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von Nessen, Paul; McCullough Robertson --- "The Perspective of Borrowing Corporations Under the Personal Property Security Bill" [2002] BondLawRw 6; (2002) 14(1) Bond Law Review 6
The Perspectives of Borrowing Corporations under the Personal Property Security Bil - [2002] BondLRev 6; (2002) 14(1) Bond Law Review
Article 6
Paul von Nessen and McCullough Robertson
McCullough Robertson is Professor of Corporate Law, QUT[*]
Introduction
1. | When I first arrived in Australia in
1980. I began my academic career teaching legal process and contracts at Monash
University.
My initial introductions to Australian law required my to forget
much of my American legal education and practical experience for
purposes of
undergraduate teaching while retaining much of my American perspectives for use
in comparative law studies and law reform
proposals. In legal process, my
experience with contingency fees, class actions, and professional advertising
proved a useful counterpoint
to the typical Australian perspective. In contract
law, despite the assistance of the coordinator of the subject (Professor David
Allan), I found myself in some difficulty trying to revert to the pre-UCC
position (or even more ancient doctrines) on a number of
points of contract law
as it still applied in Australia at that time. |
2. | On the advice of Professor Bob Baxt, I
moved into taxation law which (at that time) was even more divergent from the
tax law with
which I was familiar than had been Australian contract law.
Fortunately, the wisdom of that change became apparent as, within a
matter of
years, Australia adopted a capital gains tax and introduced numerous elements of
international taxation which were quite
familiar, if not in actual language, at
least in design. There is, to my knowledge, still no comprehensive definition
of income
in Australia, so there is still some “improvement” left to
be made. |
3. | After several years of rapid changes in
taxation law, I decided to concentrate on an area of law which did not appear to
have the
same propensity for rapid and dramatic evolution as taxation law. I
decided to concentrate on corporate law, and this change of
specialty must
certainly have been a good example of jumping from the frying pan and into the
fire. Responding to the Wallis Report,[1] the
Australian government has moved from “simplification” to a
“CLERP”[2] process which is now
entering phase 8 or 9. As with tax, however, many of the developments reminded
my of the legal studies I had
undertaken many years earlier: no par value
shares, the business judgment rule, securities regulation with legislative
design similar
to those found in the U.S. |
4. | To these examples, we may soon add
another: personal property security in Australia may in the near future join
that of a number of
Canadian Provinces and New Zealand in adopting a model which
has evolved from UCC Article 9. Unfortunately, the passage of twenty-five
years
has meant that my memory of the financing statement and registry search is
rather imperfect. I do, however, clearly remember
filing my first financing
statement to protect an advance of $600 to a friend for the purchase of a
Triumph sports car (and the difficulty
in hastily removing the statement from
the register when the car was sold by my forgetful friend months after the loan
was repaid
and the discharging documents were provided to him and promptly
lost). I also remember failing to complete a check of the register
in Atlanta
before a client, eager to close on the purchase of a seafood shop, disbursed
funds contrary to my instructions. Due to
this rush, the client acquired a shop
fit out with refrigerator equipment discovered to be heavily encumbered when the
search was
completed within the hour. I repeat these experiences to you only to
point out that no system is totally fool proof, even if it
is (or especially if
it is, depending upon the view taken) based upon an American
model. |
The Current System and Its Deficiencies
5. | The current Australian system for
registration of charges for corporate borrowers is found in the Corporations
Act Chapter 2K. Where a company creates a registrable charge, it is
required within 45 days of its creation to notify the Australian
Securities and
Investments Commission,[3] which maintains the
register of charges.[4] Registration of the
charge protects the chargee’s priority over later, registrable
charges.[5] Registrable charges which are not
registered may be invalidated in winding
up.[6] |
6. |
Those charges which must be registered under the current scheme include
the following: |
- A floating charge;[7]
- A charge on uncalled capital
- A charge on shares made but unpaid;
- A charge on personal chattel[8] either unascertained
or to be acquired in the future;
- A charge on goodwill, a patent, a trademark, a copyright or a registered
design;
- A charge on a book debt; [9]
- A charge on a marketable security; [10]
- A lien or charge on a crop, a lien on wool or a stock mortgage; and
- A charge on a negotiable instrument other than a marketable security.
7. | The deficiencies of the current system
have been catalogued and discussed on numerous occasions. One useful summary of
these is found
in Professor John Farrar’s “Reform of the Law of
Company Security Interests: Trans-Tasman
Perspectives.”[11] He identified, at
that time, the following deficiencies in the system operating under the
Corporations Law (as it then was): |
- The current system only covers charges and, therefore, fails to cover other
forms of securities such as hire purchase, long term
chattel leases, reservation
of titles clauses, and absolute transfer of title without transfer of delivery;
- The current system excludes intangibles other than book debts and in certain
instances negotiable instruments and “marketable
securities;”
- Section 262(2)(d) excludes transfers in the ordinary course of business;
- Registration of the charge must occur within certain time limits; however,
failure to register has consequences only against
a liquidator or administrator;
- The priorities scheme does not deal with priorities between registrable
and non-registrable security interests or as between
interests which are not
registrable. It also fails to deal with the effect of a restrictive clause
in relation to non-registrable
charges or absolute transfers of property;
- Execution creditors are not protected by non-registration of charges;
- The scheme permits the realisation of an unregistered charge before winding
up;
- The effects of automatic and other forms of crystallisation of a floating
charge are not dealt with;
- Uncertainty continues about the effect of the doctrine of constructive notice
on non-registrable charges; and
- The scheme is imprecise in its treatment of restrictive clauses.[12]
8. | It is not surprising that, in consequence
of the perceived deficiencies in the current system, new and better means should
be considered.
It is the attempt to provide a more efficient system (informed
by international experience), that has brought us together
today. |
Cheaper, Faster, Easier, Simpler, Safer
9. | In two recent
articles,[13] Professor David Allan described a
promised land for personal property security law, one not yet achieved. In
those articles, he
summarized the above descriptors as the criteria for a new
national and effective security system over personal property articulated
by the
1999 Conference of the Australia New Zealand Banking Law Association. From the
perspective of a borrower - corporate, individual
or whatever - these
Olympian-style aspirations for personal property security may not, at first
glance, appear to be particularly
relevant, representing as they do, traits
which are desirable to the banking sector to avoid costs in the provision of
credit. |
10. | We all know, however, that in Australia
much of a credit provider’s costs are borne by the credit recipient. From
an economist’s
perspective, this has to do with the elasticity of supply
and demand and is likely to continue to be the case so long as the consumer
demand for credit remains strong and supply is scarce. Australian banks are no
different from other industries in this regard, but
they probably suffer
consumer backlash because their costs are ever more likely to be separately
identified and not hidden as one
of many components making up the ultimate cost
to the consumer. It is thus in the borrower’s as well as the
lender’s
interest to assure a system which is cheaper, faster, easier, and
simpler, thereby reducing the transactional costs of
borrowing. |
11. | Borrowers also understood that the
greater the risk which a lender faces, the greater will be the rate of return
which the lender
will require to justify the loan. For this reason, loans which
are provided on the basis of “safe” security will be
likely to cost
a borrower less than one which is subject to some uncertainty. Thus customers
also will benefit from a “safer”
personal property security system,
one in which priorities are certain and assets covered by the security can be
identified in an
unambiguous way. |
12. | Essentially, neither borrowers nor
lenders are served by uncertainty and the risk of litigation. From a
borrower’s perspective,
current banking practice requires the elimination
of any such risk, with the result that independent solicitor’s letters are
required to assure that spouses understand the implications of a guarantee .
Similarly, cross security is often required when it
may not be strictly
necessary. Each of these limits risk, and the cost associated with each
(independent solicitor,[14] stamp duties, etc.)
fall upon the borrower. While these examples arise from real estate
transactions, there is clearly common interest
in seeing a more efficient system
for all forms of security, including personalty. |
13. | The specific advantages of the Article 9
approach were summarized by the Australian Law Reform Commission in Report No.
64: Personal Property Securities at [3.20]: |
- “The Art 9 approach, as applied with local variations in all the jurisdictions
mentioned, is attractive in its simplicity
and almost universal applicability.
- “Its use of a functional definition — which looks to the substance
of the transaction and not the form — overcomes
the complicated and
confusing rules which previously applied to different kinds of security interests.
- Ordinary securities and reverse securities which are similar in commercial
or economic effect or purpose, but legally different,
are treated alike.
- A single set of rules applies to all kinds of securities to determine when
they are enforceable against third parties.
- Archaic common law priority rules are dispensed with in favour of a more
streamlined set of priority rules.
- Registration is a voluntary act but there is incentive to register since
priority as against third parties cannot be assured
without registration or
possession.
- A single regime overcomes the difficulties of choosing which register to
file in and of searching many different registers within
one jurisdiction.
- While the single register is open to public inspection, priorities depend
not on notice (actual or constructed) but on the date
of registration.”
14. | The advantages of the proposed Personal
Property Security Bill are well recognised.[15]
These will benefit both borrowers and lenders if they reduce costs and minimize
risk. However, as my anecdotal evidence in the introduction
attests, even this
system presents some uncertainties which United States, Canadian and New Zealand
experience can alert us to. |
15. | At this meeting, the “nuts and
bolts” of the Personal Property Security Bill will undoubtedly be covered
numerous times
in detail. For this reason, I do not propose to reiterate many
of the clear advantages: the ease of registration, the uniform approach
to all
forms of personal property security, the benefits of a computer search system,
the resolution of multi-jurisdictional issues,
etc. I wish to concentrate upon
only several key issues, reviewing the implications of the new legislation which
are relevant particularly
for borrowing corporations: |
- The assets covered;
- Circulating capital;
- Potential areas of uncertainty in the new system
16. | One of the great benefits of the
proposed legislation is to approach personal property security on a functional
basis. Under the
proposed section 8, the Act applies: |
- to every transaction that in substance creates a security interest, without
regard to its form and without regard to the person
who has title to the collateral;
and
- without limiting the generality of paragraph (a), to a chattel mortgage,
a conditional sale, a hire purchase agreement, a floating
charge, a pledge,
a trust deed, a trust receipt, an assignment, a consignment,, a lease, a trust,
and a transfer of chattel
paper if they secure payment or performance of an
obligation.
17. | Within this inclusive section are the
ambit claims for coverage which form the basis for the following discussions:
the extent of
the assets which can are covered and the specific types of secured
transactions now brought within this legislative scheme. |
Assets
18. | The full extent of the coverage
expressed in section 8 (and the express inclusions of section 9), can only be
fully understood by
referring to the exclusionary provisions of sections 10.
Excluded from the operation of the Bill by section 10 are: |
- liens or charges arising by operation of law;
- an interest in a contract of annuity or insurance;
- the creation or transfer of interests in present or future salary or
wages for labour or personal services (other than professional
services)
prohibited by law;
- transfer of an interest in unearned right to payment under a contract
where the transferee must perform the transferor’s
obligations;
- the creation or transfer of an interest in land (other than arising under
a license);
- the creation or transfer of an interest to a right to payment in connection
to an interest in land (including rental payments
under a lease);
- sale of accounts or chattel paper as part of a sale of a business out
of which they arose (unless the vendor remains in apparent
control of the
business);
- a transfer of accounts solely to facilitate their collection;
- creation or transfer of an interest in a right to damages in tort;
- an assignment for the general benefit of creditors in insolvency;
- a mortgage under the Shipping Registration Act (Cth.); and
- a right of set-off (subject to the operation of section 47 of the Bill).
19. | Although assets are categorised within
the Bill for various purposes, the effect of the above provisions is to include
within the
purview of the legislative scheme a broad range of both tangible and
intangible personalty. Section 8 indicates that the bill covers
every
transaction that in substance creates a security interest, without regard to
form and without regard to the person who has
title to the collateral (defined
as “personal property that is subject to a security interest”).
|
20. | This brief review of the legislative
provisions indicates that a broad range of intangibles would be subject to the
proposed Bill,
including a number of conventional intangibles already well
exploited by financiers and borrowers such as choses in actions and intellectual
property rights. In Professor Jacqueline Lipton’s book, Security Over
Intangible Property,[16] the current
limitations upon the use of more unconventional intangibles is addressed in some
detail, with specific reference to the
evolving notion of “property”
in the information age:[17]
|
21. | The basic issues underlying the
discussion ... have been the changing nature of “property” and
‘proprietary rights”
in the global information age, and the need for
financiers to be able and willing to structure secured financing strategies that
accommodate the needs of the evolving property
concept.[18] |
22. | Because the Bill does not specify (and
thus limit) the items which would be included in personal property, its
potential coverage
may increase in the future as the concept of property
expands. In spite of the potential for future improvement, the Bill already
provides a framework for the securing of intangible property which certainly
represents a shift of some
significance.[19] |
23. | Enabling corporate borrowers to realise
the value of their intangible property by providing a comprehensive system to
allow it to
serve as security for loans will undoubtedly prove a successful
development, particularly for technology and start-up corporations
whose major
assets often consist only of intellectual property and the systems developed to
exploit those property rights. The great
difficulty as I see it will be in
valuing these intangibles so that finance providers do not subject themselves to
the insecurity
of rapidly lowering values (as experienced two years ago with the
deflation of the “dot com” bubble). However, if anyone
can be
relied upon to provide some rigour to the valuation of intangibles, one would
think that the financiers would be likely candidates. |
Circulating Capital
24. | The change of greatest importance for
borrowing corporations is the alteration of the scheme for providing security
over the circulating
capital of the corporation. Under current practice in
Australia, corporations can usethe long established equitable concept of
the
“floating charge” to provide security. The charge floats over the
assets charged (usually circulating capital assets)
enabling the corporation to
continue to deal with those assets in the ordinary course of business until an
event occurs which crystallises
or fixes that charge to the assets which form
part of the collective group subject to the charge at the time of the
crystallisation.
The floating charge has a long history in English
law;[20] however, this concept sits uneasily
with the Personal Property Security Bill, modelled as it is on the United States
system in which
the long development of the equitable floating charge is
unknown. |
25. | The benefits of the floating charge to a
borrowing corporation are obvious. It is able to acquire loans on the security
of its circulating
capital (inventory, accounts
receivables,[21] etc.) without inhibiting their
use within the business. Inventory may be sold to consumers and credit provided
to them without fear
that this circulating capital will be syphoned off, leaving
the business unable to continue. As stated by Lord Jessell MR in Re Colonial
Trusts Corporation, Ex parte Bradshaw[22]
|
26. | [I]t would be a monstrous thing to hold
that the floating security prevented the making of specific charges or
alienations of property,
because it would destroy the very object for which the
money was borrowed, namely, the carrying on of the business of the
company.[23] |
27. | The floating charge has benefited both
borrowers and lenders since its inception, and it is likely that a flexible
means of securing
capital advances secured by circulating capital should be
retained in some form. The Personal Property Security Bill expressly applies
to
floating charges, and thus may cause some anxiety to Australian lawyers fearful
of change. The experiences in Canada and New
Zealand indicate that this anxiety
also accompanied the introduction of their legislation as well. It is my view
that this anxiety
is misplaced. |
28. | The legislative scheme under the
Personal Property Security Bill which covers circulating capital is based upon
the following sections,
dealing with when a security interest attaches (section
17); security interest in after-acquired property (section 18); security
interest in the proceeds of sale (section 33) and protection of buyer or lessee
of goods (section 35). : |
30. | A security interest, including
a security interest in the nature of a floating charge, attaches
when: |
- value is given;
- the debtor has rights in the collateral; and
- except for purposes of enforcing rights between the parties to the security
agreement, the security agreement becomes enforceable
under section 15
31. | unless the parties have
specifically agreed to postpone the time for attachment in which case the
security interest will attach at
the time specified in the
agreement. |
32. | Section 18 provides that a
security interest in after acquired property attaches in accordance with the
terms of the agreement without the need
for a specified appropriation by the
debtor. |
33. | Section 33 indicates
that; |
- where collateral is dealt with or otherwise gives rise to proceeds, the
security interest:
- continues in the collateral unless the secured party expressly or impliedly
authorizes the dealing:
- extends to the proceeds.
34. | Section 35 protects buyers
or lessees of goods subject to a security interest. Of particular relevance are
subsections (2) and (3): |
(2) A buyer or lessee of goods that are acquired as consumer goods sold
or leased in the ordinary course of business of the
seller or lessor takes
free of any perfected or unperfected security interest in the goods given
by the seller or lessor
...whether or not the buyer or lessee knows of it,
unless the buyer or lessee also know that the sale or lease constitutes a
breach of the security agreement under which the security interest is created;
(3) a buyer or lessee of goods that are acquired as consumer goods takes free
of a perfected or unperfected security interest
in the goods if the buyer
or lessee
(a) gave value for the interest acquired; and
(b) bought or leased the goods without knowledge of the security interest.
35. | These provisions have been described as
imposing a “floating lien” rather than a floating charge as
currently understood.[24] Following United
States model (which suffers no confusion by reason of pre-existing
“floating charge” jurisprudence),
the security interest would attach
pursuant to section 17, and be perfected upon filing of the financing statement.
After acquired
property would be covered by the security interest if it is so
specified under section 18. Finally, sale or lease of the collateral
would be
possible under section 35; however, the secured party would retain rights in
relation to the proceeds of sale. |
36. | In those jurisdictions in which floating
charges were recognized, concerns and confusion have been raised about the
continuing effect
of the floating charge after the passage of Personal Property
Security legislation. In Canada, it has been stated that: |
• Although parties are free to use a floating charge form of security
agreement, this will not have the effect of invoking
the floating charge law.
The agreement will be governed by the PPSA. The notion of crystallisation has
no counterpart under the
Act, nor is there any equivalent to the non-specific
pre-crystallisation state of existence. Priority disputes are governed by the
priority rules of the Act and not by the complex matrix of priority rules that
formerly governed.[25]
37. | While there had been doubts and
confusion about the consequences of security interests drafted in the style of a
“floating charge,”
it appears that the English style floating charge
no longer exists under the Ontario Act.[26]
Similarly, courts in Ontario, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan have held that the use
of a floating charge does not indicate an intention
to delay attachment until
the occurrence of an event of
crystallization.[27] Section 12(1) of the
Manitoba Act, in language remarkably similar to the proposed Australian
legislation section 17, indicates that
the perfection rules apply to a security
interest, “including a security interest in the nature of a floating
charge.”
The Manitoba legislative formulation is provides a degree of
confirmation that the legislative intention is consistent with the
judicial
authorities on the
point.[28] |
38. | The initial confusion which was faced by
the Canadian judiciary in interpreting floating charges under its various
Personal Property
Security Acts has also caused some concern in New
Zealand.[29] However, the viewing the Canadian
experience through New Zealand eyes has brought one commentator to the following
view: |
39. | The answer happens to be that adoption
of floating charge language , without more, has no special consequence under the
Act. Furthermore,
in the words of Hunter J: “to continue to use the
language of floating charges and crystallisation which do not exist in the
PPSA
causes confusion in the interpretation of the unambiguous provisions of the
PPSA. This confusion has been contributed to by
the use of this archaic
language in the cases cited...”.[30]
Without recourse to Canadian precedents, we will run the risk of creating our
own prolonged confusion. Although this may line
the pockets of litigators, it
will not serve
commerce.[31] |
40. | Notwithstanding the experience in Canada
and New Zealand (not to mention the United States), the abandonment of the
English style
floating charge will face a fear factor in Australia as
well: |
41. | It is difficult to see how a company can
carry on its business under its constitution if a fixed charge applies to all
its present
and future property, including book debts. Being able to carry on
business was the quid pro quo for the courts recognizing the charging by
a company of all its undertaking.... |
42. | The ALRC proposals (and indeed the New
Zealand Personal Property Security Act 1999) would seem to destroy the essential
functions
of the floating charge, the most common and useful form of securities
created by companies.[32] |
43. | Despite the fears expressed about the
effect of the Personal Property Security Bill, much of that concern would appear
to be misplaced.
The shift away from the classical English-style floating
charge to the American style floating lien has not destroyed Canadian or
New
Zealand corporate borrowers by removing their circulating capital from their
control. It will not result in immediate destruction
of Australian commercial
practice, although some adjustments may be necessary. In this new environment,
there may be new challenges
and issues to be addressed, but they will proceed on
the basis of commercial certainty even if it is a somewhat modified
certainty. |
Potential Areas of Concern
44. | While corporate borrowers may be
generally supportive of the Personal Property Security Bill, there are some
matters which are worthy
of mention. These are not necessarily deficiencies in
the Bill, but rather what might be called the new areas of tension. Many
of
these may be observed already in the experience of the United States, Canada, or
New Zealand: |
- Legal resistance to change: As already mentioned, the use of floating charge
terminology may continue. The response of Australian
judges will assure the
successful implementation of the new system, and a willingness to learn from
and apply overseas
(particularly New Zealand and Canadian) experience will
ease the transition.
- Freedom of contract: The ability of borrowers and lenders to be inventive
should not be constrained. The Bill preserves this
ability to modify security
arrangements so long as they fall within the parameters of the new security
system;[33]
- Dealing with collateral: Because the right to the arrangements which are
desirable remain with the parties to the transaction
it would appear that
the express or implied approval of the financier for the debtor to deal with
collateral will be one
of the areas of tension in the new system. This may
be particularly so in the period immediately after enactment when efforts
are made to reproduce the effect of the floating charge under the new legislation.
- Further advances: Due to the fact that a security interest for further advances
may attach and be perfected at the time of the
original transaction, there
is the possibility that competition will be eliminated in relation to this
particular debtor.
Second priority creditors will not be able to protect their
security from the effect of later advances by the primary secured
creditor;
- After acquired property: Although inclusion of after acquired property is
permitted under the proposed Bill, the precision with
which this must be expressed
may be a matter for judicial clarification;
Conclusion
45. |
While there are some matters which may
cause concern in the Personal Property Security Bill, the certainty and
efficiency which its
introduction offers clearly offset these potential sticking
points. Moving to registration based upon functionality rather than
on the
basis of archaic and highly artificial constructs must be an improvement.
Further, under the new provision, the question
of priority is clear from the
time the security interest is created thereby imposing less risk on creditors.
This should result
in greater willingness to extend
credit.[34] With less uncertainty and greater
supply, the cost of capital to borrowing corporations should be comparatively
less than is currently
the case. Who would argue with that result if it
transpires? |
[*] From July 1, Head of the Department of Business
Law and Taxation, Monash University and Special Counsel, McCullough Robertson.
[1] Wallis (Ch.), Financial System Inquiry
Final Report (AGPS 1997)
[2] Corporate Law Economic Reform Program,
which has addressed a number of discreet areas for corporate reform. This
resulted in passage
of the CLERP Act 1999, covering five areas of
interest, and the Financial Services Reform Act 2000, the most important
of the reforms to date.
[3] Corporations Act s. 263(1)
[4] Corporations Act s. 265(1).
[5] Corporations Act ss. 278-282. For
priority among unregistered registrable charges see s. 281.
[6] Corporations Act s. 266.
[7] Defined in Corporations Act s.
9.
[8] Defined in Corporations Act s.
262(3).
[9] Defined in Corporations Act s.
262(4).
[10] Defined in Corporations Act s.
9.
[11] In Gillooly (Ed.), Securities Over
Personalty (Federation Press, 1994) pp. 168-199.
[12] Id pp. 170-171
[13] “Personal Property Security
– A Long Long Trail A-Winding” (1999) 11 Bond. L. R. 178 and
“Personal Property Security in Australia– A Long Long Trail
A-Winding” (2001) 106 Dick. L. Rev. 145.
[14] Now standard practice as a result of
Commercial Bank of Australia v. Amadio [1983] HCA 14; (1983) 151 CLR 447 and National
Australia Bank v. Garcia [1998] HCA 48; (1998) 194 CLR 395. See E.Stone, “Infants,
Lunatics and Married Women: Equitable Protection in Garcia v National
Australia Bank” (1999) 62 Mod. L. Rev. 604 and Su-King Hii,
“From Yerkey to Garcia: 60 Years on and Still as Confused as Ever! (1999)
7 Aust Propt. L J. 47.
[15] See D. Allan, “Personal Property
Security – A Long Trail A-Winding” (1999) 11 Bond L. R. 178: A.
Duggan, “Globalization of Secured Lending Law; Australian
Developments” (2001) 12 J. of Fin. Law & Practice 85;
A. Duggan,
“Personal Property Security Law Reform, the Australian Experience to
Date” (1996) 27 Can. Bus. L. J. 176; C. Wappett, “Reforming Personal
Property Security Law in Australia” (1996) 7 J. of Fin. Law & Practice
85; and
Farrar, Reform of the Law of Company Security Interests: Trans-Tasman
Perspectives in Gillooly (Ed.), Securities Over Personalty (Federation
Press, 1994) pp. 168-199.
[16] Security Over Intangible
Property (LBC, 2000)
[17] Id at pp. 12 –18.
[18] Id. p. 216.
[19] See D. Allan, “Personal Property
Security – A Long Trail A-Winding” (1999) 11 Bond L. R. 178, wherein
the historical reticence of financiers to consider such security is
mentioned.
[20] From Holroyd v. Marshall (1862)
10 HLC; 11 ER 999. See J. Chandler “The Modern Floating Charge,” in
Gillooly (Ed.) Security over Personalties (Federation Press 1994).
[21] The structure of the charge may cause
some difficulty, however. See Agnew v Comm’r of Inland Revenue
[2001] UKPC 28 and New Bullas Trading Ltd [1994] 1 BCLC 449
[22] (1879) 15 Ch. D.465.
[23] Id at 472.
[24] H. Gabriel, “The New Zealand
Personal Property Securities Act: A Comparison with the North American Model for
Personal Property
Security” (2000) 34 International Lawyer 1123
[25] R. Cuming and R. Wood, Saskatchewan
and Manitoba Personal Property Security Acts Handbook (Thomson Canada
1994)
[26] See J. Ziegel, “Freedom of
Contract and the Right to Claim Proceeds under the OPPSA” (1999) 31
Canadian Business Law Journal 299, referring to Credit Suisse Canada v. 1133
Yonge Street Holdings Ltd, (1998) 83 ACWS (3d) 402 (Ont. C.A.). See also J.
Zeigel, “Floating Charges and the OPPSA: A Basic Misunderstanding”
(1994) 23 Canadian Business Law Journal 470.
[27] Royal Bank v. G.M. Homes Inc.
(1984) 10 DLR (4th) 439 (Sask. C.A.); Euroclean Canada Inc. v. Forest Glade
Investments Ltd (1985) 49 OR (2d) 769 (C.A.) Roynat Inc. v. United Rescue
Services Ltd (1982) 2 PPSAC 49 (Man. C.A.). See also R.J. Wood, “The
Floating Charge in Canada” (1989) 27 Alta. L. Rev. 191.
[28] R. Cuming and R. Wood, Saskatchewan
and Manitoba Personal Property Security Acts Handbook (Thomson Canada
1994)
[29] M Gedye, “More PPSA
Controversy” [2001] NZLJ 142.
[30] Citing Rehm v DSG Communications
Inc (1995) 9 PPSAC (2d) 114 at 124.
[31] M Gedye, “More PPSA
Controversy” [2001] NZLJ 142.
[32] J. Wilkin, “Personal property
security reform: registration and the floating charge” (2001) 17 (3) Aust.
B & FL Bull
40.
[33] J. Ziegell, “Freedom of Contract
and the Right to Claim Proceeds under the OPPSA” (1999) 31 Can. B. L. J.
299.
[34] H. Gabriel, “The New Zealand
Personal Property Securities Act: A Comparison with the North American Model for
Personal Property
Security” (2000) 34 International Lawyer 1123, 1128
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