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The Law Commission |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Law Commission >> Company Security Interests (Report) [2005] EWLC 296(Summary) (August 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/other/EWLC/2005/296(Summary).html Cite as: [2005] EWLC 296(Summary) |
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SUMMARY
A NEW SYSTEM OF ELECTRONIC NOTICE FILING
- Electronic filing will replace the current paper-based system.- To register a charge, it will be necessary only to send brief particulars of the charge in a simple, electronic format. The original charge document will not be sent.
- The Registrar of Companies will no longer be responsible for checking the particulars that have been filed and will not issue a conclusive certificate. It will be up to the party who files (normally the lender) to ensure that the financing statement identifies the correct company as debtor and that the description is adequate to cover the property subject to the charge. Provided the financing statement does identify the correct company, the charge will be validly registered in respect of the property listed in the particulars.
- The property may be described in general terms, but there will be a facility for parties who wish the description to cover precisely what is in the charge agreement to include the exact terms of the agreement.
- Formal responsibility for registration, and the rarely-applied criminal liability for failure to register, will be removed from the company. It will be up to the lender taking the charge to file if it wishes to protect its security. If the company becomes insolvent before the charge is registered, the charge will not be effective against the administrator or liquidator. Unregistered charges will also be vulnerable to loss of priority.
REMOVING THE 21 DAY TIME LIMIT
- The formal time limit for registration (and the need for court applications for late registration) will be removed.- There will be no period of 'invisibility' between submission of the particulars and their appearance on the register. It will be possible to search quickly and reliably on-line.
- Lenders may file in advance of the transaction. They may therefore protect their position during negotiations. Similarly, a single filing may cover a number of similar transactions between the same parties, removing the need for multiple filings.
EXTENDING THE LIST OF REGISTRABLE CHARGES
- All charges are registrable unless specifically exempted.- The principal exemptions will be for some charges over registered land and over financial collateral: see below.
CLEARER PRIORITY RULES
- Priority between competing charges will be by date of filing (unless otherwise agreed between the parties involved). This will simplify the current law and will remove the current '21-day period of invisibility'.- The distinction between fixed and floating charges will be preserved, principally because of its importance in insolvency.
- In the case of a floating charge, it will be unnecessary to rely on a 'negative pledge clause' to prevent subsequent charges gaining priority. It will also be unnecessary to employ 'automatic crystallisation clauses', with their uncertain effects, to protect property subject to a floating charge from seizure by judgment creditors.
- The effect of registration on the rights of a person who buys the property without knowing of the charge will be clarified. If the charge is fixed but has not been registered, it will not affect a buyer who does not know of it; if the fixed charge has been registered it will be binding on the buyer.
- Some charges may also be registered in specialist registers, such as those covering unregistered land, registered aircraft and ships, and intellectual property. The regulations clarify that normally any priority rules set out in the specialist legislation will apply.
LAND
- If a charge over registered land is registered in the Land Registry, it will not need to be registered in the Company Security Register as well. Instead, the Land Registry will automatically forward to Companies House its information about charges over land owned by companies. The information will be available to those searching the Company Security Register.
SALES OF RECEIVABLES
- Sales of receivables of the kind which factoring and discounting agreements cover will be brought within the scheme. This means that they must be registered to be valid on insolvency.- Their priority will be determined by the date of filing.
- Provisions in the contract generating the receivable that purport to restrict its assignment will no longer be effective against the assignee.
SCOTTISH AND OVERSEA COMPANIES
- Charges created by Scottish and oversea companies over their property in England and Wales will fall within the scheme. The information will be placed on the register and made available to searchers. (The provisions on sales of receivables will only apply to companies registered in England and Wales.)- Charges created by companies registered in England and Wales over their property in other jurisdictions will remain registrable, but without prejudice to rights acquired in those assets by the secured party or third parties according to the law of that jurisdiction.
FINANCIAL COLLATERAL
- Registration will not be needed where the chargee has obtained 'possession or control' within the meaning of the Directive, or has 'control' of it as defined by the regulations we propose.- A chargee will have control of financial collateral if the company can no longer deal freely with the assets free of the charge.
- The regulations set out ways in which the chargee can obtain control over particular types of financial collateral.
- A security which is perfected by control will have priority over one merely perfected by filing; priority between charges perfected by control will depend on the order in which control was obtained.
- Purchasers of securities or securities entitlements for value and without notice of existing security interests will not be affected by them.
THE BUSINESS CASE
FURTHER WORK
Title-retention devices
Statement of rights and remedies
Charges created by unincorporated businesses and individuals