 90 Authorised search purposes 91 Interference with privacy 92 Written search results and evidence 93 Copies of financing statements 93 Amendment demands 94 ADMINISTRATIVE PROCESS TO DEMAND AMENDMENT OF A REGISTRATION 95 Judicial process to obtain amendment of a registration 96 Removal of data and correction of registration errors 97 FEES, ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW AND ANNUAL REPORTS 98 REGISTRATION AND SEARCH FEES 98 Review of decisions 98 Registrar of Personal Property Securities 99 CHAPTER 6 - JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS 101 JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS GENERALLY 101 CONFERRAL OF JURISDICTION 101 Transfers between courts 101 Registrar's role in judicial proceedings 102 Civil Penalty Proceedings 102 APPLICATION 103 Obtaining an order for a civil penalty 103 Civil penalty proceedings and criminal proceedings 103 Enforceable undertakings relating to contraventions of civil penalty provisions 104 Chapter 7 - Operation of Australian and other laws 105 AUSTRALIAN LAWS AND THOSE OF OTHER JURISDICTIONS 105 CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATIONS 105 Location 106 Agreement to apply Australian law 106 Goods 107 Goods that are moved between jurisdictions 107 Goods that are normally moved between jurisdictions - 108 Intangible property 109 Intellectual property 109 ADI accounts 110 Financial property 110 Non-negotiable documents of title 111 Negotiable instruments 111 Proceeds 111 Constitutional Operation 111 RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AUSTRALIAN LAWS 112 CONCURRENT OPERATION 112 When other laws prevail 113 When other laws do not prevail 114 Chapter 8 - Miscellaneous 116 VESTING OF CERTAIN UNPERFECTED SECURITY INTERESTS 116 EXERCISE AND DISCHARGE OF RIGHTS, DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS 117 ENTITLEMENT TO DAMAGE FOR BREACH OF DUTIES OR OBLIGATIONS 117 Provision of information by secured parties 118 NOTICES AND TIMING 119 TIMING REQUIREMENTS 120 Onus of Proof and knowledge 121 ONUS OF PROOF 121 Knowledge 122 Forms and Regulations 123 CHAPTER 9 - TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS 124 CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK 124 KEY CONCEPTS 125 INITIAL APPLICATION OF THIS ACT 126 EXCLUSIONS FROM INITIAL APPLICATION 127 Transitional provisions 127 MIGRATED SECURITY INTERESTS AND DEEMED REGISTRATION 127 Non-migrated security interests and temporary perfection 128 Priority protection for certain transitional security interests 129 Interests prescribed in the regulations excluded from temporary perfection 129 Priority after temporary perfection period 131 Priority between transitional security interests, including migrated security interests 131 Priority not on insolvency/bankruptcy or registration 133 Taking free and vesting of transitional security interests 134 Migration provisions 134 Preparatory registration for collateral secured by transitional security interests 135 Registration defects 135 Charges and fixed and floating charges 136 REVIEW OF OPERATION OF ACT 138 TABLE OF CLAUSE REFERENCES 139 GLOSSARY Accession A good is an accession to other goods when it is installed in, or affixed to, other property (unless both the accession and the other goods are required or permitted by the regulations to be described by serial number). Account A monetary obligation which arises from: . disposing of property (whether by sale, transfer, assignment, lease, licence or in any other way); or . granting a right, or providing services, in the ordinary course of a business of granting rights or providing services of that kind (whether or not the account debtor is the person to whom the right is granted or the services are provided) but excludes an ADI account, chattel paper, investment entitlement, investment instrument or negotiable instrument. It does not matter whether or not the monetary obligation is earned by performance, and, if payable in Australia, whether or not the person who owes the money is located in Australia. Credit card receivables are a type of 'account', as they are monetary obligations which arise from the provision of services by the credit card provider in the ordinary course of their business in providing services of that kind. Credit card receivables include amounts due and payable by a credit card holder to the credit card provider in the ordinary course of the creditor card provider's business of providing credit for purchases or advances made by the credit card holder. Credit card receivables also include amounts due and payable by a credit card provider in the ordinary course of the credit card provider's business of providing services to merchants in respect of purchases paid for by credit card. Accounts are able to be transferred and the interests of transferees under a transfer of an account due from either the credit card holder to a credit card provider or from the credit card provider to a merchant would be security interests. ADI account An account held with an authorised deposit-taking institution (ADI), such as a bank. Advance The payment of currency, provision of credit or giving of value. This would include the liability of a debtor to pay interest, credit costs and other charges or costs payable by the debtor in connection with the advance, or the enforcement of a security interest securing the advance. After-acquired property Personal property acquired by the grantor after the security agreement is made. Attachment The creation of a security interest in personal property which could be enforced against that property. Bailment The delivery of tangible personal property to another party who acquires possession of it. A bailment does not transfer ownership rights and the bailor has the right to take possession at any time or in accordance with the terms of the bailment. Chattel paper A writing which evidences both a monetary obligation and a security interest in, or lease of specific goods, for example, a hire-purchase agreement. It would not include a negotiable instrument, an investment instrument, an investment entitlement or a document of title. Circulating assets Assets that could be used or transferred in the ordinary course of the grantor's business, even if they are subject to a security interest, including currency, negotiable instruments, inventory and certain accounts (except where the secured party has possession or control). Collateral Personal property to which a security interest is attached. Commingled property Goods that are mixed with goods of the same kind to become part of a product or mass so as to have lost their original identity in the product or mass. Consumer property Personal property that is held by an individual and not used to any extent in the course of an enterprise to which an ABN has been allocated. Control One way of perfecting a security interest in controllable property. Currency Any currency authorised as a medium of exchange by the laws of Australia or any other country. Debtor A person (or their transferee or successor) who owes payment or the performance of an obligation that is secured by a security interest. A debtor would usually be the grantor of the security interest. Financial property Chattel paper, currency, documents of title, investment instruments and negotiable instruments (excludes investment entitlements). Financing statement The data registered on the Personal Property Securities Register. Future advance An advance secured by a security interest which is made after the security agreement has been concluded. In most cases, because advances are only made after a security agreement has been entered into, future advances and advances are the same. Goods Tangible personal property including crops, livestock, wool, extracted minerals, satellites and other space objects, but excluding chattel paper, documents of title, investment instruments, negotiable instruments, currency or investment entitlements. Grantor A person (or their transferee or successor) who owns or has an interest in the property to which a security interest has attached. A grantor would include a person who receives goods under a commercial consignment, a lessee under a PPS lease and a transferor of an account of chattel paper. Intangible property Personal property other than financial property, goods or an investment entitlement. Intellectual property Rights in a design, patent, trade mark, copyright, circuit layout or plant breeder right. Inventory Personal property used in the ordinary course of business by a business with an ABN, including property held for sale or lease, property held to be provided under a contract for services, property held as raw materials or as work in progress or property used or consumed as materials. Investment entitlement The rights held by an investment entitlement account holder arising from the crediting of a financial product to the account (clause 15). Investment instrument A financial product such as a share, stock, debenture, bond, derivative, interest in a managed investment scheme, traded financial product, assignable option (but an assignable option of an assignable option is not an investment instrument) or a foreign exchange contract that is not a derivative, but excludes a negotiable instrument, investment entitlement, document of title and the creation or transfer of a right to payment in connection with interests in land (if the evidencing writing does not specifically identify that land). Migration time The time when agencies in charge of existing Commonwealth, State and Territory registers would start to transfer data to the PPS Register. The migration time would be the start of the first day of the month that is 25 months after the month in which the Bill is given Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister. New value Consideration sufficient to support a contract, other than value provided to discharge a prior debt or liability. Perfection A security interest could be perfected by registration, possession, control or temporary perfection and perfection would always confer priority over unperfected security interests in the collateral. Personal property Any form of property, other than land or a right or entitlement under a Commonwealth, State or Territory law that declares that the right or entitlement is not personal property for the purposes of the Bill. PPS lease A lease or bailment of goods, for an indefinite term or a term of more than one year. Where goods would be described by serial number, a PPS lease would only need to be a term of 90 days. Proceeds The identifiable or traceable personal property derived directly, or indirectly, from dealing with collateral or the proceeds of collateral. Purchase money security interest (PMSI) A 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. A PMSI could also be the interest of a lessor or bailor under a PPS lease or the interest of a consignor who delivers property under a commercial consignment. Registration commencement time The start of the first day of the month that is 26 months after the month in which the Bill is given the Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister. Secured party The person who holds a security interest in collateral. The secured party would not always be the creditor of the debtor because a security interest could secure the performance of an obligation without the secured party being a creditor, for example, a security trustee could hold the security for the benefit of creditors but not itself be a creditor. Security agreement An agreement or other act, such as a deed of execution or a declaration of trust, or writing evidencing the agreement or act, that creates a security interest. Security interest An interest in relation to personal property created by a transaction that in substance secures the payment or performance of an obligation, without regard to the form of the transaction. Value Consideration sufficient to support a contract including the discharge of an earlier debt or liability. Outline Personal property is any form of property other than land and certain licences. It includes motor vehicles, contractual rights and uncertificated shares. There are other rights or interests that fall outside the concepts of real and personal property. Native title rights and interests are one example of this and, as a result, the PPS Bill would not apply to such rights and interests. A security interest in personal property arises from a transaction that in substance secures the payment or performance of an obligation. The interest in the personal property, taken as security for a loan or other obligation, is a security interest. The Bill would apply to transactions which have the effect of securing a payment or other obligation, regardless of the form of the transaction, the nature of the debtor or the jurisdiction in which the personal property or parties are located (subject to specified exceptions). This is known as a functional approach. The Bill would establish a single national law governing security interests in personal property. This would result in more certain, consistent, simpler and cheaper arrangements for personal property securities for the benefit of all parties. Personal Property Security Reform would address the complexity of over 70 Commonwealth, State and Territory laws, common law rules and rules of equity governing personal property securities. It would provide a modern and efficient personal property securities regulatory system which is essential for any modern financial system. The Bill is modelled on the New Zealand, Canadian and US legislation. It also draws on work by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) and the International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT). The Bill relies on the Commonwealth's own constitutional power and power referred to it by the States under section 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution. The Bill would also address the relationship between potentially conflicting Commonwealth and State and Territory laws. The Bill specifies where other laws prevail, for example, the Bill would not apply to rights granted under the general law or statutory law in relation to the control, use or flow of water, goods affixed to land or to non- consensual interests such as liens. Furthermore, a State or Territory would be able to expressly exclude a right, entitlement or authority granted by a law of the State or Territory from application by the Bill. Generally, a security interest would attach to personal property when the grantor has rights in the collateral and value is given or the grantor does an act which creates the security interest (such as by declaring a trust or executing a deed). The Bill would do away with the equitable concept of the crystallisation of floating charges and interests in after-acquired property would attach on the acquisition of the property by the grantor. Perfection would occur when a security interest attaches to personal property and the secured party takes possession and/or control of the property or registers it on the PPS Register. The Bill would also provide short term 'temporary perfection' following certain events involving the collateral. The Bill specifies the circumstances when personal property would be able to be acquired free of a security interest. The Bill includes default rules for determining priority between competing security interests in the same property. There are also special priority rules for specific transactions including 'purchase money security interests', accounts, ADI accounts, crops, livestock, accessions and commingled goods. The Bill also provides rules for determining priority between security interests and other interests, such as repairers' liens and the interests of an execution creditor. The Bill provides a process for enforcing security agreements following default by debtors. These rules would operate together with the enforcement provisions in the Consumer Credit Codes and the parties' own security agreements. The Bill would establish a public Register of Personal Property Securities to be maintained by a Registrar of Personal Property Securities. The Register would contain details of registered security interests in personal property (financing statements) and include details of the grantor and the secured party; an address for service of notice on the secured party; a description of the collateral and proceeds and the period of registration. The transitional provisions would provide for the migration of data from existing registers to the newly created PPS Register and priority rules for security interests existing prior to the Bill coming into force. Financial Impact Statement The new national Personal Property Securities Register to be established by the Bill would operate on a cost recovery basis. Use of the Register would incur nominal charges, which would be used to cover the costs of operating the Register. Fees are expected to be around thirty million dollars in the first full financial year of operation but revenue estimates cannot be finalised until the design of the Register is complete and a commencement date has been determined. Chapter 1 - Introduction Preliminary 1. Clause 1 contains the short title of the Bill. 2. The Bill would commence on the day after it receives Royal Assent (clause 2). 3. The Guide to the Bill would provide an overview of the entire Bill (clause 3). Each Part of the Bill would also have a guide with an overview of that specific part. 4. Subject to Part 9.3 and 9.4 of the Bill, the Bill would start to apply at the registration commencement time in relation to the following interests: . a security agreement made at or after the registration commencement time; . a security interest (other than a transitional security interest) arising at or after the registration commencement time; . a transitional security agreement; . a transitional security interest (whether arising before, at or after the registration commencement time); . an interest in personal property (other than a security interest) arising at or after the registration commencement time; . personal property of a kind prescribed by the regulations (clause 148(c)); . personal property, if data in relation to the property is given to the Registrar (clause 330-331). (Clause 310). 5. The registration commencement time, established in the transitional provisions, would be the day the PPS Register commences operation. The registration commencement time would be the start of the first day of the month that is 26 months after the month in which the Bill is given Royal Assent, or an earlier time determined by the Minister (clause 306(2)). If the Minister determines an earlier time to be the registration commencement time, that time must be at least 28 days after the migration time (clause 306(3)). 6. Despite the Bill commencing on the day after it receives Royal Assent, the transitional provisions provide that a person would only be able to apply to register a financing statement or a financing change statement and the Registrar would only be able to register a financing statement, or a financing change statement, at or after the registration commencement time. The Registrar would also only able to register a financing statement or a financing change statement at his or her own initiative at or after the registration commencement time (clause 315). 7. Part 9.4 of the Bill would set out the rules to support the migration process and early registrations of transitional security interests. The migration time in the Bill would be the start of the first day of the month that is 25 months after the month in which the Bill is given Royal Assent or an earlier time determined by the Minister (clause 306(1). If the Minister determines an earlier time to be the migration time, as is expected, the Minister would also determine an earlier time for the registration commencement time. The migration time would be determined having regard to the readiness of the PPS Register and users of the Bill. General application of this Act 8. The Bill would apply to security interests in goods or financial property located in Australia or located outside Australia if the grantor is an Australian entity (clause 6(1)). 9. For this purpose, an Australian entity would be: . an individual who is located in Australia; (clause 235) . a company or registrable Australian body (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001); . a corporation sole formed under a law of Australia; . a public authority established under a law of Australia; or . an instrumentality or agency of the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory (clause 10). 10. The Bill would also apply to security interests in intangible property where: . the grantor is an Australian entity; . the account is payable in Australia; . the assignor of an account or chattel paper is an Australian entity; . an assigned account or chattel paper is payable in Australia; . the intangible property is in an ADI account; or . the intangible property is created for by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law, for example, licences created by a law of a State or Territory and intellectual property created by a law of the Commonwealth (clause 6(2)). 11. The Bill would apply to Norfolk Island, but the application of the Bill to other external Territories would be prescribed by the regulations and could be limited to certain provisions or only be applicable in certain circumstances (clause 7(2)). 12. A reference anywhere in the provisions of the Bill to 'Australia' should be read to include the prescribed external Territory (despite s17 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901), unless the contrary intention appears. 13. Significant interests to which the Bill would not apply include: . a right under the general law or Commonwealth or State and Territory laws which apply to the control, use or flow of water (including irrigation rights); . an interest created by the transfer of land or rights to payment in connection with the transfer of land but only where the writing evidencing the creation or transfer identifies the land (mortgage- backed securities are therefore included in the Bill); . an interest in goods that are affixed to land; and . an interest in a right or licence, granted under a law of a Commonwealth, State or Territory, if the right or licence is declared not to be personal property under the Bill. 14. Other important exclusions would include: . the interest of a seller shipping goods under a negotiable bill of lading; . non-consensual charges and liens created under a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory; . approved netting, close-out netting and market netting arrangements under the Payments Systems and Netting Act 1998; . combination of account and set-off arrangements; . the transfer of future remuneration and unearned rights to payments; . the transfer of an insurance claim; . certain interests arising under the Bankruptcy Act 1966; . the assignment of an account where the sole purpose is for collection of the account (this does not include the assignment of an account to a factor); . the assignment of an account or negotiable instrument to satisfy a pre-existing indebtedness (clause 8). 15. The Bill would operate in complex and dynamic financial markets which develop over time. It would need to adapt to these changes and where appropriate, include or exclude certain market transactions which arise and which either need to be subject to the Bill or excluded from the application of the Bill. Therefore the regulation-making powers in clauses 8(1)(l) and 8(3) are required to exclude or include interests from application of the Bill. The regulation making power could also be used to clarify whether particular kinds of security interests are covered by the exclusion in clause 8(1). Chapter 2 - general rules relating to security interestS Security Agreements 1. Under the Bill, the parties to a security agreement would be free to draft their security agreement however they wish (clause 18(1)), subject only to the laws of the Commonwealth, State or Territory laws and the general law (common law and equity) (clause 257(1)). However, the Commonwealth, State, Territory or general laws would not apply to the extent that they: . require the registration of a security agreement, . require the registration of the assignment of a security interest, . require compliance with other formal requirements; or . restrict the attachment and perfection provisions of the Bill (clause 257(3)). 2. A security agreement would be able to provide for security interests in after-acquired property (clause 18(2)) and security interests in property acquired after the security agreement has been entered into (after-acquired property) would attach without the need for specific appropriation of that property (clause 18(1)). The Bill therefore does away with the common law requirement that there must be specific appropriation by the debtor for a security interest to attach after- acquired property. However, for the security agreement to be enforceable against the debtor's after-acquired property, the security agreement would have to include a description of the collateral, such as 'all after-acquired property' (clause 20(2)). 3. A description of particular collateral in a written security agreement would be sufficient where the collateral that is described as 'consumer property', 'commercial property' or 'equipment' in the writing evidencing a security agreement, is also described by reference to item or class (clause 20(4)). This means that the collateral in question would be readily identifiable in a particular situation. Example The following examples would be valid descriptions: o "All equipment located at 17 Jersey Road" where the equipment is marked, listed or readily identifiable as equipment. o "All coal produced at the Lil Abner Mine" where all Lil Abner Mine coal is stored and recorded as produce of the little Abner Mine. o "All accounts referred to in [a specified computer print-out]" where the print-out has enough information to identify the account, for example, the account name, account number and where the account is held. Examples of which would not be sufficient include: o "All equipment located at 17 Jersey Road" when there are many goods at 17 Jersey Road which may be equipment but are not identifiable as such. o "All coal produced at the Lil Abner Mine" when there no records kept of what coal was produced at the Lil Abner Mine or where the coal is, or where coal from a neighbouring mine is stored at the mine but its origin is not identifiable. o "All accounts referred to in a specified computer print-out" where there are insufficient details on the print-out to identify the account or the account holder. Security interests 4. A security interest is an interest in personal property provided for by a transaction that secures the payment or performance of an obligation (clause 12(1)). In determining whether or not an interest is a security interest, the Bill takes a functional approach and focuses on the substance of the transaction. 5. Certain transactions would create security interests provided that they secure the payment or performance of obligations, for example: fixed and floating charges; chattel mortgages; conditional sale agreements; hire-purchase agreements; pledges; trust receipts; consignments; leases of tangible property (including PPS leases); assignments, transfers of title and flawed asset arrangements (clause 12(2)). 6. A security interest would be created by a transaction that is a flawed asset arrangements that in substance secures payment or performance of an obligation. However, a security interest would not be created by an arrangement under which whether one person owes another person an obligation is conditional on the occurrence of certain events: because there is no interest in property that can be the object of the security interest. Example Person A buys its inventory from Person B on terms requiring it to pay within 90 days. However, if Person B fails to meet its supply obligations, then Person A is entitled to deduct an amount from the account owed to Person B in accordance with a formula specified in the contract. In substance, the account owed by Person A secures performance of Person B's obligation to supply inventory to Person A. Person B's account is a flawed asset: because Person B's entitlement to be paid the account is conditional on it continuing to supply inventory to Person A. Example An arrangement between Person B and Person A obliges Person A to pay Person B an amount on the occurrence of certain events. Person B does not have an interest in personal property that could be the object of a security interest. 7. While a license itself would not be a security interest, (clause 12(5)) a licensee would be able to grant a security interest in a licence which is personal property, that is if: . it is transferable (whether or not the right is exclusive and whether or not a transfer is restricted); and . it is not granted under legislation which declares that the licence is not personal property under the Bill (clause 8(1)). 8. The following interests are deemed to be security interests whether or not the transaction secures the payment or the performance of an obligation: . the interests of a transferee of accounts or chattel paper; . the interests of a lessor or bailor under a PPS lease; and . the interests of a consignor under a commercial consignment. 9. However, the enforcement provisions in the Bill would not apply to these transactions (clause 109(1)). Enforceability against debtors 10. A security interest would attach to property when: . the grantor has rights in the property or the power to transfer rights in the property to the secured party (clause 19(1)), even if this power is subject to limitations, such as the requirement of the another party's consent; and . the secured party provides value or the grantor confers a security interest through their actions (clause 19(2)) (this alternative to the provision of value is required because a security interest could secure an obligation without value being given). 11. Under the Bill, attachment of a security interest is important because once the security interest attaches to the collateral, the grantor's rights in the collateral are limited by the rights of the secured party and the secured party acquires enforceable rights against the collateral (clause 19(1)). Enforceability against third parties 12. Attachment would also be required for a security interest to be enforceable against third parties claiming competing interests in the collateral (clause 20(1)). But attachment on its own would be insufficient for a security interest to be enforceable against third parties, and in addition, the secured party would have to have either control or possession of the collateral or there would have to be a written security agreement between the parties (clause 20(1)). 13. Attachment of the security interest could be at any time, including after the other requirements have been complied with (clause 21(3)). Example A security interest in the collateral is registered on 1 February but the security agreement is executed later on 1 March. The security interest only becomes enforceable against third parties on 1 March because prior to then the security interest had not attached to the collateral. 14. For a written security agreement to be enforceable against third parties: . it would have to be signed or intentionally adopted by the grantor, in the way which is specified in the agreement (clause 20(2)); . it would have to describe the specific collateral or describe it as 'the grantor's all present and after-acquired property' or 'the grantor's all present and after-acquired property' with specified exceptions (clause 20(2)); . if collateral were to be described as 'consumer property', 'commercial property or 'equipment', it would also need to be described by reference to the item or class (clause 20(4)); . if collateral were to be described as 'inventory', it would only be enforceable while that property is held as inventory (clause 20(5)); . a description of the proceeds would not be required for the agreement to be enforceable in respect of the proceeds (clause 63(7)). 15. A security interest could be enforceable against a third party in respect of particular personal property even though the security interest is not enforceable in respect of other personal property to which the security interest has attached. 16. Unless the parties specify otherwise in a security agreement, a security interest would attach when the requirements for attachment are satisfied (clause 19(3)). The parties could agree to postpone the time for attachment, but merely referring to the security interest as a 'floating charge', would not by itself postpone attachment (clause 19(4)). 17. For the purposes of deemed security interests (that is, security interests in: accounts and chattel paper transferred to a transferee; goods which are leased to a lessee under a PPS lease; goods consigned under a commercial consignment to a consignor or sold to a purchaser under a conditional sale or retention of title agreement) the grantor (transferee, lessee, consignee or purchaser) would be deemed to have rights in the goods, for the purpose of attachment, when the grantor obtains possession of the collateral (clause 19(5)). Perfection 18. Under the Bill, perfection of security interests would be important to obtain priority over competing security interests in the same collateral. 19. A security interest would be perfected once the security interest attaches to the collateral (clause 21(1)) and the secured party provides public notice of its security interest by either: . registering an interest in any collateral; . taking possession of goods; . temporarily perfecting a security interest in the collateral; or . taking control of an investment instrument; an ADI account; a right evidenced by letters of credit; an investment entitlement or a negotiable instrument (clause 20(2)). 20. Some security interests could, therefore, be perfected without registration on the PPS Register. Where the collateral is goods (tangible personal property), possession by the secured party would be sufficient to perfect the security interest and control would be sufficient to perfect a security interest in the case of investment instruments, ADI accounts, certain rights evidenced by letters of credit, investment entitlements and negotiable instruments (clause 20(2)). 21. Where goods are held by a bailee and a security interest has attached to the collateral, the security interest would be able to be perfected by: . the secured party registering the collateral; . the bailee taking possession of the collateral on behalf of the bailor; . the bailee issuing a document of title to the goods in the name of the secured party; or . the secured party obtaining a perfected security interest, for example by possession, in the negotiable document of title (clause 22(1)). Example Bank A finances Debt A's purchase of portable steel toilets manufactured in Melbourne. Debt A is located in Sydney, so Debt A arranges for the toilets to be freighted to Sydney. The carrier issues a negotiable document of title and forwards this to Bank A. Once Bank A receives possession of the negotiable document of title, it has a perfected security interest in the toilets. Where the secured party is able to take possession of the document of title within 5 business days of its issue, the security interest would be deemed to be perfected from the moment the document of title was issued. 22. A security interest in any of the following collateral could also be temporarily perfected for the period of time specified in the Bill: . collateral moved to Australia (clause 39-40); . proceeds not included in the registered description of collateral or arising from collateral perfected in another way (clause 33(2)- (3)); . transferred collateral (clause 34); . goods or documents of title, perfected by the bailee's possession and returned to the grantor or debtor for dealing (clause 35); . negotiable and investment instruments, perfected by the bailee's control or possession, and returned to the grantor or debtor for dealing (clause 36). 23. This period of temporary perfection period would give the secured party an opportunity to perfect their interest by registration, possession or control. 24. A single registration of collateral would be able to perfect more than one security interest (clause 21(4)). Possession and control of personal property 25. Possession and control of personal property would be important as two of the four ways of perfecting a security interest. Possession 26. A secured party would be able to perfect a security interests in collateral by possession (other than possession as a result of seizure or repossession) (clause 21(2)(a)). 27. It would not be possible to perfect a security interest in an intangible by possession. However, as investment instruments, chattel paper or negotiable instruments are the physical embodiment of intangible rights, possession of these documents would perfect a security interests in the associated intangible property. 28. A person would have possession of a negotiable instrument not evidenced by an electronic record when physical possession of the instrument is held by the person, or another person on their behalf (clause 24(4)). 29. A secured party would have possession of chattel paper evidenced by an electronic record only if there is a single authoritative copy of the record that identifies the secured party as the assignee of the record, which is maintained by the secured party (copies would need to be made with the secured party's agreement and be identifiable as authorised copies) (clause 24(5)). 30. A person would have possession of an investment instrument evidenced by a certificate only if the certificate specifies the person entitled to the investment instrument, it is transferable by registration of the transfer by the issuer of the investment instrument and the person or someone on their behalf (not the grantor or debtor) has possession of the instrument (or, if another person is the registered owner, they have acknowledged in writing, possession on behalf of that person) (clause 24(6)). 31. Possession of a document of title would constitute possession of the collateral (clause 24(3)(b)). 32. Possession under the Bill would not equate to the common law meaning of possession. Possession would include both apparent and actual control of the property (clause 24(2)). Even if a secured party has actual possession of collateral, if it appears to be in the possession of the grantor (or another person on behalf of the grantor), the secured party would not have possession of the collateral (clause 24(1)). It follows that when goods in the secured party's possession are transferred to the grantor's possession, the security interest becomes unperfected (unless perfected by another means, such as by registration or through temporary perfection of returned collateral (clause 36). Example Finance A has a security interest in a painting owned by Grantor A. Finance A perfects the security interest by taking possession of the painting on 1 April 2009. Finance A returns the painting to Grantor A on 28 April 2009 for a dinner party held by Grantor A. Finance A resumes possession on 1 May. Finance A's security interest ceased to be perfected on 28 April. Perfection of the security interest commenced from 1 May 2009. Control 33. 2.31 Perfection by control would occur when a creditor takes all steps necessary to be in a position to sell the collateral without further action by the grantor. 34. It would be impractical to require perfection by registration or possession of ADI accounts; investment entitlements; investment instruments; uncertificated negotiable instruments; rights evidenced by certain letters of credit and satellites. Therefore these kinds of collateral could be perfected by control (clause 21(2)(c)). 35. A secured party would have control of an ADI account where: . the secured party is the ADI; . the secured party could direct dispositions from the ADI without the grantor's agreement (even if the grantor also retains the right to direct dispositions from the account) (clause 25(2)); or . the secured party is the ADI's customer for the account, that is, the secured party would have the right (not necessarily exclusive), to direct dispositions from the account. (Clause 25(1)). Example Bank A gives a loan to its customer Debtor A who already has a deposit account with Bank A. Bank A does not perfect a security interest in the account. Debtor A then grant's Grantor A the right to instruct Bank A to make dispositions from the account subject to Debtor A's consent. Debtor A defaults on its loans to both Bank A and Grantor A and both attempt to enforce a security interest in Debtor A's account. Because Bank A is the ADI it did not need to take any specific action to obtain a perfected security interest in Debtor A's account. Grantor A did not obtain control (and therefore a perfected security interest) in the account, because it's right to instruct Bank A to make dispositions required Debtor A's consent. 36. 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 (clause 26(1)). 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 (clause 26(2)). 37. A person would have control of a certificated or uncertificated investment instrument while they are registered by the issuer as the registered owner of the investment instrument (clause 27(2)). 38. A person would have control of a certificated investment instrument while they have possession of the instrument and the power to transfer or otherwise deal with the instrument (clause 27(3)). 39. A person would have control of an uncertificated investment instrument: . where they have agreed with the registered owner of the instrument that they may deal in the instrument (clause 27(4)); . where another person is the registered owner of the instrument on behalf of that person but that person can deal in the instrument (clause 27(5)); . if the registered owner acknowledges in writing, that they hold the instrument on behalf of that person and that person is able to deal in the instrument (clause 27(6)). 40. A secured party would have control even if the registered owner (including the grantor) retains the right to make substitutions for the instrument, to originate instructions to the issuer or to otherwise deal with the instrument (clause 27(6)). 41. A secured party would have control of the rights evidenced by a letter of credit only to the extent that the issuer consents to assigning the proceeds of the letter of credit to the secured party (clause 28). 42. A secured party would have control of an uncertificated negotiable instrument while the instrument can be transferred according to the rules of the clearing and settlement facility and the secured party is able to deal in the instrument (clause 29(1)). A secured party would have control even if the registered owner (including the grantor) retains the right to make substitutions for the instrument, to originate instructions to the issuer or to otherwise deal with the instrument (clause 29(2)). Attachment and perfection: specific rules Proceeds and transfer Attachment of security interest to proceeds 43. When collateral gives rise to proceeds, the security interest would: . automatically attach to any proceeds arising from a dealing in the collateral unless the security agreement provides otherwise; and . continue in the collateral unless the secured party expressly or impliedly authorised the dealing giving rise to the proceeds. (Clause 32(1)). 44. Personal property would only be proceeds if the grantor had an interest in the proceeds (not an interest arising from the enforcement of the security interest) or the power to transfer rights in the collateral to the secured party (clause 31(3)). This reflects the attachment principle that the grantor must have an interest in the collateral or the power to transfer the collateral to another person (clause 19(2)(a)). Example Grantor A grants Bank A a security interest in its sapphires. Grantor A then transfers the sapphires to Person A in exchange for rubies without Bank A's authorisation. Bank A would have a security interest in the rubies as proceeds of the sapphires. 45. The Bill would not require that there be a fiduciary relationship between the secured party and the person who deals in the collateral, for the proceeds to be identifiable or traceable (clause 31(2)). 46. The security interest in the proceeds would have the same priority time as the security interest in the original collateral (clause 32(5)). 47. Collateral would give rise to proceeds when the proceeds are identifiable or traceable personal property derived directly or indirectly from: . a dealing with the collateral (or proceeds of the collateral); . the right to an insurance payment or other payment as indemnity or compensation for loss or damage to the collateral; . a payment made to discharge or redeem the collateral when the collateral was chattel paper, intangible property, an investment instrument, an investment entitlement or a negotiable instrument; . the right of a licensor to receive payments under any intellectual property agreement; . rights arising out of or property collected or distributed from an investment instrument or investment entitlement (clause 31(1)). Example Grantor A is the owner of a patent and has granted a security interest in the patent to Bank A. Grantor A has also granted a licence of the patent to Manufacturer A, under which Manufacturer A is obliged to make payments to Grantor A. Bank A has a security interest in the patent as original collateral, and in the licence payments as proceeds. 48. Proceeds would include proceeds of proceeds (clause 31(1)(a)). 49. When the security interest continues in the collateral, a secured party would be able to enforce their security interest against either or both of the collateral or the proceeds (clause 32(2)). 50. Where a secured party proceeds against both the collateral and the proceeds, the amount recoverable would be limited to the market value of the collateral immediately before the collateral gave rise to the proceeds, unless the collateral is an investment instrument or, at the time of the transfer, the transferee knew that the transfer was in breach of the security agreement (clause 32(2)-(3)). 51. Where the secured party proceeds against the collateral alone, an innocent purchaser of the collateral would have rights against the transferor to recover the consideration they provided. Where the secured party proceeds against the proceeds alone, an innocent third party would retain the collateral. Perfection of security interest in proceeds 52. At the time of entering into a security agreement, a secured party cannot always anticipate that proceeds that may arise from the collateral and therefore a security interest in proceeds would be perfected by a registration of the collateral if: . the description of the collateral includes a description of the proceeds which would be sufficient for a separate perfected security interest in the proceeds; . the description of the collateral includes a description of the proceeds because they are of the same kind; . the proceeds consist of currency, cheques, an ADI account, a right to an insurance payment or another payment as indemnity or compensation for loss to the collateral. (Clause 33(1)). 53. A registration which describes the collateral as all the grantor's present and after acquired property would perfect a security interest in proceeds held by the grantor. Example Grantor A grants a security interest in her funicular car to Bank A. Grantor A then exchanges her funicular car for her neighbour's boat. The security interest would automatically attach to the boat. The security interest in the boat would only be perfected if Bank A included in the financing statement a description of any proceeds from the funicular car that included the boat. 54. A security interest in proceeds that is not perfected, but that arises from a perfected security interest in the collateral, would be temporarily perfected for 5 business days after the collateral gave rise to the proceeds (clause 33(2)). During this period of temporary perfection, the secured party could ensure the continuous perfection of the security interest in the proceeds after the end of the end of the 5 business days, by perfecting the interest in one of the usual ways (registration, possession or control) (clause 33(3)). Transfers of property 55. A security interest would not continue in transferred collateral where the Bill provides that a transferee would acquire collateral free of the security interest (clauses 41-55) or where the secured party has given express or implied authority for the transfer to be made free of the security interest (clause 32(1)). 56. In other cases, where collateral which is subject to a perfected security interest is transferred, the security interest would be temporarily perfected for a period starting from the time of transfer and ending at the earliest of: . the end of the month 24 months after transfer; . if the security interest was perfected by registration - the end time for registration; . if another perfected security interest attaches to the collateral and the original secured party consented to the transfer - 5 business days after transfer; . if another perfected security interest attaches to the collateral and the original secured party did not consent to the transfer of the collateral - 5 business days after the original secured party acquires the knowledge required to perfect their security interest by registration (clause 34(1)). 57. The period of temporary perfection would give the secured party time to perfect their security interest in the property. Example Grantor A grants Bank A a security interest in its orchids. Bank A perfects the security interest by registration. Grantor A sells the orchids to Person B without Bank A's authorisation. Grantor A does not take the orchids free of Bank A's security interest. The security interest continues in the orchids and is temporarily perfected until the earlier of 24 months, the end of the registration or 5 business days after Bank A becomes aware of the transfer. Collateral returned to grantor or debtor Collateral returned from bailee 58. When a security interest in goods is perfected by the bailee's possession of the goods, or the secured party's possession of the document of title, and the property or document of title is returned to the grantor for sale, exchange or other action in preparation for sale or exchange, the security interest would be temporarily perfected for 5 business days (clause 35). Negotiable instruments and investment instruments 59. When a security interest in a negotiable instrument or in an investment instrument is perfected by possession or control, and possession or control of the document is given to the grantor for sale, exchange, presentation, collection, renewal or registration for transfer, the security interest would be temporarily perfected for a period of 5 business days (clause 36). Following sale or lease 60. When a person acquires goods free of a security interest because of a sale or lease of the goods, the security interest would reattach to the goods when the grantor or a transferee of chattel paper regains possession of the goods as a result of: . the original contract of sale or lease being rescinded or expiring; . the transferee having seized the goods to enforce the security agreement; . the grantor having repossessed the goods to enforce the contract of sale or lease (clause 37(1)). 61. If the security interest was perfected by registration prior to acquisition, and the registration is effective at re-possession, then the perfection would be deemed to be continuous (clause 37(2)). Accounts and chattel paper 62. When an account or chattel paper, arising from the sale or lease of goods, is transferred to another person, the transferee would be taken to have a security interest in the goods, if the goods come back into the possession of the transferor or transferee as a result of: . the original contract of sale or lease being rescinded or expiring; . the transferee having seized the goods to enforce the security agreement; . the grantor having repossessed the goods to enforce the contract of sale or lease; . any other circumstances prescribed by the regulations. (Clause 38(1)). Example Dealer A sells flaring and beading machines on credit to Purchaser A. Dealer A sells the proceeds of these transactions (an account) to Discount A. The flaring and beading machines turn out to be defective and Purchaser A rescinds the contract and returns the machines to Dealer A. Discount A acquires a security interest in the machines to secure payment of the balance of the account. 63. The deemed goods security interest would be deemed to attach at the time of return or re-possession (clause 38(2)). If the transferor or transferee has a perfected security interest in the account or chattel paper when the goods are returned or re-possessed, then the security interest would be temporarily perfected from the time of possession until 5 days after the time of return or re-possession (clause 38(3)- (4)). Relocation of collateral or grantor to Australia etc Main rule 64. When collateral continues to be subject to an enforceable security interest after being moved to Australia, the security interest would be taken to be continuously perfected from when the security interest was registered or became enforceable against third parties under the foreign law until the collateral is located in Australia (clause 39(1)- (2)). 65. If the security interest is continuously perfected as above, it would also be temporarily perfected from the time of relocation until 56 days thereafter or 5 days after the secured party acquires actual knowledge that the property is relocated in Australia (clause 39(3)). Intangible and financial property 66. If the grantor of a security interest in intangible property or chattel paper, investment instruments, currency, documents of title (but not intellectual property, intellectual property licences or ADI accounts) relocates to Australia or transfers the collateral to a person located in Australia and the security interest becomes governed by Australian law, then the security interest would be taken to be continuously perfected from the time when it was registered under the foreign jurisdiction, or became enforceable against third parties, until relocation (clause 40(2)). 67. If the security interest is continuously perfected (as above), then it would be temporarily perfected starting from the time of relocation and ending at the earliest of 56 days thereafter or 5 business days after the secured party acquires actual knowledge of the relocation (clause 40(3)). Taking personal property free of security interests 68. A security agreement would be effective according to its terms (clause 18) and would continue in collateral dealt with by the grantor, unless the secured party expressly or impliedly authorised a dealing giving rise to proceeds (clause 32). 69. However, a person would acquire an interest in personal property free of a security interest in the circumstances set out in Part 2.5 of the Bill. 70. The concurrent application of more than one of these rule to the same situation, or the application of only one of the rules to the same situation, would not affect the right of a transferee to take the property free of a security interest. 71. The provisions on taking free of security interests would not apply where the transferee's interest is also a security interest, except where the property is an investment instrument or investment entitlement (clause 42). 72. The provisions refer to 'taking free of a security interest' and not 'extinguishment' because there may be circumstances where the security interest is attached to more than one item of collateral and the transferee is acquiring only one of those items. Only the acquired item would be taken free of the security interest, which would remain attached to the remaining items. 73. In some circumstances, a person would have to provide either value or new value in order to acquire an interest in personal property free of a security interest. A person provides 'value' when they provide consideration that is sufficient to support a simple contract. A person could also provide 'value' through a reduction or discharge of an existing liability. However, in order to provide 'new value', the satisfaction of an antecedent debt or liability would be insufficient, and something more would have to be given. (Clause 10). The requirement for new value ensures that the grantor obtains something that the secured party could proceed against if their property is transferred free of the security interest Unperfected security interests 74. A person who acquires personal property that is subject to an unperfected security interest would acquire it free of the security interest if they provide new value and are not a party to the transaction that provides for the security interest (clause 43). Example Grant A obtains secured finance from Bank A to purchase a forklift. Bank A does not register the forklift on the PPS Register or perfect it using the other perfection methods. Grant A sells the forklift to Buy A. Buy A would acquire her interest in the forklift free of Bank A's security interest. 75. These arrangements provide an incentive for secured parties to perfect their security interests. Serially numbered personal property 76. The Regulations would specify the kinds of personal property that may or must be described by serial number on the PPS Register and could include the following: . motor vehicles; . watercraft; . aircraft; . registered trade marks, patents, designs and plant breeder's rights. 77. In order to guarantee the ability of a prospective buyer or lessee to rely on a search of the PPS Register, and to protect a security interest against an innocent acquisition, the Bill would provide that a person would take property free of a security interest when: . the buyer or lessee provides new value; . the property is required under the regulations to be described in a registration by reference to a serial number; . a search of the register immediately before the time of the sale or lease, by reference only to the serial number of the property, would not have disclosed the registration on the PPS Register (clause 44(1)). Example Person A owns a number of collectable motor vehicles in the course of running a business of hiring out vehicles for special events. Person A secures a loan from Bank A against the motor vehicles. Bank A perfects its security interest in the vehicles by registering against all of Person A's motor vehicles, but does not register each motor vehicle individually by their serial numbers. Person B buys one of the motor vehicles from Person A. A search of the PPS Register by reference to the motor vehicle's serial number would not disclose that Bank A has a security interest. Person B would take her interest in the motor vehicle free of Bank A's security interest in the motor vehicle. Example Person A owns a number of collectable motor vehicles in the course a business of hiring out vehicles for special events. Person A secures a loan from Bank A against the motor vehicles. Bank A perfects its security interest in the vehicles by registering against all of Person A's motor vehicles generally, but does not register each motor vehicle individually by its serial number. Person B buys one of the motor vehicles from Person A. A search of the PPS Register by reference to the motor vehicle's serial number would not disclose that Bank A has a security interest. Person B searches the register against Person A and discovers the Bank's registration against Person A in relation to motor vehicles generally. Person B is not aware that her purchase of the motor vehicle constitutes a breach of the Person A's security agreement with Bank A. Person B would take her interest in the motor vehicle free of Bank A's security interest in the motor vehicle. Example Buyer A buys a motor vehicle from Person A. Finance A has registered against the motor vehicle on the PPS Register by reference to its serial number. Buyer A would not take the car free of Finance A's security interest, as a search of the PPS Register would have disclosed Finance A's registration against the motor vehicle. Had Buyer A searched the PPS Register, she would have found Finance A's registration and been aware that she would not be able to buy the motor vehicle free of Finance A's security interest. 78. A buyer or lessee would not take their interest in the property free of the security interest if: . the transferee holds the property, or holds the property on behalf of another, as inventory for a period after the sale or lease; or . the transferee has actual knowledge that the sale or lease constitutes a breach of the relevant security agreement (unless the property is of a kind prescribed by the regulations). (Clause 44(2)). 79. When personal property is bought or leased with the intention of using it predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes, the intention of the buyer or lessee is to be determined when the new value is first given for the sale or lease. This might be when the buyer or lessee provides a deposit (which could be in advance of the parties making a binding agreement to buy or lease the property) (clause 44(3)). 80. This exception against taking inventory free of security interests means that a purchase or lease of serial numbered property (such as a motor vehicle) by a dealer in the property from a person who held the property as commercial property would not be free of the security interest merely because the financier of the seller or lessor had elected to register against the seller's property generally and not in relation to individual serial numbered items. Example Finance A finances motor vehicles held by Person A as commercial property. Motor vehicles have been prescribed as serial numbered property. Finance A registers its security interest in Person A's motor vehicles generally, and not by reference to their individual serial numbers. Dealer A buys a motor vehicle from Person A and holds the vehicle as inventory in the course of its business of buying and selling motor vehicles. Dealer A takes the motor vehicle subject to Finance A's security interest. Special rules relating to motor vehicle purchases Incorrect or missing serial number 81. A person who buys or leases a motor vehicle (of a kind prescribed in the regulations) would take their interest in the vehicle free of a security interest if: . the person acquires the motor vehicle for new value; . the regulations provide that the motor vehicle is of a kind that may or must, be described by serial number; . a search of the register immediately before the time of the sale or lease, or on the previous day, by reference only to the serial number of the vehicle, would not have disclosed a registration on the PPS Register; and either: o the seller or lessor is the person who granted the security interest; or o the seller or lessor is another person who is in possession of the motor vehicle, provided the person who granted the security interest has lost the right to possess the motor vehicle (or is estopped from asserting an interest in the vehicle) (clause 45(1)). 82. However, the buyer or lessor would not take the motor vehicle free of the security interest if: . the secured party is in possession of the motor vehicle immediately before the time of the sale or lease; . the motor vehicle is bought at a sale held by or on behalf of an execution creditor; . the buyer or lessee holds, or holds on behalf of another person, the motor vehicle as inventory; or . the person has actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest (clause 45(2)). 83. Therefore, if the person acquiring the property did not have knowledge of the security interest and a search of the PPS Register at any time on the day that the interest was acquired, or on the previous day, by reference to the serial number would not have disclosed a registered security interest, then that person would acquire the motor vehicle free of the security interest (clause 45). 84. This provision is based on s7(1A) of the Chattel Securities Act 1987 (Vic) (the 'day and a half rule') and s8(3)(b) of the Registration of Interests in Goods Act 1986 (NSW), but unlike the existing State provisions, these provisions would not compel a transferee to undertake the search prior to purchase or lease (clause 45(1)). 85. This provision would have effect only in limited circumstances because in most cases, where personal property is required to be registered by serial number and the serial number is incorrectly recorded or missing, the registration would be ineffective, and the transferee would take their interest free of the security interest. Taking from prescribed persons 86. A buyer or lessee of an interest in a motor vehicle would ordinarily acquire it free of a security interest, if the regulations provide that motor vehicles of that kind may or must be described by serial number, and the seller or lessor is in a class of persons prescribed by the regulations (clause 45(3)). 87. The purpose of this provision is to allow a person to buy or lease a motor vehicle from a motor vehicle dealer, free of a security interest, without the need to search the PPS Register prior to acquiring their interest. Example Grant A is a motor vehicle dealer. Grant A has cars in stock financed under a floor plan arrangement with bailment company Finance A. Under the floor plan arrangement Finance A purchases the vehicles from Manufacturer A and allows Grant A to retain them on its premises for sale. Finance A registers its security interest in each vehicle. Buy A wants to purchase a car from Grant A with finance provided by Bank B. Neither Buy A nor Bank B need to search the PPS Register as the transferor (Grant A) is a motor vehicle dealer. Buy A acquires its interest in the car free of Finance A's security interest. 88. However, the person would not take the vehicle free of the security interest if: . the secured party was in possession of the vehicle immediately before the buyer or lessee acquired their interest; . when the vehicle is being sold (not leased) - the person buys the vehicle at a sale held by or on behalf of an execution creditor; . the buyer or lessee holds the vehicle as inventory, or holds the vehicle as inventory on behalf of another person; or . the transferee has actual or constructive knowledge that the sale or lease constitutes a breach of the security agreement (clause 45(4)). 89. Many buyers or lessees of motor vehicles from motor vehicle dealers would be aware that motor vehicles held by dealers as inventory are subject to a security interest but this knowledge alone would not disqualify buyers and lessees. Example Grant A is a motor vehicle dealer. Bank A has perfected a security interest in all of the vehicles at Grant A's showroom, by registering each vehicle against its serial number. The security agreement obliges Grant A to sell the vehicles for an amount determined in accordance with a formula agreed to by Grant A and Bank A, with a minimum price of $X for any vehicle. Buy A is an associate of Grant A, though not a motor vehicle dealer, and is aware that Grant A is obliged to sell the vehicles for at least $X. Grant A sells a motor vehicle to Buy A for an amount significantly less than $X. Buy A would not acquire the motor vehicle free of Bank A's security interest. Transactions in the ordinary course of business 90. Generally, a person who acquires an interest in personal property in the ordinary course of the vendor's business of dealing with property of that kind would acquire the interest free of any security interest granted by the vendor, whether perfected or unperfected (clause 46(1)). This would not give the transferee protection from all security interests, only those security interests that have been granted by the transferor. 91. However, this provision would not apply if: . in the case of personal property that may or must be described by serial number, the transferee holds the property, or holds the property on behalf of another, as inventory; or . the transferee has actual or constructive knowledge of the security agreement (clause 46(2)). 92. Purchasers are only protected when they acquire their interest in the property 'in the ordinary course of the seller's or lessor's business of selling or leasing personal property of that kind'(clause 46(1)). Generally, this would be a question of fact in each case but a person would not take free in the ordinary course of the seller's business if the sale is made at a time of financial stress and the sale would not have been made but for the seller's financial stress. Example Grant A is primarily in the business of leasing, repairing and rebuilding cranes. Grant A's practice is to sell a crane if it becomes obsolete, deteriorated beyond its useful life, or difficult to lease. Grant A sells one of its cranes to Buy A. The sale is the only sale that occurs that year. While the sale of the crane to Buy A would be in the ordinary course of Grant A's business, the sale would not be in the ordinary course of Grant A's business of dealing with property of that kind. Example Grant A is primarily in the business of raising and selling livestock. Grant A and Buy A regularly exchange livestock for feed. The exchange of the livestock for feed would be in the ordinary course of business despite it being secondary to Grant A's primary business of dealing in livestock. Low value consumer property 93. A person who buys or leases personal property that they intend to use predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes would take the goods free of any security interests provided that: . their intention to use the personal property predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes existed at the time of the purchase of lease; . the person acquires their interest for new value; and . the market value of the consideration provided by the purchaser or lessee (at the time of payment) is not more than $5,000 (or a greater amount prescribed in the regulations) (clause 47(1)). 94. However, the buyer or lessee would not take the property free of the security interest if: . the property is required under the regulations to be described in a registration by serial number; . the person has actual or constructive knowledge that the sale or lease is a breach of the security agreement; or . at the time the contract for sale or lease was entered into: o the market value of the personal property is more than $5,000; and o the person believed the market value of the personal property to be not more than $5,000 (clause 47(2)). 95. This provision would enable consumer to purchase low-value consumer goods without the need to search the PPS Register. Example Ms X buys a chainsaw at a garage sale for $2,000 with the intention to use it in her hobby workshop. Ms X is not aware of any security interest in the chainsaw. The market value of the chainsaw is less than $5,000. Ms X would take the chainsaw free of the security interest. Example Mr Y buys an antique chair at a garage sale for $4,000. Mr Y does not believe the market value of the chair to be more than $5,000 and while similar chairs are selling for $6,000 at the local antique shop, Mr Y does not know this. Mr Y would take the chair free of the security interest. Example Mr Y buys an antique chair at a garage sale for $4,000. Mr Y knows that similar chairs are selling for $6,000 at the local antique shop. Mr Y would not take the chair free of the security. Security interests in currency 96. A transferee of currency would acquire their interest in the currency free of any security interests in that currency if, at the time of acquiring the currency, the transferee had no actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest (clause 48). 97. This rule recognises the importance of the negotiability of currency in ordinary commerce. Security interests in investment instrument or entitlement in the ordinary course of trading 98. A person who buys an investment instrument or entitlement in the ordinary course of trading on a prescribed financial market (within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001) takes an instrument or entitlement free of any security interests (clause 49). This provision protects the integrity of transactions in prescribed markets such as the Australian Stock Exchange. Security interests in investment instruments 99. A person would acquire an interest, including a security interest, (clause 42) in an investment instrument free of other security interests if: . the person acquired their interest by a consensual transaction for value; . the person took possession or control of the investment instrument; and . the person had no actual or constructive knowledge that the acquisition constituted a breach of the security agreement that provided for the security interest (clause 50). Security interests in investment entitlements 100. A person would acquire an interest in an investment entitlement free of a security interest if: . the person gave value for the interest (unless the interest acquired is a security interest); . the person acquired their interest in a consensual transaction; and . the person had no actual or constructive knowledge that the acquisition of the interest was a breach of a security agreement that provides for a security interest in any investment entitlement or financial product (clause 51). Temporarily perfected security interests 101. A security interest would be temporarily perfected in a number of circumstances, despite the secured party not having perfected it by registering a financing statement or by taking possession or control of the collateral, where: . a bailee takes possession of goods and issues a negotiable instrument of title (clause 22(2)); . proceeds arise from collateral (clause 33(2)); . collateral is transferred (clause 34(1)); . goods are returned to a grantor for dealing (clause 35(1)); . negotiable instruments or investment instruments are given to the grantor for sale (clause 36(1)); . goods, which are the subject of transferred account or chattel paper, are returned (clause 38(3)); . collateral is relocated to Australia (clause 39(1)); or . the grantor moves to Australia (clause 40(2)). 102. Transferees that buy or lease collateral in which the security interest is temporarily perfected (other than under clause 322) would acquire their interests free of the security interest where they provide new value and do not have actual knowledge that the purchase or lease constitutes a breach of the security interest (clause 52). 103. This protects innocent transferees who acquire collateral subject to a temporarily perfected security interest, as searching the PPS Register would not have revealed a registration. Example Bank A has perfected its security interest in goods by arranging for a bailee to possess the goods on its behalf. The property is returned to Grant A for sale. The security interest would be temporarily perfected for five business days. If Grant A becomes insolvent during those five days, Bank A's security interest would not be void because of the temporary perfection. However, if Grant A sells the property to a third party during the five days, in circumstances that constitute a breach of the security agreement, the transferee would take the collateral free of Bank A's security interest, despite the secured party's interest being temporarily perfected. Rights of secured party and transferee 104. The ability of transferees to take security interests free of security interests would have consequences for secured parties and transferees as follows: . the rights of the secured party to the relevant property, or an accession to the property, are subrogated to the rights (if any) of the transferor and any predecessor of the transferor (clause 53(2)); and . a transferee who makes a part payment before receiving notice of the secured party's rights (clause 53(2)) would have their obligation discharged to the extent of the payment (clause 53(3)). Priority between Security Interests Priority of security interests generally 105. An item of personal property could secure payments or obligations owed to more than one secured party. When more than one secured party becomes entitled to the collateral under their security agreement, the priority rules determine (for example): . the order in which proceeds of the collateral realised as part of an enforcement process are to be distributed (clause 140); . whether a secured party would be entitled to notice that another secured party has commenced enforcement process in relation to the collateral (clause 130); . whether a secured party would be entitled to take over an enforcement process initiated by another secured party (clause 123). 106. The priority rules would apply only if two or more security interests are attached to the same collateral. 107. The priority rules would not apply where the collateral has been acquired free of any competing security interests or where only one security interest is attached to the collateral. Example Grant A is a dealer in antiquarian books. Grant A grants a security interest in its antiquarian books to Bank A. Grant A later grants a security interest in the same antiquarian books to Bank B. Neither Bank A nor Bank B perfect their security interest in the books. Grant A sells one of the antiquarian books to Buy A. Buy A takes the book free of the security interests previously held by Bank A and Bank B (clause 43). There is no priority contest between Bank A and Bank B. Example Grant A is a dealer in antiquarian books. Grant A grants a security interest in its antiquarian books to Bank A. Grant A later grants a security interest in the same antiquarian books to Bank B. Both Bank A and Bank B perfect their security interest. Grant A sells a book to Buy A in the ordinary course of Grant A's business. Buy A knew that the transfer would be a breach of the security agreement with Bank A. Therefore, Buy A acquired the books subject to Bank A's security interest, but not Bank B's security interest. It is not necessary to apply the priority rules because Buy A took the books free of Bank B's security interest (clause 48). 108. The Bill includes general priority rules (clause 55-61) and specific priority rules for: . purchase money security interests (clause 62-65); . security interests in transferred collateral (clause 66-68); . creditors and purchasers of negotiable instruments, chattel paper and negotiable documents of title (clause 69-72); . competing security interests and declared statutory interests (clause 73); and . execution creditors, ADI accounts and returned tangible property (clause 74-77). Default priority rules 109. The order in which the security interests attach to the collateral is relevant only if both interests are unperfected, in which case priority would be determined by the order of attachment (clause 55(2)). 110. When two unperfected security interests attach at the same time, they would have the same priority under the Bill. However, one of the secured parties will be able to achieve priority over the other by registering their security interest. 111. A perfected security interest would have priority over an unperfected security interest in the same collateral (clause 55(3)). Example Grant A grants a security interest in its oil paintings to Bank A, and later grants a security interest in the same oil paintings to Bank B. Bank B registers the security interest, while Bank A does not. The security interest held by Bank B would have a higher priority than the security interest granted by Bank A, despite Grant A having granted the first security interest to Bank A. 112. Where two or more security interests are both perfected, priority would be determined by the priority time for each security interest (clause 55(4)). 113. The priority time for a security interest would be the initial perfection time only if it the security interest remained continuously perfected after that time (clause 55(6)). A security interest would be continuously perfected only if it is has been perfected at all times since the initial perfection time (clause 56(1)). A security interest could be continuously perfected by separate contiguous or overlapping perfections (clause 56(2)). Example Grant A purchases a Bentley with finance provided by Finance A. Finance A registers the security interest in May and provides the finance to Grant A in June. Grant A later obtains further finance from Finance B, which is also secured against the Bentley. Finance B registers this security interest in June. The security interest held by Finance A would have priority over that held by Finance B, because the priority time for Finance A's security interest preceded that of Finance B's. Example Grant A is a dealer in stamps. Grant A purchases a rare stamp with finance provided by Bank A. In July, Bank A perfects its security interest in the stamp by taking possession of the stamp. In September, Grant A grants security interest in the stamp to Bank B. Bank B perfects its security interest in the stamp with a registration on the PPS Register. In November, Bank A agrees to give Grant A possession of the stamp for 48 hours to allow Grant A to exhibit the stamp at a festival. Before giving Grant A possession of the stamp, Bank A registers its security interest in the stamp on the PPS Register. The security interest held by Bank A would have priority over that held by Bank B, because the priority time for Bank A's security interest would be July (when Bank A initially perfected its security interest by taking possession of the stamp). Priority of security interests perfected by control 114. A security interest that is perfected by control would have priority over a security interest perfected by any other means (clause 57(1)). 115. Only the following kinds of property could be perfected by control: . an ADI account; . an investment entitlement; . an investment instrument; . a negotiable instrument that is not evidenced by a certificate; . a right evidenced by a letter of credit that states that the letter of credit must be presented on claiming payment or requiring the performance of an obligation; and . satellites and other space objects. 116. A security interest would be perfected by control when the secured party, or another person on behalf of the secured party, has control of the collateral (clause 21(2)). However, controllable property could be perfected otherwise than by control. Example Grant A borrows $10,000 from Bank A and grants Bank A a security interest in its shares. Bank A perfects its security interest by registering a financing statement on the PPS Register. Grant A later borrows $15,000 from Bank B and grants Bank B a security interest in the same shares. Bank B perfects its security interest by taking control of the shares. Bank B's security interest would have priority over Bank A's security interest because Bank B has perfected its security interest through control while Bank A has perfected its security interest through registration. 117. A security interest perfected by control would have priority over a security interest that is not perfected by control even when the secured party knows that the grant of the security interest was made in breach of a pre-existing security interest. This makes it unnecessary to consider whether a person with control had knowledge of another security interest or the terms of the other security interest. 118. Secured parties should therefore protect their security interests by perfecting their interests appropriately. As perfection by registration alone would be insufficient to guarantee priority against a competing security interest perfected by control, a secured party with a security interest in controllable property, who is concerned that the grantor might transfer the collateral to another person, should consider taking control of the property. 119. Where all the competing security interests are perfected by control, the first in time principle would apply and priority would be determined by the order in which the secured parties took control of the collateral (provided that perfection by control has been continuous) (clause 57(2)). 120. This rule would be subject to an exception where an ADI perfects its security interest in an ADI account held with the ADI (always by control) (clause 25(1)). The security interest held by the ADI would be subordinate to a security interest held by another secured party who has control (clause 75). An ADI which is concerned about this could choose to specify that only an account holder can direct the disposition of funds. 121. Priority between perfected security interests not perfected by control would be determined by their priority time. The security interest with the earliest priority time would have the highest priority (clause 55(4)). 122. Over a period of time, a secured party might perfect a security interest by more than one method. For example, the security interest might initially be perfected by possession and then perfected later by registration. Provided that the security interest has been continuously perfected, the priority time would be the earliest priority time (clause 55(5)-(6). Example On 1 July, Grant A grants Finance A a security interest in a lathe. Finance A takes possession of the lathe from 1 July until 30 August. On 1 August, Finance A registers against Grant A in relation to the lathe with an end date of 31 October. On 1 October, Finance A again takes possession of the lathe until 31 December. At 31 December, Finance A's security interest in the lathe will have been continuously perfected since 1 July, initially by possession, then by registration and later by possession. The priority time for the security interest will be 1 July. 123. The priority time for a security interest first perfected by control would be the time when the collateral is first perfected by control. A secured party who has control of the collateral and who wishes to surrender control while retaining a perfected security interest, should satisfy themselves beforehand that the security interest will remain perfected despite the loss of control (clause 55(7)). 124. If a security interest has priority over a second security interest and that second security interest has priority over a third security interest, then the first security interest would have priority over the third security interest (clause 59). It would not matter whether the second security interest exists. 125. The priority of a constitutional security interest over a non- constitutional security interest is relevant where a State does not refer the power to enact the Bill to the Commonwealth. Some security interests would be within the constitutional power of the Commonwealth (clauses 243(2) and clauses 246-249) but others would not be. For example, the Bill would operate in relation to a security interest when the secured party is a constitutional corporation and the grantor is an individual (clause 248(1)). However, the Bill would not operate when both the secured party and the grantor are individuals and the constitution does not apply to the collateral.. 126. A security interest that is within the constitutional power of the Commonwealth would have priority over a security interest that is not within the constitutional power of the Commonwealth (clause 252). Accordingly, a security interest granted by an individual over non- constitutional property to a constitutional corporation would have priority over a security interest in the same property granted to an individual. Example State A is a State that has not referred the power to enact the Bill to the Commonwealth. Grant A is an individual, and has granted a security interest in his or her personal property to Person A, another individual. The security agreement is entered into in State A. Grant A later grants a security interest in the same personal property to Bank A. The security interest held by Bank A, as a security interest arising from the Commonwealth's banking power, would have priority over the security interest held by Person A. 127. Where a security interest is transferred to another party, the transferred part of the security interest would have the same priority after the transfer that it had immediately before the transfer (clause 60). 128. A secured party could subordinate their security interest to any other interest (whether or not a security interest) in the same collateral (clause 61(1)). This would sometimes be necessary because a prior perfected security interest could limit further finance available to the debtor. 129. A subordination agreement would be effective according to its terms. Any third party who is intended to benefit from the subordination agreement would be able to enforce the subordination agreement without being a party to the agreement. (Clause 61(2)). Example On 1 July, Finance A registers a security agreement against Grant A over its inventory in anticipation of future deliveries of inventory to Grant A. On 1 August, Grant A attempts to obtain further finance from Finance B but Finance B is aware of Finance A's registered security interest and concerned that Finance A would have priority in the event of Grant A's default. Finance B therefore makes the provision of finance conditional on a subordination agreement between Grant A and Finance A to ensure that once their security agreement is signed, Finance B's security interest would not be subordinate to that of Finance A. 130. A security interest would not be created by an agreement or undertaking to subordinate the right of a person to the performance of an obligation to the right of another person to the performance of an obligation of the same debtor. Advances 131. An advance is the payment of currency, the provision of credit or the giving of value, and would include the liability of a debtor to pay interest, credit costs and other charges or costs connected to the advance or the enforcement of a security interest securing the advance (clause 10, advance). A future advance would be an advance secured by a security interest (if the advance is made after the security agreement) and would include expenses in relation to the enforcement of the security agreement, secured by the security interest (clause 10, future advance). 132. A security agreement could contain a provision securing a future advance (clause 18(4)) and the Bill would confer the same priority on all advances (including future advances) and obligations secured by the security agreement (clause 58). Accordingly, a security agreement can contain a provision which secures future advances. 133. Expenses, in relation to the enforcement of a security interest in collateral, would include advances, costs and taxes for obtaining possession of, protecting (including insuring), maintaining, preserving or repairing the collateral (clause 10). A security agreement would be taken to secure reasonable expenses in relation to the enforcement of the security interest, unless the parties agree otherwise (clause 18(5)). Purchase money security interests 134. A security interest would be a purchase money security interest: . to the extent that it attaches to collateral and secures all or part of the purchase price; . where the secured party provides the value required by the grantor to acquire the collateral, to the extent that the collateral secures the value; . where a lessor or bailor acquires an interest under a PPS lease, that is, a lease or bailment of tangible property for an effective period of more than one year, or 90 days in the case of serial numbered goods) (clause 13); or . where a consignor acquires an interest under a commercial consignment (clause 14(1)). Example Grant A leases a jetspa from Finance A for a term of more than one year. Finance A has a purchase money security interest. Example Grant A is a wholesaler of car radios. Grant A purchases car radios from Manufacturer A, financed by Bank B. Bank B has a security interest in Grant A's all present and after acquired property but does not have a purchase money security interest. Grant A decides to take up Manufacturer A's offer to supply the car radios on a deferred payment basis. Manufacturer A would have a purchase money security interest in the car radios supplied after this time. 135. A secured party who has a purchase money security interest would have priority over a perfected security interest in the same collateral, granted by the same grantor, provided the purchase money security interest is perfected by a registration that states that the security interest is a purchase money security interest. 136. When the collateral is inventory that is goods, the purchase money security interest would have to be perfected by a registration before the grantor obtains possession of the goods (clause 62(2)). A single registration could confer purchase money priority on several later supplies of goods. When goods are shipped to the grantor by a common carrier, the grantor would not obtain possession of the goods until the grantor acquires actual possession of the goods (clause 65). When the collateral is inventory that is not goods, the security interest would have to be perfected by a registration before the security interest could attach to the inventory (clause 62(2)). 137. When the collateral is goods, but not inventory, the purchase money security interest would have to be perfected by registration before the end of 10 days after the grantor obtains possession of the goods. When collateral is neither inventory nor goods, the purchase money security interest would have to be perfected by registration before the end of 10 days after the security interest attaches to the collateral. (Clause 62(3)). 138. A purchase money security interest held by a seller, lessor or consignor of the collateral would have priority over another purchase money security interest in the same collateral held by a person who is not the seller, lessor or consignor, provided the priority interest is perfected within the period required to obtain priority over a security interest that is not a purchase money security interest (clause 64). 139. A PMSI would not include: . an interest acquired under a sale and lease-back arrangement; . an interest in collateral (as original collateral) that is a monetary obligation, chattel paper, investment instrument, investment entitlement or a negotiable instrument; . a security interest in collateral that the grantor intends to use predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes (clause 14(2)). 140. If a security interest secures purchase money security obligations and other obligations, it would be a purchase money security interest only to the extent that it secures purchase money obligations and not to the extent that it does not secure purchase security obligations (clause 14(3)). Example Grant A borrows $100,000 from Dealer A to purchase a front-end loader from Dealer A. Grant A is able to purchase the front-end loader for $75,000 and Grant A uses the balance of the money advanced ($25,000) to purchase a round-the-world cruise. While the front-end loader would secure the entire $100,000 advanced, the security interest would only be a purchase money security interest priority to the extent that it secured $75,000. Dealer A would have a security interest in the front-end loader securing the other $25,000 (but this security interest would not have purchase money security status). 141. If a security interest is granted in purchase money security collateral and collateral that is not purchase money security collateral, the security interest would be a purchase money security interest only to the extent that it secures the purchase money collateral (clause 14(4)). Example Grant A owes $5,000 to Bank A, but the loan is unsecured. Grant A borrows a further $10,000 from Bank A to purchase a computer. All of the $10,000 is used to purchase the computer. Bank A secures both the $10,000 loan and the earlier $5,000 loan against the computer. The security interest in the computer would be a purchase money security interest only to the extent that it secures the $10,000 advanced by Bank A for the purchase of the computer. 142. A purchase money security interest would continue to be a purchase money security interest despite the secured obligation being renewed, refinanced, consolidated or restructured (clause 14(5)). Example Bank A gives Grant A a $5,000 unsecured loan in addition to an existing $10,000 purchase money security interest secured against Grant A's wine collection. Grant A and Bank A agree to consolidate the loans, to extend the period over which Bank A must be repaid and to secure the loans against the wine collection and against some antique prints owned by Grant A. The consolidated loan would be a purchase money security interest, but only to the extent of $10,000 of the $15,000 consolidated loan and only to the extent that it is secured against the wine collection. 143. When an obligation secures both purchase money security interests and other security interests, the parties could agree on a method of apportioning payments. If the parties don't agree, the payments would be apportioned as intended by the grantor alternatively in the following order: . to unsecured obligations; . to secured obligations; . to obligations secured by purchase money security interests. (Clause 14(6)). Non-purchase money security interests in accounts 144. The priority held by an inventory financier in a purchase money security interest could extend to proceeds arising from a dealing by the grantor in the collateral (clause 32(5)) but when the proceeds are in the form of an account, other than an ADI account, the grantor could assign the account to another person for new value. 145. The accounts financier would have priority provided it registers its security interest against the grantor, before the earlier of: . the perfection of the purchase money security interest; or . the registration time of the purchase money security interest (Clause 64(1)). 146. Alternatively, the accounts financier would have priority, if it gives notice to each secured party holding a registered purchase money security interest in the inventory at least five business days before the earlier of the day: . it registers its security interest against the grantor; or . the priority interest attaches to the account. (Clause 64(1)). 147. The requirement that five business days notice be given to the inventory financier would give the inventory financier time to protect its security interest by altering the terms of trade for future inventory finance that would become subordinate to the priority interest. 148. If the purchase money security interest is subordinate to a priority interest, the purchase money security interest would continue in either the proceeds of the inventory or the new value received by the grantor. This security interest in the new value would be taken to be perfected by the registration that perfected the purchase money security interest in the proceeds. (Clause 64(3)). Example Manufacturer A supplies inventory to Grant A on a purchase money security interest basis. Manufacturer A has registered against Grant A in relation to the inventory. Grant A would like to begin transferring the proceeds of its inventory, in the form of accounts, to Discount A for new value. Discount A gives 5 business days notice to Manufacturer A of its intention to begin buying accounts from Grant A. Discount A registers its security interest in the transferred accounts. At the end of the 5 business days, Discount A begins buying the accounts from Grant A. Discount A has priority over Manufacturer A in relation to the accounts, but Manufacturer A would have a purchase money priority over the new value Grant A has received on the transfer of the accounts to Discount A. 149. More than one purchase money security interest could attach to the same collateral, for example where a grantor acquires collateral that is financed partly by the seller of the collateral and partly by another financier. 150. A purchase money security interest held by a seller, lessor or consignor would have priority over any other purchase money security interest granted by the same grantor, if the purchase money security interest is perfected: . for collateral that is inventory and tangible property - at the time the grantor obtains possession; . for collateral that is inventory and intangible property - at the time the priority interest attaches to the collateral; and . in any other case, before the end of 10 business days after the grantor obtains possession of the collateral (clause 63). Example Grant A acquires a lathe from Manufacturer A on a retention of title basis, under which Grant A is obliged to pay 25% on possession and the balance in regular instalments over six months. Manufacturer A has a purchase money security interest in the lathe that secures the 75% balance owing on the lathe. Grant A finances the initial 25% of the purchase price of the lathe through a loan from Bank B secured against the lathe also on a purchase money security interest basis. Manufacturer A's purchase money security interest will have priority over Bank B's purchase money security interest. 151. When neither of the purchase money security interests is held by a seller, lessor or consignor, priority would be determined in accordance with the default priority rules, that is, on the basis of the earliest priority time or earliest attachment if neither is perfected. Example Bank A grants Grant A a loan to purchase equipment for its business. Bank A takes a security interest in all Grant A's present and after acquired property, including proceeds, to secure the loan. Grant A then acquires a boat from Manufacturer A, on a retention of title basis, and Manufacturer A registers its purchase money security interest in the boat. Grant A finances the initial down payment on the boat through a loan from Bank B, also secured against the boat, and any proceeds, on a purchase money security interest basis. Grant A sells the boat and acquires proceeds in the form of an account. Grant A sells the account to Discount A and keeps the new value provided by Discount A. Discount A gives notice to Manufacturer A one day before it registers its security interest in the transferred account. Discount A has priority over Manufacturer A in the proceeds that were transferred to Grant A. As the seller of the boat, Manufacturer A would have priority over Bank B's purchase money security interest in the proceeds but Bank B would have priority over Bank A which does not have a purchase money security interest in the proceeds. Priority of security interests in transferred collateral 152. A grantor could transfer collateral to another person where the transferee does not take the property free of the security interest and the transferee, in turn, grants a security interest in the collateral to another secured party. In these circumstances, it would become necessary to determine which security interest has priority (clause 66). 153. The law would need to balance the competing interests of two innocent parties: . the secured creditor who provided finance to the transferor and who did not consent to and is unaware of the transfer (the transferor's secured party); and . the secured creditor who provided finance to the transferee and who was not aware of the earlier security interest (the transferee's secured party). 154. Where the transferor-granted security interest or the transferee- granted security interest is a purchase money security interest, neither interest would have purchase money priority over the other, because purchase money priority applies only when the competing security interests have been granted by the same grantor (clause 62(1)). 155. The transferor-granted interest would have priority where it was perfected immediately prior to transfer and was continuously perfected since transfer (clause 67). Example Bank A has a registered security interest in Grant A's worm farm, securing $100 owed by Grant A to Bank A. Grant A transfers the worm farm to Grant B, in circumstances where Grant B takes the worm farm subject to the security interest. Bank A has the benefit of temporary perfection (clause 34). Within 24 months of the transfer, Grant B grants Bank B a security interest in the worm farm, securing $150 owed by Grant B to Bank B. Grant A is not aware of the transfer. Bank A's security interest would have priority over Bank B's security interest (clause 67). Example Bank A has a registered security interest in Grant A's worm farm, securing $100 owed by Grant A to Bank A. Grant A transfers the worm farm to Grant B, in circumstances where Grant B takes the worm farm subject to the security interest. Bank A has the benefit of temporary perfection (clause 34). Bank A becomes aware of the transfer, but does not register against Grant B within 5 business days. The temporary perfection ends (clause 34(1)(c)(ii)). Bank A registers against Grant B. There are no other registrations against Grant B. Grant B later grants a security interest in the worm farm to Bank B (who later still perfects its security interest by registration). Bank A would have priority on an ordinary first in time basis because its second registration was made before Bank B's registration. 156. On ordinary first in time priority principles, once the transferor- granted interest becomes unperfected, a perfected transferee-granted interest would have priority over a transferor-granted interest. 157. However, the Bill would allow the transferor-granted interest to have priority over the transferee-granted interest, subject to the transferor's secured party resuming perfection of the security interest and giving notice to the transferee's secured party. The transferee-granted interest would have priority to the extent of any advances made or obligations secured while the transferor-granted interest was not perfected (clause 68). The transferee's secured party would have priority only if it acquired the security interest without actual or constructive notice that the acquisition constitutes a breach of the transferor's security interest (clause 68(2)(c)). Example Bank A has a registered security interest in Grant A's worm farm, securing $100 owed by Grant A to Bank A. Grant A transfers the lathe to Grant B, in circumstances where Grant B takes the worm farm subject to the security interest. Bank A has the benefit of temporary perfection (clause 34). Bank A becomes aware of the transfer, but does not register against Grant B within 5 business days. The temporary perfection ends (clause 34(1)(c)(ii)). Grant B is negotiating a loan from Bank B. Bank B registers against Grant B. Bank A becomes aware of the transfer to Grant B and registers against Grant B but before Bank B makes an advance to Grant B or comes under an obligation to Grant B that is secured against the worm farm. Bank A gives a notice to Bank B. Bank A's security interest has priority over Bank B's security interest (clause 68(1)). 158. The transferee-granted interest has priority where the transferor- granted security interest: . is not registered with a serial number; . was perfected by registration before the transfer, became unperfected and was later re-perfected; . notice in the approved form was given to other secured parties; . the transferee-granted security interest was perfected immediately before the transferor-granted interest was re-perfected; . the transferee acquired their interest without knowledge that it was a breach of a prior security agreement; and . the transferee-granted interest secured performance of an advance made before the transferor-granted interest is re-perfected (this would apply despite the rule that all advances have the same priority)(clause 58). (Clause 68(2)). Example Bank A has a registered security interest in Grant A's worm farm. Grant A transfers the worm farm, in the ordinary course of his business, to Grant B who acquires the worm farm free of Bank A's security interest. Grant B grants a security interest in the worm farm to Bank B. Bank B immediately perfects its interest in the worm farm without any knowledge that this is in breach of Bank A's prior security agreement and makes a number of advances to Grant B under their security agreement. Bank A later becomes aware of the transfer and re-registers its security interest and provides notice to Bank B in the approved form. Bank A would have priority over Bank B's security interest in the worm farm (clause 68(1)). However, Bank B would have priority over the Bank A's security interest to the extent of the advances made or obligations incurred before Bank A re-perfected its security interest and gave the notice to Bank B (clause 68(2)). Priority of creditors and purchasers of negotiable instruments, chattel paper and negotiable documents of title 159. The interest of a creditor who is paid by a debtor would have priority over any security interest in: . the funds paid; . the intangible that was the source of the payment (for example, a bank account); or . a negotiable instrument used to effect the payment (clause 69(1)). 160. However, the creditor would not have priority if they had actual knowledge that the payment was a breach of the security agreement that provided for the security interest (clause 69(2)). 161. A person who acquires an interest in a negotiable instrument, in a consensual transaction, would have priority over security interests in the negotiable instrument provided: . the person provided value and took possession or control of the instrument; . if the acquisition was in the ordinary course of the person's business of acquiring instruments of that kind - the person acquired the interest without actual or constructive knowledge that the transaction involved a breach of the security interest; and . if the acquisition was not in the ordinary course of the person's business of acquiring instruments of that kind - the person lacks actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest (clause 70). Example Finance A perfects its security interest in Dealer A's cars by registering a financing statement. Dealer A sells a car to a person who pays for the car with a cheque. Dealer A deposits the cheque with Bank A. Bank A is unaware of Finance A's security interest in the cheques (as proceeds of the car). Bank A's interest in the cheque takes priority Finance A's security interest in the cheque. 162. The interest of a person who acquires chattel paper for new value, in a consensual transaction, in the ordinary course of their business of acquiring chattel paper of that kind would have priority over: . a perfected security interest if they lack actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest; and . a security interest that has attached to proceeds of inventory as original collateral (clause 71(2)). Example Dealer A leases paintings in the course of a business. Dealer A leases a painting to Person A. The lease agreement is chattel paper. The lease payments are proceeds of Dealer A's inventory. Dealer A assigns the lease payments to Finance A. The assignment is deemed to be a security interest and attaches to the payments (which are proceeds of inventory) as original collateral. Dealer A also sells the chattel paper to Finance B. Both Finance B and Finance A claim the lease payments made to Dealer A. Finance B's interest in the chattel paper would have priority over Finance A's security interest in the lease payments. 163. The interest of a holder of a negotiable document of title would have priority over a perfected security interest in the document if the holder gives value for the document and: . where the holder acquires the document in the ordinary course of their business of dealing in documents of that kind - it is acquired without actual or constructive knowledge that the acquisition was a breach of the security interest; or . where the holder does not acquire the document in the ordinary course of their business of dealing in documents of that kind - it is acquired without actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest (clause 72). Priority of other interests Priority between security interests and declared statutory interests 164. An interest in personal property would have priority over a security interest where: . it arises under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or Territory (unless the collateral owner agrees to the interest) or the general law; and . it arises in relation to providing goods or services in the ordinary course of business; . no other law provides for priority between the priority interest and the security interest; and . the holder of the priority interest has no knowledge that the transaction is a breach of the security agreement (clause 73(1)). 165. Other interests in personal property would have priority over a security interest if, and only if, the Commonwealth, State or Territory conferred priority on the other interests over security interests (clause 73(2)). 166. The priority between an interest arising under a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory and a security interest would be determined according to that law, if: . that law declares these provisions to be applicable to the statutory interest; and . the statutory interest arises after the declaration come into effect (clause 73(2)). 167. These rules do not apply to interests arising before the registration commencement time. Any other interest that currently has priority over a security interest would continue to have priority over a security interest (clause 312). Priority of execution creditors 168. A security interest would be subordinate to the interest of an execution creditor provided the security interest is not perfected at the time of execution (clause 74). Returned goods 169. A perfected security interest that re-attaches to returned property (clause 37(1)) would have priority over a goods security interest that is granted to the transferee of an account under clause 38(1). (Clause 76(1)) . 170. A security interest in goods granted to the transferee of chattel paper (clause 38(1)) has priority over: . a perfected security interest granted to the transferee of an account (clause 38(2)); . a perfected security interest that re-attaches to returned goods or after-acquired property (if the transferee takes possession of the chattel paper in the ordinary course of business and for new value). Example Finance A grants a loan to Dealer A and secures a security interest in all Dealer A's motor vehicles. Lessor A leases a motor vehicle from Dealer A. The lease creates chattel paper which Dealer A transfers to Finance B. Lessor A makes the required payments under the lease to Finance B. Lessor A then terminates the lease and returns the motor vehicle to Dealer A. Finance A's pre existing security interest re-attaches to the motor vehicle but this security interest would be subordinate to Finance B's security interest as the transferee of the chattel paper. 171. A security interest in goods that is granted by a person who acquires an interest in the property would have priority over a security interest that re-attaches or is granted when the goods are returned, if: . the attachment occurred while the person possesses the property; and . immediately before the possession time, the priority interest was perfected (clause 76(3)). Priority where no foreign register 172. Where a foreign jurisdiction does not provide for the registration of security interests, a security interest in an account or financial property (chattel paper; currency; documents of title; investment instruments and negotiable instruments) would have priority over another interest, in proceedings in an Australian court: 173. in respect of accounts - if the priority interest was perfected prior to the attachment of the other interest (clause 77(2)); 174. in respect of financial property - if the priority interest was perfected by registration prior to the attachment of the other interest and the secured party lacks possession or control of the property (clause 77(3)). Transfer and assignment of interests in collateral Transfer of collateral 175. A provision in a security agreement or other agreement prohibiting the transfer of the collateral by the grantor would not affect any right the grantor has to transfer the collateral either by agreement with the transferee or by operation of law (clause 79(1)). 176. However, the fact that the transfer of the collateral is effective would not affect the right of a secured party to treat the transfer as a default under the security agreement (clause 79(2)). Rights on transfer of account or chattel paper 177. In order to ensure that an account debtor is not in a worse position following the transfer of an account or chattel paper, the rights of a transferee of an account or chattel paper (including a secured party or receiver) would, subject to the account debtor not having agreed not to assert any contractual defences (clause 80(2)), be subject to: . the contractual terms between the account debtor and the transferor, and any equity, defence or claim arising under their contract; . any other equity, defence or claim that the account debtor may have against the transferor, including set-off, that arises before transfer, (clause 80(1)). Modification or substitution of contract 178. An account debtor and the transferor of an account may agree to modify the contract giving rise to the account. The modification would be effective against the transferee provided that: . the account debtor and the transferor acted honestly in modifying the contract; . the modification is made in a commercially reasonable way; and . the modification does not have a materially adverse effect on the transferee's rights or the transferor's ability to perform under the contract (clause 80(6)). 179. This rule would apply only to the extent that a transferred right to payment has not been fully earned by performance (or is outstanding) (clause 80(4)). 180. If a transferor initially agrees with the transferee not to modify or substitute a contract but then later agrees with the account debtor to modify or substitute the contract, contrary to the agreement with the transferee, the transferor would be acting dishonestly. 181. If collateral is intangible or chattel paper, the account debtor would be able to make payments under the contract to the transferor until the receipt of a notice including the following information: . the contract under which payment has become due; . the amount payable that has been transferred; and . that payment needs to be made to the transferee. 182. An account debtor would be unaffected by the assignment of a debt until notice of the assignment is given directing the account debtor to pay the transferee. After receiving notice, other than a notice from the transferor, if the account debtor requests proof from the transferee and the transferee fails to provide proof within 5 days of the transfer, payment to the transferee discharges the obligation (clause 80(7)). Example Buyer A has an agreement with Dealer A to purchase equipment and pay on an instalment basis. Dealer A agrees that it will not assign any of its rights under the sale agreement. Nevertheless, Dealer A grants Finance A a security interest in the accounts. The anti-assignment agreement would be ineffective. However, if Finance A notifies Buyer A to make all future payments directly to Finance A, Buyer A would be obliged to do so in order to discharge its obligations. Rights on transfer of account or chattel paper 183. A term in a contract which prohibits the transfer of: . an account arising from the proceeds of inventory; . an account which arises from granting rights (other than under construction contracts) or providing services (other than financial services) in the ordinary course of a business of that kind; or . an account that is proceeds of an account arising from providing rights or services in the ordinary course of business; would be binding on the transferor only to the extent of making the transferor liable in damages for breach of contract and is unenforceable against third parties (clause 81(2)). Example Buyer A has an agreement with Dealer A to purchase equipment and pay on an instalment basis. Dealer A agrees that it will not assign any of its rights under the sale agreement. Nevertheless Dealer A grants to Finance A a security interest in its accounts. The anti-assignment agreement would be ineffective. 184. This provision acknowledges that it is impractical for transferees of accounts and chattel paper to examine each contract for prohibitions on assignment. Chapter 3 - Specific Rules For Certain Security Interests Agricultural interests 1. The Bill deals with the relationship between a security interest in crops and an interest in the land on which the crops are growing (clause 84). 2. It establishes what could be described as an 'agricultural PMSI' (purchase money security interest) that would enable farmers to obtain additional finance on a PMSI-like basis, using crops and livestock as collateral. While an 'agricultural PMSI' shares many characteristics with PMSIs, they would have a lower priority than a PMSI in the same property. Relationship between security interest in crops and interest in land 3. The Bill would protect the interests of a lessor or mortgagee of land and they would not be adversely affected if: . a security interest is granted in crops on the land after the creation of the lessor's or mortgagee's interest in the land; and . the lessor or mortgagee has not consented to the creation of the security interest in the crops (clause 84(1)). Example Farmer B borrows money from Bank A and provides Bank A with a mortgage over his land. Farmer B then borrows money from Bank B and grants a security interest to Bank B in his crops. Bank A does not give written consent to the creation of the security interest in the crops. Bank A's mortgage is not prejudicially affected by Bank B's security interest in the crops. 4. A perfected security interest in crops would be protected if the land is subsequently sold, leased or encumbered (clause 84(2)). This provision reflects similar protection in State and Territory legislation. Example Farmer J borrows money from Bank A and grants Bank A a perfected security interest in her crops. Farmer J then grants Bank B a mortgage over the land on which the crops are growing. Bank A's security interest in the crops is not prejudicially affected by Bank B's mortgage. 5. Perfected security interests in crops which secure loans or other value used to produce the crops (a 'crop PMSI') would have priority over other security interests in the same crops (clause 85) 6. A security interest in crops would be a crop PMSI where: . the security interest is granted for value; . the security interest is granted to enable the crops to be produced (for example, seed, fertiliser or chemicals used in crop production); and . the security agreement providing for the security interest is made six months before the crops are planted or while they are growing (to ensure that the growing of the crops is contemplated at the time the security interest is granted) (clause 85). Example Farmer B borrows money from Bank A and provides Bank A a perfected security interest in his crops. The money is used for general farming purposes not specifically related to producing the crops. Farmer B then purchases fertiliser from AgricSupplies on terms that grant AgricSupplies a security interest in the fertiliser and the crops securing the unpaid purchase price of the fertiliser. The crops PMSI of AgricSupplies would have priority over Bank A's security interest in the crops. 7. A similar rule would be established for livestock, but whereas the crop PMSIs would have priority over other PMSIs, the priority interests in livestock would not have priority over PMSIs (clause 86). Accessions 8. Goods are sometimes made up of separate components that may require replacement as they wear out or become obsolete (for example, a sail on a yacht) and the value or utility of these goods may be improved with additional components (for example, a roof rack or trailer hitch to a car). 9. These substituted or added goods are accessions, which are defined as goods that are installed in, or affixed to, other goods, unless both the accessions and the other goods are required or permitted by the regulations to be described by unique serial numbers (clause 10, accession). For example, an engine installed in a motor vehicle is an accession because the engine is physically attached to the motor vehicle and only the car is described by a unique serial number. This exception for goods permitted or required to be described by a serial number would avoid the application of the accessions provisions where it would be inappropriate to do so and in particular, to the attachment of aircraft engines to airframes. 10. Accessions raise particular priority issues and therefore the Bill would provide special priority issues for accessions. They would also raise particular enforcement issues (as they become attached to other property). The rules on accessions are closely modelled on those in the New Zealand and Saskatchewan personal property securities legislation. Priority rules 11. A security interest in a good would continue in the good after it becomes an accession, despite being affixed or installed to another good (clause 88). 12. A security interest in an accession would have priority over an interest in the whole unless the interest in the whole falls within an exception (clause 89). For example, a security interest in an engine that is later affixed to a car would have priority over a security interest attached to the car. If the car (including the engine) were dealt with in a way that extinguished the security interest, then the security interest in the engine would be extinguished, for example, if the car were sold by a motor vehicle dealer. 13. These provisions would protect secured parties with security interests in goods that have the potential to become an accession (because when the security agreement is made the secured party would have an expectation that the good would later be affixed or installed to another good and that this would not affect their security interest). 14. Exceptions to the default priority rule would apply when: . a person acquires an interest in the whole for value after the accession is affixed, but before the security interest in the accession is perfected; . a person who buys the whole for value before the security interest in the accession is perfected; . a person with a perfected security interest in the whole who makes an advance after the accession is affixed and before the security interest in the accession is perfected, but only to the extent of the advance; or . a person has a perfected security interest in the whole obtained after the goods become an accession, and acquires the right to retain the goods under the security agreement before the security interest in the accession became perfected. (Clause 90). 15. All of these exceptions would apply only when the secured party to the accession has not perfected its security interest in the accession after it became affixed and it is therefore necessary to balance the interests of the secured party to the accession (who has not perfected the security interest) and another person who acquired rights in the whole (including the accession) without the benefit of notice that would have been provided by perfecting the security interest. Example Grant A borrows money from Finance B to buy a new motor for its pump, which is placed into the pump. Before Finance B registers its security interest in the motor on the PPS Register, Grant A offers the pump as security for a loan from Bank A, which advances the money and perfects its security interest in the pump through registration. Bank A has priority over Finance B to the motor because Bank A acquired for value an interest in the whole (the pump) before the security interest in the accession (the motor) was perfected. Bank A's search of the register would not have disclosed Finance B's security interest, and Bank A was entitled to assume that its perfected security interest would have the highest priority of any security interests attached to the pump. 16. Exceptions to the default priority rules would also apply where a security interest in the accession attaches after the goods becomes an accession. (Clause 91). 17. A security interest in the accession would be subordinate to a security interest attached to the whole before the accession was affixed, unless the person with the security interest in the whole: . consents to the security interest in the accession; . disclaims any interest in the accession; . agrees that a person may remove the accession; or . has no right to prevent the grantor from removing the accession. Example Grant A owns a large telescope at its observatory. Bank A has a registered security interest in Grant A's telescope. Grant A orders a replacement mirror from Supplier S. Supplier S supplies and installs the mirror in the telescope before the terms of payment are agreed. Grant A and Supplier S later agree that payment for the mirror is to be made within 30 days of the installation and Supplier S a security interest in the mirror. Bank A does not consent to the terms of payment between Grant A and Supplier S. Grant A defaults on its obligations to Bank A. Bank A seeks to enforce its interest in the telescope (including the recently installed mirror). Bank A's security interest would have priority over Supplier S' interest in the mirror. 18. A security interest in an accession that attaches after the goods become an accession would also be subordinate to the interest of a person who acquires an interest in the whole after the goods become an accession, but before the security interest in the accession is perfected. Enforcement of security interests in accessions 19. A secured party seizing an accession would have a duty to minimise any damage caused to the other good and any inconvenience to the person in possession of the other goods (clause 123). Only damage and inconvenience that is necessarily incidental to the removal of the accession would be permitted and the degree of damage and inconvenience that is necessarily incidental to the removal would be a question of fact in each case (clause 92). 20. Any party other than the grantor with an interest in the goods which are damaged would have a right to be reimbursed for the damage (but not inconvenience) caused by the removal of the accession, even if the damage is necessarily incidental to the removal of the accession (clause 93(1)). The value of the damage would not include the diminished value of the good resulting from the removal of the accession (otherwise the reimbursed party would be unjustly enriched) (clause 93(2)). A person entitled to be reimbursed may refuse to give permission for removal until the secured party has given adequate security for the removal (clause 94). 21. The secured party who is removing the accession would have to notify the grantor and any parties with a higher priority security interest in the accession that they intend to remove the accession (clause 95(1). Notice would give the grantor and any parties with a higher priority security interest in the accession an opportunity to approach the Court to seek a postponement of the removal (clause 97). 22. A person with an interest in the whole would be entitled to retain the accession if the obligation secured by the security interest in the accession is performed or the removing party is paid the market value of the accession (clause 96). The removing party would be able to obtain a Court order determining the amount payable for the retention of the accession (clause 97). Processed or commingled goods 23. Special provisions would apply to goods which are manufactured, processed, assembled or comingled so that they become part of a product of mass and their separate identity is lost. 24. A security interest in goods would continue in a product or mass even though the identity of the good is lost in the manufacturing, processing, assembly or commingling process (clause 99(1)). 25. The identity of the good would be lost if it is not commercially practical to restore the good to its original state. This would be a question of fact to be determined by the commercial and practical facts of each case. (For example, grain that becomes commingled with other grain in a silo would normally lose its identity in the mass of grain and a piece of wood that is manufactured into a fruit bowl would lose its identity in the fruit bowl) (clause 99(2)). 26. Perfection of a security interest in goods that become part of a product or mass is treated as perfection of a security interest in the product or mass (clause 100). The Bill would therefore provide protection for a secured party who perfects their security interest in a good which is then subsequently transformed into another good. 27. Any priority continuing in the commingled goods would be limited to the value of the goods on the day on which they became part of the combined product or mass (this would prevent the unjust enrichment of a secured party) (clause 101). Example Grant A is a furniture-maker. Finance A has a perfected security interest of $1 000 in glue owned by Grant A. Finance B has a perfected security interest of $10 000 in timber owned by Grant A. Grant A uses the glue and timber to make a table. The value of the glue that Grant A uses to make the table on the day that Grant A makes the table is $50. The value of the timber that Grant A uses to make the table on the day that Grant A makes the table is $200. Finance A and Finance B are the only persons with security interests in the table. Because the market for tables collapses, the table is worth $100. Finance A and Finance B have equal priority in the table. On enforcement of their security interests, Finance A is entitled to recover $20 (or 50/250th of $250). Finance B is entitled to recover $80 (or 200/250th of $250). 28. The priority between security interests continuing in commingled goods would be determined according to three rules: . a continuing perfected security interest would have priority over a continuing unperfected security interest (clause 102(1)); . continuing perfected security interests would have equal priority, but only to the extent that the amount secured by the interests would be proportionate to the amount secured by the sum of all perfected interests(clause 102(2)); and . continuing unperfected security interests would have equal priority but only to the extent that the amount secured by the interest would be proportionate to the amount secured by the sum of all perfected interests (clause 102(3)). 29. The priority of security interests continuing in the product or mass would be limited to the value of the goods on the day on which they become part of the product or mass (clause 102(4)). But a perfected PMSI in goods that continues in the product or mass has priority over a non-PMSI security interest in the product or mass (clause103). Example Grant A is a furniture-maker. Finance A has a registered security interest of $1 000 in glue owned by Grant A. The value of the glue that Grant A uses to make a table on the day that Grant A makes the table is $50. The table is valued at $1 000, being for the timber, glue, labour and skill of the furniture maker. On enforcement of its security interest, Finance A could recover no more than $50. Intellectual Property Implied references to intellectual property 30. If a security interest in goods were perfected by registration, and the exercise of the secured party's rights would necessarily involve the exercise of the intellectual property rights, including those under licence, and the security interest had attached to the intellectual property, then the description of the goods in the security agreement would be taken to include a description of those intellectual property rights. This would be subject to the parties indicating a contrary intention in their agreement (clause 105). Example Grant A owns a factory that produces car parts using robots whose only function is to manufacture those particular car parts. The process used to manufacture the car parts was patented by Grant A. Grant A obtains a loan from Bank A and received value for a security interest. The security agreement refers to 'the robots'. Bank A registers the security interest. Grant A defaults under the security agreement. Bank A enforces the security agreement. The security agreement only refers to a security interest in robots, but the court determines that the security interest extends to the patent to the extent required to permit the robots to operate. The exercise of Bank A's rights to the robots under the security agreement necessarily involves the use of the patent rights exploited in the robots. Bank A's security interest will therefore be enforceable against both the robots and the patent. Security interests in intellectual property licences 31. Where intellectual property is transferred and the licensee or sub- licensee continues to hold the licence or sub-licence after transfer, a security interest in the licence or sub-licence would continue in the licence or sub-licence and bind every successor-in-title to the licensor to the same extent as the security agreement was binding on the licensor (clause 106). Example Licensor A is the owner of copyright, and has licensed Grant A to exercise the copyright. Grant A has granted a security interest in the licensed rights to Bank A. Licensor A transfers the copyright to Licensor B. Licensor B will be bound by the security interest granted by Grant A to Bank A to the same extent that Licensor A was bound by the security interest. Chapter 4 - Enforcement of Security Interests General rules 1. The Bill would not codify the rights, duties and obligations of the parties to a security agreement as the parties should be able to negotiate their own contractual terms, subject to the provisions of the Consumer Credit Code (the Code), to the extent that it is able to operate concurrently (clause 254(1)). 2. Any secured party would, regardless of its priority ranking, be able to commence enforcement action under the Bill. This would enable secured parties to negotiate between themselves and reach agreement about enforcement. Higher ranked secured parties would, however, be able to protect their interests by obtaining possession of collateral from a lower ranked enforcing party. 3. Enforcement under the Bill would not require secured parties to obtain judgment against a debtor before being entitled to exercise rights against the secured assets. Likewise, the enforcement provisions would not prevent persons with an interest in the secured property, other than a security interest, from enforcing their interest, through court proceedings. Exclusions 4. The enforcement provisions would only apply to secured goods within Australia. However, it is important to note that the enforcement provisions would not apply to all secured personal property. 5. Specifically, the enforcement provisions would not apply where: . the transaction is deemed to be a security interest. A transaction that does not secure the payment or performance of an obligation does not create a security interest and therefore should not be subject to the security interest enforcement remedies; or . a party has perfected its security interest in an investment instrument or investment entitlement by taking possession or control. When the secured party has perfected their security interest in an investment instrument or investment entitlement by possession or control they would be able to sell, transfer, use or otherwise deal with the collateral in the manner and to the extent provided in the security agreement. This would allow a secured party to trade in the market without having to comply with the procedures and time limits of the Bill (clause 109(3)). Exercise of rights 6. The enforcement provisions would not diminish the rights and remedies available to parties, whether those remedies are provided for by the security agreement, any Commonwealth, State and/or Territory law and/or any rule of law or equity (clause 110). Accordingly, the rights and remedies available to parties may be a combination of right and remedies provided in the Bill, contractual provisions and other legislation (clause 114). 7. However, enforcement action under the Bill would require all parties to exercise their rights, duties and obligations arising under the enforcement provisions honestly and in a commercially reasonable manner (clause 111). The duty would apply in conjunction with the specific duties imposed in the enforcement provisions, and under the general law and other legislation. 8. In exercising rights, a secured party is generally only able to deal with the personal property to the same extent that the grantor would be able to deal with the property. However, a secured party would not be so limited if the secured party had title to the collateral prior to enforcing (for example, a lease arrangement, or where the grantor is contractually prohibited from transferring the collateral to a contract) (clause 112). 9. If a secured party has obtained judgment or initiated execution proceedings against a grantor these would continue in the collateral and would not prevent the secured party from taking enforcement action under the Bill (clause 113). Collateral used for consumer purposes 10. The Bill distinguishes between transactions securing inventory and equipment and those securing consumer goods, particularly in relation to the extent to which parties may contract out of the enforcement clauses. 11. In describing consumer transactions, the enforcement provisions refer to 'goods used predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes' rather than 'consumer property', used elsewhere in the Bill and defined as property used exclusively for a non-ABN activity (clause 10). 12. Consumer property is defined in the Bill as property used predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes or intended to be used mostly for those purposes and is not acquired as an investment. The use of the wider definition is consistent with the Code and would ensure that the consumer protections in the Code and the Bill would apply in broadly the same set of circumstances. Certain remedies would not be available where the collateral is used predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes. The remedies that fall into this category are: . remedies available under applied provisions of the State and Territory land law (clause 117-118); . the collection and application of liquid collateral (clause 120); . the disposal of collateral by lease or licence (clause 128(2)); . the disposal by sale where the collateral is acquired by the enforcing secured party (clause 129); and . the retention of collateral by the enforcing secured party (clause 134). Contracting out 13. The parties would have freedom of contract over their respective rights and responsibilities in enforcement. 14. Parties would also be able to contract out of specific enforcement provisions. The rights of parties to contract out would not impact on the rights and remedies affecting third parties who are not parties to the contract. 15. The extent to which parties would be able to contract out would depend on whether the collateral secured is used predominantly for personal use; and if so, parties would only be able to contract out of the secured party's right to apparent possession (where property cannot be seized or storage facilities are unavailable) (clause 115(4)). 16. This would ensure that consumers have the full protection of the enforcement provisions and, in particular, the notice provisions. In any event, contracting out of the provisions in respect of personal, domestic and household goods would be of limited use as parties would still have to meet the requirements in the Code. Example Grant A obtains a loan from Bank B to finance the purchase of business assets secured against her car. Grant A uses the car 90% of the time for personal use. For 10% of the time Grant A uses the car for business purposes. Grant A defaults on the loan and Bank B initiates enforcement action. As a result of Grant A's use of the car predominantly for personal, household or domestic purposes, Bank B is unable to vary or contract out of most of the enforcement provisions, regardless of the fact that the loan was obtained to meet business needs. 17. Where collateral is not used predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes, parties would be able to contract out of most of the enforcement provisions (clause 115). Relationship with other laws 18. The Bill would not apply to property of a business that is subject to a receiver or a controller appointed under Part 5.2 of the Corporations Act 2001 (clause 116). These provisions provide comprehensive rules for receivers and other controllers when exercising functions in relation to property. 19. Security agreements in relation to commercial transactions often use both personal property and land to secure the same obligation. Currently, a secured party must initiate separate enforcement proceedings against the land and the personal property to meet any outstanding debt secured by both. This is costly and can lead to prolonged enforcement proceedings. 20. In order to reduce costs and to ensure expeditious resolution of enforcement, the Bill would allow a secured party who has a security interest securing the same obligation in relation to both kinds of collateral to apply the land law to the personal property as if the personal property were land (clause 117-118). This is done by reading in the provisions of the relevant land law as if it were a provision of the Bill. 21. The incorporation of the land laws would not oblige a secured party having an interest in both land and personal property to initiate enforcement action under the applied land laws. A secured party could take separate proceedings against the land under the land law and against the personal property in accordance with their other rights under the Bill, general law and the security agreement (clause 118(2)). 22. A secured party could make a decision to proceed as if the personal property were land or to proceed under the Bill; but could only make a decision where they have the highest priority or have received written agreement from all the other secured parties (clause 117(1)). 23. Where a secured party decides to proceed under land law, the land law of the State or Territory in which the land is situated would apply. A secured party who elected to proceed under the land provisions would not have to comply with the enforcement provisions of the Bill other than the distribution rules (clause 140). The rights of the other secured parties would not be affected by the proceedings under land law. They would have standing in any enforcement proceedings and would be entitled to apply to Court for a judicially supervised sale (clause 118(6)). 24. Because the land law of the State or Territory might not be consistent with the enforcement of security interests against personal property, clause 118(5) would provide a regulation-making power to enable State or Territory land laws to be modified for the enforcement of security interests in personal property. The Bill has been developed in consultation with the States and Territories and they endorse this option of using the State and Territory land laws to enforce security interests in both personal property and land. The States and Territories have also approved the text of this Bill. Consumer Credit Code 25. Where collateral is used for consumer purposes, the Bill and the Code would operate concurrently and, in these circumstances, a secured party would have to comply with both the requirements in the Bill and in the Code. 26. Whether the Code would apply, would depend on the purpose of the credit. The Code establishes the rights and obligations of parties where credit has been provided, or is intended to be provided, wholly or predominantly for personal, domestic, or household purposes. 27. There would be overlap between the Bill and the Code when the credit is provided, or is intended to be provided, wholly or predominantly for personal, domestic, or household purposes, and the collateral is used wholly or predominantly for personal, domestic, or household purposes. The Code may not apply where the credit was intended for business purposes, even if the credit is secured against personal property that is used wholly or predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes. 28. The Code and the Bill contain similar requirements for enforcement, but they also contain requirements on which the other is silent, as well as a number of corresponding requirements. 29. Where both the Code and the Bill contain similar obligations, regulations under the Bill would provide that a secured party who has complied with the relevant provision of the Code would be deemed to have complied with corresponding obligations in the Bill (clause 119(2)). 30. The regulations are likely to deem compliance, where the provisions in the Bill and the Code are similar and there would be no significant impact on the rights of parties if there is deemed to be compliance. 31. The concurrent operation of the Bill means that: . where there are requirements or rights in the Code on which the Bill is silent the secured party must comply with the requirements in the Code; . where there are requirements or rights in the Bill on which the Code is silent the secured party must comply with the requirements in the Bill; and . where there are corresponding requirements in relation to the same party in both the Code and the Bill, the requirements in the Bill may be deemed to be satisfied by a secured party undertaking the requirements in the Code. Example Bank A has a security interest in Grant A's stereo set. Vikram uses the stereo at home. When Grant A defaults on her loan with Bank A, Bank A decides to take enforcement action against Grant A's stereo. As Grant A uses the stereo predominantly for personal use, Bank A must comply with all the obligations in the Code as well as the requirements in the Bill. As required by the Code, Bank A provides a pre-possession notice to Grant A and gives her 30 days to remedy the default. Pursuant to the Consumer Credit Code, Bank A obtains a court order allowing it to enter Grant A's residence and take possession of the stereo. As required by both the Code and the Bill, after gaining possession, Bank A provides a notice advising Grant A that it intends to dispose of the stereo. The Code prevents Bank A from selling the stereo until 21days have elapsed after giving notice. The Bill requires only a period of 10days to have elapsed before Bank A could dispose of the stereo. The regulations could provide, however, that if Bank A complies with the requirements in the Code, Bank A would be deemed to have complied with the Bill. Accordingly, Bank A gives Grant A the pre- disposal notice and waits until 21 days have elapsed before it sells the stereo. Bank A would have complied with the Code and would be deemed to have complied with the Bill. 32. The following Table lists the respective rights, duties and obligations contained in the Code and the Bill and details how the Bill and Code would operate when there are concurrent or conflicting duties. Interaction between the Code and the Bill |The Code |The Bill | | | | |After default, the credit provider |The Bill doesn't specify the formal | |would have to provide notice to the |requirements for after default and | |debtor specifying the action required|before seizure of the collateral. | |to remedy the default. The credit |Therefore the Bill would not prevent | |provider would have to wait at least |the operation of the Code (a secured | |30 days before taking enforcement |party enforcing against collateral | |action (s80). |used as a consumer good would | | |therefore have to send a notice prior| | |to seizure as required in the Code). | | | | |A secured party cannot enforce a |The Bill does not provide any | |security interest against a guarantor|pre-seizure conditions where the | |(a person who executed the security |grantor is not the debtor. | |agreement but is not the debtor) |Accordingly, the requirements in s82 | |unless: |of the Code would have to be | |judgment has been obtained against |satisfied before a secured party | |the debtor and remains unsatisfied; |could enforce against a guarantor. | |or | | |the court has relieved the credit | | |provider from obtaining judgment | | |against the debtor; or | | |the debtor cannot be located (s82). | | | | | | | | |A secured party must seek the consent|The Bill does not contain any minimum| |of a court to seize goods where the |amount that would have to be | |amount outstanding is less than 25% |outstanding before enforcement action| |of the credit provided or $10,000 |could take place. The restrictions | |whichever is the lesser amount (s83).|in s83 of the Code would apply. | | | | | | | |An acceleration clause in a contract | | |or mortgage may only be applied in | | |certain circumstances (s84-85). | | | | | |Postponement of enforcement action |The Bill is silent on the issue of | |could be negotiated between the |postponement of enforcement action | |parties or ordered by a court |and where a debtor, mortgagor or | |(s86-89). |grantor sought a postponement, the | | |provisions in the Code relating to | | |postponement would apply. | | | | |A secured party may seek details of |Nothing would prevent a secured party| |the whereabouts of collateral from a |from seeking information under s90 of| |debtor (s90). |the Code. | | | | |The concurrent application of the |A secured party could seize | |Code and the Bill means that a |collateral if the debtor is in | |secured party may, under the Bill |default (clause 123). | |seize collateral used predominantly |A secured party with possession or | |for personal, domestic or household |control could seize the collateral by| |purposes if any applicable |serving a notice on the grantor, or | |preconditions in the Code have been |where the collateral is a licence, | |complied with. |the licensor (clause 124). | | |A secured party with a higher ranking| | |could seize the collateral from the | | |possession of a lower ranking party | | |(clause 127A) . | | | | |A secured party cannot enter |The Bill provides that a secured | |residential premises to take |party could seize the collateral by | |possession of collateral without the |any method permitted by law. As a | |permission of the occupier or an |result, a secured party would have to| |order from court (s91-93). The Code |comply with the Code's regulation of | |is silent on apparent possession and |seizure. If collateral cannot be | |accordingly parties could seize by |readily moved from a grantor's | |apparent possession under clause 164 |premises or adequate storage | |of the Bill unless the parties have |facilities are not available a | |contracted out of this provision. |secured party may seize the | | |collateral by taking apparent | | |possession of the collateral | | |(clause 123 and clause 126). | | | | |Within 14 days of taking possession |A secured party would have to give | |under a mortgage a secured party must|notice to the grantor and to any | |provide notice to the mortgagor with |secured party with a higher priority | |all relevant details and must not |at least 10 business days before the | |sell the goods within 21 days of |collateral is to be disposed of | |providing the notice (s94). |(clause 130). | | | | | | |Example of Possible Regulation: The regulations could provide that the | |requirement in clause 130 would be taken to have been complied with, if a | |notice to the mortgagor is provided as required by section 94 of the Code. | | | | |A debtor may nominate a person who is|The Bill would not prevent the | |prepared to purchase the goods (s95).|application of s95 of the Code. | | | | | | | |If the outstanding obligation has not|After seizing collateral, a secured | |been paid within 21 days after |party would have to dispose of the | |receiving the notice under section 94|collateral by sale and must obtain | |the secured party must sell the |the market value or, if the | |goods, either for the estimated value|collateral does not have a market | |or a higher price to a nominated |value, the best price reasonably | |buyer or to another person for the |obtainable (Clause 128 ). | |best price reasonably obtainable | | |(s96). | | | | |Example of Possible Regulation: The regulations could provide that the | |requirement in clause 128 and clause 130 of the Bill would be taken to have | |been complied with if the secured party complied with s96 of the Code. | | | | |After the sale of mortgaged goods a |A secured party would have to give | |secured party must give the mortgagor|the grantor, higher secured parties | |a notice stating the gross amount |and the debtor a notice with the | |realised, the net proceeds of the |total amount received from the sale, | |sale, the amount required to pay out |the enforcement expenses, amounts | |the credit contract and any further |paid to other secured parties and the| |action the secured party intends on |balance owing to the grantor or by | |taking (s96(3)). |the debtor to the secured party | | |(Clause 132). | | | |Example of Possible Regulation: The regulations could provide that | |clause 132 of the Bill would be taken to have been complied with if a notice| |is given to the mortgagor (grantor) in terms of s96(3) of the Code | | | | |A secured party is entitled to deduct|A secured party would have to | |the following amounts from the money |distribute funds received in the | |received from the sale: |following order: | |the secured amount outstanding; |interests with a higher priority; | |the amount payable to discharge any |enforcement costs; | |prior mortgage; |higher ranking security interests; | |the amounts payable to discharge |lower priority interests and security| |subsequent mortgages of which the |interest; | |secured party had notice (s97). |grantor (Clause 140). | | | |Example of Possible Regulation: While it is arguable that s97 does not | |provide an order for distribution, it limits the amounts that may be | |deducted to secured amounts. The regulations could provide that clause 140 | |of the Bill would be taken to have been complied with s97 of the Code has | |been complied with. | Enforcement rights where there are multiple secured parties 33. Any secured party, regardless of its priority ranking, would be able to commence enforcement action under the Bill. To ensure that this does not prejudice higher ranking secured parties, a higher ranking party would be able to 'take-over' enforcement proceedings and obtain possession of the collateral from a lower ranking enforcing secured party (clause 121(3)). This would apply to all collateral. Notice 34. The notice provisions would require an enforcing secured party to give notice of its intended action at different stages of the enforcement process: . before a secured party removes an accession (clause 95); . before a secured party initiates enforcement action under the incorporated land laws of a State or Territory (clause 118); . before a secured party takes enforcement action against liquid collateral (clause 121); . before a secured party disposes of collateral (clause 130); . after a secured party has seized and disposed of the collateral or keeps the collateral for disposal at a later date it would have to provide a statement of account (clause 132); . before a secured party can retain the property (clause 135). 35. Where the collateral is used predominantly for personal, domestic or household purposes, additional notice requirements in the Code would also apply. 36. Enforcement notices would generally only be required to be given to the grantor, who stands to lose their rights in the collateral and higher ranking secured parties (who have a right to seize the collateral and commence their own enforcement action). Secured parties would not be required to give notice to lower ranking secured parties, as this would increase the cost burden on the enforcing secured parties, thereby reducing the money available for distribution. Lower ranking secured parties would, however, be able to negotiate additional notice provisions or to extend the provision of notices to themselves. 37. There are, however, two circumstances which would require notice to be given to a wider group of persons: . where a secured party intends to use the incorporated provisions of a State or Territory land law, they need to give notice to the grantor, any person with a perfected security interest and any person who has notified the secured party of their interest in the property (clause 118(2)). This notice is required because the procedures and remedies under the incorporated land law might differ from those in the Bill and lower-ranking secured parties may wish to engage in the proceedings (clause 118(6)); . Where a secured party intends to retain the collateral, they would need to provide notice to the grantor or to a secured party with an interest perfected by registration. This notice is required because where a secured party retains the collateral it does so, without having to pay other secured parties any obligations still owed to them and notice would enable them to object to retention or negotiate for compensation. 38. Despite the general requirement for providing notice when undertaking a step in the enforcement action, enforcing secured parties are not required to give notice when: . the secured party has failed to locate the person to whom the notice must be sent; . a person (including the grantor) has waived their right to receive the notice; or . a court has ordered that a notice is not required for any other reason. Enforcement of liquid assets 39. The Bill would provide for enforcement against collateral consisting of debts due to the grantor from a third party, including accounts, chattel paper, investment instruments in the form of debt obligations or negotiable instruments. Because this collateral is the equivalent of cash, a separate enforcement process would be provided to ensure that the secured party would not have to go through a two-step process and could realise the collateral by collection directly from the third party (clause 120-121). 40. When liquid assets are collected, the enforcing secured party would have to apply the assets to discharge the obligation secured by the security interest and distribute any amounts received in accordance with the Bill (clause 140). Example Grant A owes Finance A $30,000. To secure the loan, Finance A has taken a security interest in Grant A's bank account held with Bank A. Finance A is the highest ranking secured party. On 1 January 2028, Grant A defaults on his loan repayments to Finance A. On 6 January 2028, Finance A gives written notice to Bank A requiring it to pay $30,000 from Grant A's bank account. On 8 January 2008, Bank A pays Finance A $30,000 from Grant A's bank account, that is, within 5 days of receiving the notice. Finance A applies the money received from Bank A ($30,000) towards discharging the obligation that Grant A owes it. 41. The secured party would have to give a written notice to higher ranking secured parties within 10 business days before the day on which third party notice is given or control of the asset is taken (whichever applies) (clause 121). This would allow the higher ranking secured party to take enforcement action in its own right (clause 121(3)). The enforcing secured party would also have to notify the grantor within 5 business days after the day on which action is taken (clause 121(4)). 42. When liquid assets are collected, the enforcing secured party would have to apply the assets to discharge the obligation secured by the security interest and distribute the balance as required by the Bill (clause 120(5)). Seizure and disposal or retention of collateral Seizing collateral 43. On default by a grantor, when the secured party wishes to initiate an enforcement action, it would need to seize the collateral. The Bill would provide for this right to seize the collateral, in the event that a contract failed to do so. A secured party would be able to seize the collateral by any method permitted by law where the debtor is in default under the security agreement (clause 123(1)). This would enable secured parties to determine the method of seizure that is most appropriate for the collateral and their circumstances. 44. Where the collateral is an intangible, the secured party cannot physically possess the collateral but the Bill would deem seizure to have occurred if a secured party takes steps to gain control. If the collateral is a licence, the secured party could effect seizure by giving notice of possession to the licensor and either the grantor or the grantor's successor. If the collateral is any other type of intangible (for example, an investment instrument) a secured party ccould seize the collateral after giving notice to the grantor (clause 123(2)). 45. A secured party who has perfected the security interest by possession or control is taken to have seized the collateral (clause 124). 46. Taking possession of the collateral implies removing it from the grantor's premises to the secured party's premises or control. Physical removal would not always be possible and therefore a secured party could take 'apparent possession' of collateral where it cannot be readily moved from a grantor's or the grantor's agent's premises or where adequate storage facilities are not available (clause 126). 47. Apparent possession would enable a secured party to enforce their interest where they cannot seize the property or where they have no storage facilities. It provides notice of the transfer of the collateral from the grantor to the secured party. Once a secured party has gained apparent possession, any interference with this possession would be an interference with the secured party's rights. 48. A secured party who takes apparent possession may dispose of the collateral on the grantor's property. To ensure that this provision does not work unfairly against grantors, the Bill would provide that secured parties would not be able to cause to the grantors, any greater cost or inconvenience than is necessarily incidental to the disposal (clause 126(2)). Example Bank A has decided to enforce its security interest in Person A's grain which is located in a silo on her property. Bank A is unable to find adequate storage facilities in the vicinity of her property and, after meeting the notice requirements under the Bill, advertises Person A's grain for public sale by auction, despite not having actual possession of the grain. Bank A decides to conduct the auction on Olga's property, and to run a small market at the auction on Person A's property. The market stalls are not 'necessarily incidental' to the sale. Bank A does not have the right to operate the market stalls. As the stalls will be on Person A's property, she can prevent Bank A from conducting the market stalls. Seizure by parties with a higher priority 49. At any time when a secured party has taken possession of collateral, a higher ranking secured party could require that the secured party give it possession of the collateral (clause 127(2)). To seize collateral from a lower ranking party, a higher ranking party would have to provide it with a written notice requiring possession. A lower ranked enforcing secured party would have to comply with the notice within 5 business days of receiving it or within a reasonable period given the circumstances. 50. A higher ranked party that has gained possession of the collateral would have to pay the enforcement costs of the lower ranked party within 20 business days after the later of either: . disposing of the collateral; or . receiving evidence that the lower ranking party has incurred those costs. 51. If not paid, the outstanding enforcement costs would become a debt due by the higher party and the lower ranked party could initiate court action to recover these costs. 52. A higher party who has seized the collateral from a lower ranked party would be required to dispose of or retain the collateral. Example Finance A decided to commence enforcement action against Person A who was in default of a security agreement over a small aircraft. Finance A's security interest was second in priority to that of Bank A. Finance A took possession of the aircraft and gave notice to Bank A. Bank A gave written notice to Finance A to give possession of the aircraft to Bank A. Finance A must comply. Bank A takes over enforcement action. 53. By enabling any secured party to seize and enforce against the collateral, the rights of junior secured parties would be protected, in that they would not be reliant on higher ranking parties to take action. Conversely, the right of a higher ranking party to seize would enable a higher ranked party to protect its own interests. Disposing of collateral (including by purchasing collateral) 54. Secured parties who seize collateral under the Bill are required to dispose of collateral or retain the collateral themselves (clause 125). Disposal relates to three different types of remedies: . sale to a third party; . sale where the collateral is purchased by the enforcing secured party; and . lease or licence to a third party. 55. The disposal provisions would apply to all collateral including intangibles such as licences. A secured party would be able to dispose of collateral by sale or lease to a third party (clause 128(2)) and any proceeds arising from the disposal would need to be distributed in accordance with the Bill (clause 140). 56. The Bill would not require immediate disposal after seizure and recognises that disposal might need to be delayed, in whole or in part, to obtain a higher price or for other reasons. The secured party would only be able to delay the disposal where it would be reasonable in the circumstances or in accordance with the security agreement (clause 125(3)). The parties would be able to contract out of this provision. Disposal by sale 57. The Bill would provide that a secured party could choose the method of sale, including private or public sale, auction or closed tender (clause 128(2)). 58. The secured party would be able to be dispose of the collateral as a whole or in parts, where it would be difficult to dispose of the collateral in its entirety (clause 128(5)). This could result in different components being sold at different times. 59. Disposal of licences would have to be in accordance with the terms and conditions of the licence (clause 128(6)). Disposal by lease 60. A disposal by lease could only occur if expressly provided for by the security agreement (clause 128(2)). The disposal would be at the time the lease is entered into (clause 128(3)) and the terms of a lease would be determined by the security agreement. Example Manufacturer A sells new office furniture and leases new and used office furniture. Almost all of its business is aimed at providing office furniture for small to medium sized businesses. Grant A has entered into a conditional sale agreement to buy office furniture from Manufacturer A. Under the agreement, Grant A will pay the purchase price of the office furniture over a period of 9 months. The sale agreement provides that the office furniture will continue to be owned by Manufacturer A until the last instalment has been paid. The sale agreement also provides that if Grant A defaults on the sale agreement, Manufacturer A is able to dispose of the office furniture either through sale or through a lease arrangement. If the office furniture is leased it must be leased for a minimum of 3 months. Grant A defaults on its sale agreement. Manufacturer A seizes the desks and chairs under the Bill and leases them according to the terms in the sale agreement. Purchase of collateral by the secured party 61. A secured party who seizes commercial collateral would be able to dispose of the collateral by purchasing it (clause 129). 62. A significant concern of interested parties would be that a secured party could purchase the collateral for less than its market value. Therefore a secured party would need to provide notice of its intention to purchase to the grantor and other interested parties, who could then object to the purchase. A secured party would only be able to purchase the collateral if there is no objection to the purchase (clause 130). 63. A secured party would only be able to purchase collateral by public sale (including auction or closed tender) for an amount which is equal to or more than the market value of the collateral (clause 129(3)). 64. Regardless of how it intends to dispose of the collateral, a secured party who has seized the collateral would be required to provide notice of its intention to dispose of the collateral (clause 130). Interested parties would have the opportunity to seek to redeem or reinstate the collateral or to monitor disposal to ensure it is conducted in a commercially reasonable manner. 65. A secured party would be required to notify the grantor and higher ranking secured parties at least 10 business days before the day on which the collateral is to be disposed of (clause 130(3)). 66. The secured party would not be required to give notice in certain circumstances (clause 130(5)) including where: . the secured party believes on reasonable grounds that the secured party was induced to enter the security agreement as a result of a fraud by the grantor or debtor; . the secured party, after making reasonable attempts to locate the person, has failed to do so; . financial damage may be suffered if collateral is not immediately disposed of; . the collateral is perishable and may perish within 10 days after the collateral is seized; . the secured party reasonably believes that the value of the collateral will materially decline if not disposed of immediately; and . the collateral is foreign currency. 67. The first exemption would enable a secured party who was induced into a security agreement by fraud to dispose of the property without intervention from the grantor or debtor which could delay the disposal process. Other exemptions would ensure that the notice provisions would not prejudice the interests of all parties in obtaining the maximum value to be gained from the collateral. Duties owed by a secured party when disposing of collateral 68. When disposing of collateral to third parties, the secured party would owe a duty to exercise reasonable care to: . obtain at least the market value for the collateral; or . if there is no market value, to obtain the best price that is reasonably obtainable, having regard to the circumstances that exist at the time (clause 131). This is the same duty required of a controller of disposing of corporation property under s420A of the Corporations Act. 69. Breach of this provision would not depend on an actual failure to achieve either the market price or the best price reasonably obtainable but would depend on whether all reasonable care was taken to sell the property for its market value, or alternatively for the best price reasonably obtainable. 70. The provision requires that the collateral be marketed in a manner appropriate for sale of collateral of that type and compliance in each case would depend on the particular circumstances. The secured party exercising a sale would be expected to, where appropriate, obtain proper valuations, advertise appropriately, maintain the collateral in good condition pending sale and choose an appropriate venue for the sale. 71. This provision would ensure that the enforcing secured party obtains the best possible price rather than merely satisfying its own interests. This duty operates in conjunction with the requirement for secured parties to exercise their rights honestly and in accordance with ordinary commercial practice (clause 111). This would be in the interests of the debtor (who would need to make good any shortfall in the sale price and outstanding obligations) and other secured parties who would have to take separate legal proceedings to obtain any outstanding debts from the debtor. 72. A failure by the enforcing party to attempt to obtain the best possible price could result in a statutory breach which would enable other interested parties to take legal action to either ensure that the best possible price were obtained or to claim damages suffered as a result of the statutory breach. Statements of account 73. The statement of account would be the means by which enforcing secured parties would account to interested parties on the disposal of the collateral and distribution of the proceeds. 74. Where a secured party has disposed of collateral or exercised its collection rights, interested parties would be entitled to all relevant financial information, such as the amount received, the enforcement costs, and the debts outstanding. The enforcing secured party would only be obliged to provide this statement on request from a grantor, debtor or a higher ranking secured party (clause 132(1)). 75. Where the secured party has not disposed of the collateral within 6 months of seizing the collateral, they would have to provide a written statement of account showing the total amount received for the collateral and the expenses incurred in maintaining the collateral (clause 132(7)). A new statement would need to be given for each 6 month period after seizure if the collateral is not disposed of within this period (clause 132(4)). The secured party would have to give this statement to the grantor, debtor and higher ranking secured parties when requested to do so. 76. Statements of account would need to be provided within 20 business days following the request or such further period as would be reasonable in the circumstances (clause 132(2) and clause 132(6)). 77. Collateral acquired after disposal would be acquired free of the interests of the grantor of the security interest, the security interest of the enforcing secured party and all security interests lower in priority to the interest of the enforcing secured party (clause 133), but subject to the security interests of higher ranked parties. The higher ranking security interests would be able to be discharged in accordance with the security agreement if sufficient funds were available. 78. The rules relating to an acquirer taking free of security interests would need to be read in conjunction with the distribution rules (clause 186), which require payment to the higher secured party ahead of amounts owed to the enforcing secured party. Where the obligation owed to a higher ranking secured party has been discharged, the person acquiring the collateral would not be subject to that security interest. Retaining collateral 79. The Bill would also allow a secured party to enforce their security interest by retaining collateral they have seized (clause 134). However, the collateral could not be retained if it is used predominantly for personal domestic or household purposes (clause 109(5)). 80. There would be cases where it is commercially advantageous for a secured party to retain collateral rather than sell it and the Bill would allow them to do so. This right to retain collateral corresponds to a creditor's existing right to seize and retain collateral on default under a retention of title arrangement. However, retention is not an absolute right and the Bill would provide a process to ensure that the interests of all interested parties are taken into account. This is particularly important given that the remedy of retention would not require a secured party to compensate other interested parties for the loss of their interests in the collateral. Objection to purchase or retention 81. Before a secured party could retain property, it would be required to provide notice of its intention to the grantor and other registered secured parties (clauses 135-138). 82. Persons receiving notice would be able to object to the secured party's proposal of retention by providing notice to the secured party at least 10 business days or a shorter period (agreed to by the objector) before the enforcing secured party takes steps to retain the collateral (clause 137(2)). 83. On receiving an objection, a secured party would be entitled to seek proof of the objector's interest in the collateral. If such proof is not provided within 10 business days of the request, the notice of objection would be taken not to have been given (clause 138). 84. If the secured party receives a notice of objection, it could sell or lease the collateral rather than retain or purchase it (clause 135(3)). 85. If a secured party receives no objections by the end of 10 business days after the day the last notice is given, they would be taken to have irrevocably elected to acquire the collateral (clause 136(1)). Thereafter, the secured party would become the unencumbered owner of the property and would have no rights against the grantor in respect of any outstanding obligation. A secured party would need to ensure that legal title to the property passes to them as this would not occur by operation of law. 86. Secured parties subordinate to the retaining secured party and the grantor(s) would also be able to object to the retention of the collateral. This is especially important as the retention provision does not provide for subordinate parties or the grantor to receive anything if the value of the retained collateral is greater than the amount owed to the retaining secured party. It is likely that before they agree to retention of collateral by the enforcing secured party, other secured parties would negotiate acceptable terms of compensation. 87. The Bill would provide that a secured party who acquires title to the collateral acquires the collateral free of their own security interests as well as the security interests of the grantor and subordinate security interests (clause 136(2)). Rules applying after enforcement 88. Any proceeds received from the collateral either through enforcement against liquid collateral (clause 120) or by disposal (clause 128) would have to be applied according to the distribution rules in the Bill (clause 140). 89. This distribution would mean that, where there are insufficient funds, parties lower in the order would not recover the amount due to them. Where a secured party does not receive funds from the distribution or there is a shortfall in the amount received, they would be able to take legal action against the debtor personally for the outstanding obligation. Redemption 90. The right of redemption is the right to cure the default and redeem the collateral at any time before the collateral is irrevocably disposed of by sale or foreclosure. 91. The Bill would provide the debtor, the grantor and higher ranking secured parties with a right to redeem the collateral (clause 142(1)). 92. A debtor's right to redeem the collateral would have priority over the right of any other party, including that of a higher ranking secured party, to redeem the collateral (clause 142(3)). 93. Redemption would be given effect when the redeemer pays the amount required to discharge the obligation secured by the collateral and the amount of any enforcement expenses incurred by the secured party, secured by the security interest. 94. Parties to a non-consumer transaction would be able to contract out of the right of redemption (clause 115). A person entitled to redeem would also be prohibited from accessing the redemption provisions if, after the default occurred they had agreed with the secured party not to redeem the property (clause 142(2)). Reinstatement of the security agreement 95. The Bill would provide a right of reinstatement of the security agreement prior to the exercise of enforcement action. 96. The right to reinstatement would enable a person to reinstate the security agreement by paying the amount of arrears and the amount of any expenses incurred as a result of the enforcement action. The right of reinstatement would protect grantors and debtors where their default is minor, temporary and atypical. 97. The Bill would establish safeguards against possible abuse of the right of reinstatement. A security agreement could only be reinstated once and the person seeking reinstatement would have to pay not only the amount in actual arrears but also cure any other default and reimburse the secured party for their enforcement expenses (clause 143(1)). Chapter 5 - Personal Property Securities Register 1. The Bill would establish a single national online Personal Property Securities Register (the PPS Register) under which personal property that is or may be subject to a security interest can be registered. The main object of the PPS Register would be to provide a real-time online noticeboard of personal property over which a security interest has been, or may be, taken. The PPS Register would replace the existing array of electronic and paper-based registers. It would be a voluntary registration scheme, allowing secured parties to weigh up the costs and benefits of registering a financing statement for a security interest. 2. In most cases, the registrations contained on the PPS Register would relate to security interests. All security interests in personal property would be registrable regardless of the form of the security interest, the legal personality of the grantor of the interest, the nature of the collateral or the jurisdiction in which the property or the parties are located. Registration of security interests would be voluntary. However, parties should be aware that failure to register a security interest on the PPS Register could result in a loss of priority to a third person or unenforceability against a liquidator, administrator, trustee in bankruptcy or the Official Receiver. 3. A person would also be able to search the PPS Register to determine whether a prior registered interest exists prior to purchasing personal property or lending money in relation to the property. 4. A simple targeted electronic 'registration' would provide notice to the world of any actual or prospective security interests without the need to sift through complex documentary material as is currently the case with many of the existing schemes. This would make the advance registration of security interests possible; that is, property would be able to be registered on the PPS Register before a security agreement is made or the security interest attaches to it. 5. The PPS Register could also contain information about other interests over personal property prescribed by the regulations, for example, interests that arise in vehicles impounded by State and Territory police or property subject to confiscation orders under proceeds of crime laws. 6. While the PPS Register would be accessible using a web browser, it would also be supported by a business to government interface, a physical document lodgement service, a contact centre and SMS message connectivity. PPS Register information would be transmitted using secure, encrypted methods of communication. Example Grant A applied for a loan with Finance A using its business assets to secure the loan. Finance A registered the business assets on the PPS Register before approving the loan. 7. During development of the Bill, concerns were expressed about possible scope creep of the PPS Register. These concerns related to two particular functions of the Register. The first concern was a possible increase in the authorised purposes for which a search could be made by reference to the name and date of birth of an individual (clause 172). Consequently, the authorised purposes for searches by reference to the name and date of birth of an individual could only be altered by the Parliament and it would not be lawful to alter the authorised purposes without Parliamentary scrutiny. 8. The second concern was the type of interest that could be included on the Register. The definition of security interest (clause 12) would only be able to be amended by legislation. However, the Bill would also allow for the registration of other interests in classes of personal property to be determined under the regulations (clause 148). Therefore any Regulations made under this provision would have to take account of privacy concerns, and include a Privacy Impact Assessment where appropriate. Establishment of the Register 9. The PPS Register would be established and maintained by a Registrar of Personal Property Securities (clause 147(1)). Data that is recorded in the PPS Register would be the property of the Commonwealth (clause 147(2)). Clause 147(3) would allow the Registrar to keep the Personal Property Securities Register in any form that he or she considers appropriate. This provision is based on s1274(1) of the Corporations Act, which allows ASIC to 'keep such registers as it considers necessary in such form as it thinks fit'. This would ensure that the focus is on the outcomes to be delivered rather than the manner in which the obligations are discharged. The Bill would also be 'technology neutral' so that the Registrar would not be constrained in the discharge of his or her obligations under the Bill. For example, the Bill would allow the Registrar to accept documents in hard copy form, over the internet through a web browser, or over the internet using XML messaging technology. 10. While the Registrar would be able to keep the Register in any form that he or she considers appropriate (clause 147(3)), the Government proposes to implement a fully electronic register. 11. The PPS Register would be maintained and operated at all times (clause 147(4)). This means that it would be available day and night, as well as on weekends and public holidays, when large numbers of secured transactions would take place. However, the Registrar would be able to refuse access to, or suspend the operation of the PPS Register, in whole or in part, where it would not be practical to provide access (clauses 147(4)-(5)). If this occurs, the Registrar must publish notice of the suspension or refusal in a way prescribed by the regulations and, if not prescribed, by Gazette (clause 147(6)). Example The Registrar may consider that it is not practical to maintain the PPS Register when upgrading the IT system or during an IT failure that closed down part of the PPS Register. 12. The PPS Register could contain a range of information about personal property that is, or will become, subject to a security interest (clause 148). This would allow buyers and financiers to readily identify property that is subject to an actual or potential security interest. 13. There would also be scope to register property subject to other kinds of interests, such as those which arise in vehicles impounded because of their use in unlawful activities and confiscation orders made under proceeds of crime laws (clause 148). Any such interests could be included on the PPS Register by regulation, with the provisions in Chapter 5 being applied with appropriate modifications. This is designed to help prospective purchasers and lenders to obtain up-to- date information about the status of personal property. Example Person W wants to buy a car from an acquaintance. The acquaintance agrees but advises that he will not be able to deliver the car straight away. Person W searches the PPS Register. The search result discloses that there are no security interests over the car but that it has recently been impounded by the police. Registration 14. A person would be able to apply to the Registrar to register on the PPS Register under a financing statement (or a financing change statement to amend a registered financing statement) with respect to a security interest or other kinds of interest prescribed in the regulations (clause 150). 15. The term 'financing statement' refers to the data that is, or is to be, registered on the PPS Register (clause 10, financing statement). The term 'financing change statement' in turn means data that amends a financing statement that is registered on the PPS Register (clause 10, financing change statement). These terms have been adopted because they are also used in other jurisdictions that have a PPS regime, such as New Zealand and Canada. 16. The Registrar would have to register the financing statement or financing change statement if: . the application is in a form approved by the Registrar; . the registration fee (if any) has been paid or an arrangement for payment has been made; . the Registrar is not satisfied that the application is frivolous, vexatious or offensive, contrary to the public interest or made in circumstances in which the registrant does not believe on reasonable grounds that it holds or will hold a security interest in the property stated in the application; and . the registration is not prohibited by the regulations (clause 150(3)). 17. If the financing statement or financing change statement does not satisfy any of the above, the Registrar would not be required to make the registration. The Registrar's decision not to make the registration would be reviewable by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (clause 191). 18. A person would not be able to apply to register a financing statement, or a financing change statement, in relation to a security interest unless the person believes on reasonable grounds that a security interest in the property is, or would be held by a person stated in the application as a secured party (clause 151(1) and (7)). Where a person registers without such a belief they would be taken to have contravened an obligation owed to any person with an interest in the personal property (clause 151(5)). 19. A person who applies for a financing statement or financing change statement, would be required to end the registration where: . the collateral has never (since the statement was registered) secured an obligation owed by a debtor to the person stated in the registration to the secured party; and . there are no reasonable grounds for believing that the collateral secures, or would secure, such an obligation 20. In cases where there have never been reasonable grounds for believing that the collateral secures or would secure the obligation, the registration would have to end as soon as practical or within 5 business days of the day of registration or if there are any no longer any reasonable grounds for that belief, as soon as practical or within 5 business days of the reasonable grounds for the belief ceasing. (Clause 151(2)-(3)). 21. The failure to discharge the obligation to only register a financing statement, where the person believes on reasonable grounds that the collateral secures or would secure a security interest ,would not affect the validity or effectiveness of the registration (clause 151(6)). However, the failure to discharge the obligation would attract a civil penalty (clause 151(1)) and give rise to a claim for damages (clause 271). The onus of proving a breach of clauses 151(1)-(2) would rest on the person making the claim (clause 151(4)). 22. Civil penalties could apply to breaches of these provisions. The maximum penalty for each breach would be 50 penalty units for an individual, and 250 penalty units for a body corporate (clause 151(1)- (2)). The 'corporate multiplier' (that is, maximum fine applicable to individuals would be multiplied by a factor of five for a body corporate) reflects the corporate multiplier in s4B(3) of the Crimes Act 1914. The maximum penalty level is considered to be sufficient in light of the potential impact unauthorised registrations could have on those relying on the registrations as well as the ability of persons with an interest in the property to recover for any loss or damage resulting from these breaches. 23. The Registrar could register a financing statement, or a financing change statement, even if the personal property, or the person who owns or has rights in that property, is located outside Australia (clause 152). This is subject to the necessary connection with Australia being satisfied (clause 6). 24. While applications for registration would have to be in writing, they would largely be lodged electronically through a web browser or through a business to government interface. The Electronic Transactions Act 1999 would have the effect that any applications made in accordance with the Bill could be made by electronic transmission of words or data or the display or representation of words or data by any form of communication. Registration with respect to security interests 25. When a secured party or its agent registers a financing statement or financing change statement in order to make or amend a registration on the PPS Register, they would be required or authorised to enter the following information: . details about the secured party and related information such as an address and identifier for giving notices to the secured party (clause 153(1) table items 1 and 3); . details about the grantor (clause 153(1) table item 2) but this is not required for consumer property required by the regulations to be described by a serial number, because the serial number would be sufficient to allow a search of the register to disclose a registration over the collateral without grantor details; . a description of the collateral and proceeds (including as prescribed by the regulations (clause 153(1) table item 4), including: o a description as either 'consumer property' or 'commercial property'; o a serial number where required by the regulations; o allocation to a single class as prescribed by the regulations; and o where proceeds are claimed, a description of proceeds in accordance with the regulations; o the end time of the registration (or end time 'not stated' for commercial registrations where the collateral is not described by serial number)(clause 153(1) table item 5); o details of any subordination agreements (optional)(clause 153(1) table item 6); o whether the security interest is (or is to be) a purchase money security interest (optional) (clause 153(1) table item 7), and o any other matter prescribed by the Bill or regulations (clause 153(1) table item 8). Grantors, secured parties and giving of notices 26. The details to be included on the PPS Register about a secured party or grantor would be prescribed by regulations. 27. The Bill would require that consumer grantors be identified by their name and date of birth (or not at all when the collateral is required by the regulations to be described by serial number) (clause 153, table item 2). 28. When the secured party or grantor is not an individual, the regulations could require them to identify themselves by their Australian Company Number (ACN) issued under the Corporations Act 2001 at registration; their Australian Registered Body Number (ARBN) issued to a 'registrable body' under that Act; or their Australian Registered Scheme Number (ARSN). The regulations could also prescribe that certain trading arrangements, for example partnerships, could be identified by their Australian Business Number (ABN). For those that are not required to be identified by their ACN, ARBN, ARSN or ABN, the required details could be the organisation's name as it appears on the organisation's constitution. 29. The incorrect entry of the identifier of the grantor would be a registration error that would result in a registration being ineffective (and therefore invalid) (clause 164(1)). This could occur through inadvertence (for example entering one incorrect number when entering the ACN). In relation to grantors who are individuals, the error could occur because people are known by more than one name. To promote certainty, the regulations could specify the sources from which names and dates of birth would have to be drawn. 30. Secured parties would be wholly responsible for the accuracy of all details contained in their registrations. However, to assist users to maintain the accuracy of registrations, the PPS Register could check the validity of data against other databases (such as the National Names Index or the Australian Business Register administered, respectively, by the Australian Securities and Investment Commission and the Australian Taxation Office). This application of IT technology would help to promote the integrity of information recorded on the PPS Register. 31. In order to reflect commercial reality, the PPS Register could enable an application for the registration of a financing statement or financing change statement to be made by a secured party group (consisting of one or more secured parties) and/or multiple grantors (clauses 153-154). This would be important where people hold or propose to hold property jointly, or as tenants in common when jointly accessing credit. There might also be occasions where credit is offered by multiple secured parties, such as on a joint venture basis. 32. Secured parties would also be able to record a unique identifier devised by themselves, when giving notice in relation to particular registrations (clause 153(1) table item 3(b)). This identifier could be used by secured parties to direct communications to their agents (clause 289). Collateral descriptions 33. A focal part of each registration would be the 'collateral description' which would describe key attributes of the property that is the subject of the registration (clause 153(1) table item 4). 34. Personal property registrations over consumer property would have to be described on the PPS Register as either 'consumer property' or 'commercial property' (clause 153(1) table item 4(a)). This distinction is important because the Bill contains safeguards to ensure that consumers are not subject to the same rules as commercial transactions. 35. The other collateral descriptions required under clause 153(1) table item 4, are discussed below. Serial numbered goods - motor vehicles and other goods 36. It is proposed that the PPS Register would take the place of existing State and Territory schemes for registering encumbrances over motor vehicles (such REVS in New South Wales and VSR in Victoria) and would extend to certain other property assigned a serial number (particularly ships and aircraft). 37. In circumstances prescribed by the regulations, such as when the collateral is consumer property, it would be mandatory to describe property registered on the PPS Register by its serial number: such as the vehicle identification number (VIN) or chassis number applied to motor vehicles (clause 153(1) table item 4(b)). This would assist PPS Register users to readily identify property. It would also promote privacy protection as such property would be identifiable on the Register by the serial number, rather than by the grantor's name. 38. Where serial numbered goods are registered as 'commercial property', it would be optional for the secured party to record serial numbers (clause 153(1)). This approach would avoid the inconvenience of requiring secured parties to continually update the PPS Register in relation to car-lot inventory and the like. 39. The use of serial numbers to describe collateral would enable the PPS Register to link with other databases such as the National Exchange of Vehicle and Driver Information System (NEVDIS), which uses serial numbers. NEVDIS would return information about whether the vehicle has been reported as written off or stolen. Including this information in the search result would give consumers greater confidence that they are buying property that is not subject to a security interest or other restriction. Example When Grant A decided to buy a car, he searched the PPS Register for possible registrations. Grant A found that the vehicle was clear of any registrations and had not been reported as written off or stolen. Allocation of a single class and other descriptors prescribed by regulation 40. All of the collateral described in a particular registration would have to be allocated a single class as prescribed by the regulations (clause 153(1) table item 4(c)). The types of collateral classes could be agriculture, aircraft, financial property, goods, intangibles, motor vehicle and watercraft. In order to reflect current practice in relation to general company charges, the prescribed classes could include 'present and after-acquired property' and 'present and after acquired property except specified property' (with a capacity to describe the exception in a free text field or attachment). 41. The PPS Register could be designed so that a user could only ever choose a single collateral class for each registration. This would ensure that registrations are allocated to a single class. 42. For some collateral classes or registration types, the regulations could allow secured parties to enter free text into a separate data field in the registration in order to provide further particulars of the property. This would make it easier for third parties searching the PPS Register to accurately identify the property. Example Finance A made a registration against Grant A's wheat crop. It described the collateral as 'crops', and entered the description of 'wheat' in the free text field. Example Finance A made a registration against Grant A's present and after acquired property apart from scuba equipment. It allocated the class of 'all present and after acquired property except', and placed 'scuba equipment' in the free text field. 43. In addition, for some collateral class or registration types, the regulations could allow the parties to attach documents to their collateral descriptions. Example Purchaser A wants to buy accounts from Grant A. Purchaser A searches the PPS Register and discovers that the accounts have already been registered by Finance A. Purchaser A is able to identify the accounts on the PPS Register by the list of accounts that Finance A had attached to its registration. Proceeds 44. A secured party would be able to describe the collateral as including any proceeds arising from the sale of the property (clause 153(1) table items 4(d)). This would be important because a security interest in the proceeds could be perfected and enforced against third parties. Where proceeds are to be specifically claimed, the secured party would have to indicate this in the registration in order to obtain perfection. The regulations will prescribe the way in which proceeds would need to be described. End times, default end times and renewal of registrations 45. Registrations would have a period of registration that commences from the 'registration time' and ends at the moment that the registration ceases to be available for a real-time search on the PPS Register (the 'end time')(clauses 153(1) table item 5, (clause 160), (clause163) and (clause 166)). Secured parties could renew a registration by amending the registered 'end time'. 46. When making a registration, a secured party would have the option of specifying an 'end time' for the registration. Where an end time is not specified or does not comply with the rules for default registration periods, the PPS Register would assign a 'default end time' according to the type of property and 'default registration period' (clause 153(1) table item 5 and clause 153(2)). 47. For consumer property and other property described in a registration by a serial number, the default registration period would be no later than the end of the day seven years after the registration became available for search on PPS Register (noting that the registration would be extendable by increments of up to seven years) (clause 153(1) table item 5(b)). 48. Commercial property, such as inventory or equipment, would be registrable for a period of up to 25 years after the end of the day the collateral becomes available for search (clause 153(1) table item 5(a)). Alternatively, the secured party could choose not to state an end time for the registration. Registrations over commercial property could be extended for increments of up to 25 years or by amending the registration to record that there is no stated end time. Example Finance F registers Grant A's motor vehicle on 1 January 2020. Finance F does not enter an end time for the registration so that the PPS Register assigns a default end time of 1 January 2027 in accordance with the rules for the 'default registration period' for consumer goods. On 1 January 2027, Grant A has not paid out the loan secured against the motor vehicle, and tries to extend the registration by entering an end date of 2 January 2035. Under the 'default registration period' rules, the PPS Register assigns a default end time of 1 January 2034. Subordination, purchase money security interests and matters prescribed by the regulations 49. A secured party would be able to indicate whether the security interest is (or is to be) subject to subordination agreements that postpone the secured party's interest to that of another person on the relevant registration or registrations (clause 153(1) table items 6). The indication of subordination would be optional because the subordination would only affect the priority position of those people bound by it. 50. A secured party would be able to indicate whether the security interest is (or is to be) subject to be a purchase money security interest (clause 153(1) table items 7). 51. The regulations would allow for matters relating to the contents of a registration to be prescribed (clause 153(1) table item 8). It is envisaged that most matters that would be prescribed by regulation would concern, but would not be limited to, grantor and secured party details and collateral descriptions. 52. Apart from registrations relating to security interests, the Bill would also allow for the registration of other interests over property, such as those that arise in vehicles impounded by State and Territory police because of their use in unlawful activities, or property subject to confiscation orders made under proceeds of crime laws (clause 154). For such registrations, the required data that needs to be recorded on the PPS Register would include: . details of the person who owns or has an interest in the property (details of the person recorded as prescribed by the regulations); and . details relating to the property including the allocation to a single class as prescribed by the regulations and a statement must be included of the reason why the property is registered (clause 154). Verification statements and registration events 53. To help parties manage their registrations, the Bill would establish a system for verifying registration events. 54. 'Registration event' refers to the registration of a financing statement or a financing change statement (except where the financing change statement relates to the removal of old data under clause 216 or the restoration of incorrectly removed data under clause 217) (clause 155). 55. Where a registration event occurs, the Registrar would be required to give a verification statement to each person who is or was registered as a secured party immediately after or before the time of the registration event (clause 156(1)). Where a registration event involves an amendment to the secured party address for service, the Registrar must ensure that the verification statement is sent to the secured party at the old and amended addresses (clause 156(2)). Similarly, if the amendment is to omit a secured party, the Registrar would be required to send a copy of the verification statement to the secured party at the previously registered address (clause 156(3)). Example Credit A registers a financing statement on the PPS Register on 1 August 2010. Soon after, Credit A registers a financing change statement to add another grantor to the registration. The Registrar would issue a verification statement to Credit A soon after the registration of the financing change statement. 56. A verification statement would give secured parties a documentary basis on which they could check the accuracy of any data added, altered or removed from the PPS Register by them, their agent or the Registrar. The statement must be given as soon as practicable after the time of the verifiable event or the latest verifiable event where more than one event is notified. 57. The Electronic Transactions Act 1999 would operate alongside the Bill to allow the Registrar to provide verification statements and other notices given under the Bill by electronic means. In such cases, that Act would require that the person consented to the information being given by electronic communication. However, consent would be able to be inferred from the person's conduct. For example, the Registrar would be able to infer consent where a secured party has nominated an email address as the address for giving notices in relation to the registration. 58. Recipients of a verification statement would have to ensure that notices of the statement are given to each person registered as a grantor immediately before and/or immediately after the registration event (clause 157(1)). The approved form would authorise that specified data in the verification statement would not have to be included in the notice, in case it contains confidential information such as passwords, but otherwise should contain the same data as that on the verification statement (clause 157(2)). The notice of a verification statement would have to be given as soon as practicable after the relevant registration event (clause 157(3)). Example Finance A registers a financing change statement to change the grantor from Grantor A to Grantor B. Soon after registration, Finance A receives the verification statement from the Registrar. Finance A must send a copy of the verification statement in the approved form and containing the required information as soon as practical to both Grantor A and Grantor B. 59. Where the collateral is described as commercial property, the grantor could waive in writing the right to receive a copy of a verification statement in relation to certain verifiable events (clause 157(3)). For consumer protection purposes, consumer grantors would not be able to waive this requirement. 60. If a verifiable event occurs which affects a number of persons registered as secured parties (whether before or after the events) and the Registrar considers that it would be inconvenient for verification statements to be sent to each interested person, the Registrar could publish a single verification statement in relation to all verifiable events (clause 158(1)). Where this occurs, the requirement for individual verification statements would no longer apply. This process could be used, for example, in relation to data migration from existing registers to the new PPS Register during the transition to the new system. 61. A failure to send a notice of a verification statement to the grantor as soon as reasonably practical would not alter the effectiveness of a registration. However, it would constitute an interference with the privacy of a grantor who is an individual for the purposes of s13 of the Privacy Act 1988 (clause 157(5)) and could give rise to a claim for damages against the secured party (clause 271). This 'interference with privacy' provision would cover any entity or individual whether or not they were otherwise subject to the Privacy Act. 62. The PPS Register would be based on notice filing rather than document filing. The general rule would be that a registration commences from the moment that the collateral description becomes available for search on the PPS Register in relation to a particular secured party (clause 160(1)). Example At noon on 1 January 2020, Finance A applied to register Grant A's wheat crop on the PPS Register in anticipation of entering a loan agreement. The collateral was registered from when it became available for search on the PPS Register at 1 second after noon on 1 January 2020. 63. When a financing change statement is registered to amend data in a registration, the amended data (for example, added property and any proceeds as described)) would only be registered from the moment that the data becomes available for search on the PPS Register (amendment time) (clause 160(2)). The amended registration would not be taken to have commenced at the initial registration time, but at the amendment time. Example Finance A has a registration against Farmer B in relation to crops: wheat that commenced on 1 January 2020. On 1 July 2022, Finance A amended its registration against Farmer B to describe the collateral as crops: wheat and barley. The crop: wheat registration commenced on 1 January 2020, while the crop: barley registration commenced on 1 July 2022. 64. Personal property would be registrable before or after a security agreement is made describing the property (clause 161). In addition, the PPS Register would allow a registration to reflect the transfer of a security interest or of the collateral before or after the transfer (clause 162). 65. Advance registration would inform secured parties of the order of registration (and potentially the order of priority) while still negotiating the transaction. This would improve certainty in commercial negotiations as parties could ascertain their rights to priority over other security interests in personal property. 66. Where a security interest in property is transferred to another secured party by registering a financing changes statement, the 'registration time' for the property would not be affected. Alternatively, the prospective secured party could apply to register a new financing statement. Here, the registration time would, by operation of law, be the registration time for the original collateral, provided that the property is continuously perfected since the initial registration time (that is, there is no gap in time between the effective registration of the initial financing statement and the new financing statement). Example Finance F sold its security interest in Grant A's crops to Bank A. The transfer could be reflected in the PPS Register in one of two ways. Finance F could transfer the registration to Bank A, thereby effecting a change of the secured party. Alternatively, Bank A could register Grant A's crops in a new registration. Finance F would have to end its effective registration against Grant A's crops. Bank A could take a subordination agreement from Finance F in case Finance F did not end its registration. Effective registration 67. The Bill would apply the concept of 'effective registration', which would describe the situation where a person has a financing statement validly recorded on the PPS Register. This would be important for the purposes of establishing, in the context of a priority dispute or a grantor's insolvency, that the person is a secured party with a security interest in personal property that is perfected by registration. 68. In the absence of any disqualifying defects, a registration of a financing statement would be effective from the 'registration time' of the relevant financing statement until the earliest of the following times: the registration reaches the end time for the registration; the collateral is omitted from the registration or the description of the collateral otherwise ceases to be available for search (for example, where the Registrar has removed the data because it is frivolous or vexatious) (clause 163). An effective registration could also be brought to an end by the Registrar (clause 168) for failure to pay a maintenance fee. Defects in registrations 69. It is the secured party's responsibility to ensure that the information registered on the PPS Register is accurate and complete. A registration would be ineffective in certain circumstances (clause 164), for example where a registration contains a seriously misleading defect in any data relating to the registration or another defect that is specified in the Bill as rendering a registration ineffective. A defect would include an irregularity, omission or error in the registration (clause 10, defect). 70. This policy approach has been adopted to promote the reliability of PPS Register data. This rule would not necessarily make a registration defective on the basis of a simple mistake, such as a typographical error in a free text field. Nor would it be likely to capture errors of a more substantive kind that do not seriously mislead a person. For example, the omission of the name of one secured party in a consortium would not be seriously misleading whereas an incomplete or inaccurate collateral description would be likely to be misleading. 71. In order to establish that a defect is seriously misleading, it would not be necessary to prove that a person was actually misled by the registration (clause 164(2)). This means that parties would need to objectively consider whether certain errors are seriously misleading. This would promote the integrity and reliability of the PPS Register system and minimise litigation. 72. For the same reasons, the Bill would establish specific circumstances in which a registration would be ineffective (clause 165): . where the collateral is required under the regulations to be described by a serial number in the PPS Register and no search of the PPS Register by reference only to the serial number would disclose the registration (this rule would apply to registrations covering either consumer property or commercial property) (clause 165(a)); . where the collateral is not required under the regulations to be described by a serial number in the PPS Register and the regulations require the grantor's details to be provided and no search of the PPS Register by reference only to the grantor's details would disclose the registration (this rule would apply to commercial property and consumer property not required by the regulations to be described by serial number (clause 153(1), table item 2). (Clause 165(b)); . where the registered financing statement states that the security interest is a purchase money security interest and the security interest is not a purchase money interest in relation to the collateral; (clause 165(c)) and . a defect in the data prescribed by the regulations (clause 165(d). Example Finance A made a number of errors when entering data into the PPS Register. For example, it registered: Grant A's motor vehicle (consumer property) using an incorrect serial number (12344 instead of 12345); and Grant B's details using the incorrect ACN. Either of these errors is sufficient to render the registration ineffective. 73. One exception to the general rule regarding registration defects arises in relation to the description of particular collateral that forms only part of the property subject to the registration. Specifically, the registration of certain collateral would not be ineffective for the sole reason that the registration of other collateral in the same registration is ineffective (clause 164(3)). This means that a registration may be partly effective and partly ineffective. Example After Finance F registered Grant A's crop:wheat, it intended to add Grant A's barley crop. In the free text description, Finance F mistakenly entered the phrase 'and canola' (rather than 'and barley'). The misdescription of the barley crop did not affect the registration of the wheat crop, which continued to be effective. The registration would have been effective in relation to any of Grant A's canola. Registration continues despite certain defects 74. Registrations would continue to be effective despite certain defects arising over time (clause 166). This might occur, for example, where the grantor's name becomes seriously misleading because of a name change following marriage. In such cases, the registration would remain effective until the earliest of: . the end time for the registration as registered immediately before the change; . the end of the month that is 60 months after the change; . the end of 5 business days after the day that the secured party acquires the knowledge of the defect (clause 166(2)). 75. A secured party would have the knowledge required to correct a defect if the secured party has actual knowledge of the defect, or would have had such knowledge had they made the enquiries that an honest and prudent person would have made (clause 297). Finance providers should not be subject to unduly onerous requirements to update the PPS Register, but could be expected to undertake periodic reviews of their customer loans. Where such reviews reveal a change of circumstances, registrations made by the secured party should be amended to include updated information. This would ensure continuing priority in the property and would assist other PPS Register users. 76. This rule is not intended to give secured parties the opportunity to correct defects of their own creation, but to provide a grace period for secured parties to correct registrations where events beyond their control have led to a previously effective registration becoming defective. 77. It is important to note that the ineffectiveness of a registration does not affect the validity of the underlying security agreement, but may result in a loss of priority where a competing interest is registered on the PPS Register. Example When Gina James changed her name to Gina O'Grady, she forgot to tell Bank A. When Bank A reviewed Gina's loans some eighteen months later, it discovered Gina's name change and amended its registration to correct the defect within 5 business days. Bank A's registrations remained effective throughout the whole period. Requirement to end the registration of certain property 78. To ensure that individuals are not prejudiced by outdated registrations, a secured party would be under a statutory obligation to omit collateral or end the effective registration of collateral that is a consumer good or serial numbered property and the security interest that is perfected by registration would become unperfected. The secured party would have to end the registration within 5 business days of the 'unperfection time' (clause 167) or extended time as approved by a court (clause 293). Non-compliance would expose the secured party to liability for statutory damages (clause 271) and would entitle the grantor to seek to end the registration through administrative or judicial processes. This would be important because secured consumer credit transactions tend to be one-off dealings between the parties where there is no reason for the secured party to obtain the benefit of continuing priority status at the expense of the consumer. 79. In all other cases, there would be no statutory obligation on the secured party to end a registration. This is because commercial financing is typically a medium to long term arrangement, often involving a fluctuating line of credit rather than a lump sum loan, and a series of security agreements rather than a one-time loan or credit transaction. In many commercial arrangements, it would be contrary to the interests and intentions of both parties to require the secured party to end a registration every time there was a short break in their financing relationship. 80. However, most financing arrangements would come to an end at some point and negotiations could end after a registration is made and when no security agreement is executed. Many consumers might also not want to pursue damages claims or would have suffered no loss or insufficient loss to warrant court action but would still want old registrations ended. Therefore, the Bill would include an amendment demand process aimed at ensuring that all parties can obtain rectification of the PPS Register in certain circumstances (Part 5.6). Failure to pay maintenance fee 81. An effective registration could be brought to an end by the Registrar for the failure to pay a maintenance fee (clause 168(2)). This would only apply where: . the Minister has determined that a fee is payable to maintain the effectiveness of the registration (clause 190(1)); . the Registrar has issued a written notice requiring the secured party to pay the stated fee within 28 days after the notice is given; and . the secured party has failed to pay the fee stated in the notice, or has failed to make arrangements (clause 190(3)) for the payment of the fee within 28 days after the notice is given (clause 168(1)). 82. Where the maintenance fee has not been paid, or arrangements have not been made for its payment, the Registrar would be able to bring the registration to an end by registering a financing change statement amending the registration to end it (clause 168(2)). 83. As the registration of the financing change statement is a registration event (clause 155), the Registrar would have to give a verification statement to each secured party (clause 156) and the secured party would have to in turn give notice of this registration event to grantor(s) (clause 157). Searching the register 84. The availability of reliable, low-cost, fast and accessible search facilities would be a central feature of the PPS Register. This would be important because prospective lenders might wish to know whether particular property is subject to a current or prospective security interest, while prospective purchasers may want to learn whether property they are about to buy is subject to an encumbrance or other restriction. In addition, secured parties may want to search the PPS Register to verify the validity and history of their own registrations, while grantors might like to monitor registrations made against them. 85. As with all registrations and amendments, the PPS Register could be accessible for search purposes by direct online access 24 hours a day, 7 days per week or by making a written application lodged with the Registrar. This could be done through a web browser, through a business to government interface, written application, SMS message, or by Interactive Voice Response (IVR) (search by SMS and IVR would only be available for searches for collateral described by a serial number). A search result could provide real-time and historic point- in-time information. A person could enlist the services of an agent to perform the searches on her or his behalf. This would mean that all people would be able to access the PPS Register for search and other purposes even if they are located in remote areas. 86. For this purpose, the Bill would provide that a person could apply to search the PPS Register for data and obtain a written search result in relation to that data (clause 170(1)-(2)). Users would not have to be registered to undertake a PPS Register search. However, the Registrar would only be required to give a person access if: . the search is authorised both in terms the correct search criteria (clause 171) and a search reference to an individual grantor (clause 172); . the search application is in the approved form; . a search fee is paid or an arrangement is made for the payment of fees in accordance with a determination made by the Minister; and . the search is not prohibited by the regulations (clause 170(3)). Search criteria 87. The Bill would provide that a person may search the PPS Register by reference to the following specified criteria: . a grantor's details; . a serial number by which collateral may (or must) be described; . the time of the search; . an earlier nominated time (point-in-time search), but only with the consent of the Registrar; and . any other criteria prescribed by the regulations. (Clause 171(1)). Example Bank A searches the PPS Register for dairy cattle registered against Grant A, a company that is recorded as the grantor in several PPS Register registrations. Bank A enters the Grant A's ACN and indicates in the search request that he is searching for livestock registrations. The search returns two registrations against that ACN-one for dairy cattle against Finance A and another for goats against Bank B. 88. To improve business efficiency and to minimise inconvenience, the PPS Register search function would allow users to refine their searches according to their needs. Therefore, while a user may search against a particular grantor's name, they could refine their search to a particular class of collateral or other descriptor. It is anticipated that these descriptors might include information that identifies, for example, whether the property is a purchase money security interest, subject to a subordination agreement or is a current asset subject to control. 89. For serial numbered goods (such as motor vehicles used for consumer purposes), users would be able to search the PPS Register by the serial number only. This is in line with the current practice on the REVS and VRS registers which do not record grantor details. 90. The regulations would prescribe a number of search criteria. For example, it would be possible to establish the PPS Register so that a person would be able to search the PPS Register by reference to the unique identifier of a registration. This would make searching more efficient as searchers would not have to examine irrelevant registrations. Example Bank B makes a registration and is given the unique identification number for the registration. Bank A (and other authorised searchers) will be able to enter this unique identification number on the PPS Register to view the registration. 91. The Registrar would have to ensure that search results are provided in response to a search application in accordance with any regulations made for such purposes (clause 171(2)). This provision would enable the regulations to determine rules for applying technological solutions for working out search results. In particular, this would allow the PPS Register to apply an exact match search method with a correction table for frequently used substitutes (such as Ltd and Limited). Authorised search purposes 92. Given the public nature of the PPS Register, it is of primary concern to protect the privacy of individuals' details recorded on the PPS Register. To deter people from interfering with individual grantors' privacy, the Bill would provide that the PPS Register could only be searched by reference to an individual grantor's details for an authorised purpose. These purposes are varied and would include a broad spectrum of searches without compromising an individual's privacy (clause 172(2)). Example Vendor A is selling a large commercial shopping complex to Buyer A. Vendor A made it a condition of its leases that tenants - some of whom are sole traders - not enter into any general security interests. Buyer A would like to search the PPS Register to establish whether the tenants have complied with the lease terms. Buyer A will not be able to search the PPS Register for this purpose. As Vendor A made it a condition of the lease agreement that it could search the PPS Register for this purpose, Vendor A will be able to undertake the searches and warrant compliance to Buyer A. 93. In addition, a person who undertakes an authorised search could not then use the data obtained as a result of searching the PPS Register, unless the searcher has also obtained the data lawfully from another source (clause 172(3)). This would therefore limit the extent to which PPS Register search data could be used, including by information brokers. 94. Each unauthorised search of the PPS Register or use of PPS Register would attract a civil penalty. The maximum penalty would be 50 penalty units for an individual, and 250 penalty units for a body corporate (clause 172(3)). The maximum penalty level is considered to be sufficient in light of the potential impact unauthorised searches and use of PPS Register data could have on persons whose information is disclosed in a registration, the limited information about individual persons contained on the PPS Register, and the ability of grantors to recover for loss or damage in relation to such breaches. 95. A person claiming that there has been an unauthorised search or use of PPS Register data bears the evidential burden of proof (clause 172(4)). The Registrar would be empowered to investigate, decline to investigate, or further investigate, a suspected unauthorised search or use of data (clause 172(5)). The Registrar would also be able to use technological evidence to detect transactions on the PPS Register indicating that unauthorised searches or use of data is occurring. 96. The duty not to conduct unauthorised searches would be an obligation due to the grantor and the failure to observe that duty and resulting in loss or damage would give rise to a claim for damages. (Clause 172(3) and (6)). Interference with privacy 97. To supplement the civil penalties which could apply to unauthorised searches and unauthorised use of an individual's personal information, the Bill would also provide that an unauthorised search or use of the personal information (including unauthorised use by a third party) would constitute an act or practice interfering with the privacy of an individual for the purposes of s13 of the Privacy Act (clause 173(2)). This 'interference with privacy' provision would cover any entity or individual whether or not they were otherwise subject to the Privacy Act. 98. An individual would be able to complain to the Privacy Commissioner under section 36 of the Privacy Act if she or he believes that a search of the PPS Register or use of the personal information constitutes an interference with their privacy. Example Person A received a phone call from Finance F offering her cheap finance because she had no registrations on the PPS Register. Person A complained to Finance F that this was an unauthorised search of the PPS Register and an interference with her privacy but they could not resolve the matter. Person A complained to the Privacy Commissioner. The Privacy Commissioner encouraged the parties to conciliate the complaint and, as happens in the majority of these matters, the parties reached an agreement, including that Finance F would provide a public apology to Person A. Because there was no formal determination by the Commissioner, no decision could be published on the website but, as this particular matter was considered to be of general interest to the public, the Privacy Commissioner published some short case notes about the complaint and its outcome without identifying any of the parties. 99. In addition the Registrar would be able to inform the Privacy Commissioner of a suspected interference with privacy and the Privacy Commissioner would be able to investigate the matter under its own motion investigative powers (s40(2) of the Privacy Act). Written search results and evidence 100. An important part of entering into secured transactions would be to obtain accurate and reliable written search results. While a clear PPS Register search result would provide prospective purchasers and lenders with some certainty that the transaction they are about to enter would not be undermined by other registered interests, it would be another matter to prove the status of a registration at a later time, particularly if a priority dispute were litigated. 101. To this end, a person who conducts an electronic search of the PPS Register could elect to obtain a written search result documenting the search (clause 170(2)). The written search result would be admissible as evidence in a court or tribunal and, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, proof of matters stated in the search result (clause 174(1)). Where competing interests are in dispute, a party would need a written search result covering two or more competing registrations and provision would be made for this (clause 174(2)(c)). Example Finance F and Bank B both registered Grant A's present and after acquired property on the same day. However, Finance F's registration was the first to become available for search on the PPS Register. A later written search result issued by the Registrar provided prima facie written evidence that Finance F was the first to register. This occurred because it was Bank B's practice to make all of its registrations at the end each business day, while Finance F made its registrations as they occurred throughout the day. 102. A written search result would be provided in the appropriate form if issued by the Registrar in the approved form or by Commonwealth, State or Territory officers authorised by the Registrar or other prescribed persons (clause 174(3)). 103. The Registrar could by legislative instrument determine data relating to the secured party, grantor, or collateral, to be included on the search result (clause 174(4) and (7)). In order to protect personal information, it is envisaged that only necessary information would be shown on the search result about grantors and secured parties. 104. For secured parties, this would be the identifier (ACN, ARSN etc) or name recorded on the PPS Register in accordance with the regulations, and the address for service nominated by the secured party group. The address for service would need to be shown on the search result as this would be used by interested parties to send notices to the secured party. Copies of financing statements 105. The Bill would also allow for secured parties to request, in the approved form, a copy of their financing statement or verification statement from the Registrar (clause 175). A request for a copy of the financing statement or verification statement could incur a fee (clause 190). 106. The Registrar would have a discretion to issue or refuse to issue a copy of the financing statement or verification statement. This would assist the Registrar to manage his/ her resources and to impose limits on how many requests a secured party could make in relation to a registration for a given period. If the Registrar refuses the request, and the secured party disagrees with the refusal, the secured party could apply to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal to review the Registrar's decision. 107. A person could also request, in the approved form, a report of matters relating to registered data relating to that person (clause 176(1)). The Registrar would be able to determine the different matters that the report would cover. A request for a report could incur a fee (clause 190). These reports would be intended to assist secured parties to manage their registrations. Example To assist secured parties renewing registrations nearing their end date, the Registrar could determine, by written instrument, that a report showing the number of registrations with an end date within the next three months would be provided (clause 176(2)). 108. The Registrar would also have the discretionary power to provide a report of matters related to registered data (clause 176(2)). Amendment demands 109. Ideally secured parties and others with interests in the registered personal property would be able to resolve any difficulties with the registration between themselves. However, if a secured party is unwilling or neglects to omit property from, or end, a registration, a person with an interest in the collateral (other than a security interest) could demand, in writing, that the registration be amended (clause 178). This statutory demand would be known as an 'amendment demand'. An interested person could demand: . that the secured party omit the collateral from the registration (clause 178(1), item 1); or . end the effective registration of the collateral (clause 178(1), item 2). 110. This process would be important as a mere registration could limit the person's ability to deal with the registered property. 111. A secured party would not be able to require payment for compliance with a demand for amendment (clause 178(3)). Consumers would be protected against the imposition of hidden loan fees relating to amendment demands. 112. Where a dispute remains unresolved, the person seeking amendment could obtain a rectification of the registration through either an administrative or judicial process. 113. A person with an interest in property described in a registration would initially have to give a written demand to the secured party to amend the registration (clause 178). The Electronic Transactions Act 1999 authorises the giving of a demand by electronic means. Example Person A became aware that Finance A had registered against all of its present and after-acquired paintings rather than the particular painting offered as security for the loan. Person A sends an email to Finance A demanding that it amend the registration to apply only to the particular painting. 114. Where the secured party fails to amend the PPS Register in line with the demand by the end of 5 business days after the day of the demand (or such later period as approved by the court (clause 293), the person would generally have a choice of pursuing an administrative or a judicial action to obtain an amendment of the PPS Register. However, if the security agreement that provides for the security interest in the collateral is a security trust instrument, only judicial processes would be available (clause 179(1)-(3)). Administrative process to demand amendment of a registration 115. The Bill would only allow secured parties, their agents and the Registrar (including subject to court order) to amend a registration. Secured parties could therefore expect that registrations could not be amended inadvertently or with ill-intentions. 116. The administrative process would be available where a person gives a written demand to a secured party to amend the registration and the secured party fails to apply for the amendment before the end of 5 business days or a period as extended by the court (clause 179(1)). However, the process would not be available where: . the security agreement (if any) creating the security interest in respect of the collateral is a security trust instrument; or . proceedings are before a court in relation to an application concerning the demand (clause 179(2)). 117. The exception in relation to security trust instruments would minimise the scope for inadvertent, fraudulent or negligent changes to a registration through a trustee's actions or omissions. In cases involving security trust instruments, the beneficiaries of the trust rather than the trustee would suffer the direct loss where a security interest loses priority due to negligent or fraudulent action that brings a registration to an end. 118. The administrative process would cease to be available where the financing statement is subsequently amended in accordance with a demand or court proceedings (clause 179(2)). 119. To commence the administrative process, a person would have to give a written statement to the Registrar setting out the nature of their demand and anything else prescribed by the regulations (clause 180(3)). As soon as practical after the statement is given to the Registrar, the Registrar would have to give an amendment notice to the secured party unless the Registrar has already done so (clause 180(4)). In this regard, the Registrar could give an amendment notice to a secured party where the Registrar suspects on reasonable grounds that the underlying obligation has ceased (clause 180(2)). 120. An amendment notice would have to be in the approved form. If the amendment notice is not in the approved form, the amendment notice would have to: . state the amendment demanded; . invite the secured party to submit a response before the end of 5 business days after the day of the Registrar's notice or an extended period approved by the Registrar; . describe the 'show cause' procedure in the amendment notice (clause 181); and . include a copy of the written statement of the person who demanded the amendment (clause 180(5)). 121. The 'show cause' process would require the Registrar to amend a registration in accordance with the demand described in the amendment notice unless the Registrar suspects on reasonable grounds that the amendment is not authorised under the Bill (clause 181(1) and (2)). In deciding whether to amend or refuse to amend the registration, the Registrar would have to consider the response (if any) of the secured party as well as any other relevant information (clause 181(4)). Example Finance A failed to comply with Grant A's request to amend the registration over Grant A's painting. Grant A applied to the Registrar setting out the terms of his demand and other required information. The Registrar gave Finance A written notice of Grant A's statement and invited Finance A to show cause why the registration should not be amended. 122. The provision of false or misleading information in any response to the Registrar's invitation could be an offence against Part 7.4 of the Criminal Code. Similarly, providing false or misleading information in an application to the Registrar to initiate the amendment demand process could be an offence against Part 7.4 of the Criminal Code. 123. A secured party would have to be notified of the Registrar's decision by verification statement under clause 156)(assuming the Registrar decides to amend the registration). The Registrar's decision would be reviewable by the AAT. Judicial process to obtain amendment of a registration 124. The Bill would provide a judicial process for interested persons affected by a PPS Register registration to obtain an amendment to a registration that concerns their interests. These parties would not be required to undergo the administrative process prior to applying to a court. 125. The judicial process would be available where a written demand for amendment is made and the secured party does not comply with the demand within 5 business days after being given notice of the demand or a period extended by a court under clause 293. The judicial process would be available in all cases, including where a security trust instrument is involved. 126. The secured party or the person who gave the demand (usually the grantor) would be able to apply to court for an order relating to the registration (clause 182(1)). Any person with an interest (including a security interest) in the collateral would have the right to appear before the court (clause 182(3)). The Registrar would also have the right to appear in proceedings (clause 218), which would be especially important if other relevant administrative processes relevant were underway. 127. Where a party brings an application to court in relation to an amendment demand, the court could make orders to amend the registration (clause 182(4)). If the court did not consider the demand was authorised, the court could make orders to: . restrain the Registrar from amending the registration; . restrain the person who gave the amendment demand from making such further amendment demands as specified by the court; . restrain the Registrar from giving the secured party amendment notices in relation to such further amendment demands as specified by the court; . any other orders that the court thinks fit (clause 182(4)). 128. The Registrar would have to comply with a court order as soon as practicable after receiving it (clause 182(5)). The Register could also determine that data removed from the PPS Register would not be made available for searching by reference to a time prior to the removal or after the removal (clause 182(6)). Removal of data and correction of registration errors 129. Consistent with the Registrar's role of establishing and maintaining the PPS Register, the Registrar would be empowered to: amend registrations; correct errors and omissions made by the Registrar and registry staff; remove, restore and archive data and implement court orders as authorised. 130. The Registrar would be empowered to remove data (including an entire registration) from the PPS Register where: . the application to register the data is frivolous or vexatious, the data is offensive, or the retention of the data in the PPS register is contrary to the public interest; . the registration of the data is prohibited by the regulations; . the application to register the data was not made in the approved form; . the removal is required urgently in the public interest or for reasons prescribed by the regulations (clause 184). Example Credit A applied for a registration against Person B in which the collateral was described as 'Bartholomew'. As Credit A could not take a security interest in a person, the registration would be frivolous or vexatious and the Registrar could remove it. 131. The Registrar's power to remove data which is contrary to the public interest would extend to a broad range of data, for example, data that if retained on the PPS Register, would otherwise be unlawful. The Registrar would also have the power to urgently remove data in the public interest. 132. The Registrar would also be empowered to remove data if the data is prohibited by the regulations for being defamatory or otherwise unlawful. 133. Where data is removed, the Registrar would have to give a verification statement to each secured party (clause 156). The verification statement would serve as notice of the removal of the data. If the secured party believes that the Registrar's decision is wrong, they could apply to the AAT to review the Registrar's decision (clause 191). 134. In most cases, where a financing change statement is registered, the historical data about the registration prior to the amendment would be available for search if a user undertakes a point-in-time search or a current search after the removal of the data. Where data has been removed by the Registrar, the Registrar could decide that the data would not be included in any point-in-time search result. If the data has been removed urgently in the public interest or for reasons prescribed by the regulations (clause 184(1)(e)(ii)), the Registrar would be required not to make such data available for search. Data removed in this way would be treated as if it had never been included in the PPS Register. 135. The Registrar would also have the capacity to register a financing change statement to remove old data from the PPS Register or data that has been ineffective for 7 years or more after its registered end date (clause 185). 136. The Registrar would also have the discretionary power to restore data (including an entire registration) to the PPS Register where that data was incorrectly removed (clause 186(1)). The Registrar would need to exercise his discretionary power to protect the rights of third parties. If data is restored to the PPS Register, it would be taken to have never been removed from the PPS Register (clause 186(2)). 137. To ensure that removed data is not lost, the Registrar would be able to keep a record of any removed data (clause 187). This would allow for old and removed records to be archived and prevent the PPS Register from becoming cluttered with old and ineffective registrations. Parties would be able to gain access to archived records under the Freedom of Information Act. 138. The Registrar would be empowered to amend registrations to correct any errors or omissions made by the Registrar (clause 188). Fees, administrative review and annual reports Registration and search fees 139. The Minister would be able, by legislative instrument, to determine fees for the purposes of the Bill (clause 190(1)-(2)). Fees could be payable on a 'pay as you go' basis (through credit card or direct debit arrangements) or by arrangement with the Registrar (in accordance with arrangements determined by the Minister under clause 190(3)-(4). Example Finance A projected that it would undertake about 1,000 transactions on the PPS Register each month. To overcome the inefficiency of multiple small 'as you go' transactions, Finance A enters an arrangement with the Registrar of Personal Property Securities for the invoicing and payment of fees on a monthly basis. 140. Any fees imposed by the Bill would be set on a cost recovery basis (clause 190(5)) and could not amount to a taxation (section 55 of the Commonwealth Constitution). 141. The amount of any fee, other than a fee to maintain a registration, would be a debt due to the Commonwealth, and could be recovered by the Commonwealth by application to court (clause 190(6)). The fee to maintain a registration would not be a debt to the Commonwealth because the sanction imposed for non-payment would be the ending of the effective registration of the property. Review of decisions 142. A person could apply to the AAT for review of any of the following decisions by the Registrar: . refusing to register a financing statement (clause 150(1); . refusing to register a financing change statement (clause 150(2)); . amending the PPS Register to end the effect of a registration (clause 150(2)); . refusing to give a person access to the PPS Register to search for data, (clause 170); . refusing to give a person a copy of a registered financing statement or a verification statement (clause 175); . refusing to give a person a report (clause 176(1)); . registering, or refusing to register, an amendment demand (clause 181(1)); . removing data from the PPS Register (clause 184(1)(a)-(c)); . not making data removed from the PPS Register available for searching on the PPS Register (clause 178(2), clause 181(5)) or clause 184(2)(a)); . restoring incorrectly removed data to the PPS Register (clause 186); . correcting an error or omission made by the Registrar (clause 188); and . removing migrated data from the PPS Register (clause 334(2)). 143. Under the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975, a party to Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) proceedings may appeal a decision by the tribunal to the Federal Court of Australia on a question of law. 144. The Registrar would have to prepare an annual report at the end of each financial year for tabling by the Minister in the Parliament. The report would have to address the operation of the Bill and provide details of each occasion on which access to the Register was refused or otherwise suspended during the relevant year (clause 147(5)). (Clause 192(2)). Registrar of Personal Property Securities 145. The offices of the Registrar of Personal Property Securities and the Deputy Registrar are established under Part 5.9. 146. The clauses in this Part provide for: . an office of the Registrar and Deputy Registrar and for the appointment of the Registrar and the Deputy Registrar (clause 194 and clause 200); . the functions and powers of the Registrar and Deputy Registrar (clause 195 and clause 201); . acting Registrar appointments to be made in certain circumstances (clause 196); . the resignation of the Registrar and Deputy Registrar (clause 198 and clause 202); and . the termination of the appointment of the Registrar and Deputy Registrar (clause 199 and clause 203). 147. The Registrar would be able to delegate his or her powers to persons who may, or may not, be engaged under the Public Service Act 1999 (clause 197). The ability to delegate to non-public servants would be necessary to outsource functions under the Bill to private employees, such as those engaged in a contact centre. A delegate could be required to exercise their powers under the direction or supervision of the Registrar, Deputy Registrar or a person engaged under the Public Service Act. The powers conferred on the Registrar under the Bill fall into three broad classes: . the powers required to operate the PPS Register. It is expected that the Registrar would ordinarily exercise these powers through automated systems without delegation to any person but the Registrar would need this power of delegation for situations requiring manual processes. The volume of transactions processed by the PPS Register would make it impractical for the Registrar to exercise all of his or her powers personally; . the power to undertake investigations or commence or intervene in legal proceedings (clauses 173(5), 218 and 219). It is expected that the Registrar would ordinarily exercise these powers personally but if the powers were delegated, it is expected that the delegation would be in relation to a particular matter and under the supervision of the Registrar. This power of delegation would give the Registrar flexibility in the administration of the PPS Register and the ability to retain powers over significant matters and to delegate powers over less significant matters; . the power to make a range of routine decisions, such as in relation to applications to the Registrar for reports (clause 176), the amendment demand process (clause 180(2)) and the approval of arrangements for the payment of fees (clause 190(4)). It is expected that these matters would ordinarily be exercised by junior officers working at a telephone contact centre, under the direct supervision of more senior officers. The volume and nature of these functions would make it inappropriate for them to be exercised by SES officers. Chapter 6 - Judicial proceedings Judicial proceedings generally 1. The Bill would confer jurisdiction on various Australian courts over 'PPS matters', that is matters arising under the Bill or otherwise arising in relation to security agreements or security interests (clause 206(1)). The conferred jurisdiction would not include matters over which the Federal Court or the Federal Magistrates Court has jurisdiction under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977. (Clause 206(1)). 2. Chapter 6 would establish specific requirements and procedures for transferring PPS matters between courts, including cross- jurisdictional transfers. The Bill would therefore exclude the operation of the Jurisdiction of Courts (Cross-vesting) Act 1987 and section 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (clause 206(2)) but not other provisions of the Judiciary Act (clause 206(3)). Conferral of jurisdiction 3. The Bill would confer jurisdiction over PPS matters on the following courts, subject to any limits on a particular court's jurisdiction (clause 207): . the Federal Court; . the Family Court of Australia; . the Federal Magistrates Court; . a superior court of a State or Territory; and . a lower court of a State or Territory. 4. A lower court of a State or Territory is a court of that State or Territory that is not a superior court (ie, a Supreme Court) (clause 211(3)). Jurisdiction would be conferred on such courts to facilitate access to court for parties wishing to enforce their rights regardless of the value of the security interests. 5. The Bill would not permit cross-jurisdictional appeals (eg from a state court to a federal court) unless expressly provided for by law (clause 208). 6. The Bill would require that courts and court officers with jurisdiction over PPS matters assist each other (clause 209). Transfers between courts 7. PPS matters would be able to be transferred between courts where appropriate or in the interests of justice (clause 212(1)). For a matter to be transferred: . a PPS matter would need to be pending or before a court; . jurisdiction would need to be conferred on the receiving court for either the whole proceeding or an application in the proceeding; and . the remedies sought would need to be within the power of the receiving court. (Clause 210). 8. The Bill would not provide for the transfer of PPS matters between the Federal or Family Court and the Federal Magistrates Court (clause 210). Transfers between these courts are already provided for under existing legislation. 9. The Bill would enable cross-jurisdictional transfers from lower courts through the superior courts (clause 211). For example, a Local Court could transfer a matter to its Supreme Court with a recommendation that the matter be transferred to the Supreme Court of another jurisdiction. On receipt of the transfer, the Supreme Court of the other jurisdiction could transfer the matter to a lower court in its jurisdiction. 10. A court could transfer a PPS matter on the application of a party or on its own initiative (clause 213) In deciding whether to make a transfer, the court would need to take into account a number of considerations, including but not limited to the following: . the location or place of business of the parties; . where the relevant events took place; . the desirability that related hearings be heard in the same State or Territory; . any recommendation from a lower court that the matter be transferred; and . the suitability of having the matter determined by the receiving court (clause 212(2)). 11. The receiving court would proceed with a transferred matter as if the matter had been instituted in that court (clause 214). When dealing with a transferred PPS matter, a court would be required to apply the rules of evidence and procedures applied in any superior court, which the court considers appropriate in the circumstances (clause 215). Where a PPS matter is transferred, barristers or solicitors entitled to practise in the transferring court would have the same entitlements to practice in the receiving court (clause 216). In addition, appeals would not be allowed in relation to the transfer of proceedings (clause 211) and the rules of evidence and procedure (clause 215). (Clause 217). Registrar's role in judicial proceedings 12. The PPS Registrar would be able to intervene in a proceeding on behalf of the Commonwealth (clause 218). If the PPS Registrar considered it to be in the public interest for a person to seek to recover damages resulting from a PPS matter, the Registrar would be able to commence and pursue proceedings in the person's name (clause 219). Where the person is not a constitutional corporation, this would require the person's written consent (clause 219(3)). Civil Penalty Proceedings 13. The Bill would include a civil penalty regime for the contravention of certain provisions ('civil penalty provisions'). These provisions are aimed at protecting the privacy of individuals. A wrongdoer who contravened a civil penalty provision could be ordered to pay the Commonwealth a monetary penalty. A civil penalty is imposed through the courts and the standard is a civil, rather than a criminal, standard. Part 6.3 of the Bill would set out the framework for civil penalty proceedings. Application 14. A civil penalty provision would be identified as such by the relevant provision or by another provision (clause 221). Obtaining an order for a civil penalty 15. The PPS Registrar would initiate civil penalty proceedings on behalf of the Commonwealth. The Registrar would need to apply for an order from the Federal Court within six years of the alleged contravention (clause 222(1)). If two or more civil penalty provisions were contravened by the same conduct, proceedings could be instituted under any one or more of the provisions but a person would be liable for only one penalty in respect of the same conduct (clause 222(4)). 16. In making its decision, the court would need to be satisfied that the wrongdoer had contravened a civil penalty provision and that the contravention was serious (clause 222(2)). When determining the monetary penalty, the court would have regard to the nature and extent of the contravention and of the resultant loss or damage. The court would also consider the circumstances of the contravention and whether the person had previously been found to engage in similar conduct. (Clause 222(3)). 17. For each contravention, the court could order the wrongdoer to pay the pecuniary penalty that the court considers appropriate. However, the amount payable could not be more than the amount set for contravening the relevant provision (clause 222(2)). 18. Civil penalties could be applied to persons involved in the acts of others who contravened the civil penalty provisions. For example, a person who aids, abets, counsels or procures a contravention of a civil penalty provision would be liable to incur a civil penalty (clause 224). 19. If the Federal Court orders a person to pay a monetary penalty, this would have the same effect as a court judgment and would be enforceable by the Commonwealth as such (clause 225). 20. The contravention of a civil penalty provision would not constitute an offence (clause 223). Civil penalty proceedings and criminal proceedings 21. Where conduct could attract both civil penalty and criminal proceedings, the Bill provides priority for criminal proceedings. 22. If the relevant conduct results in a criminal conviction, the Federal Court could not make an order for contravening a civil penalty provision (clause 226). Where criminal proceedings are commenced against a person for conduct which is the subject of civil penalty proceedings, the civil penalty proceedings would be stayed (clause 227(1)). In the event the person was not convicted of the offence, the civil proceedings would be resumed, but otherwise they would be dismissed (clause 227(2)). 23. Criminal proceedings would be able to be instituted against a person despite that person having been found to have contravened a civil penalty provision in respect of substantially the same conduct (clause 228)). 24. Other than in cases raising allegations of giving false evidence in civil penalty proceedings, the evidence produced in civil proceedings would be inadmissible in criminal proceedings if the conduct alleged to constitute the offence is substantially similar (clause 229). Enforceable undertakings relating to contraventions of civil penalty provisions 25. If the PPS Registrar considers a person to have contravened a civil penalty provision, the Registrar could accept a written undertaking to pay an amount to the Commonwealth within a certain period (clause 230). The breach of such an undertaking would enable the Registrar to apply to the Federal Court for an order that the person comply with the undertaking (clause 231). Chapter 7 - Operation of Australian and other laws Australian laws and those of other jurisdictions 1. The parties to a security agreement would need to know whether the security interest will be governed by the law of a place in Australia or another place. They would require certainty and predictability as to the law applicable to the validity, perfection, effects of perfection and non-perfection and enforcement of the security interest. The conflict-of-laws rules would meet the reasonable expectations of all interested parties to a security agreement. 2. The rules in Part 7.2 would apply to proceedings in an Australian court (clause 234). 3. As there are connecting factors which must be met before Australian law is able to determine which law governs a security agreement, this Part should be read together with clause 6 (Connection with Australia). 4. This Part is based on international conflict-of-laws rules, and in particular on similar provisions in the New Zealand and Saskatchewan PPS Acts and the UNCITRAL [Legislative Guide on Secured Transactions]. 5. Clause 234 (Scope of this Part) would use the term 'validity' instead of 'attachment'. This concept of validity relates to whether a security interest is effective and enforceable between the parties, and not whether the security agreement itself is valid as a contract between the parties. 6. The provisions would include general rules (clause 234-237) and specific rules about security interests in goods (clause 238), intangible property (clause 239), financial property (clause 240) and proceeds (clause 241). 7. The starting principle is that a security interest in goods would be governed by the law of the location in which the goods are located, that security interests in an intangible would be governed by the law of the location in which the grantor is located and that a security interest in financial property would be governed by the law of the location in which the grantor is located. These principles would be modified in particular situations. Contractual obligations 8. Nothing in this Part of the Bill would affect the law that governs contractual obligations in a security agreement (clause 234). The contractual rights and obligations of the parties to a security agreement would be subject to the law chosen by the parties and as evidenced by the terms of the contract. The Bill would deal only with the law governing property rights created by a security agreement in proceedings before an Australian court (clause 234). 9. The choice of law available to parties to a security agreement would be consistent with the Convention on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations (Rome Convention)(Articles 3 and 4). Article 3 of the Rome Convention provides that parties have freedom of choice as to what law should govern contractual obligations and Article 4 provides that where a law has not been chosen, contractual obligations would be governed by the law of the country to which the contract is most closely connected. Under the Bill, the parties to a security agreement would be able to determine the appropriate law applicable to their personal obligations under the agreement Location 10. The location of personal property, whether in Australia or another jurisdiction, would generally be the location where the personal property is situated (clause 235). 11. Australia would mean the Commonwealth of Australia and include Norfolk Island and any other external Territories prescribed by the Regulations (clause 7). 12. There would be exceptions for some specific kinds of personal property, for example, investment instruments not evidenced by certificates would be located in the jurisdiction which governs the transfer of the investment instrument, while the location of negotiable instruments evidenced by electronic records would be the jurisdiction which governs the negotiable instrument. The location of chattel paper would also be the jurisdiction which governs the chattel paper (clause 235). 13. A person's location would be determined either by a body corporate's place of incorporation, the jurisdiction of the body politic or an individual's principal place of residence. Agreement to apply Australian law 14. The law of the Commonwealth would be the substantive law governing property rights created by a security agreement when the agreement between the parties expressly states the law of a place in Australia is to apply, and the grantor is an Australian entity (clause 237). The parties would be able to agree that Australian law governs a security interest only when the grantor is an Australian entity at the time the security interest attaches to the collateral (clause 237(1)(a)). For practical purposes, when the grantor is an Australia entity, this clause would apply only when the collateral is goods or a securities entitlement (because the security interest would generally be governed by Australian law when the collateral is an intangible) (clause 239) or financial property (clause 240). 15. An Australian company with foreign investments would be able to enter into security agreements which expressly apply Australian law to the company's security interests, no matter where the goods, intangible property or financial property is located, when the security interest attaches. 16. The Bill would not apply when the grantor is not an Australian entity and the collateral is goods located outside Australia, as there would not be a sufficient connection with Australia (clause 6(1)). For this reason, the Bill does not include provisions about the law that governs these security interests - including parties being able to agree that Australian law applies to the security agreement. Whether a non-Australian entity would be able to agree that Australian law governs a security interest granted by it in goods located outside Australia would be a matter for the law of the location of the grantor or the goods. 17. There would be some exceptions to the express agreement provision in relation to specific intangible property. A security agreement would be unable to specify that Australian law would apply over security interests in an account, an assignment of an account or chattel paper, intellectual property or an intellectual property licence. Security interests in this type of intangible property would be governed by the law of the location of the grantor. Example Company B incorporated in Country Z exports goods to Australia and a number of other countries and has receivables owed to it from customers in these countries. Company A incorporated in Australia takes a security interest in an accounts receivable of Company B for receivables owed by Australian customers and payable in Australia. As the collateral is an account the governing law is that of the jurisdiction of the grantor at the time the security interest attaches. In this instance the law of Country Z would apply to the security interest. 18. This approach would be consistent with the United Nations Convention on the Assignment of Receivables in International Trade (UN Assignment Convention). Articles 22 and 30 of the UN Assignment Convention establish the general rule that it is the law of the jurisdiction where the grantor is located which determines the governing law for the assignment of receivables. This rule would be required so that the law applicable to receivables is fixed to one location and secured parties would not have to ascertain which of a potential multitude of laws applies in a particular case. 19. This Part would cover the attachment, perfection and effect of perfection or non-perfection of security interests but other Commonwealth laws could provide governing laws for security interests (clause 236). Goods 20. The main rule applying to goods would be that of the jurisdiction where the property is located when the security interest attaches to the goods, under that law. Example Person A, located in Australia, takes a security interest in a painting owned by Person F, located in Country F. The painting is located in Country F. As the painting is a good located in Country F, the validity, perfection and effect of perfection or non- perfection of the security interest will be governed by the law of Country F, However, the parties could expressly agree that the law of Australia would apply to the security interest in the painting despite the painting beings located outside Australia (clause 237). 21. The rule applying to goods would not distinguish between possessory and non-possessory security interests. Goods that are moved between jurisdictions 22. Secured parties could have security interests in personal property which is capable of being moved from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. If the main rule were to apply, it would be incumbent on secured parties to monitor the secured goods throughout transit and to enforce the security interests according to the law of the jurisdiction in which the goods were located when the security interest attached (this could be difficult to determine when the security agreement is enforced at a later time). 23. The Bill would therefore include an exception to the main rule for goods that are about to be moved. The law of the jurisdiction to which the goods are moved would apply when the secured party has a reasonable belief that the goods will be moved to the jurisdiction (clause 238(2)). Example Person A, located in Australia, takes a security interest in a painting owned by Person F, located in Country F. The painting is located in Country F. When the security interest attached to the painting, Person A held a reasonable belief that the painting would be moved from Country F to Australia. The governing law for goods that are moved is that of the jurisdiction to which they are moved, provided the secured party has a reasonable belief that the goods will be moved to that jurisdiction. Therefore, the law of Australia would govern the security interest in the painting. Also, because Person A is located in Australia, the parties could have expressly agreed that the law of Australia would apply to the security interest from the outset, regardless of the location of the painting at any particular time (clause 237). Example Person F, located in Country F, takes a security interest in a painting owned by Person A, located in Australia. The painting is located in Australia. When the security interest attached to the painting, Person F held a reasonable belief that the painting would be moved from Australia to Country F. In proceedings in an Australian court, the law of Country F would govern the security interest in the painting (so long as the painting is located in Australia) (clause 6(1)(a) and clause 238(3). Goods that are normally moved between jurisdictions - 24. Strict adherence to the main rule would create a similar problem for secured parties who take security interests in goods which are normally moved between jurisdictions. Shipping containers are an example of this type of property 25. Therefore, the Bill would provide an exception to the main rule for commercial goods that are normally moved between jurisdictions. The exception would apply the law of the jurisdiction (including the conflict of law rules) in which the grantor is located when the security interests attaches to the goods under the law of that jurisdiction (clause 238(3)). This means that secured parties would not have to know the exact location of the goods at any particular point in time. Example Person A, located in Australia, grants a security interest in shipping containers to Bank A, located in Australia. At any given time the shipping containers are located in various countries, or at sea. As Person A is located in Australia, the law of Australia would govern security interests in the container, unless otherwise expressly agreed by the parties (clause 238(3) and clause 237). Example Person F, located in Country F, grants a security interest in shipping containers to Foreign bank, located in Country F. At any given time, the shipping containers are located in various countries, or at sea. In proceedings in an Australian court, as Person F is located in Country F, the law of Country F would govern security interests in the container, unless otherwise expressly agreed by the parties (clause 238(3) and clause 237). 26. This exception to the main rule would take into consideration the requirement of sufficient connection to the governing law and the reasonable expectation of the parties, that for mobile commercial property, the location of the goods at any particular time should not dictate what law would apply to the security interests. 27. A notable difference in this provision would be that the law of the debtor's jurisdiction includes a reference to their conflict of laws rule. Similar inclusions are contained in both the New Zealand and Saskatchewan PPS Acts. The inclusion of conflict of laws invokes the doctrine of renvoi, which essentially means 'reference back'. Put simply, the law of the forum is required to look not only at the domestic law of the debtor's location, but also the choice of law provisions in the grantor's location. Example Person F, located in Country F, grants a security interest in shipping containers to Bank A, located in Australia. Bank A commences enforcement action in an Australian court against Person F in relation to shipping containers located in Australia. The Australian court is required to apply the choice of laws rules in Country F. The Australian court is able to resolve the dispute in accordance with Australian law, provided the conflict of law rules in Country F apply the law of Australia to the shipping containers (clause 238(3)). Example Person F, located in Country F, grants a security interest in shipping containers to Bank A, located in Australia. Bank A commences enforcement action in an Australian court against Person F in relation to shipping containers located in Australia. The choice of laws in Country F includes the doctrine of renvoi, which creates a circular situation where the laws of each jurisdiction keep referring back to one another. In this instance, the Australian court would apply the law of Country F and resolve the issue as if a court of Country F had exercised its jurisdiction (clause 238(3)). Intangible property 28. The main governing law rule for security interests in intangible property would be that the governing law would be the law of the jurisdiction where the grantor is located when the security interest attaches under that law (clause 239(1)). 29. This provision would provide certainty for the parties because: . it would not always be clear where an intangible is located; and . there would be a single law applicable to the intangible property. 30. The Bill would take into consideration a change in the location of the grantor over the life of the security interest and provide that perfection and the effect of perfection or non-perfection of a security interest in intangible property would be governed by the law in which the grantor is located at a particular time (clause 239(2)). Example Exporter A, located in Australia, grants a security interest over a chose in action it has against persons located in Country D and Country E. The security interests would be governed by the law of Australia, unless the parties agree otherwise (clause 239(2)). Example Person A, located in Australia, grants a security interest over accounts due to it by persons located in Country D and Country E. The security interests would be governed by the law of Australia (clause 239(2)). Person A would not be able to contract that the security interest be governed by the law of another country (clause 237(2)(a)). Intellectual property 31. The governing law for security interests in intellectual property or an intellectual property licence would be the law of the jurisdiction under which the intellectual property or licence was granted (clause 239(3)). Example Grant A, who is located in Australia, is the author and owner of the intellectual property in a best-selling book. In order to finance her next book, Grant A borrows money from Publisher F, which is located in Country F. Grant A grants Publisher F a security interest in the copyright in Grant A's next book, whether located in Australia or Country F. The security interest would not extend to the copyright in other places. The security interest would be governed by the law of Australia to the extent that the collateral is Australian copyright and the law of Country F to the extent that the collateral is Country F copyright. 32. A different rule would apply to intellectual property and intellectual property licences because the same law would need to govern both the intellectual property and the associated security interest. This would be particularly important when title to the intellectual property is based on registration in an intellectual property register, such as for patents and trade marks. ADI accounts 33. A security interest in an ADI account would ordinarily be governed by the law of the jurisdiction that governs the ADI account (clause 239(4)). The parties to the security interest and the ADI could agree to the law of another jurisdiction applying to the security interest in the ADI account, provided the choice of law is not manifestly contrary to public policy (clause 239(5)). Financial property 34. The governing law for the validity of a security interest in financial property would ordinarily be that of the jurisdiction where the grantor is located when the security interest attaches, under that law, to the property (clause 240(1)). The location of the grantor would ordinarily also apply for determining perfection and the effect of perfection or non-perfection of a security interest in financial property (clause 240(4)). Example Company F, located in Country F, grants a security interest to Bank B, located in Country B, in financial property located in Australia. Bank B does not have possession or control of the financial property. In proceedings in an Australian court, the validity, perfection and the effect of perfection or non-perfection of a security interest in the financial property would be governed by the law of Country F (ie the law of the location of the grantor). 35. However, the law of Australia would govern the validity of a security interest in certain kinds of financial property when the security interest attaches under the law of a place in Australia and at the time the security interest attaches, the property is both located in Australia and the secured party has possession or control of the property. This rule would apply to investment instruments, negotiable instruments not evidenced by certificates and rights evidenced by letters of credit that state that the letters of credit must be presented on claiming payment or requiring the performance of an obligation (clause 240(3)). Example Company F, located in Country F, grants a security interest to Bank B, located in Country B, in an investment instrument located in Australia. The security interest has attached under the law of New South Wales. Bank B has possession or control of the investment instrument. The validity of Bank B's security interest in the shares would be governed by the law of Australia. 36. Australian law would also apply to the perfection of a security interest in financial property in certain situations. Perfection and the effect of perfection or non-perfection would be governed by the law of Australia if at that time the financial property is located in Australia and the secured party has possession or control of the property (clause 240(5)). Example Company F, located in Country F, grants a security interest to Bank B, located in Country B, in an investment instrument located in Australia. The security interest has attached under the law of New South Wales. At the time of attachment, Bank B did not have possession or control of the investment instrument, however, Bank B later obtained possession or control of the investment instrument. The validity of Bank B's security interest in the shares would be governed by the law of Country F (the location of the grantor, as there was no possession or control at attachment). But the perfection and the effect of perfection or non-perfection would be governed by the law of Australia (as the secured party has possession or control of the investment instrument that is located in Australia). Non-negotiable documents of title 37. A security interest in a non-negotiable document of title would be governed by the law of the jurisdiction in which the goods covered by the document of title are located when the security interest attaches under that law (clause 240(6)). Negotiable instruments 38. A security interest in an uncertificated negotiable instrument would be governed by the law of the jurisdiction that governs the negotiable instrument. Proceeds 39. The governing law in relation to a security interest in proceeds would be the law of the location of the security interest in the original collateral. 40. There would be an exception where the proceeds are an account (to facilitate transfers of accounts) (clause 241). Constitutional Operation 41. Pursuant to section 51(xxxvii) of the Constitution, the Commonwealth Parliament may legislate with respect to matters referred to it by the State parliaments. The Bill would be supported by suitable references of State legislative powers. Such references would remove any need to 'read down' the Act by reference to existing Commonwealth constitutional powers and would ensure that the new legislative framework is comprehensive in its national coverage. 42. The Commonwealth and the States and Territories have agreed to the terms of an inter-governmental agreement underpinning the referral of legislative power from the States to the Commonwealth to enable the Commonwealth to enact the Bill. The Council of Australian Governments signed the inter-governmental agreement on 2 October 2008. 43. The Bill would operate in a referring State to the extent permitted by the constitutional powers of the Commonwealth and the reference of State legislative powers. 44. The Bill would still operate in a State regardless of whether that State has referred the powers necessary to enable the Commonwealth Parliament to enact the Bill. However, the Bill would operate in a non-referring State only to the extent that the Bill's operation could be supported by the Commonwealth Parliament's legislative powers under section 51 of the Constitution (other than section 51 (xxxvii)). 45. In a non-referring State, the Bill would govern security interests in personal property where: . the grantor of the security interest is a person with respect to whom the Commonwealth can legislate, for example a bankrupt or an insolvent (clause 247); . the security interest arose in the course of activities with respect to which the Commonwealth can legislate: for example, activities undertaken by a constitutional corporation (clause 248); or . the security interest is in collateral over which the Commonwealth has legislative powers, for example, a bill of exchange or promissory note (clause 249). 46. The Bill would also provide that the PPS Register would operate in a non-referring State (clause 250). 47. The Bill would operate in a Territory as a law of the Commonwealth, to the extent that it can in accordance with the Commonwealth Parliament's legislative powers under sections 122 and 51 of the Constitution (other than section 51(xxxvii)) (clause 243). 48. The Bill would operate outside Australia to the extent that it can under section 51(xxix) of the Constitution (the external affairs power) or any of the other legislative powers that the Commonwealth Parliament has under section 51 of the Constitution (other than section 51(xxxvii)) (clause 243(7)). 49. A State would not be a referring State unless the State refers the necessary legislative power before the registration commencement time. If a State were to refer the legislative power after the registration commencement time, a further Bill would be required to include that State as a referring State (clause 244). 50. The Bill would reflect the matters referred by state parliaments (clause 245). Initially, the Commonwealth would rely on the referral of legislative power from the states in order to make the Bill. The reference of power would also extend to the making of express amendments to the Bill. An express amendment would include direct amendments of the Bill but would exclude the enactment of a provision in a different Act that would have a significant affect on the Bill. 51. A referring State would stop being a referring State if that State were to terminate the provisions of the referral legislation that conferred the power to make the Bill initially and the provisions that permitted subsequent amendments (clause 244). Relationship between Australian Laws Concurrent Operation 52. The Bill would establish the relationship between the Bill and other laws. If the Bill were to operate in relation to a security interest, other laws would not affect the validity of the interest, except where the Bill provides otherwise. The Bill would otherwise operate not to exclude or limit the concurrent operation of other applicable laws of the Commonwealth, a State or Territory or a rule of law or equity. The Bill would prevail to the extent of any direct inconsistency over a law of a State or a Territory or a rule of law or equity. However, the Bill would recognise that some laws of a State or a Territory and rules of law or equity could operate concurrently with the Bill (clause 254). 53. The Bill would provide certainty about the concurrent operation of the Bill with other Commonwealth, State and Territory laws (clause 255) and this would be consistent with the intergovernmental agreement on PPS reform, which provides (clause 3.2.4) that, where there is direct inconsistency between State or Territory legislation and the PPS Act, or subordinate legislation made under the Act, that State or Territory legislation would prevail over the Act or subordinate legislation where: . subordinate legislation made under the Act provides that the State or Territory legislation prevails; or . the State or Territory legislation expressly derogates from the Act or subordinate legislation . 54. Inconsistencies between the Bill and other Commonwealth, State or Territory legislation would be able to be resolved by a regulation replacing a provision of the Bill or modifying its operation (clause 255). This would provide a mechanism to resolve inconsistencies that would otherwise affect the regulatory responsibilities of participants in the national PPS scheme. A similar mechanism is included in the Corporations Act and the Corporations Agreement 2002. 55. This regulation making power could not be used to modify the definitions of 'personal property' (clause 26) or 'licence' (clause 255(3) so far as those definitions exclude certain rights, entitlements and authorities granted under Commonwealth, State or Territory law and which are declared under that law not to be personal property under the PPS Act. This restriction would be in accordance with the terms of the PPS inter-governmental agreement between the Commonwealth and the States and Territories. 56. The Bill would ensure that the Commonwealth, by enacting the Bill, could not give preference to one State (or part thereof) over another State (or part thereof) in relation to trade, commerce or revenue (as this would contravene section 99 of the Commonwealth Constitution) (clause 260)). This would be achieved by allowing a court to 'read- down' any provision in the Bill that would give such a preference, so that it would not operate to the extent that it gives the preference. When other laws prevail 57. The Bill would allow for the Payment Systems and Netting Act 1998, the Cheques Act 1986, and the Bill of Exchange Act 1997 to prevail over the PPS Act to the extent of any inconsistency (clause 256). 58. The Bill would set out restrictions on the extent to which a security agreement would be effective according to its terms under clause 18(1) (clause 18). A security agreement would be subject to any rule of law or equity or any law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory. An Act that prevented the granting of security interests in certain kinds of personal property would continue to be effective, for example, the prohibition in the Gaming Machines Act 2001 (NSW) on granting certain kinds of security interests in approved gaming machines (section 74) or the prohibition in the Consumer Credit Code on mortgages that charges all the property of a mortgagor (section 40(1)). 59. The contractual relationship between the parties would continue to be regulated by the general contract rules dealing with matters such as the formation, validity, interpretation and enforceability of contracts. 60. The Bill would allow a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory or a rule of law or equity to prevail over the Bill to the extent of an inconsistency, where that law prohibits or limits a person creating, acquiring or dealing with collateral or a security interest in collateral (clause 254). This would include where the relevant law restricts the right of a person to hold, transfer or assign a security interest or where the law would impose further limitations or obligations in relation to the enforcement of a security interest in personal property. The regulation-making power in clause 258(4) could disapply the subordination so that the Bill would prevail. This could be necessary, for example, where a State or Territory law purporting to limit the ability of a person to deal with a security interest in personal property would unintentionally undermine the operation of the national scheme. 61. This rule would be subject to the provisions in the Bill which determine when other laws do not prevail (clause 258(5). 62. The Bill would allow a referring State or a Territory to declare that a matter be excluded from the application of the whole or part of the Bill (clause 259). The declaration could also specify the extent to which the matter is excluded. Regulations made under the Bill could override any such declaration. These provisions would be in accordance with the terms of the PPS inter-governmental agreement between the Commonwealth and the States and Territories. 63. While the Bill would allow State and Territory laws consistent with the Bill to operate concurrently with the Bill, the Bill would ensure that such laws would not prevail over the Bill in certain circumstances. When other laws do not prevail 64. A security agreement or an assignment of a security agreement would not be ineffective under the Bill merely because of a failure to comply with certain laws of a State or a Territory. Specifically, where a State or Territory law: . require or enable a person to register a security interest or an assignment - a failure to comply with the registration requirements under the relevant State or Territory law would not affect the validity, priority or enforcement or otherwise limit the effect of the security agreement, security interest (clause 261) or the assignment (clause 262); . relates to a security agreement or an assignment of a security interest and requires the security agreement to be in a particular form or be executed in a particular way - a failure to comply with the formal requirements under the relevant State or Territory law would not affect the validity, priority or enforcement or otherwise limit the effect of the security agreement, the security interest or the assignment (clause 263). This would only apply to State and Territory laws prescribed by the regulations. It would be possible to prescribe State and Territory laws that impose different formal requirements in different States and Territories, to facilitate consistent national formal requirements; . affects the operation of the rules under the Bill that determine when a security interest attaches to personal property (clause 264) and how a security interest is perfected - the operation of the relevant State or Territory law would be excluded to the extent that it affects the specified provisions of the Bill. 65. These provisions would ensure national consistency in relation to registration, assignment, the formal requirements for security agreements and the rules relating to attachment and perfection. Chapter 8 - Miscellaneous Vesting of certain unperfected security interests 1. The Bill would specify the circumstances in which an unperfected security interest in property would vest in the grantor (clauses 267- 269). 2. These provisions would operate in conjunction with other provisions in the Corporations Act and the Bankruptcy Act 1966 which specify the circumstances in which a security interest is void as against a trustee, liquidator or administrator. For example, the Corporations Act provides that certain unregistered charges are void as against the liquidator (s266-267). 3. Unlike the provisions in the Bankruptcy Act and Corporations Act, the provisions in the Bill would also apply to transactions where the secured party owns the collateral, for example, under a lease or hire purchase arrangement. 4. The Bill would provide that a security interest would vest in the grantor if the security interest were unperfected when: . a company or body corporate is wound up; . an administrator is appointed under the Corporations Act (or that Act as applied by a State or Territory law); . a company or a body corporate executes a deed of company arrangement; . a sequestration order is made under the Bankruptcy Act; . the person becomes a bankrupt under the Bankruptcy Act (clause 267). 5. This outcome would not be new to Australian law. The High Court in Associated Alloys v ACN 001 452 106 (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) [2000] HCA 25 and in General Motors Acceptance Corporation Australia v Southbank Traders (Pty) Ltd [2007] HCA 19, held that a supplier could lose their security interest as a result of failing to register the interest. 6. The following kinds of security interests would be exempt from this rule: . the interest of a senior creditor under a turnover trust (clause 268(2)); . a short term PPS lease (a lease of goods described by serial number for a term of 90 days and less than one year (clause 268(1). 7. While these transactions would survive the grantor's insolvency, they would remain subject to the relevant priority rules in the Bill. 8. Turnover trusts are a feature of a large number of commercial documents and are commonly included in guarantees provided in commercial financing. It would therefore be onerous to require financiers to register turnover trusts. The Bill would strike a balance by allowing unregistered turnover trusts to survive the grantor's insolvency but would make the senior creditor's unregistered interest under the trust subordinate to the interest of another registered security interest. 9. Similarly, it would be onerous to require the registration of short term PPS leases to protect them from a grantor's insolvency. As with turnover trusts, the Bill would strike a balance by allowing unperfected short term PPS leases to survive the grantor's insolvency but to remain subject to the priority rules of the Bill. 10. The Bill would also provide that a person who acquired the personal property from the secured party or the receiver would acquire good title provided they gave new value and had no knowledge that the winding up of the company , administration or the execution of a deed of company arrangement had commenced (clause 267(3)). 11. A secured party whose security interest vests in the grantor would be entitled to compensation which would entitle them to prove in the grantor's insolvency (clause 269). Exercise and discharge of rights, duties and obligations Entitlement to damage for breach of duties or obligations 12. The Bill would provide a right to recover damages to any person to whom a duty or obligation is owed under the Bill or who reasonably relies on the performance of a duty or obligation and who suffers loss or damage as a result of a failure to satisfy the duty or obligation (clause 271(1)). This right to recover damages would not affect any other liability arising under a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory or the general law (clause 271(2)). 13. The right to recover damages could arise in the following situations: . a breach of the duty to obtain market value when enforcing a security agreement (clause 131); . a breach of the duty not to damage property when removing an accession in enforcing a security agreement (clause 92); or . a failure to amend a registration (clause 180). 14. Damages would not be recoverable from the following persons provided that they had acted honestly under a power conferred on them by the Bill: . the Commonwealth; . the Registrar, Deputy Registrar, a delegate, member of staff or person acting as a member of staff or authorised to perform any of the Registrar's functions; . a Commonwealth Minister; or . a State or Territory Minister performing functions under an agreement to proceed as if personal property is land (clause 118). (Clause 272). 15. A person who is affected by an error made by any of these people would have recourse under the Commonwealth's Compensation for Detriment caused by Defective Administration Scheme. 16. The operation of the Bill in relation to rights, obligations, duties and remedies would remain unaffected where the secured party has title to the collateral, rather than the grantor (clause 273). Provision of information by secured parties 17. The Bill would allow: . a grantor of a security interest; . a person with another security interest in the collateral; . an execution creditor with an interest in the collateral; . an authorised representative of any of the above (clause 275(9); to request the following information from a secured party: . a copy of the security agreement; . the amount of the obligation and the terms of payment; . an approval or correction of an itemised list of secured property at a day not more than 20 days after the request; . an approval or confirmation of the amount of the obligation and terms of payment at a day not more than 20 days after the request. (Clause 275). 18. The person providing the information could later be estopped from denying the authenticity of the copy of the agreement they provide or the accuracy of the information they provide (clause 283). 19. The secured party would be required to provide the information within ten days of receiving the request (clause 277(1)) unless: . the secured party obtains a court exemption from providing the information (clause 278); . the secured party obtains an extension of time for providing the information (clause 278); . the secured party has already provided the information under another legal obligation (clause 275(5)); . the secured party has a prior confidentiality agreement with the debtor, the debtor is not in default and the information has not been requested by the grantor or its auditor (clause 275(7)); . the response would contravene a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory or the general law (clause 275(6)); . the response would breach a duty of confidence (clause 275(6)); or . the fees requested for responding to the request have not been paid (clause 279(5)). 20. Where the secured party fails to respond to a request for information within the specified time or provides an incomplete or incorrect response, the person requesting the information would be able to apply to court for an order ordering the secured party to respond to the request within a specified period (clause 280). 21. A grantor would be entitled to receive this information free of charge once every six months or otherwise if there has been a material change in the information (clause 281(3)). In other circumstances, secured parties would be able to recover the reasonable marginal costs of responding to requests for information (clause 279). Where a person believes that the requested fee exceeds the reasonable marginal costs of providing the information or that the information has not already been provided in the previous six months or that there has been a material change in the information, the person would be able to apply to court for an order imposing a fee and stating a time within which it is to be paid (clause 281). 22. When a person fails to comply with a court order made in respect of a failure to provide the information or in relation to the reasonable fees of providing the information, the court would have the power to make an order extinguishing the security interest and directing the Registrar to register a financing statement reflecting this. The court could make any other orders it thinks necessary to obtain compliance (clause 282). 23. If a person who is no longer a secured party receives a request for information, they would be required to provide the requesting party with the name and address of their successor (if known) (clause 276). Notices and Timing 24. The provisions on notices and timing would not apply to proceedings before a court or tribunal or to procedures specified in the parties' security agreement (clause 285). 25. A notice or other document required to be given under the Bill would need to be given: . in writing (clause 286); and . at the address specified in the registration by pre-paid post, fax or email (a registration would specify only one address for service even where there is more than one secured party) (clause 153). 26. A registration could include an identifier so notices could be directed to the appropriate person within large organisations (clause 153). The Registrar would be able to specify the manner in which these identifiers would need to be included in notices and a notice which fails to include the identifier in the specified manner would be ineffective (clause 289). 27. A notice to be served on a deceased person could be served on the deceased's legal representative or another person specified by the court (clause 290). The court would also have the power to make an order directing a notice or document to be given in a particular way or dispensing with any of the notice requirements (clause 291). Timing requirements 28. Provided a Court is satisfied that it would be just and equitable and that there would be no prejudice to third parties, it could extend the number of business days within which a person would be required to comply with the following obligations: . perfection of purchase money security interests in collateral other than inventory (clauses 62(3)) and 63); . the perfection of non-purchase money security interests in accounts (clause 64(1)); . the enforcement of security interests in liquid assets: o the payment of amounts owing to secured parties (clause 120(3)); o the provision of notice to higher priority parties (clause 121(2)) and the grantor (clause121(5)); o compliance with notice from higher priority parties (clause 127(9)); o the provision of notice of disposal of collateral (clause 130(2)); o the provision of statements of account (clause 132(2)); o the provision of notice of retention of collateral (clause 135(2)); o the provision of proof of interests (clause 138(2)); . the registration of financing statements: o the amendment of a registration after acquiring knowledge of defect (clause 166(2)); o an application to end an effective registration in consumer property or serial numbered goods (clause 167(2)); o an application for amendment of an registration after change demand (clause 182(2)); or o the provision of information relating to security interests (clause 275(1)). 29. A notice given under the Act would not be invalid as a result of a formal defect or an irregularity (clause 292)). Onus of Proof and knowledge Onus of Proof 30. In any proceedings in an Australian court, the onus of proving that a security interest has attached to personal property, is perfected or has been taken free of a security interest, would lie with the person making those assertions. 31. Furthermore, because knowledge would generally lie with the person making the assertion, the onus would lie with the person making the following assertions to prove them: (clause 296): . a security interest is attached; . a security interest is perfected; . personal property is acquired free of security interests (except in relation to taking domestic or household property free of security interests (clause 44(2)); . a person acquires property but had no knowledge that a security interest had also been granted by a body corporate and the winding up, administration or execution of a deed of company arrangement of the company or body corporate had commenced (clause 267(3)); . the fee requested to provide information regarding a security interest does or does not exceed the reasonable marginal costs of providing the information (clause 279(2)); . information regarding a security interest has been or has not been provided to a grantor within the previous 6 months (clause 281(3)); . there has been or has not been a material change in the information regarding the security interest provided to a grantor since the information was last provided (clause 281(3)); or . the secured party paid the market value when it purchased the collateral (clause 129(3)). 32. A number of the provisions in the Bill (particularly those in Part 2.5) would allow a person to acquire property free of a security interest provided certain conditions are satisfied. The Bill provides that the person would not take the property free of the security interest if: . the purchaser had actual or constructive knowledge that the acquisition constituted a breach of the security agreement that provides for a security interest in the personal property; . the purchaser had actual or constructive knowledge of a security interest in the personal property; or . value was not given by the transferee for the interest acquired. 33. The onus of proving that the security interest is extinguished, would be on the person claiming that they have taken the property free of the security interest (clause 296). Knowledge 34. The Bill would refer to 'actual knowledge' and 'constructive knowledge'. 35. The expression 'constructive knowledge' would be used where a person might gain an advantage by deliberately not making inquiries when a reasonable person would make inquiries. Constructive knowledge would therefore include the knowledge that a person would have if they had made the inquiries that would have been made by an honest and prudent person in their situation or by an honest and prudent person with their actual knowledge and in their situation (clause 297). 36. Where it is necessary to prove that a body corporate, or person other than a body corporate, has actual or constructive knowledge of a specific circumstance, it would be sufficient to prove that: . a director, employee or agent, of the body corporate or person, who has responsibility for the circumstance had that knowledge; or . the circumstance was communicated to a director, employee or agent, of the body corporate or person and reasonable care required them to bring the circumstances to the attention of the person responsible for the circumstance (clause 298). 37. The Bill would contain presumptions that where personal property is transferred between members of the same household, related companies or a company and a company director or officer of that company (clause 299(1)), that they: . had actual or constructive knowledge of the security interest in the collateral; . had actual or constructive knowledge that the transaction was a breach of the security agreement; and . did not provide value for the interest. 38. These presumptions could be disproved if the parties involved could prove otherwise beyond a reasonable doubt (clause 299(2)). 39. This standard of proof is used in the Security Interests in Goods Act 2005 (NSW)(s7(6)) and the Chattel Securities Act 1987 (Vic)(s8). These Acts deal with security interests and would be replaced by the PPS Bill. 40. The Commonwealth, the States and Territories have all agreed that the higher standard be retained to provide finance companies with their existing level of protection against fraudulent transactions. Because the civil standard of proof would make it harder to set aside fraudulent transactions, it would not give lenders sufficient incentive to finance ordinary consumers without additional checks. The higher criminal standard of proof would better protect financiers holding security interests in personal property and deter fraudulent transactions which are a clear risk where related entities trade with one another. Forms and Regulations 41. The Registrar would be able to approve forms required for the Bill (clause 302). 42. The Governor-General would be able to make regulations for the purposes of the Bill (clause 303). chapter 9 - Transitional Provisions 1. The Bill would provide for the transition from current law governing the creation, enforcement and priorities of security interests in personal property. Part of this transition would require the migration of data from existing State, Territory and Commonwealth registers recording security interests in personal property to the PPS Register. 2. The Bill would apply to security interests existing before the Bill comes into force subject to the transitional provisions. The transitional provisions would generally allow security holders to maintain their existing priority and preserve their rights for 24 months from the time the PPS Register commences operation. 3. In order to preserve existing rights and priorities while ensuring a smooth transition to PPS law, certain parts of the Bill, for example, the provisions relating to enforcement would only apply to new security interests created once the Bill comes into force and not to existing security interests. Constitutional framework 4. Under clause 51(xxxi) of the Constitution, the Commonwealth can only make laws acquiring property on just terms, including the provision of just terms compensation. Therefore the Bill cannot confer a higher priority on a security interest relative to another security interest in the same property, than it had prior to the Bill. 5. It is only where priority is to be determined following a bankruptcy or insolvency, or where an existing secured party has assented to the Bill by voluntarily registering their interest on the PPS Register, that the Commonwealth can alter the existing priorities between competing interests without invoking the just terms requirement. The transitional provisions therefore contain special rules for determining priority in these situations. Apart from insolvency and consent, the Bill would ensure that pre-existing interests maintain the priority they would have had prior to the Bill. 6. The transitional provisions would preserve for 24 months (the temporary perfection period) existing rights in cases of bankruptcy or insolvency, or assent by a security interest holder whose interest is not migrated to the PPS Register (non-migrated security interest). 7. However, the transitional provisions would also encourage non-migrated security interest holders to register their interests under the new regime. The Bill would provide that should the grantor become insolvent or bankrupt after the expiry of the temporary perfection period, unless that security interest has been otherwise perfected, it would become an unperfected security interest under the Bill and would have a lower priority than security interests in the same property that had been perfected. 8. The transitional provisions would apply to existing security interests that had been migrated to the PPS Register without requiring the secured party to indicate their assent to the Bill by voluntarily re- registering or amending the registration. However, in circumstances where this would change the priority of a migrated security interest, resulting in an acquisition of property otherwise than on just terms, the transitional provisions would protect the migrated security interest by ensuring that the secured party retains the priority they would have had if the PPS Act had not been enacted (clause 325). Key concepts 9. The migration time would be the start of the month that is 25 months after Royal Assent to the Bill or an earlier time determined by the Minister (clause 306(1)) although it is likely that the Minister would determine an earlier migration time. 10. The registration commencement time would also be determined by the Minister and would need to be at least 28 days after the day determined as the migration time. If the Minister does not make a determination for the migration time, the registration commencement time would be the start of the first day of the month that is 26 months after the month in which the Bill is given Royal Assent (clause 306)) Example If the Bill were given Royal Assent on 10 December 2020, the migration time would be the start of 1 January 2023 and the registration commencement time would be the start of 1 February 2023. If the Minister determined that the migration time would instead be 1 March 2021, the Minister may also determine an earlier time for the registration commencement time to occur but that time must be after 28 March 2021. 11. A security agreement would be a transitional security agreement if the agreement was in force immediately before the registration commencement time and the Bill would have applied to the security interest had the Bill been in force before the registration commencement time (clause 307). 12. A security interest would be a transitional security interest even if the interest arises after the registration commencement time, where the security agreement is entered into prior to the registration commencement time and allows for the creation of the security interest and the Bill would have applied to the security interest had the Bill been in force before the registration commencement time (clause 308). 13. Whether the relevant State is a referring State would affect whether the Bill would apply to a particular security interest arising after the registration commencement time and the extent to which it would have applied before the registration commencement time. In general terms, if a State does not refer its constitutional powers to the Commonwealth, the Bill would apply only to the extent of the Commonwealth's constitutional power (that is, generally to all secured lending over personal property except as between solvent individuals where the Commonwealth lacks constitutional power). 14. A security agreement would be able to expressly provide for ongoing supplies and therefore result in a series of security interests. Provided the security agreement is in force prior to the registration commencement time and allows for future security interests to be granted, each security interest granted under that security agreement, regardless of whether it is granted before or after the registration commencement time, would be a transitional security interest. The secured party to such an ongoing transaction would only need to register one financing statement to cover the ongoing transitional security interests. 15. Where there is no formal agreement providing for ongoing supplies, generally each supply would be considered to be a separate contract or security agreement. Supplies made after the registration commencement time in this type of situation would each be made under a new security agreement. Security interests made after the registration commencement time would not benefit from the protection provided in the transitional provisions. The secured party to this kind of arrangement would need to register two financing statements; one to secure transitional security interests and a further registration to secure security interests arising after the registration commencement time. Example Each Friday, Supplier A supplies Vendor A, a newsagent, with greeting cards. Supplier A and Vendor A signed a contract on 1 February 2007, prior to the first supply, which noted that Mary does not own the cards until she pays for them. The contract provided for the ongoing supply of cards. Three weeks after the Bill commences, a liquidator is appointed to Vendor A's business. Supplier A has not registered the collateral on the PPS Register. The contract between Supplier A and Vendor A is a security agreement that provides for future security interests in the cards supplied. The supply each week represents a new security interest under the security agreement. Supplier A will have priority over the liquidator's interest for all supplies made to Mary as the ongoing supplies are transitional security interests provided for by the original transitional security agreement. The transitional security interests therefore receive temporary perfection for 24 months following the registration commencement time. Example Facts as above except that the weekly parcels have always come with a prominent notice on the invoice to the effect that Mary does not own the cards until she pays for them. Vendor A has never signed a contract with Supplier A. Three weeks after the Bill commences, a liquidator is appointed to Mary's Vendor A. Supplier A has not yet registered against Vendor A. The informal nature of the business relationship between Supplier A and Vendor A means that a security agreement, and a security interest under that agreement, arises with each supply. There is no security agreement that covers the ongoing supplies. As a result, any supplies made after the registration commencement time will also be new security agreements and Supplier A would not be able to access the protection provided under the transitional provisions for the security interests arising under those agreements. Supplier A would have priority over the liquidator only in relation to supplies made before the registration commencement time. Fred will lose priority in relation to goods supplied after the registration commencement time as his interest in these goods has not been perfected. Example Facts as above except that prior to the commencement of the Bill, Supplier A decides that, in order to protect supplies made after the commencement of the Bill, he will require Vendor A to enter into a written contract providing for the ongoing supply of cards. The parties enter into the agreement two weeks before the registration commencement time. Three weeks after the Bill commences, a liquidator is appointed to Vendor A's business. Supplier A has not yet registered against Vendor A. Supplier A has protected his security interests by having Vendor A enter into a written agreement that provides for the ongoing supplies. The agreement would ensure that supplies made after the registration commencement time are protected by the 24 month temporary perfection period. Supplier A would have priority over the liquidator's interest for all supplies made to Vendor A. Initial Application of this Act 16. The application provisions would establish the security interests and security agreements to which the Bill would apply as follows: . security agreements made at or after the registration commencement time; . security interests arising at or after the registration commencement time; . transitional security agreements and transitional security interests; . interests in personal property (other than security interests) arising after the registration commencement time; . personal property, if data in relation to the property is given to the Registrar as part of the migration process; and . prescribed personal property. (Clause 310). Exclusions from initial application 17. Several parts of the Bill would apply only in relation to interests that arise after the registration commencement time and would, therefore, not apply as follows: . transitional security interests would only be enforceable against third parties if they would have been enforceable before the registration commencement time (clause 311); . priority between security interests and declared statutory interests would not be determined by the priority provisions of the Bill unless the interests were created under a law of the Commonwealth, State or Territory after the registration commencement time (clause 312); . security interests in intellectual property licences that are created before the registration commencement time would not be binding on successors-in-title (clause 313); . the enforcement provisions would not apply to security agreements made before the registration commencement time (clause 314); . application for the registration of a financing statement would not be able to be made, nor the registration made, before the registration commencement time (clause 315); . the governing laws provisions of the Bill would not apply to security interests that arise before the registration commencement time (clause 316); . a non-constitutional security interest that becomes a constitutional security interest would not be covered by the Bill unless the security interest arose at or after the registration commencement time (clause 317(1)); . charges, fixed charges and floating charges created by security agreements made prior to the registration commencement time, would not be covered by the Bill (clause 318). Transitional provisions 18. In order to encourage secured parties to register their interests, the Bill would limit the period for which holders of transitional security interests (including both migrated security interests and non-migrated security interests) could maintain their priority over newly registered interests. Migrated security interests and deemed registration 19. Migrated security interests would be interests that are currently registered on 'transitional registers' and the registered data in relation to the interests would be migrated to the PPS Register (clause 332). These interests would be deemed to be registered on the PPS Register from immediately before the registration commencement time until the earlier of: . the time when the interest stops being continuously perfected under the Bill; . the end-time of the registration (clause 323). 20. By being deemed to be registered from immediately before the registration commencement time, migrated security interests would have priority over new security interests registered at or after the registration commencement time. Example Bank B has a security interest in a car owned by Grant A. This security interest was registered on the NSW Register of Encumbered Vehicles and is migrated across to the PPS Register as a migrated security interest. Bank B's security interest is taken to be perfected from immediately before the registration commencement time until the time the registration would have ended in accordance with the law under which the Register of Encumbered Vehicles was maintained. Example Facts as above except, after the security interest is migrated to the PPS Register, Bank B amends the registration to extend the end time. On 6 August 2011, which is before the end date of both the REVS registration and the amended PPS registration, Grant A gives Bank B an amendment demand stating that the car does not secure the loan to Grant A. Bank B does not respond. On 12 August 2011, the Registrar removes Bank B's registration from the PPS Register. On 20 August 2011, a liquidator is appointed to Grant A's company. By amending its registration, Bank B assented to the terms of the PPS Bill. Bank B's security interest stopped being continuously perfected on 12 August -its unregistered security interest would be void against the liquidator. 21. The process of migrating security interests from transitional registers would not require security interest-holders to re-register their existing registered security interests. However, if the application of the transitional priority scheme would result in an acquisition of property other than on just terms, then the priority would be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted (clause 325). Non-migrated security interests and temporary perfection 22. A non-migrated security interest would be any transitional security interest which is not a migrated security interest. Apart from certain interests excluded by the regulations, non-migrated security interests would be temporarily perfected by the Bill for a period starting immediately before the registration commencement time and ending at the end of the earlier of the following times: . the time when the security interest ceased to be continuously perfected otherwise than by temporary perfection; or . the end of the month that is 24 months after the registration commencement time (clause 322). 23. Temporary perfection is a form of perfection (clause 21) the purpose of which is to protect the holder of the non-migrated security interest and give them the opportunity to perfect their security interest. Temporary perfection would give secured parties holding non- migrated security interests priority over parties who register their security interest at or after the registration commencement time. Example Grant A is a fruit packer. On 30 August 2009 Finance A lends Grant A $5 000 and takes a security interest in Grant A's truck. There is no register on which Finance A can register its interest in the truck. On 1 May 2010 the new PPS Register commences. On 14 May 2010 Finance B lends Grant A $10000 and takes a security interest in the same truck. Finance B registers its interest on the PPS Register on the same day. On 15 July 2010 Grant A becomes insolvent. The priority between Finance A and Finance B comes to be determined. Finance A's interest is a transitional security interest and would therefore be temporarily perfected by the Bill, for a period starting immediately before 1 May 2010, up until 31 May 2012. Finance A's interest in Grant A's truck would therefore have priority over Finance B's interest, even though Finance A's interest is unregistered. Example Facts as above, except on 24 May 2010 Finance A registers its interest on the PPS Register and as a result agrees to be subject to the terms of the Bill. On 1 June 2010 Finance A inadvertently removes Finance A's registration from the PPS Register. On 15 July 2010 Grant A becomes insolvent. Finance A's continuous perfection ended, and the security interest became unperfected, on the date the registration became ineffective. Finance A would not have the benefit of temporary perfection until the end of the 24 month period. Finance B would have priority as a registered security interest over Finance A's now unregistered security interest. Priority protection for certain transitional security interests 24. The transitional provisions would set up a transitional priority scheme which would apply: . in bankruptcy or insolvency; or . in a priority dispute between migrated security interests; or . where holders of non-migrated security interests have assented to the Bill by registering their interests (clause 320). 25. A transitional security interest would be taken to have attached to the collateral immediately before the registration commencement time (clause 321). Interests prescribed in the regulations excluded from temporary perfection 26. The 24 month temporary perfection period applying to non-migrated security interests would not apply to interests prescribed in the regulations (clause 320(5)). The regulations could provide that the temporary perfection period would only be available for transitional security interests that were: . not registrable on any register prior to the registration commencement time; or . registrable on a register but registration did not confer priority under the legislation. 27. Therefore, security interests that were registrable on a transitional register that determined priority but were not registered, would not be temporarily perfected and the priority of these interests would be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted (in the absence of rules establishing priority, priority would be determined by the common law rule that an earlier security interest would have priority over a later security interest). Example On 3 March 2009, Finance F lends Grant A $20,000 and takes a security interest in Grant A's boat as collateral. The parties and the boat are located in Queensland. The boat is old and does not have a valid Hull Identification Number (HIN). The security interest is registrable on the Queensland Bills of Sale Register but Finance F registers its interest on the Queensland Register of Encumbered Vehicles (REVS) despite the State legislation requiring that all registrations of interests in boats include the HIN. The registration is therefore not legally valid under the legislation. Finance F' registration is not migrated to the PPS Register. The security interest would also not be temporarily perfected as it was registrable on the Queensland Bills of Sale Register. If Finance F registers on the PPS Register after the registration commencement time, it would have a transitional security interest perfected only from the date of registration. The invalid registration on the Queensland Register would not provide any protection for the security interest. Example Facts as above, except that on 19 September 2009, Grant A grants a further security interest in his boat to Finance S in the sum of $10,000. Finance S registers its interest in Grant A's boat on the Queensland Bills of Sale Register. The registration is migrated to the PPS Register and is deemed to be registered on the PPS Register from immediately before the registration commencement time. Two months after the registration commencement time, Grant A becomes insolvent. These provisions of the Bill would not apply to Finance F's interest because it was registrable on a register that determines priority by registration. Priority would be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted, under the Bills of Sale and Other Instruments Act 1955 (Qld), which determines that a registered interest has priority over an unregistered interest. Finance S's registered interest would have priority over Finance F's unregistered interest despite the fact that Finance F's interest was created first. 28. The regulations could also provide that if the legislation governing the transitional register provides a time in which secured parties must register their interest, any interests created within that time period before the registration commencement time would obtain temporary perfection. However, if the time in which the interest had to be registered under the governing legislation has lapsed at the registration commencement time, the interest would not obtain temporary perfection and would only obtain perfection from the time of registration on the PPS Register. 29. If the legislation governing the transitional register does not determine a time by which an interest should be registered, the interest would have perfection from the time it is registered on the PPS Register. Example The Corporations Act requires that where a company creates a charge, the company must ensure that it lodges a notice in the prescribed form setting out particulars of the charge within 45 days of the charge being created. Thirty days before the registration commencement time, Company A establishes a charge over Company B's assets in relation to a debt owed by Company B. Five days after the registration commencement time, Company B becomes insolvent. Company A's security interest would have temporary perfection from immediately before the registration commencement time and would have priority over the liquidator. Example In January 2008, Bank D lends Grant A $4,000 and takes a security interest in Grant A's car as collateral for the loan. Bank D registers its security interest on the NSW Register of Encumbered Vehicles. Five days before the registration commencement time, Finance F lends Grant A $5,000 and takes a security interest in Grant A's car as collateral for the loan. Despite being registrable on the NSW Register of Encumbered Vehicles, Finance F fails to register its interest. Two months after the registration commencement time, Grant A becomes insolvent. Bank D's registration was migrated to the PPS Register and is deemed to be registered from immediately before the registration commencement time. Finance F has not registered its interest on the PPS Register. The priority would be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted and Bank D would have priority over the liquidator and Finance F as an unregistered security interest. Priority after temporary perfection period 30. The effect of limiting the temporary perfection period would be that secured parties are encouraged to register their non-migrated security interests during the 24 month temporary perfection period. Disputes about the priority between security interests most commonly arise in cases of bankruptcy or insolvency, and in these circumstances the Bill would not confer priority on eligible non-migrated security interests for longer than 24 months. After the temporary perfection period, in an insolvency, the priorities would be determined under the substantive provisions of the Bill. However, if secured parties register during the temporary perfection period and maintain that perfection, their interests would have been continuously perfected from immediately before the registration commencement time. Example Grant A is a fruit packer. On 5 February 2010, Finance B lends Grant A $5,000 and takes a security interest in Grant A's truck. The PPS Register commences on 1 May 2010. On 6 August 2010, Finance A lends Grant A $10,000 and takes a security interest in the same truck, which it registers on the PPS Register. Grant A becomes insolvent on 1 October 2012. Finance B has not registered its interest on the NSW Register of Encumbered Vehicles. Finance A's registered interest in Grant A's truck would have priority over Finance B's unregistered interest, because the priority provisions of the Bill would give priority to a perfected interest. The two year temporary perfection period ended on 31 May 2012 without Finance B registering its interest and Finance A's interest is perfected by registration. Example Facts as above, except Finance B registers its security interest on 24 June 2012 after the end of the temporary perfection period. Grant A becomes insolvent on 1 October 2012. The first in time rule in the Bill would apply and Finance A's registered interest in Grant A's painting would have priority over Finance B's registered interest. Finance B would not benefit from the temporary perfection period in the Bill because there would be a gap between the temporary perfection period and the registration of the interest. Priority between transitional security interests, including migrated security interests 31. The Bill would also provide rules for determining priority between different transitional security interests. The interests would have the same priority they would have had if the Bill had not been enacted. The period for which this rule applies (the priority period) would be limited by the Bill depending on the particular interests involved (clause 324). 32. After the end of the priority period, the security interests would have priority between themselves that is determined under the Bill (clause 324(3)). 33. Where two non-migrated security interests compete for priority, the priority period would generally be the 24 month temporary perfection period. However, if one of the security interests had been perfected by registration and the registration had expired during that period, the priority period would end when that registration expired (clause 322(2)). Where both security interests had been registered and both of the registrations expire within the 24 months temporary perfection period, the priority period would finish on the earlier of the dates on which the registrations expire. Example On 13 June 2008, Finance F lends Grant A $5,000 and takes a security interest in his racing bicycle. On 16 September 2009, Finance B lends Grant A $6,000 and also takes a security interest in the same bicycle. On 1 May 2010, the PPS Register commences operation. Prior to the PPS Register there was no register on which interests in bicycles could be registered. On 27 September 2010, within the temporary perfection period, Grant A becomes insolvent. The two interests would have priority determined as if the Bill were not in operation, so Finance F's earlier interest would have priority. Example Facts as above, except on 11 June 2010 Finance B registers its interest on the PPS Register, and on 27 September 2012 Grant A becomes insolvent. The date of insolvency is no longer within the two year temporary perfection period. Finance B's interest is now perfected by registration, and Finance F's is unperfected. The Bill would give Finance B's registered interest priority. Example Facts as above, except on 30 July 2011 Finance B's registration ends, and on 20 August 2011, Grant A becomes insolvent. The date of insolvency is within the two year temporary perfection period. Finance F continues to have temporary perfection, and Finance B's continuous perfection has stopped and its interest will no longer have temporary perfection. The priorities would be determined under the Bill. Finance B's interest would be unperfected under the Bill and Finance F's interest would therefore have priority as it is perfected by temporary perfection. 34. Where a migrated security interest and a non-migrated transitional security interest compete for priority, the priority period would end at the earliest of the expiry of the 24 month temporary perfection period or the time when one of the security interest stops being continuously perfected. Example On 1 April 2010, Company A establishes a charge over Company B's assets in the sum of $100,000. Company A does not register its charge prior to the PPS registration commencement time on 1 May 2010. Under the Corporations Act, Company A has 45 days to register the charge. As a result, Company A would be eligible for temporary perfection under the Bill. On 5 April 2010, Company L also establishes a charge over Company B's assets, in the sum of $25,000. Company L creates the charge despite being aware of Company A's charge over Company B's property. On 16 April 2010, Company L registers the charge on the Australian Securities and Investment Commission Register in accordance with the Corporations Act. Company A's registered charge is migrated to the PPS Register. On 27 September 2010 Company B becomes insolvent. As a migrated security interest, Company L's security interest would have effective registration from immediately prior to the registration commencement time. As a non-migrated security interest, Company A's security interest would have temporary perfection from immediately before the registration commencement time. The priority has come to be determined during the priority period and would therefore be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted. At this time Company A's charge would have priority, because the Corporations Act gives priority to an unregistered charge over a registered charge where the registered chargee has notice of the unregistered charge when registering. Example Facts as above except, Company A does not register during the temporary perfection period and Company B becomes insolvent on 2 October 2012. Because the temporary perfection period for Company A's transitional interest has ended, the priority between the two interests will be determined by the provisions that apply after the priority period. The priority will therefore be determined by the Bill. Because Company B's interest is taken to be perfected by registration until the registration end date and Company L's interest is no longer temporarily perfected, Company L's security interest would have priority, as the Bill would give priority to a perfected interest. 35. Where two migrated security interests compete for priority, the priority period would finish at the earliest date on which one of the registrations expires. Example On 5 March 2008, Finance A lends Grant A $60,000 to buy a car and takes a security interest in the car. Finance A registers its interest on 10 March 2008 on the Queensland Register of Encumbered Vehicles, with an end date of 10 March 2015. On 16 June 2009, Finance B lends Grant A $5,000 and also takes a security interest in the car. Faith Finance registers its interest on the Queensland Register of Encumbered Vehicles, with an end date of 16 June 2016. The start of the day on 1 May 2010 is the registration commencement time, and both Finance A's and Finance B's interests appear on the new PPS Register. Grant A becomes insolvent on 1 March 2015. Because the priority has come to be determined during the priority period, the priority will be determined as if the Bill had not been enacted. Finance A's interest has priority because the Motor Vehicles and Boats Securities Act 1986 (Qld) would have given Finance A's earlier registered interest priority. Example Facts as above, except Grant A becomes insolvent on 11 May 2015, after the end date of Finance A's registration. Because the priority has come to be determined after the priority period, the priority will be determined by the Bill. Finance A's interest is now unregistered, so the Bill would give priority to Finance B's perfected migrated security interest. 36. In some cases, the Bill would give both interests exactly the same priority. This is because the temporary perfection provisions give exactly the same start time for temporary perfection for all transitional security interests. For example, if two non-migrated interest holders have registered during the temporary perfection period, their interests would have been perfected from exactly the same time, and the Bill would give them equal priority. 37. In any case, where the Bill would apply and would not result in either security interest having priority over the other, the Bill would give the interests the same priority between themselves they would have had if the Bill had not been enacted (clause 324(3)). Priority not on insolvency/bankruptcy or registration 38. The priority rules would be different where priority is to be determined between a transitional security interest and a competing interest but: . The issue of priority does not arise because of an insolvency or bankruptcy; and . priority is to be determined where the secured party holds a non- migrated security interest but they have not registered it (clause 326). 39. This alternative priority rule would apply to a competing security interest whether or not the competing interest is a transitional security interest and whether or not the competing interest is an interest to which these provisions would apply. The competing security interest could be any kind of security interest, including a registered security interest. 40. Because a determination of the priority in these cases could involve the acquisition of property on just terms, the transitional security interest and the competing security interest in the collateral would have the priority between themselves that they would have had if the Bill had not been enacted (clause 326(3)). Taking free and vesting of transitional security interests 41. The provisions in the Bill relating to acquiring collateral free of security interests and vesting of unperfected security interests in the grantor would apply to transitional and migrated security interests only in cases of bankruptcy or insolvency or where a secured party has assented to the Bill by registering their transitional security interest or re-registering or amending the registration of their migrated security interest (clauses 327 and 328). As a result, collateral might be transferred free of a security interest under the Bill where, under the law prior to the Bill, the same collateral would have transferred subject to the security interest. In cases where this would not apply, the pre - registration commencement time law would apply (clause 329). Migration provisions 42. Registered interests on transitional registers would generally be migrated to the new PPS Register. Migration would be done by an officer or agency of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory giving data in the approved form to the PPS Registrar and the Registrar accepting that data (clause 330). The Registrar would be able to compel an officer or agency of the Commonwealth to provide data in the approved form to the Registrar (clause 331). 43. A security interest would be a migrated security interest if: . it is a transitional security interest in personal property; . data is given to and accepted by the Registrar; . the registration was effective on the transitional register immediately before the registration was given to the Registrar; and . the registration on the transitional register was authorised by the law under which the transitional register was maintained (clause 332). 44. The migration provisions would provide that the Registrar may determine, by legislative instrument, that a class of personal property about which data had been given to the Registrar is registrable, and allow the Registrar to register items in that class before the registration commencement time (clause 333). 45. This would involve the Registrar determining that, for example, 'valid registrations on the Queensland Vehicle Securities Register perfecting security interests at the registration commencement time' is a class of registrable property. A register may be unsuitable for migration because: . the information in the register is not clearly set out; . it is a register of interests to which the Bill does not apply; or . it does not contain sufficient identifying information. 46. If a particular interest is not migrated across from an existing register because the Registrar has not determined the information on that register to be a registrable class of property, the interest would be a non-migrated security interest. If the interest is a type of interest governed by the Bill, the transitional provisions would protect the rights of the secured party. 47. These provisions would not apply to certain transitional security interests prescribed in the regulations and as a result those interests would not obtain temporary perfection (clause 320(5)). 48. If a particular interest is migrated to the PPS Register despite falling outside the classes of personal property determined by the Registrar to be registrable, the data would be taken not to be, and never to have been, included in the PPS Register (clause 334(1)). The Registrar would be able to determine a time before which the Registrar would be able to register a financing change statement to remove data incorrectly registered in the migration process (clause 334(2)) Where data needs to be removed after the determined time, the data would need to be removed under another provision of the Bill. 49. The Registrar would have to give a verification statement to the secured party of the registration that is removed but there would be no obligation on the secured party to provide a notice of the verification statement to the grantor (clause 335). 50. Each migrated registration would need to have an end time. This would be the end time in the transitional register, according to the law under which the transitional register was maintained (clause 333(4)). Typically, this end time would be listed on the register from which the information is being migrated. If a particular registration fails to list this information, the Registrar would assign an appropriate end time, for example, the latest end date allowed by the legislation governing the particular register (clause 153). Preparatory registration for collateral secured by transitional security interests 51. The migration provisions would allow a non-migrated transitional security interest to be registered between the migration time and the registration commencement time (clause 336). A secured party that registers their security interest in this time would receive the same protection under the Bill as a secured party who registers their security interest within the 24 month temporary perfection period. The registration time for registrations of this nature would be immediately before the registration commencement time. 52. The holder of a non-migrated security interest that is excluded from temporary perfection would be able to apply for preparatory registration in order to secure perfection from immediately before the registration commencement time. Registration defects 53. The Registrar would be able to determine that certain registrations are effective despite defects that would render them ineffective under the Bill (clause 337). This provision is necessary because some transitional registers do not include information that would be required on the PPS register. In the case of other transitional security interests, the Registrar could decide that secured parties should be given an opportunity to correct certain details of the registration where they have perfected their interest. Example State vehicle registers do not include information about the grantor of the interest. The Bill would enable the Registrar to determine that a migrated State vehicle registration, for a vehicle that is commercial property, is not ineffective merely because a search of the PPS Register, by reference only to the individual or corporate details of the grantor in respect of the collateral, is not capable of returning the relevant registration. 54. A registration on the PPS Register would be ineffective because of a defect if, and only if, there is a seriously misleading defect in the data or there is a specified defect (clauses 164) and 165). If a registration falls within the scope of the Registrar's determination, the registration would not be ineffective because of the defect until: . in relation to a non-migrated security interest, the end of the month that is 36 months after the security interest becomes unperfected; or . in relation to a migrated security interest, the end time included when the security interest is migrated (clause 337). 55. Once these times have lapsed, the registration would become ineffective unless the registration is amended to correct the defect before the relevant time lapses. Charges and fixed and floating charges 56. The Bill would implement a functional approach to security interests, and apply to all security transactions that in effect secure payment or the performance of an obligation - including fixed and floating charges. As a result, transactions that are currently structured as fixed charges or floating charges would become security interests under the Bill. 57. Some statutes currently refer to fixed charges, floating charges or charges and the Bill would maintain the effect of the existing provisions so that parties would not be able to avoid existing provisions governing fixed and floating charges. Similarly, some security agreements may refer to fixed or floating charges. 58. The Bill would provide that in any Commonwealth law or security agreement, a reference to a charge would be taken to be a reference to a security interest that has attached to a circulating asset or personal property that is not a circulating asset (clause 339(3)). 59. The reference to a charge would apply to a charge only to the extent that the charge has attached to personal property owned by the grantor (clause 339(1)). As a result, a reference to a charge would not apply to property owned by the secured party-such as the collateral in a retention of title arrangement, lease or consignment. 60. A reference to a floating charge over property would be taken to be a reference to a security interest that attaches to a circulating asset (clause 339(5)). 61. There would be two classes of circulating assets: . where a secured party has given the grantor express or implied authority for any transfer of the personal property to be made, in the ordinary course of the grantor's business, free of the security interest (clause 340(1)) (the personal property would not be a circulating asset merely because the secured party has given express authority to transfer specific personal property or a specific class of personal property free of a security interest (clause 340(4)) and . current assets as follows: o accounts that arise from granting a right or providing services in the ordinary course of a business of granting rights or providing services of that kind (whether or not the account debtor is the person to whom the right is granted or the services are provided); o accounts that are the proceeds of inventory; o ADI accounts (other than term deposits); o currency; o inventory; and o negotiable instruments. (Clause 340(5)). 62. However, personal property would not be a circulating asset if: . the personal property consists of goods and the security interest in the goods is perfected by possession (clause 340(3); . the secured party has registered a collateral description in a current asset that discloses that the secured party has control of the personal property and the secured party does have control of the current asset (clause 340(2)). 63. A person would have control of inventory if the secured party and the grantor have agreed in writing that the grantor would specifically appropriate the inventory to the security interest and would not remove any specifically appropriated inventory without previously obtaining express authority from the secured party to do so (and it is the grantor's usual practice to comply) (clause 341(1)). 64. A person would have control of an account if: . the secured party and the person to whom the relevant account is owed have agreed in writing that amounts paid to discharge the account must be deposited into a specified ADI account and it is usual practice for those amounts to be deposited in that manner; . the secured party controls the ADI account and any deposits into the ADI account do not result in any person becoming liable to pay the person to whom the relevant account is owed or, if that person is a body corporate, to pay a related body corporate (clause 341(3)). 65. This applies to: . an account that arises from granting a right, or providing services, in the ordinary course of a business of granting rights or providing services of that kind (whether or not the account debtor is the person to whom the right is granted or the services are provided); and . an account that is the proceeds of inventory. (Clause 341(2)). 66. These provisions would not be exhaustive of when a person might have control of a current asset. 67. The definition of circulating asset would confirm the existing case law on floating charges, which provides that in determining whether a floating charge exists over personal property, consideration must be given to both the express terms of the agreement between the parties as well as to the actual level of control exerted by the secured party. The provision takes into account current case law on the nature of floating charges so that, in determining whether a charge is a floating charge, consideration would be given to the intention of the parties as demonstrated by both their contract and their practice. Review of operation of Act 68. The Minister would have to arrange for a review of the operation of the Bill to be undertaken and completed within 3 years after the registration commencement time (clause 343). The persons who undertake the review would have to provide a report to the Minister which would be tabled in both Houses of Parliament within 15 sitting days after the report is given to the Minister. table of clause references clause 1 14 clause 2 14 clause 3 14 clause 6 15, 79, 105, 106, 108 clause 7 15, 106 clause 8 16, 18 clause 10 15, 29, 41, 54, 60, 78, 87 clause 12 18, 77 clause 13 42 clause 14 42, 43 clause 15 8 clause 18 17, 28, 41, 113 clause 19 19, 20, 24 clause 20 17, 19, 20 clause 21 19, 20, 21, 22, 39, 128 clause 22 21, 35 clause 24 22 clause 25 23, 39 clause 26 23, 113 clause 27 23, 24 clause 28 24 clause 29 24 clause 31 24, 25 clause 32 24, 25, 26, 28, 44 clause 33 21, 25, 26, 35 clause 34 21, 26, 35, 46 clause 35 21, 27, 36 clause 36 21, 22, 27, 36 clause 37 27, 49 clause 38 27, 28, 36, 49 clause 39 21, 28, 36 clause 40 21, 28, 36 clause 42 28, 35 clause 43 29, 37 clause 44 30, 121 clause 45 31, 32 clause 46 33 clause 47 34 clause 48 35, 37 clause 49 35 clause 50 35 clause 51 35 clause 52 36 clause 53 36 clause 55 38, 40 clause 56 38 clause 57 39 clause 58 41, 47 clause 59 40 clause 60 41 clause 61 41 clause 62 42, 46, 120 clause 63 20, 45 clause 64 42, 44, 120 clause 65 42 clause 66 45 clause 67 46 clause 68 46, 47 clause 69 47 clause 70 48 clause 71 48 clause 72 48 clause 73 37, 49 clause 74 49 clause 75 40 clause 76 49, 50 clause 77 50 clause 79 50 clause 80 50, 51 clause 81 51 clause 84 53 clause 85 53, 54 clause 86 54 clause 88 54 clause 89 54 clause 90 55 clause 91 55 clause 92 56, 117 clause 93 56 clause 94 56 clause 95 56, 67 clause 96 56 clause 97 56 clause 99 56, 57 clause 100 57 clause 101 57 clause 102 57 clause 103 57 clause 105 58 clause 106 58 clause 109 19, 59, 73 clause 110 59 clause 111 60, 72 clause 112 60 clause 113 60 clause 114 59 clause 115 61, 75 clause 116 61 clause 117 60, 61, 62 clause 118 60, 61, 62, 67, 117 clause 119 62 clause 120 60, 68, 74, 120 clause 121 67, 68, 120 clause 123 37, 56, 64, 65, 69 clause 124 64, 69 clause 125 70 clause 126 65, 69 clause 127 64, 69, 120 clause 128 60, 65, 70, 71, 74 clause 129 60, 71, 121 clause 130 37, 65, 67, 71, 120 clause 131 72, 117 clause 132 65, 67, 73, 120 clause 133 73 clause 134 60, 73 clause 135 67, 74, 120 clause 136 74 clause 137 74 clause 138 74, 120 clause 140 36, 62, 65, 66, 68, 70, 74 clause 142 75 clause 143 75 clause 147 77, 99 clause 148 14, 77 clause 150 78, 98, 99 clause 151 78, 79 clause 152 79 clause 153 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 119, 135 clause 154 81, 84 clause 155 84, 89 clause 156 84, 89, 96, 97 clause 157 85, 89 clause 158 85 clause 160 83, 85 clause 161 86 clause 162 86 clause 163 83, 86 clause 164 65, 80, 87, 136 clause 165 87, 136 clause 166 83, 88, 120 clause 167 88, 120 clause 168 86, 89 clause 170 90, 93, 99 clause 171 90, 91 clause 172 76, 90, 91, 92 clause 173 92, 100 clause 174 93 clause 175 93, 99 clause 176 94, 99, 100 clause 178 94, 99 clause 179 95 clause 180 95, 100, 117 clause 181 95, 96, 99 clause 182 96, 97, 120 clause 184 97, 99 clause 185 98 clause 186 73, 98, 99 clause 187 98 clause 188 98, 99 clause 190 89, 93, 94, 98, 100 clause 191 78, 97 clause 192 99 clause 194 99 clause 195 99 clause 196 99 clause 197 100 clause 198 99 clause 199 100 clause 200 99 clause 201 99 clause 202 99 clause 203 100 clause 206 101 clause 207 101 clause 208 101 clause 209 101 clause 210 102 clause 211 101, 102 clause 212 101, 102 clause 213 102 clause 214 102 clause 215 102 clause 216 102 clause 217 102 clause 218 96, 100, 102 clause 219 100, 102 clause 221 103 clause 222 103 clause 223 103 clause 224 103 clause 225 103 clause 226 103 clause 227 103 clause 228 104 clause 229 104 clause 230 104 clause 231 104 clause 234 105 clause 235 15, 106 clause 236 107 clause 237 106, 107, 108, 109 clause 238 105, 107, 108, 109 clause 239 105, 106, 109, 110 clause 240 105, 106, 110, 111 clause 241 105, 111 clause 243 40, 112 clause 244 112 clause 245 112 clause 247 112 clause 248 40, 112 clause 249 40, 112 clause 250 112 clause 252 40 clause 254 59, 113 clause 255 113 clause 256 113 clause 257 17 clause 258 114 clause 259 114 clause 260 113 clause 261 114 clause 262 114 clause 263 114 clause 264 115 clause 267 116, 117, 121 clause 268 116 clause 269 117 clause 271 79, 85, 89, 117 clause 272 117 clause 273 118 clause 275 118, 119, 120 clause 276 119 clause 277 118 clause 278 118 clause 279 119, 121 clause 280 119 clause 281 119, 121 clause 282 119 clause 283 118 clause 285 119 clause 286 119 clause 289 81, 119 clause 290 119 clause 291 120 clause 292 120 clause 293 89, 94, 96 clause 296 121 clause 297 88, 122 clause 298 122 clause 299 122 clause 302 123 clause 303 123 clause 306 14, 15, 125 clause 307 125 clause 308 125 clause 310 14, 127 clause 311 127 clause 312 49, 127 clause 313 127 clause 314 127 clause 315 14, 127 clause 316 127 clause 317 127 clause 318 127 clause 320 129, 135 clause 321 129 clause 322 36, 128, 131 clause 323 128 clause 324 131, 133 clause 325 124, 128 clause 326 133, 134 clause 327 134 clause 328 134 clause 329 134 clause 330 14, 134 clause 331 14, 134 clause 332 128, 134 clause 333 134, 135 clause 334 99, 135 clause 335 135 clause 336 135 clause 337 135, 136 clause 339 136 clause 340 136, 137 clause 341 137, 138 clause 343 138Index] [Search] [Download] [Bill] [Help]