ENROLLED
COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE
FOR
Senate Bill No. 742
(Senators Jenkins, Dempsey, Minard, Unger, Caruth, Harrison and Yoder,
original sponsors)
____________
[Passed March 10, 2006; in effect ninety days from passage.]
____________
AN ACT to repeal §46-1-109, §46-1-207 and §46-1-208 of the Code of
West Virginia, 1931, as amended; to repeal §46-2-208 of said
code; to repeal §46-2A-207 of said code; to amend and reenact
§46-1-101, §46-1-102, §46-1-103, §46-1-104, §46-1-105,
§46-1-106, §46-1-107, §46-1-108, §46-1-201, §46-1-202,
§46-1-203, §46-1-204, §46-1-205 and §46-1-206 of said code; to
amend said code by adding thereto ten new sections, designated
§46-1-301, §46-1-302, §46-1-303, §46-1-304, §46-1-305,
§46-1-306, §46-1-307, §46-1-308, §46-1-309 and §46-1-310; to
amend and reenact §46-2-103, §46-2-104, §46-2-202, §46-2-310,
§46-2-323, §46-2-401, §46-2-503, §46-2-505, §46-2-506, §46-2-
509, §46-2-605 and §46-2-705 of said code; to amend and
reenact §46-2A-103, §46-2A-501, §46-2A-514, §46-2A-518, §46-
2A-519, §46-2A-526, §46-2A-527 and §46-2A-528 of said code; to
amend and reenact §46-3-103 of said code; to amend and reenact
§46-4-104 and §46-4-210 of said code; to amend and reenact §46-4A-105, §46-4A-106 and §46-4A-204 of said code; to amend
and reenact §46-5-103 of said code; to amend and reenact §46-
7-101, §46-7-102, §46-7-103, §46-7-104, §46-7-105, §46-7-201,
§46-7-202, §46-7-203, §46-7-204, §46-7-205, §46-7-206, §46-7-
207, §46-7-208, §46-7-209, §46-7-210, §46-7-301, §46-7-302,
§46-7-303, §46-7-304, §46-7-305, §46-7-306, §46-7-307, §46-7-
308, §46-7-309, §46-7-401, §46-7-402, §46-7-403, §46-7-404,
§46-7-501, §46-7-502, §46-7-503, §46-7-504, §46-7-505, §46-7-
506, §46-7-507, §46-7-508, §46-7-509, §46-7-601, §46-7-602 and
§46-7-603 of said code; to amend said code by adding thereto
three new sections, designated §46-7-106, §46-7-701 and §46-7-
702; to amend and reenact §46-8-102 and §46-8-103 of said
code; to amend and reenact §46-9-102, §46-9-203, §46-9-207,
§46-9-208, §46-9-301, §46-9-310, §46-9-312, §46-9-313, §46-9-
314, §46-9-317, §46-9-338, §46-9-516 and §46-9-601 of said
code, all relating to revising the Uniform Commercial Code,
articles one and seven; making conforming amendments to other
articles; and authorizing administrative review by secretary
of state of certain fillings in connection with secured
transactions.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That §46-1-109, §46-1-207 and §46-1-208 of the Code of West
Virginia, 1931, be repealed; that §46-2-208 of said code be
repealed; that §46-2A-207 of said code be repealed; that §46-1-101,
§46-1-102, §46-1-103, §46-1-104, §46-1-105, §46-1-106, §46-1-107,
§46-1-108, §46-1-201, §46-1-202, §46-1-203, §46-1-204, §46-1-205 and §46-1-206 of said code be amended and reenacted; that said code
be amended by adding thereto ten new sections, designated §46-1-
301, §46-1-302, §46-1-303, §46-1-304, §46-1-305, §46-1-306, §46-1-
307, §46-1-308, §46-1-309 and §46-1-310; that §46-2-103, §46-2-104,
§46-2-202, §46-2-310, §46-2-323, §46-2-401, §46-2-503, §46-2-505,
§46-2-506, §46-2-509, §46-2-605 and §46-2-705 of said code be
amended and reenacted; that §46-2A-103, §46-2A-501, §46-2A-514,
§46-2A-518, §46-2A-519, §46-2A-526, §46-2A-527 and §46-2A-528 of
said code be amended and reenacted; that §46-3-103 of said code be
amended and reenacted; that §46-4-104 and §46-4-210 of said code be
amended and reenacted; that §46-4A-105, §46-4A-106 and §46-4A-204
of said code be amended and reenacted; that §46-5-103 of said code
be amended and reenacted; that §46-7-101, §46-7-102, §46-7-103,
§46-7-104, §46-7-105, §46-7-201, §46-7-202, §46-7-203, §46-7-204,
§46-7-205, §46-7-206, §46-7-207, §46-7-208, §46-7-209, §46-7-210,
§46-7-301, §46-7-302, §46-7-303, §46-7-304, §46-7-305, §46-7-306,
§46-7-307, §46-7-308, §46-7-309, §46-7-401, §46-7-402, §46-7-403,
§46-7-404, §46-7-501, §46-7-502, §46-7-503, §46-7-504, §46-7-505,
§46-7-506, §46-7-507, §46-7-508, §46-7-509, §46-7-601, §46-7-602
and §46-7-603 of said code be amended and reenacted; that said code
be amended by adding thereto three new sections, designated §46-7-
106, §46-7-701 and §46-7-702; that §46-8-102 and §46-8-103 of said
code be amended and reenacted; and that §46-9-102, §46-9-203, §46-
9-207, §46-9-208, §46-9-301, §46-9-310, §46-9-312, §46-9-313, §46-
9-314, §46-9-317, §46-9-338, §46-9-516 and §46-9-601 of said code
be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS.
Part 1. General Provisions.
§46-1-101. Short titles.

(a) This chapter may be cited as the Uniform Commercial Code.

(b) This article may be cited as Uniform Commercial Code -
General Provisions.
§46-1-102. Scope of article.

This article applies to a transaction to the extent that it is
governed by another article of this chapter.
§46-1-103. Construction of uniform commercial code to promote its
purposes and policies; applicability of supplemental
principles of law.

(a) This chapter must be liberally construed and applied to
promote its underlying purposes and policies, which are:

(1) To simplify, clarify and modernize the law governing
commercial transactions;

(2) To permit the continued expansion of commercial practices
through custom, usage and agreement of the parties; and

(3) To make uniform the law among the various jurisdictions.

(b) Unless displaced by the particular provisions of this
chapter, the principles of law and equity, including the law
merchant and the law relative to capacity to contract, principal
and agent, estoppel, fraud, misrepresentation, duress, coercion,
mistake, bankruptcy and other validating or invalidating cause
supplement its provisions.
§46-1-104. Construction against implied repeal.

The Uniform Commercial Code being a general act intended as a
unified coverage of its subject matter, no part of it shall be
deemed to be impliedly repealed by subsequent legislation if such
construction can reasonably be avoided.
§46-1-105. Severability.

If any provision or clause of this chapter or its application
to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does
not affect other provisions or applications of this chapter which
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application,
and to this end the provisions of this chapter are severable.
§46-1-106. Use of singular and plural; gender.

In this chapter, unless the statutory context otherwise
requires:

(1) Words in the singular number include the plural, and those
in the plural include the singular; and

(2) Words of any gender also refer to any other gender.
§46-1-107. Section captions.

Section captions are part of this chapter.
§46-1-108. Relation to electronic signatures in global and
national commerce act.

This chapter modifies, limits and supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (15
U.S.C. Section 7001, et. seq.) but does not modify, limit, or
supersede Section 101(c) of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 7001(c)) or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in
Section 103(b) of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 103(b)).
Part 2.
General Definitions and
Principles of Interpretation.
§46-1-201. General definitions.

(a) Unless the context otherwise requires, words or phrases
defined in this section, or in the additional definitions contained
in other articles of this chapter that apply to particular articles
or parts thereof, have the meanings stated.

(b) Subject to definitions contained in other articles of this
chapter that apply to particular articles or parts thereof:

(1) "Action", in the sense of a judicial proceeding, includes
recoupment, counterclaim, set-off, suit in equity and any other
proceeding in which rights are determined.

(2) "Aggrieved party" means a party entitled to pursue a
remedy.

(3) "Agreement", as distinguished from "contract", means the
bargain of the parties in fact, as found in their language or
inferred from other circumstances, including course of performance,
course of dealing, or usage of trade as provided in section 1-303.

(4) "Bank" means a person engaged in the business of banking
and includes a savings bank, savings and loan association, credit
union, and trust company.

(5) "Bearer" means a person in control of a negotiable
electronic document of title or a person in possession of a
negotiable instrument, document of title or certificated security
that is payable to bearer or indorsed in blank.

(6) "Bill of lading" means a document of title evidencing the
receipt of goods for shipment issued by a person engaged in the
business of directly or indirectly transporting or forwarding
goods. The term does not include a warehouse receipt.

(7) "Branch" includes a separately incorporated foreign branch
of a bank.

(8) "Burden of establishing" a fact means the burden of
persuading the trier of fact that the existence of the fact is more
probable than its nonexistence.

(9) "Buyer in ordinary course of business" means a person that
buys goods in good faith, without knowledge that the sale violates
the rights of another person in the goods, and in the ordinary
course from a person, other than a pawnbroker, in the business of
selling goods of that kind. A person buys goods in the ordinary
course if the sale to the person comports with the usual or
customary practices in the kind of business in which the seller is
engaged or with the seller's own usual or customary practices. A
person that sells oil, gas or other minerals at the wellhead or
minehead is a person in the business of selling goods of that kind.
A buyer in ordinary course of business may buy for cash, by
exchange of other property, or on secured or unsecured credit, and
may acquire goods or documents of title under a preexisting
contract for sale. Only a buyer that takes possession of the goods
or has a right to recover the goods from the seller under article
2 may be a buyer in ordinary course of business. "Buyer in
ordinary course of business" does not include a person that acquires goods in a transfer in bulk or as security for or in total
or partial satisfaction of a money debt.

(10) "Conspicuous", with reference to a term, means so
written, displayed, or presented that a reasonable person against
which it is to operate ought to have noticed it. Whether a term is
"conspicuous" or not is a decision for the court. Conspicuous
terms include the following:

(A) A heading in capitals equal to or greater in size than the
surrounding text, or in contrasting type, font or color to the
surrounding text of the same or lesser size; and

(B) Language in the body of a record or display in larger type
than the surrounding text, or in contrasting type, font, or color
to the surrounding text of the same size, or set off from
surrounding text of the same size by symbols or other marks that
call attention to the language.

(11) "Consumer" means an individual who enters into a
transaction primarily for personal, family or household purposes.

(12) "Contract", as distinguished from "agreement", means the
total legal obligation that results from the parties' agreement as
determined by this chapter as supplemented by any other applicable
laws.

(13) "Creditor" includes a general creditor, a secured
creditor, a lien creditor and any representative of creditors,
including an assignee for the benefit of creditors, a trustee in
bankruptcy, a receiver in equity, and an executor or administrator
of an insolvent debtor's or assignor's estate.

(14) "Defendant" includes a person in the position of
defendant in a counterclaim, cross-claim or third-party claim.

(15) "Delivery", with respect to an electronic document of
title means voluntary transfer of control and with respect to an
instrument, document of title or chattel paper, means voluntary
transfer of possession.

(16) "Document of title" means a record: (i) that in the
regular course of business or financing is treated as adequately
evidencing that the person in possession or control of the record
is entitled to receive, control, hold, and dispose of the record
and the goods the record covers and (ii) that purports to be issued
by or addressed to a bailee and to cover goods in the bailee's
possession which are either identified or are fungible portions of
an identified mass. The term includes a bill of lading, transport
document, dock warrant, dock receipt, warehouse receipt, and order
for delivery of goods. An electronic document of title means a
document of title evidenced by a record consisting of information
stored in an electronic medium. A tangible document of title means
a document of title evidenced by a record consisting of information
that is inscribed on a tangible medium.

(17) "Fault" means a default, breach or wrongful act or
omission.

(18) "Fungible goods" means:

(A) Goods of which any unit, by nature or usage of trade, is
the equivalent of any other like unit; or

(B) Goods that by agreement are treated as equivalent.

(19) "Genuine" means free of forgery or counterfeiting.

(20) "Good faith", except as otherwise provided in article 5,
means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial
standards of fair dealing.

(21) "Holder" means:

(A) The person in possession of a negotiable instrument that
is payable either to bearer or to an identified person that is the
person in possession; or

(B) The person in possession of a negotiable tangible document
of title if the goods are deliverable either to bearer or to the
order of the person in possession; or

(C) the person in control of the negotiable electronic
document of title.

(22) "Insolvency proceeding" includes an assignment for the
benefit of creditors or other proceeding intended to liquidate or
rehabilitate the estate of the person involved.

(23) "Insolvent" means:

(A) Having generally ceased to pay debts in the ordinary
course of business other than as a result of bona fide dispute;

(B) Being unable to pay debts as they become due; or

(C) Being insolvent within the meaning of federal bankruptcy
law.

(24) "Money" means a medium of exchange currently authorized
or adopted by a domestic or foreign government. The term includes
a monetary unit of account established by an intergovernmental
organization or by agreement between two or more countries.

(25) "Organization" means a person other than an individual.

(26) "Party", as distinguished from "third party", means a
person that has engaged in a transaction or made an agreement
subject to this chapter.

(27) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,
association, joint venture, government, governmental subdivision,
agency, or instrumentality, public corporation or any other legal
or commercial entity.

(28) "Present value" means the amount as of a date certain of
one or more sums payable in the future, discounted to the date
certain by use of either an interest rate specified by the parties
if that rate is not manifestly unreasonable at the time the
transaction is entered into or, if an interest rate is not so
specified, a commercially reasonable rate that takes into account
the facts and circumstances at the time the transaction is entered
into.

(29) "Purchase" means taking by sale, lease, discount,
negotiation, mortgage, pledge, lien, security interest, issue or
reissue, gift or any other voluntary transaction creating an
interest in property.

(30) "Purchaser" means a person that takes by purchase.

(31) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium
and is retrievable in perceivable form.

(32) "Remedy" means any remedial right to which an aggrieved party is entitled with or without resort to a tribunal.

(33) "Representative" means a person empowered to act for
another, including an agent, an officer of a corporation or
association, and a trustee, executor or administrator of an estate.

(34) "Right" includes remedy.

(35) "Security interest" means an interest in personal
property or fixtures which secures payment or performance of an
obligation. "Security interest" includes any interest of a
consignor and a buyer of accounts, chattel paper, a payment
intangible or a promissory note in a transaction that is subject to
article 9. "Security interest" does not include the special
property interest of a buyer of goods on identification of those
goods to a contract for sale under section 2-401, but a buyer may
also acquire a "security interest" by complying with article 9.
Except as otherwise provided in section 2-505, the right of a
seller or lessor of goods under article 2 or 2A to retain or
acquire possession of the goods is not a "security interest", but
a seller or lessor may also acquire a "security interest" by
complying with article 9. The retention or reservation of title by
a seller of goods notwithstanding shipment or delivery to the buyer
under section 2-401 is limited in effect to a reservation of a
"security interest". Whether a transaction in the form of a lease
creates a "security interest" is determined pursuant to section
1-203.

(36) "Send" in connection with a writing, record, or notice
means:

(A) To deposit in the mail or deliver for transmission by any
other usual means of communication with postage or cost of
transmission provided for and properly addressed and, in the case
of an instrument, to an address specified thereon or otherwise
agreed, or if there be none to any address reasonable under the
circumstances; or

(B) In any other way to cause to be received any record or
notice within the time it would have arrived if properly sent.

(37) "Signed" includes using any symbol executed or adopted
with present intention to adopt or accept a writing.

(38) "State" means a state of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands, or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States.

(39) "Surety" includes a guarantor or other secondary obligor.

(40) "Term" means a portion of an agreement that relates to a
particular matter.

(41) "Unauthorized signature" means a signature made without
actual, implied or apparent authority. The term includes a
forgery.

(42) "Warehouse receipt" means a document of title issued by
a person engaged in the business of storing goods for hire.

(43) "Writing" includes printing, typewriting, or any other
intentional reduction to tangible form. "Written" has a
corresponding meaning.
§46-1-202. Notice; knowledge.

(a) Subject to subsection (f), a person has "notice" of a fact
if the person:

(1) Has actual knowledge of it;

(2) Has received a notice or notification of it; or

(3) From all the facts and circumstances known to the person
at the time in question, has reason to know that it exists.

(b) "Knowledge" means actual knowledge. "Knows" has a
corresponding meaning.

(c) "Discover", "learn", or words of similar import refer to
knowledge rather than to reason to know.

(d) A person "notifies" or "gives" a notice or notification to
another person by taking such steps as may be reasonably required
to inform the other person in ordinary course, whether or not the
other person actually comes to know of it.

(e) Subject to subsection (f), a person "receives" a notice or
notification when:

(1) It comes to that person's attention; or

(2) It is duly delivered in a form reasonable under the
circumstances at the place of business through which the contract
was made or at another location held out by that person as the
place for receipt of such communications.

(f) Notice, knowledge, or a notice or notification received by
an organization is effective for a particular transaction from the
time it is brought to the attention of the individual conducting
that transaction and, in any event, from the time it would have
been brought to the individual's attention if the organization had exercised due diligence. An organization exercises due diligence
if it maintains reasonable routines for communicating significant
information to the person conducting the transaction and there is
reasonable compliance with the routines. Due diligence does not
require an individual acting for the organization to communicate
information unless the communication is part of the individual's
regular duties or the individual has reason to know of the
transaction and that the transaction would be materially affected
by the information.
§46-1-203. Lease distinguished from security interest.

(a) Whether a transaction in the form of a lease creates a
lease or security interest is determined by the facts of each case.

(b) A transaction in the form of a lease creates a security
interest if the consideration that the lessee is to pay the lessor
for the right to possession and use of the goods is an obligation
for the term of the lease and is not subject to termination by the
lessee, and:

(1) The original term of the lease is equal to or greater than
the remaining economic life of the goods;

(2) The lessee is bound to renew the lease for the remaining
economic life of the goods or is bound to become the owner of the
goods;

(3) The lessee has an option to renew the lease for the
remaining economic life of the goods for no additional
consideration or for nominal additional consideration upon
compliance with the lease agreement; or

(4) The lessee has an option to become the owner of the goods
for no additional consideration or for nominal additional
consideration upon compliance with the lease agreement.

(c) A transaction in the form of a lease does not create a
security interest merely because:

(1) The present value of the consideration the lessee is
obligated to pay the lessor for the right to possession and use of
the goods is substantially equal to or is greater than the fair
market value of the goods at the time the lease is entered into;

(2) The lessee assumes risk of loss of the goods;

(3) The lessee agrees to pay, with respect to the goods,
taxes, insurance, filing, recording, or registration fees, or
service or maintenance costs;

(4) The lessee has an option to renew the lease or to become
the owner of the goods;

(5) The lessee has an option to renew the lease for a fixed
rent that is equal to or greater than the reasonably predictable
fair market rent for the use of the goods for the term of the
renewal at the time the option is to be performed; or

(6) The lessee has an option to become the owner of the goods
for a fixed price that is equal to or greater than the reasonably
predictable fair market value of the goods at the time the option
is to be performed.

(d) Additional consideration is nominal if it is less than the
lessee's reasonably predictable cost of performing under the lease
agreement if the option is not exercised. Additional consideration is not nominal if:

(1) When the option to renew the lease is granted to the
lessee, the rent is stated to be the fair market rent for the use
of the goods for the term of the renewal determined at the time the
option is to be performed; or

(2) When the option to become the owner of the goods is
granted to the lessee, the price is stated to be the fair market
value of the goods determined at the time the option is to be
performed.

(e) The "remaining economic life of the goods" and "reasonably
predictable" fair market rent, fair market value or cost of
performing under the lease agreement must be determined with
reference to the facts and circumstances at the time the
transaction is entered into.
§46-1-204. Value.

Except as otherwise provided in articles 3, 4, and 5 of this
chapter, a person gives value for rights if the person acquires
them:

(1) In return for a binding commitment to extend credit or for
the extension of immediately available credit, whether or not drawn
upon and whether or not a charge-back is provided for in the event
of difficulties in collection;

(2) As security for, or in total or partial satisfaction of,
a preexisting claim;

(3) By accepting delivery under a preexisting contract for
purchase; or

(4) In return for any consideration sufficient to support a
simple contract.
§46-1-205. Reasonable time; seasonableness.

(a) Whether a time for taking an action required by this
chapter is reasonable depends on the nature, purpose and
circumstances of the action.

(b) An action is taken seasonably if it is taken at or within
the time agreed or, if no time is agreed, at or within a reasonable
time.
§46-1-206. Presumptions.

Whenever this chapter creates a "presumption" with respect to
a fact, or provides that a fact is "presumed", the trier of fact
must find the existence of the fact unless and until evidence is
introduced that supports a finding of its nonexistence.
Part 3. Territorial Applicability and General Rules.
§46-1-301. Territorial applicability; parties' power to choose
applicable law.

(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, when a
transaction bears a reasonable relation to this state and also to
another state or nation the parties may agree that the law either
of this state or of such other state or nation shall govern their
rights and duties.

(b) In the absence of an agreement effective under subsection
(a), and except as provided in subsection (c), this chapter applies
to transactions bearing an appropriate relation to this state.

(c) If one of the following provisions of this chapter
specifies the applicable law, that provision governs and a contrary
agreement is effective only to the extent permitted by the law so
specified:

(1) Section 2-402;

(2) Sections 2A-105 and 2A-106;

(3) Section 4-102;

(4) Section 4A-507;

(5) Section 5-116;

(6) Section 8-110;

(7) Sections 9-301 through 9-307.
§46-1-302. Variation by agreement.

(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) or
elsewhere in this chapter, the effect of provisions of this chapter
may be varied by agreement.

(b) The obligations of good faith, diligence, reasonableness,
and care prescribed by this chapter may not be disclaimed by
agreement. The parties, by agreement, may determine the standards
by which the performance of those obligations is to be measured if
those standards are not manifestly unreasonable. Whenever this
chapter requires an action to be taken within a reasonable time, a
time that is not manifestly unreasonable may be fixed by agreement.

(c) The presence in certain provisions of this chapter of the
phrase "unless otherwise agreed", or words of similar import, does
not imply that the effect of other provisions may not be varied by
agreement under this section.
§46-1-303. Course of performance, course of dealing, and usage of
trade.

(a) A "course of performance" is a sequence of conduct between
the parties to a particular transaction that exists if:

(1) The agreement of the parties with respect to the
transaction involves repeated occasions for performance by a party;
and

(2) The other party, with knowledge of the nature of the
performance and opportunity for objection to it, accepts the
performance or acquiesces in it without objection.

(b) A "course of dealing" is a sequence of conduct concerning
previous transactions between the parties to a particular
transaction that is fairly to be regarded as establishing a common
basis of understanding for interpreting their expressions and other
conduct.

(c) A "usage of trade" is any practice or method of dealing
having such regularity of observance in a place, vocation, or trade
as to justify an expectation that it will be observed with respect
to the transaction in question. The existence and scope of such a
usage must be proved as facts. If it is established that such a
usage is embodied in a trade code or similar record, the
interpretation of the record is a question of law.

(d) A course of performance or course of dealing between the
parties or usage of trade in the vocation or trade in which they
are engaged or of which they are or should be aware is relevant in
ascertaining the meaning of the parties' agreement, may give particular meaning to specific terms of the agreement, and may
supplement or qualify the terms of the agreement. A usage of trade
applicable in the place in which part of the performance under the
agreement is to occur may be so utilized as to that part of the
performance.

(e) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (f), the
express terms of an agreement and any applicable course of
performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade must be construed
whenever reasonable as consistent with each other. If such a
construction is unreasonable:

(1) Express terms prevail over course of performance, course
of dealing, and usage of trade;

(2) Course of performance prevails over course of dealing and
usage of trade; and

(3) Course of dealing prevails over usage of trade.

(f) Subject to section 2-209, a course of performance is
relevant to show a waiver or modification of any term inconsistent
with the course of performance.

(g) Evidence of a relevant usage of trade offered by one party
is not admissible unless that party has given the other party
notice that the court finds sufficient to prevent unfair surprise
to the other party.
§46-1-304. Obligation of good faith.

Every contract or duty within this chapter imposes an
obligation of good faith in its performance and enforcement.
§46-1-305. Remedies to be liberally administered.

(a) The remedies provided by this chapter must be liberally
administered to the end that the aggrieved party may be put in as
good a position as if the other party had fully performed but
neither consequential or special damages nor penal damages may be
had except as specifically provided in this chapter or by other
rule of law.

(b) Any right or obligation declared by this chapter is
enforceable by action unless the provision declaring it specifies
a different and limited effect.
§46-1-306. Waiver or renunciation of claim or right after breach.

A claim or right arising out of an alleged breach may be
discharged, in whole or in part, without consideration by agreement
of the aggrieved party in an authenticated record.
§46-1-307. Prima facie evidence by third-party documents.

A document in due form purporting to be a bill of lading,
policy or certificate of insurance, official weigher's or
inspector's certificate, consular invoice, or any other document
authorized or required by the contract to be issued by a third
party is prima facie evidence of its own authenticity and
genuineness and of the facts stated in the document by the third
party.
§46-1-308. Performance or acceptance under reservation of rights.

(a) A party that with explicit reservation of rights performs
or promises performance or assents to performance in a manner
demanded or offered by the other party does not thereby prejudice the rights reserved. Such words as "without prejudice", "under
protest," or the like are sufficient.

(b) Subsection (a) does not apply to an accord and
satisfaction.
§46-1-309. Option to accelerate at will.

A term providing that one party or that party's successor in
interest may accelerate payment or performance or require
collateral or additional collateral "at will" or when the party
"deems itself insecure", or words of similar import, means that the
party has power to do so only if that party in good faith believes
that the prospect of payment or performance is impaired. The
burden of establishing lack of good faith is on the party against
which the power has been exercised.
§46-1-310. Subordinated obligations.

An obligation may be issued as subordinated to performance of
another obligation of the person obligated, or a creditor may
subordinate its right to performance of an obligation by agreement
with either the person obligated or another creditor of the person
obligated. Subordination does not create a security interest as
against either the common debtor or a subordinated creditor.
ARTICLE 2. SALES.
Part 1. Short Title, General Construction and Subject Matter.
§46-2-103. Definitions and index of definitions.

(1) In this article unless the context otherwise requires:

(a) "Buyer" means a person who buys or contracts to buy goods.

(b) [Reserved.]

(c) "Receipt" of goods means taking physical possession of
them.

(d) "Seller" means a person who sells or contracts to sell
goods.

(2) Other definitions applying to this article or to specified
parts thereof, and the sections in which they appear are:

"Acceptance". Section 2-606.

"Banker's credit". Section 2-325.

"Between merchants". Section 2-104.

"Cancellation". Section 2-106 (4).

"Commercial unit". Section 2-105.

"Confirmed credit". Section 2-325.

"Conforming to contract". Section 2-106.

"Contract for sale". Section 2-106.

"Cover". Section 2-712.

"Entrusting". Section 2-403.

"Financing agency". Section 2-104.

"Future goods". Section 2-105.

"Goods". Section 2-105.

"Identification". Section 2-501.

"Installment contract". Section 2-612.

"Letter of credit". Section 2-325.

"Lot". Section 2-105.

"Merchant". Section 2-104.

"Overseas". Section 2-323.

"Person in position of seller". Section 2-707.

"Present sale". Section 2-106.

"Sale". Section 2-106.

"Sale on approval". Section 2-326.

"Sale or return". Section 2-326.

"Termination". Section 2-106.

(3) "Control" as provided in Section 7-106 and the following
definitions in other articles of this chapter apply to this
article:

"Check." Section 3-104.

"Consignee." Section 7-102.

"Consignor." Section 7-102.

"Consumer goods." Section 9-102.

"Dishonor." Section 3-502.

"Draft." Section 3-104.

(4) In addition article one of this chapter contains general
definitions and principles of construction and interpretation
applicable throughout this article.
§46-2-104. Definitions: "merchant"; "between merchants";
"financing agency".

(1) "Merchant" means a person who deals in goods of the kind
or otherwise by his occupation holds himself out as having
knowledge or skill peculiar to the practices or goods involved in
the transaction or to whom such knowledge or skill may be
attributed by his or her employment of an agent or broker or other
intermediary who by his occupation holds himself out as having such knowledge or skill.

(2) "Financing agency" means a bank, finance company or other
person who in the ordinary course of business makes advances
against goods or documents of title or who by arrangement with
either the seller or the buyer intervenes in ordinary course to
make or collect payment due or claimed under the contract for sale,
as by purchasing or paying the seller's draft or making advances
against it or by merely taking it for collection whether or not
documents of title accompany or are associated with the draft.
"Financing agency" includes also a bank or other person who
similarly intervenes between persons who are in the position of
seller and buyer in respect to the goods (section 2-707).

(3) "Between merchants" means in any transaction with respect
to which both parties are chargeable with the knowledge or skill of
merchants.
§46-2-202. Final written expression: parol or extrinsic evidence.

Terms with respect to which the confirmatory memoranda of the
parties agree or which are otherwise set forth in a writing
intended by the parties as a final expression of their agreement
with respect to such terms as are included therein may not be
contradicted by evidence of any prior agreement or of a
contemporaneous oral agreement but may be explained or
supplemented:

(a) By course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of
trade (section 1-303); and

(b) By evidence of consistent additional terms unless the court finds the writing to have been intended also as a complete
and exclusive statement of the terms of the agreement.
§46-2-310. Open time for payment or running of credit; authority
to ship under reservation
.

Unless otherwise agreed:

(a) Payment is due at the time and place at which the buyer is
to receive the goods even though the place of shipment is the place
of delivery; and

(b) If the seller is authorized to send the goods he may ship
them under reservation, and may tender the documents of title, but
the buyer may inspect the goods after their arrival before payment
is due unless such inspection is inconsistent with the terms of the
contract (section 2-513); and

(c) If delivery is authorized and made by way of documents of
title otherwise than by subsection (b) then payment is due
regardless of where the goods are to be received: (i) at the time
and place at which the buyer is to receive delivery of the tangible
documents; or (ii) at the time the buyer is to receive delivery of
the electronic documents and at the seller's place of business or
if none, the seller's residence; and

(d) Where the seller is required or authorized to ship the
goods on credit the credit period runs from the time of shipment
but postdating the invoice or delaying its dispatch will
correspondingly delay the starting of the credit period.
§46-2-323. Form of bill of lading required in overseas shipment, "overseas".

(1) Where the contract contemplates overseas shipment and
contains a term C.I.F. or C. & F. or F.O.B. vessel, the seller
unless otherwise agreed must obtain a negotiable bill of lading
stating that the goods have been loaded on board or, in the case of
a term C.I.F. or C. & F., received for shipment.

(2) Where in a case within subsection (1) a tangible bill of
lading has been issued in a set of parts, unless otherwise agreed
if the documents are not to be sent from abroad the buyer may
demand tender of the full set; otherwise only one part of the bill
of lading need be tendered. Even if the agreement expressly
requires a full set:

(a) Due tender of a single part is acceptable within the
provisions of this article on cure of improper delivery (subsection
(1) of section 2-508); and

(b) Even though the full set is demanded, if the documents are
sent from abroad the person tendering an incomplete set may
nevertheless require payment upon furnishing an indemnity which the
buyer in good faith deems adequate.

(3) A shipment by water or by air or a contract contemplating
such shipment is "overseas" insofar as by usage of trade or
agreement it is subject to the commercial, financing or shipping
practices characteristic of international deep water commerce.
§46-2-401. Passing of title; reservation for security; limited
application of this section.

Each provision of this article with regard to the rights,
obligations and remedies of the seller, the buyer, purchasers or
other third parties applies irrespective of title to the goods
except where the provision refers to such title. Insofar as
situations are not covered by the other provisions of this article
and matters concerning title become material the following rules
apply:

(1) Title to goods cannot pass under a contract for sale prior
to their identification to the contract (section 2-501), and unless
otherwise explicitly agreed the buyer acquires by their
identification a special property as limited by this chapter. Any
retention or reservation by the seller of the title (property) in
goods shipped or delivered to the buyer is limited in effect to a
reservation of a security interest. Subject to these provisions
and to the provisions of the article on secured transactions
(article 9), title to goods passes from the seller to the buyer in
any manner and on any conditions explicitly agreed on by the
parties.

(2) Unless otherwise explicitly agreed title passes to the
buyer at the time and place at which the seller completes his
performance with reference to the physical delivery of the goods,
despite any reservation of a security interest and even though a
document of title is to be delivered at a different time or place;
and in particular and despite any reservation of a security
interest by the bill of lading.

(a) If the contract requires or authorizes the seller to send the goods to the buyer but does not require him to deliver them at
destination, title passes to the buyer at the time and place of
shipment; but

(b) If the contract requires delivery at destination, title
passes on tender there.

(3) Unless otherwise explicitly agreed where delivery is to be
made without moving the goods;

(a) If the seller is to deliver a tangible document of title,
title passes at the time when and the place where he delivers such
documents and if the seller is to deliver an electronic document of
title, title passes when the seller delivers the document; or

(b) If the goods are at the time of contracting already
identified and no documents of title are to be delivered, title
passes at the time and place of contracting.

(4) A rejection or other refusal by the buyer to receive or
retain the goods, whether or not justified, or a justified
revocation of acceptance retests title to the goods in the seller.
Such recessing occurs by operation of law and is not a "sale".
§46-2-503. Manner of seller's tender of delivery.

(1) Tender of delivery requires that the seller put and hold
conforming goods at the buyer's disposition and give the buyer any
notification reasonably necessary to enable him to take delivery.
The manner, time and place for tender are determined by the
agreement and this article, and in particular.

(a) Tender must be at a reasonable hour, and if it is of goods
they must be kept available for the period reasonably necessary to enable the buyer to take possession; but

(b) Unless otherwise agreed the buyer must furnish facilities
reasonably suited to the receipt of the goods.

(2) Where the case is within the next section respecting
shipment tender requires that the seller comply with its
provisions.

(3) Where the seller is required to deliver at a particular
destination tender requires that he comply with subsection (1) and
also in any appropriate case tender documents as described in
subsections (4) and (5) of this section.

(4) Where goods are in the possession of a bailee and are to
be delivered without being moved.

(a) Tender requires that the seller either tender a negotiable
document of title covering such goods or procure acknowledgment by
the bailee of the buyer's right to possession of the goods; but

(b) Tender to the buyer of a nonnegotiable document of title
or of a record directing the bailee to deliver is sufficient tender
unless the buyer seasonably objects, and except as otherwise
provided in Article 9 receipt by the bailee of notification of the
buyer's rights fixes those rights as against the bailee and all
third persons; but risk of loss of the goods and of any failure by
the bailee to honor the nonnegotiable document of title or to obey
the direction remains on the seller until the buyer has had a
reasonable time to present the document or direction, and a refusal
by the bailee to honor the document or obey the direction defeats
the tender.

(5) Where the contract requires the seller to deliver
documents.

(a) He must tender all such documents in correct form, except
as provided in this article with respect to bills of lading in a
set (subsection (2) of section 2-323); and

(b) Tender through customary banking channels is sufficient
and dishonor of a draft accompanying or associated with the
documents constitutes nonacceptance or rejection.
§46-2-505. Seller's shipment under reservation.

(1) Where the seller has identified goods to the contract by
or before shipment:

(a) His procurement of a negotiable bill of lading to his own
order or otherwise reserves in him a security interest in the
goods. His procurement of the bill to the order of a financing
agency or of the buyer indicates in addition only the seller's
expectation of transferring that interest to the person named.

(b) A nonnegotiable bill of lading to himself or his nominee
reserves possession of the goods as security but except in a case
of conditional delivery (subsection (2) of section 2-507) a
nonnegotiable bill of lading naming the buyer as consignee reserves
no security interest even though the seller retains possession or
control of the bill of lading.

(2) When shipment by the seller with reservation of a security
interest is in violation of the contract for sale it constitutes an
improper contract for transportation within the preceding section
but impairs neither the rights given to the buyer by shipment and identification of the goods to the contract nor the seller's powers
as a holder of a negotiable document of title.
§46-2-506. Rights of financing agency.

(1) A financing agency by paying or purchasing for value a
draft which relates to a shipment of goods acquires to the extent
of the payment or purchase and in addition to its own rights under
the draft and any document of title securing it any rights of the
shipper in the goods including the right to stop delivery and the
shipper's right to have the draft honored by the buyer.

(2) The right to reimbursement of a financing agency which has
in good faith honored or purchased the draft under commitment to or
authority from the buyer is not impaired by subsequent discovery of
defects with reference to any relevant document which was
apparently regular.
§46-2-509. Risk of loss in the absence of breach.

(1) Where the contract requires or authorizes the seller to
ship the goods by carrier:

(a) If it does not require him to deliver them at a particular
destination, the risk of loss passes to the buyer when the goods
are duly delivered to the carrier even though the shipment is under
reservation (section 2-505); but

(b) If it does require him to deliver them at a particular
destination and the goods are there duly tendered while in the
possession of the carrier, the risk of loss passes to the buyer
when the goods are there duly so tendered as to enable the buyer to
take delivery.

(2) Where the goods are held by a bailee to be delivered
without being moved, the risk of loss passes to the buyer.

(a) On his receipt of possession or control of a negotiable
document of title covering the goods; or

(b) On acknowledgment by the bailee of the buyer's right to
possession of the goods; or

(c) After his receipt of possession or control a nonnegotiable
document of title or other direction to deliver in a record, as
provided in subsection (4) (b) of section 2-503.

(3) In any case not within subsection (1) or (2), the risk of
loss passes to the buyer on his receipt of the goods if the seller
is a merchant; otherwise the risk passes to the buyer on tender of
delivery.

(4) The provisions of this section are subject to contrary
agreement of the parties and to the provisions of this article on
sale on approval (section 2-327) and on effect of breach on risk of
loss (section 2-510).
§46-2-605. Waiver of buyer's objections by failure to
particularize.

(1) The buyer's failure to state in connection with rejection
a particular defect which is ascertainable by reasonable inspection
precludes him from relying on the unstated defect to justify
rejection or to establish breach:

(a) Where the seller could have cured it if stated seasonably;
or

(b) Between merchants when the seller has after rejection made a request in writing for a full and final written statement of all
defects on which the buyer proposes to rely.

(2) Payment against documents made without reservation of
rights precludes recovery of the payment for defects apparent in
the documents.
§46-2-705. Seller's stoppage of delivery in transit or otherwise.

(1) The seller may stop delivery of goods in the possession of
a carrier or other bailee when he discovers the buyer to be
insolvent (section 2-702) and may stop delivery of carload,
truckload, planeload or larger shipments of express or freight when
the buyer repudiates or fails to make a payment due before delivery
or if for any other reason the seller has a right to withhold or
reclaim the goods.

(2) As against such buyer the seller may stop delivery until:

(a) Receipt of the goods by the buyer; or

(b) Acknowledgment to the buyer by any bailee of the goods
except a carrier that the bailee holds the goods for the buyer; or

(c) Such acknowledgment to the buyer by a carrier by
reshipment or as a warehouse; or

(d) Negotiation to the buyer of any negotiable document of
title covering the goods.

(3)(a) To stop delivery the seller must so notify as to enable
the bailee by reasonable diligence to prevent delivery of the
goods.

(b) After such notification the bailee must hold and deliver
the goods according to the directions of the seller but the seller is liable to the bailee for any ensuing charges or damages.

(c) If a negotiable document of title has been issued for
goods the bailee is not obliged to obey a notification to stop
until surrender of possession or control of the document.

(d) A carrier who has issued a nonnegotiable bill of lading is
not obligated to obey a notification to stop received from a person
other than the consignor.
ARTICLE 2A. LEASES.
Part 1. General Provisions.
§46-2A-103. Definitions and index of definitions.

(1) In this article unless the context otherwise requires:

(a) "Buyer in ordinary course of business" means a person who
in good faith and without knowledge that the sale to him or her is
in violation of the ownership rights or security interest or
leasehold interest of a third party in the goods, buys in ordinary
course from a person in the business of selling goods of that kind
but does not include a pawnbroker. "Buying" may be for cash or by
exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured credit and
includes acquiring goods or documents of title under a preexisting
contract for sale but does not include a transfer in bulk or as
security for or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt.

(b) "Cancellation" occurs when either party puts an end to the
lease contract for default by the other party.

(c) "Commercial unit" means such a unit of goods as by
commercial usage is a single whole for purposes of lease and
division of which materially impairs its character or value on the market or in use. A commercial unit may be a single article, as a
machine, or a set of articles, as a suite of furniture or a line of
machinery, or a quantity, as a gross or carload, or any other unit
treated in use or in the relevant market as a single whole.

(d) "Conforming" goods or performance under a lease contract
means goods or performance that are in accordance with the
obligations under the lease contract.

(e) "Consumer lease" shall have the same meaning as that
ascribed to it in section one hundred two, article one, chapter
forty-six-a of this code.

(f) "Fault" means wrongful act, omission, breach or default.

(g) "Finance lease" means a lease with respect to which:

(i) The lessor does not select, manufacture or supply the
goods;

(ii) The lessor acquires the goods or the right to possession
and use of the goods in connection with the lease; and

(iii) One of the following occurs:

(A) The lessee receives a copy of the contract by which the
lessor acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the
goods before signing the lease contract;

(B) The lessee's approval of the contract by which the lessor
acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods
is a condition to effectiveness of the lease contract;

(C) The lessee, before signing the lease contract, receives an
accurate and complete statement designating the promises and
warranties, and any disclaimers of warranties, limitations or modifications of remedies, or liquidated damages, including those
of a third party, such as the manufacturer of the goods, provided
to the lessor by the person supplying the goods in connection with
or as part of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods
or the right to possession and use of the goods; or

(D) If the lease is not a consumer lease, the lessor, before
the lessee signs the lease contract, informs the lessee in writing:
(a) Of the identity of the person supplying the goods to the
lessor, unless the lessee has selected that person and directed the
lessor to acquire the goods or the right to possession and use of
the goods from that person; (b) that the lessee is entitled under
this article to the promises and warranties, including those of any
third party, provided to the lessor by the person supplying the
goods in connection with or as part of the contract by which the
lessor acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the
goods; and (c) that the lessee may communicate with the person
supplying the goods to the lessor and receive an accurate and
complete statement of those promises and warranties, including any
disclaimers and limitations of them or of remedies.

(h) "Goods" means all things that are movable at the time of
identification to the lease contract, or are fixtures (section
2A-309), but the term does not include money, documents,
instruments, accounts, chattel paper, general intangibles or
minerals or the like, including oil and gas, before extraction.
The term also includes the unborn young of animals.

(i) "Installment lease contract" means a lease contract that authorizes or requires the delivery of goods in separate lots to be
separately accepted, even though the lease contract contains a
clause "each delivery is a separate lease" or its equivalent.

(j) "Lease" means a transfer of the right to possession and
use of goods for a term in return for consideration, but a sale,
including a sale on approval or a sale or return, or retention or
creation of a security interest is not a lease. Unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublease.

(k) "Lease agreement" means the bargain, with respect to the
lease, of the lessor and the lessee in fact as found in their
language or by implication from other circumstances including
course of dealing or usage of trade or course of performance as
provided in this article. Unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise, the term includes a sublease agreement.

(l) "Lease contract" means the total legal obligation that
results from the lease agreement as affected by this article and
any other applicable rules of law. Unless the context clearly
indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublease contract.

(m) "Leasehold interest" means the interest of the lessor or
the lessee under a lease contract.

(n) "Lessee" means a person who acquires the right to
possession and use of goods under a lease. Unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublessee.

(o) "Lessee in ordinary course of business" means a person who
in good faith and without knowledge that the lease to him or her is
in violation of the ownership rights or security interest or leasehold interest of a third party in the goods leases in ordinary
course from a person in the business of selling or leasing goods of
that kind but does not include a pawnbroker. "Leasing" may be for
cash or by exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured
credit and includes acquiring goods or documents of title under a
preexisting lease contract but does not include a transfer in bulk
or as security for or in total or partial satisfaction of a money
debt.

(p) "Lessor" means a person who transfers the right to
possession and use of goods under a lease. Unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise, the term includes a sublessor.

(q) "Lessor's residual interest" means the lessor's interest
in the goods after expiration, termination or cancellation of the
lease contract.

(r) "Lien" means a charge against or interest in goods to
secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation, but the
term does not include a security interest.

(s) "Lot" means a parcel or a single article that is the
subject matter of a separate lease or delivery, whether or not it
is sufficient to perform the lease contract.

(t) "Merchant lessee" means a lessee that is a merchant with
respect to goods of the kind subject to the lease.

(u) "Present value" means the amount as of a date certain of
one or more sums payable in the future, discounted to the date
certain. The discount is determined by the interest rate specified
by the parties if the rate was not manifestly unreasonable at the time the transaction was entered into; otherwise, the discount is
determined by a commercially reasonable rate that takes into
account the facts and circumstances of each case at the time the
transaction was entered into.

(v) "Purchase" includes taking by sale, lease, mortgage,
security interest, pledge, gift or any other voluntary transaction
creating an interest in goods.

(w) "Sublease" means a lease of goods the right to possession
and use of which was acquired by the lessor as a lessee under an
existing lease.

(x) "Supplier" means a person from whom a lessor buys or
leases goods to be leased under a finance lease.

(y) "Supply contract" means a contract under which a lessor
buys or leases goods to be leased.

(z) "Termination" occurs when either party pursuant to a power
created by agreement or law puts an end to the lease contract
otherwise than for default.

(2) Other definitions applying to this article and the
sections in which they appear are:

"Accessions". Section 2A-310(1).

"Construction mortgage". Section 2A-309(1)(d).

"Encumbrance". Section 2A-309(1)(e).

"Fixtures". Section 2A-309(1)(a).

"Fixture filing". Section 2A-309(1)(b).

"Purchase money lease". Section 2A-309(1)(c).

(3) The following definitions in other articles apply to this article:

"Account". Section 9-102(a)(2).

"Between merchants". Section 2-104(3).

"Buyer". Section 2-103(1)(a).

"Chattel paper". Section 9-102(a)(11).

"Consumer goods". Section 9-102(a)(23).

"Document". Section 9-102(a)(30).

"Entrusting". Section 2-403(3).

"General intangible". Section 9-102(a)(42).

"Instrument". Section 9-102(a)(47).

"Merchant". Section 2-104(1).

"Mortgage". Section 9-102(a)(55).

"Pursuant to commitment". Section 9-102(a)(68).

"Receipt". Section 2-103(1)(c).

"Sale". Section 2-106(1).

"Sale on approval". Section 2-326.

"Sale or return". Section 2-326.

"Seller". Section 2-103(1)(d).

(4) In addition, article one contains general definitions and
principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout
this article.
PART 5. DEFAULT.
A. IN GENERAL.
§46-2A-501. Default; procedure.

(1) Whether the lessor or the lessee is in default under a
lease contract is determined by the lease agreement and this article.

(2) If the lessor or the lessee is in default under the lease
contract, the party seeking enforcement has rights and remedies as
provided in this article and, except as limited by this article, as
provided in the lease agreement.

(3) If the lessor or the lessee is in default under the lease
contract, the party seeking enforcement may reduce the party's
claim to judgment, or otherwise enforce the lease contract by self-
help or any available judicial procedure or nonjudicial procedure,
including administrative proceeding, arbitration, or the like, in
accordance with this article.

(4) Except as otherwise provided in section 1-305(a) or this
article or the lease agreement, the rights and remedies referred to
in subsections (2) and (3) are cumulative.

(5) If the lease agreement covers both real property and
goods, the party seeking enforcement may proceed under this part as
to the goods, or under other applicable law as to both the real
property and the goods in accordance with that party's rights and
remedies in respect of the real property, in which case this part
does not apply.
§46-2A-514. Waiver of lessee's objections.

(1) In rejecting goods, a lessee's failure to state a
particular defect that is ascertainable by reasonable inspection
precludes the lessee from relying on the defect to justify
rejection or to establish default:

(a) If, stated seasonably, the lessor or the supplier could have cured it (section 2A-513); or

(b) Between merchants if the lessor or the supplier after
rejection has made a request in writing for a full and final
written statement of all defects on which the lessee proposes to
rely.

(2) A lessee's failure to reserve rights when paying rent or
other consideration against documents precludes recovery of the
payment for defects apparent in the documents.
§46-2A-518. Cover; substitute goods.

(1) After a default by a lessor under the lease contract of
the type described in section 2A-508(1), or, if agreed, after other
default by the lessor, the lessee may cover by making any purchase
or lease of or contract to purchase or lease goods in substitution
for those due from the lessor.

(2) Except as otherwise provided with respect to damages
liquidated in the lease agreement (section 2A-504) or otherwise
determined pursuant to agreement of the parties (sections 1-302 and
2A-503), if a lessee's cover is by a lease agreement substantially
similar to the original lease agreement and the new lease agreement
is made in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner, the
lessee may recover from the lessor as damages: (i) The present
value, as of the date of the commencement of the term of the new
lease agreement, of the rent under the new lease agreement
applicable to that period of the new lease term which is comparable
to the then remaining term of the original lease agreement minus
the present value as of the same date of the total rent for the then remaining lease term of the original lease agreement; and (ii)
any incidental or consequential damages, less expenses saved in
consequence of the lessor's default.

(3) If a lessee's cover is by lease agreement that for any
reason does not qualify for treatment under subsection (2), or is
by purchase or otherwise, the lessee may recover from the lessor as
if the lessee had elected not to cover and section 2A-519 governs.
§46-2A-519. Lessee's damages for non-delivery, repudiation,
default, and breach of warranty in regard to accepted goods.

(1) Except as otherwise provided with respect to damages
liquidated in the lease agreement (section 2A-504) or otherwise
determined pursuant to agreement of the parties (sections 1-302 and
2A-503), if a lessee elects not to cover or a lessee elects to
cover and the cover is by lease agreement that for any reason does
not qualify for treatment under section 2A-518(2), or is by
purchase or otherwise, the measure of damages for non-delivery or
repudiation by the lessor or for rejection or revocation of
acceptance by the lessee is the present value, as of the date of
the default, of the then market rent minus the present value as of
the same date of the original rent, computed for the remaining
lease term of the original lease agreement, together with
incidental and consequential damages, less expenses saved in
consequence of the lessor's default.

(2) Market rent is to be determined as of the place for tender
or, in cases of rejection after arrival or revocation of
acceptance, as of the place of arrival.

(3) Except as otherwise agreed, if the lessee has accepted
goods and given notification (section 2A-516(3)), the measure of
damages for nonconforming tender or delivery or other default by a
lessor is the loss resulting in the ordinary course of events from
the lessor's default as determined in any manner that is reasonable
together with incidental and consequential damages, less expenses
saved in consequence of the lessor's default.

(4) Except as otherwise agreed, the measure of damages for
breach of warranty is the present value at the time and place of
acceptance of the difference between the value of the use of the
goods accepted and the value if they had been as warranted for the
lease term, unless special circumstances show proximate damages of
a different amount, together with incidental and consequential
damages, less expenses saved in consequence of the lessor's default
or breach of warranty.
§46-2A-526. Lessor's stoppage of delivery in transit or otherwise.

(1) A lessor may stop delivery of goods in the possession of
a carrier or other bailee if the lessor discovers the lessee to be
insolvent and may stop delivery of carload, truckload, planeload or
larger shipments of express or freight if the lessee repudiates or
fails to make a payment due before delivery, whether for rent,
security or otherwise under the lease contract, or for any other
reason the lessor has a right to withhold or take possession of the
goods.

(2) In pursuing its remedies under subsection (1), the lessor
may stop delivery until:

(a) Receipt of the goods by the lessee;

(b) Acknowledgment to the lessee by any bailee of the goods,
except a carrier, that the bailee holds the goods for the lessee;
or

(c) Such an acknowledgment to the lessee by a carrier via
reshipment or as a warehouse.

(3)(a) To stop delivery, a lessor shall so notify as to enable
the bailee by reasonable diligence to prevent delivery of the
goods.

(b) After notification, the bailee shall hold and deliver the
goods according to the directions of the lessor, but the lessor is
liable to the bailee for any ensuing charges or damages.

(c) A carrier who has issued a nonnegotiable bill of lading is
not obliged to obey a notification to stop received from a person
other than the consignor.
§46-2A-527. Lessor's rights to dispose of goods.

(1) After a default by a lessee under the lease contract of
the type described in section 2A-523(1) or 2A-523(3)(a) or after
the lessor refuses to deliver or takes possession of goods (section
2A-525 or 2A-526), or, if agreed, after other default by a lessee,
the lessor may dispose of the goods concerned or the undelivered
balance thereof by lease, sale or otherwise.

(2) Except as otherwise provided with respect to damages
liquidated in the lease agreement (section 2A-504) or otherwise
determined pursuant to agreement of the parties (sections 1-302 and
2A-503), if the disposition is by lease agreement substantially similar to the original lease agreement and the new lease agreement
is made in good faith and in a commercially reasonable manner, the
lessor may recover from the lessee as damages: (i) Accrued and
unpaid rent as of the date of the commencement of the term of the
new lease agreement; (ii) the present value, as of the same date,
of the total rent for the then remaining lease term of the original
lease agreement minus the present value, as of the same date, of
the rent under the new lease agreement applicable to that period of
the new lease term which is comparable to the then remaining term
of the original lease agreement; and (iii) any incidental damages
allowed under section 2A-530, less expenses saved in consequence of
the lessee's default.

(3) If the lessor's disposition is by lease agreement that for
any reason does not qualify for treatment under subsection (2), or
is by sale or otherwise, the lessor may recover from the lessee as
if the lessor had elected not to dispose of the goods and section
2A-528 governs.

(4) A subsequent buyer or lessee who buys or leases from the
lessor in good faith for value as a result of a disposition under
this section takes the goods free of the original lease contract
and any rights of the original lessee even though the lessor fails
to comply with one or more of the requirements of this article.

(5) The lessor is not accountable to the lessee for any profit
made on any disposition. A lessee who has rightfully rejected or
justifiably revoked acceptance shall account to the lessor for any
excess over the amount of the lessee's security interest (section 2A-508(5)).
§46-2A-528. Lessor's damages for non-acceptance, failure to pay,
repudiation, or other default.

(1) Except as otherwise provided with respect to damages
liquidated in the lease agreement (section 2A-504) or otherwise
determined pursuant to agreement of the parties (sections 1-302 and
2A-503), if a lessor elects to retain the goods or a lessor elects
to dispose of the goods and the disposition is by lease agreement
that for any reason does not qualify for treatment under section
2A-527(2), or is by sale or otherwise, the lessor may recover from
the lessee as damages for a default of the type described in
section 2A-523(1) or 2A-523(3)(a), or, if agreed, for other default
of the lessee: (i) Accrued and unpaid rent as of the date of
default if the lessee has never taken possession of the goods, or,
if the lessee has taken possession of the goods, as of the date the
lessor repossesses the goods or an earlier date on which the lessee
makes a tender of the goods to the lessor; (ii) the present value
as of the date determined under clause (I) of the total rent for
the then remaining lease term of the original lease agreement minus
the present value as of the same date of the market rent at the
place where the goods are located computed for the same lease term;
and (iii) any incidental damages allowed under section 2A-530, less
expenses saved in consequence of the lessee's default.

(2) If the measure of damages provided in subsection (1) of
this section is inadequate to put a lessor in as good a position as
performance would have, the measure of damages is the present value of the profit, including reasonable overhead, the lessor would have
made from full performance by the lessee, together with any
incidental damages allowed under section 2A-530, due allowance for
costs reasonably incurred and due credit for payments or proceeds
of disposition.
ARTICLE 3. NEGOTIABLE INSTRUMENTS.
§46-3-103. Definitions.

(a) In this article:

(1) "Acceptor" means a drawee who has accepted a draft.

(2) "Drawee" means a person ordered in a draft to make
payment.

(3) "Drawer" means a person who signs or is identified in a
draft as a person ordering payment.

(4) [reserved]

(5) "Maker" means a person who signs or is identified in a
note as a person undertaking to pay.

(6) "Order" means a written instruction to pay money signed by
the person giving the instruction. The instruction may be
addressed to any person, including the person giving the
instruction, or to one or more persons jointly or in the
alternative but not in succession. An authorization to pay is not
an order unless the person authorized to pay is also instructed to
pay.

(7) "Ordinary care" in the case of a person engaged in
business means observance of reasonable commercial standards,
prevailing in the area in which the person is located, with respect to the business in which the person is engaged. In the case of a
bank that takes an instrument for processing for collection or
payment by automated means, reasonable commercial standards do not
require the bank to examine the instrument if the failure to
examine does not violate the bank's prescribed procedures and the
bank's procedures do not vary unreasonably from general banking
usage not disapproved by this article or article four.

(8) "Party" means a party to an instrument.

(9) "Promise" means a written undertaking to pay money signed
by the person undertaking to pay. An acknowledgment of an
obligation by the obligor is not a promise unless the obligor also
undertakes to pay the obligation.

(10) "Prove" with respect to a fact means to meet the burden
of establishing the fact (section 1-201(b)(8)).

(11) "Remitter" means a person who purchases an instrument
from its issuer if the instrument is payable to an identified
person other than the purchaser.

(b) Other definitions applying to this article and the
sections in which they appear are:



"Acceptance" 







Section 3-409.



"Accommodated party"




Section 3-419.



"Accommodation party" 




Section 3-419.



"Alteration" 







Section 3-407.



"Anomalous indorsement"



Section 3-205.



"Blank indorsement"





Section 3-205.



"Cashier's check"






Section 3-104.



"Certificate of deposit" Section 3-104.



"Certified check"






Section 3-409.



"Check" 









Section 3-104.



"Consideration"






Section 3-303.



"Draft" 









Section 3-104.



"Holder in due course" 



Section 3-302.



"Incomplete instrument"



Section 3-115.



"Indorsement"







Section 3-204.



"Indorser"








Section 3-204.



"Instrument"








Section 3-104.



"Issue"










Section 3-105.



"Issuer"









Section 3-105.



"Negotiable instrument"



Section 3-104.



"Negotiation" 







Section 3-201.



"Note" 










Section 3-104.



"Payable at a definite time"

Section 3-108.



"Payable on demand"





Section 3-108.



"Payable to bearer"





Section 3-109.



"Payable to order"





Section 3-109.



"Payment"









Section 3-602.



"Person entitled to enforce"

Section 3-301.



"Presentment" 







Section 3-501.



"Reacquisition"






Section 3-207.


"Special indorsement" 




Section 3-205.



"Teller's check"






Section 3-104.



"Transfer of instrument"



Section 3-203.



"Traveler's check"





Section 3-104.



"Value"










Section 3-303.



(c) The following definitions in other articles apply to this
article:



"Bank" 










Section 4-105.



"Banking day"







Section 4-104.



"Clearing house" 






Section 4-104.



"Collecting bank" 





Section 4-105.



"Depositary bank" 





Section 4-105.



"Documentary draft" 




Section 4-104.



"Intermediary bank" 




Section 4-105.



"Item" 










Section 4-104.



"Payor bank" 







Section 4-105.



"Suspends payments"





Section 4-104.



(d) In addition article one contains general definitions and
principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout
this article.
ARTICLE 4. BANK DEPOSITS AND COLLECTIONS.
§46-4-104. Definitions and index of definitions.



(a) In this article unless the context otherwise requires:



(1) "Account" means any deposit or credit account with a bank,
including demand, time, savings, passbook, share draft, or like
account, other than an account evidenced by a certificate of
deposit;



(2) "Afternoon" means the period of a day between noon and
midnight;



(3) "Banking day" means the part of a day on which a bank is
open to the public for carrying on substantially all of its banking
functions;



(4) "Clearing house" means an association of banks or other
payors regularly clearing items;



(5) "Customer" means a person having an account with a bank or
for whom a bank has agreed to collect items, including a bank that
maintains an account at another bank;



(6) "Documentary draft" means a draft to be presented for
acceptance or payment if specified documents, certificated
securities (section 8-102) or instructions for uncertificated
securities (section 8-102), or other certificates, statements or
the like are to be received by the drawee or other payor before
acceptance or payment of the draft;



(7) "Draft" means a draft as defined in section 3-104 or an
item, other than an instrument, that is an order;



(8) "Drawee" means a person ordered in a draft to make
payment;



(9) "Item" means an instrument or a promise or order to pay
money handled by a bank for collection or payment. The term does
not include a payment order governed by article four-a or a credit
or debit card slip;



(10) "Midnight deadline" with respect to a bank is midnight on
its next banking day following the banking day on which it receives
the relevant item or notice or from which the time for taking
action commences to run, whichever is later;



(11) "Settle" means to pay in cash, by clearing-house
settlement, in a charge or credit or by remittance, or otherwise as
agreed. A settlement may be either provisional or final;



(12) "Suspends payments" with respect to a bank means that it
has been closed by order of the supervisory authorities, that a
public officer has been appointed to take it over or that it ceases
or refuses to make payments in the ordinary course of business.



(b) Other definitions applying to this article and the
sections in which they appear are:





"Agreement for electronic presentment"
Section 4-110.





"Bank"
Section 4-105.





"Collecting bank"








Section 4-105.





"Depositary bank"








Section 4-105.





"Intermediary bank"







Section 4-105.





"Payor bank"










Section 4-105.





"Presenting bank"








Section 4-105.





"Presentment notice"






Section 4-110.





(c) "Control" as provided in section 7-106 and the following
definitions in other articles apply to this article:





"Acceptance"










Section 3-409.





"Alteration"










Section 3-407.





"Cashier's check"








Section 3-104.





"Certificate of deposit"





Section 3-104.





"Certified check" 







Section 3-409.





"Check"
Section 3-104.





"Draft"
Section 3-104.











"Holder in due course"






Section 3-302.





"Instrument"










Section 3-104.





"Notice of dishonor"






Section 3-503.





"Order"
Section 3-103.





"Ordinary care"








Section 3-103.





"Person entitled to enforce"



Section 3-301.





"Presentment"









Section 3-501.





"Promise"
Section 3-103.





"Prove"
Section 3-103.





"Teller's check"








Section 3-104.





"Unauthorized signature"





Section 3-403.





(d) In addition, article one contains general definitions and
principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout
this article.
§46-4-210. Security interest of collecting bank in items,
accompanying documents and proceeds.





(a) A collecting bank has a security interest in an item and
any accompanying documents or the proceeds of either:





(1) In case of an item deposited in an account, to the extent
to which credit given for the item has been withdrawn or applied;





(2) In case of an item for which it has given credit available
for withdrawal as of right, to the extent of the credit given,
whether or not the credit is drawn upon or there is a right of
charge-back; or





(3) If it makes an advance on or against the item.





(b) If credit given for several items received at one time or
pursuant to a single agreement is withdrawn or applied in part, the
security interest remains upon all the items, any accompanying
documents or the proceeds of either. For the purpose of this
section, credits first given are first withdrawn.





(c) Receipt by a collecting bank of a final settlement for an
item is a realization on its security interest in the item,
accompanying documents and proceeds. So long as the bank does not
receive final settlement for the item or give up possession of the
item or possession or control of the accompanying documents for
purposes other than collection, the security interest continues to
that extent and is subject to article nine but:





(1) No security agreement is necessary to make the security
interest enforceable (section 9-203(b)(3)(A));





(2) No filing is required to perfect the security interest;
and





(3) The security interest has priority over conflicting
perfected security interests in the item, accompanying documents or
proceeds.
ARTICLE 4A. FUND TRANSFERS.
§46-4A-105. Other definitions.





(a) In this article:





(1) "Authorized account" means a deposit account of a customer
in a bank designated by the customer as a source of payment of
payment orders issued by the customer to the bank. If a customer
does not so designate an account, any account of the customer is an authorized account if payment of a payment order from that account
is not inconsistent with a restriction on the use of that account.





(2) "Banker" means a person engaged in the business of banking
and includes a savings bank, savings and loan association, credit
union, and trust company. A branch or separate office of a bank is
a separate bank for purposes of this article.





(3) "Customer" means a person, including a bank, having an
account with a bank or from whom a bank has agreed to receive
payment orders.





(4) "Funds-transfer business day" of a receiving bank means
the part of a day during which the receiving bank is open for the
receipt, processing and transmittal of payment orders and
cancellations and amendments of payment orders.





(5) "Funds-transfer system" means a wire transfer network,
automated clearing house or other communication system of a
clearing house or other association of banks through which a
payment order by a bank may be transmitted to the bank to which the
order is addressed.





(6) [reserved]





(7) "Prove" with respect to a fact means to meet the burden of
establishing the fact (section 1-201(b)(8)).





(b) Other definitions applying to this article and the
sections in which they appear are:





(1) "Acceptance", §46-4A-209.





(2) "Beneficiary", §46-4A-103.





(3) "Beneficiary's bank", §46-4A-103.





(4) "Executed", §46-4A-301.





(5) "Execution date", §46-4A-301.





(6) "Funds transfer", §46-4A-104.





(7) "Funds-transfer system rule", §46-4A-501.





(8) "Intermediary bank", §46-4A-104.





(9) "Originator", §46-4A-104.





(10) "Originator's bank", §46-4A-104.





(11) "Payment by beneficiary's bank to beneficiary", §46-4A-
405.





(12) "Payment by originator to beneficiary", §46-4A-406.





(13) "Payment by sender to receiving bank", §46-4A-403.





(14) "Payment date", §46-4A-401.





(15) "Payment order", §46-4A-103.





(16) "Receiving bank", §46-4A-103.





(17) "Security procedure", §46-4A-201.





(18) "Sender", §46-4A-103.





(c) The following definitions in article four of this chapter
apply to this article:





(1) "Clearing house", §46-4-104.





(2) "Item", §46-4-104.





(3) "Suspends payments", §46-4-104.





(d) In addition, article one of this chapter contains general
definitions and principles of construction and interpretation
applicable throughout this article.
§46-4A-106. Time payment order is received.





(a) The time of receipt of a payment order or communication cancelling or amending a payment order is determined by the rules
applicable to receipt of a notice stated in section 1-202. A
receiving bank may fix a cut-off time or times on a funds-transfer
business day for the receipt and processing of payment orders and
communications cancelling or amending payment orders. Different
cut-off times may apply to payment orders, cancellations, or
amendments, or to different categories of payment orders,
cancellations, or amendments. A cut-off time may apply to senders
generally or different cut-off times may apply to different senders
or categories of payment orders. If a payment order or
communication cancelling or amending a payment order is received
after the close of a funds-transfer business day or after the
appropriate cut-off time on a funds-transfer business day, the
receiving bank may treat the payment order or communication as
received at the opening of the next funds-transfer business day.





(b) If this article refers to an execution date or payment
date or states a day on which a receiving bank is required to take
action, and the date or day does not fall on a funds-transfer
business day, the next day that is a funds-transfer business day is
treated as the date or day stated, unless the contrary is stated in
this article.
§46-4A-204. Refund of payment and duty of customer to report with
respect to unauthorized payment order.





(a) If a receiving bank accepts a payment order issued in the
name of its customer as sender which is: (1) Not authorized and not
effective as the order of the customer under §46-4A-202; or (2) not enforceable, in whole or in part, against the customer under §46-
4A-203, the bank shall refund any payment of the payment order
received from the customer to the extent the bank is not entitled
to enforce payment, and shall pay interest on the refundable amount
calculated from the date the bank received payment to the date of
the refund. However, the customer is not entitled to interest from
the bank on the amount to be refunded if the customer fails to
exercise ordinary care to determine that the order was not
authorized by the customer and to notify the bank of the relevant
facts within a reasonable time not exceeding ninety days after the
date the customer received notification from the bank that the
order was accepted or that the customer's account was debited with
respect to the order. The bank is not entitled to any recovery
from the customer on account of a failure by the customer to give
notification as stated in this section.





(b) Reasonable time under subsection (a) of this section may
be fixed by agreement as stated in section 1-302(b), but the
obligation of a receiving bank to refund payment as stated in
subsection (a) of this section may not otherwise be varied by
agreement.
ARTICLE 5. LETTERS OF CREDIT.
§46-5-103. Scope.





(a) This article applies to letters of credit and to certain
rights and obligations arising out of transactions involving
letters of credit.





(b) The statement of a rule in this article does not by itself require, imply, or negate application of the same or a different
rule to a situation not provided for, or to a person not specified,
in this article.





(c) With the exception of this subsection, subsections (a) and
(d), sections 5-102(a)(9) and (10), 5-106(d), and 5-114(d), and
except to the extent prohibited in sections 1-302 and 5-117(d), the
effect of this article may be varied by agreement or by a provision
stated or incorporated by reference in an undertaking. A term in
an agreement or undertaking generally excusing liability or
generally limiting remedies for failure to perform obligations is
not sufficient to vary obligations prescribed by this article.





(d) Rights and obligations of an issuer to a beneficiary or a
nominated person under a letter of credit are independent of the
existence, performance, or nonperformance of a contract or
arrangement out of which the letter of credit arises or which
underlies it, including contracts or arrangements between the
issuer and the applicant and between the applicant and the
beneficiary.
ARTICLE 7. WAREHOUSE RECEIPTS, BILL OF LADING AND OTHER DOCUMENTS
OF TITLE.
Part 1 General.
§46-7-101. Short title.





This article may be cited as Uniform Commercial Code--
Documents of Title.
§46-7-102. Definitions and index of definitions.





(a) In this article, unless the context otherwise requires:





(1) "Bailee" means a person that by a warehouse receipt, bill
of lading, or other document of title acknowledges possession of
goods and contracts to deliver them.





(2) "Carrier" means a person that issues a bill of lading.





(3) "Consignee" means a person named in a bill of lading to
which or to whose order the bill promises delivery.





(4) "Consignor" means a person named in a bill of lading as
the person from which the goods have been received for shipment.





(5) "Delivery order" means a record that contains an order to
deliver goods directed to a warehouse, carrier, or other person
that in the ordinary course of business issues warehouse receipts
or bills of lading.





(
(6) "Good faith"
means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial
standards of fair dealing.





(7) "Goods" means all things that are treated as movable for
the purposes of a contract for storage or transportation.





(8) "Issuer" means a bailee that issues a document of title
or, in the case of an unaccepted delivery order, the person that
orders the possessor of goods to deliver. The term includes a
person for which an agent or employee purports to act in issuing a
document if the agent or employee has real or apparent authority to
issue documents, even if the issuer did not receive any goods, the
goods were misdescribed, or in any other respect the agent or
employee violated the issuer's instructions.





(9) "Person entitled under the document" means the holder, in
the case of a negotiable document of title, or the person to which
delivery of the goods is to be made by the terms of, or pursuant to
instructions in a record under, a nonnegotiable document of title.





(10) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium
and is retrievable in perceivable form.





(11) "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or
adopt a record:





(A) To execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or





(B) To attach to or logically associate with the record an
electronic sound, symbol, or process.





(12) "Shipper" means a person that enters into a contract of
transportation with a carrier.





(13) "Warehouse" means a person engaged in the business of
storing goods for hire.





(b) Definitions in other articles applying to this article and
the sections in which they appear are:





(1) "Contract for sale", Section 2-106.







(2) "Lessee in the ordinary course of business", Section 2A-
103.





(3) "Receipt" of goods, Section 2-103.





(c) In addition, Article 1 contains general definitions and
principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout
this article.
§46-7-103. Relation of article to treaty or statute.





(a) This article is subject to any treaty or statute of the
United States or regulatory statute of this state to the extent the
treaty, statute or regulatory statute is applicable.





(b) This article does not modify or repeal any law prescribing
the form or content of a document of title or the services or
facilities to be afforded by a bailee, or otherwise regulating a
bailee's business in respects not specifically treated in this
article. However, violation of such a law does not affect the
status of a document of title that otherwise is within the
definition of a document of title.





(c) This [act] modifies, limits, and supersedes the federal
Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (15
U.S.C. Section 7001, et. seq.) but does not modify, limit, or
supersede Section 101(c) of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 7001(c))
or authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices described in
Section 103(b) of that act (15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b)).





(d) To the extent there is a conflict between article one,
chapter thirty-nine A and this article, this article governs.
§46-7-104. Negotiable and nonnegotiable document of title.





( (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), a
document of title is negotiable if by its terms the goods are to be
delivered to bearer or to the order of a named person..





(b) A document of title other than one described in subsection
(a) is nonnegotiable. A bill of lading that states that the goods
are consigned to a named person is not made negotiable by a
provision that the goods are to be delivered only against an order in a record signed by the same or another named person.





(c) A document of title is nonnegotiable if, at the time it is
issued, the document has a conspicuous legend, however expressed,
that it is nonnegotiable.
§46-7-105. Reissuance in alternative medium.







(a) Upon request of a person entitled under an electronic
document of title, the issuer of the electronic document may issue
a tangible document of title as a substitute for the electronic
document if:





(1) The person entitled under the electronic document
surrenders control of the document to the issuer; and





(2) The tangible document when issued contains a statement
that it is issued in substitution for the electronic document.





(b) Upon issuance of a tangible document of title in
substitution for an electronic document of title in accordance with
subsection (a):





(1) The electronic document ceases to have any effect or
validity; and





(2) The person that procured issuance of the tangible document
warrants to all subsequent persons entitled under the tangible
document that the warrantor was a person entitled under the
electronic document when the warrantor surrendered control of the
electronic document to the issuer.





(c) Upon request of a person entitled under a tangible
document of title, the issuer of the tangible document may issue an
electronic document of title as a substitute for the tangible document if:





(1) The person entitled under the tangible document surrenders
possession of the document to the issuer; and





(2) The electronic document when issued contains a statement
that it is issued in substitution for the tangible document.





(d) Upon issuance of an electronic document of title in
substitution for a tangible document of title in accordance with
subsection (c):





(1) The tangible document ceases to have any effect or
validity; and





(2) The person that procured issuance of the electronic
document warrants to all subsequent persons entitled under the
electronic document that the warrantor was a person entitled under
the tangible document when the warrantor surrendered possession of
the tangible document to the issuer.
§46-7-106. Control of electronic document of title.





(a) A person has control of an electronic document of title if
a system employed for evidencing the transfer of interests in the
electronic document reliably establishes that person as the person
to which the electronic document was issued or transferred.





(b) A system satisfies subsection (a), and a person is deemed
to have control of an electronic document of title, if the document
is created, stored, and assigned in such a manner that:





(1) A single authoritative copy of the document exists which
is unique, identifiable, and, except as otherwise provided in
paragraphs (4), (5), and (6), unalterable;





(2) The authoritative copy identifies the person asserting
control as:





(A) The person to which the document was issued; or





(B) If the authoritative copy indicates that the document has
been transferred, the person to which the document was most
recently transferred;





(3) The authoritative copy is communicated to and maintained
by the person asserting control or its designated custodian;





(4) Copies or amendments that add or change an identified
assignee of the authoritative copy can be made only with the
consent of the person asserting control;





(5) Each copy of the authoritative copy and any copy of a copy
is readily identifiable as a copy that is not the authoritative
copy; and





(6) Any amendment of the authoritative copy is readily
identifiable as authorized or unauthorized.




Part 2 - Warehouse Receipts: Special Provisions.
§46-7-201. Person that may issue a warehouse receipt; storage
under bond.





(a) A warehouse receipt may be issued by any warehouse.





(b) If goods, including distilled spirits and agricultural
commodities, are stored under a statute requiring a bond against
withdrawal or a license for the issuance of receipts in the nature
of warehouse receipts, a receipt issued for the goods is deemed to
be a warehouse receipt even if issued by a person that is the owner
of the goods and is not a warehouse.
§46-7-202. Form of warehouse receipt; effect of omission.





(a) A warehouse receipt need not be in any particular form.





(b) Unless a warehouse receipt provides for each of the
following, the warehouse is liable for damages caused to a person
injured by its omission:





(1) A statement of the location of the warehouse facility
where the goods are stored;





(2) The date of issue of the receipt;





(3) The unique identification code of the receipt;





(4) A statement whether the goods received will be delivered
to the bearer, to a named person, or to a named person or its
order;





(5) The rate of storage and handling charges, unless goods are
stored under a field warehousing arrangement, in which case a
statement of that fact is sufficient on a nonnegotiable receipt;





(6) A description of the goods or the packages containing
them;





(7) The signature of the warehouse or its agent;





(8) If the receipt is issued for goods that the warehouse
owns, either solely, jointly, or in common with others, a statement
of the fact of that ownership; and





(9) A statement of the amount of advances made and of
liabilities incurred for which the warehouse claims a lien or
security interest, unless the precise amount of advances made or
liabilities incurred, at the time of the issue of the receipt, is
unknown to the warehouse or to its agent that issued the receipt, in which case a statement of the fact that advances have been made
or liabilities incurred and the purpose of the advances or
liabilities is sufficient.





(c) A warehouse may insert in its receipt any terms that are
not contrary to [the Uniform Commercial Code] and do not impair its
obligation of delivery under section 7-403 or its duty of care
under section 7-204. Any contrary provision is ineffective.
§46-7-203. Liability for nonreceipt or misdescription.





A party to or purchaser for value in good faith of a document
of title, other than a bill of lading, that relies upon the
description of the goods in the document may recover from the
issuer damages caused by the nonreceipt or misdescription of the
goods, except to the extent that:





(1) The document conspicuously indicates that the issuer does
not know whether all or part of the goods in fact were received or
conform to the description, such as a case in which the description
is in terms of marks or labels or kind, quantity, or condition, or
the receipt or description is qualified by "contents, condition,
and quality unknown", "said to contain", or words of similar
import, if the indication is true; or





(2) The party or purchaser otherwise has notice of the
nonreceipt or misdescription.
§46-7-204. Duty of care; contractual limitation of warehouse's





liability.





(a) A warehouse is liable for damages for loss of or injury to the goods caused by its failure to exercise care with regard to the
goods that a reasonably careful person would exercise under similar
circumstances. Unless otherwise agreed, the warehouse is not
liable for damages that could not have been avoided by the exercise
of that care.





(b) Damages may be limited by a term in the warehouse receipt
or storage agreement limiting the amount of liability in case of
loss or damage beyond which the warehouse is not liable. Such a
limitation is not effective with respect to the warehouse's
liability for conversion to its own use. On request of the bailor
in a record at the time of signing the storage agreement or within
a reasonable time after receipt of the warehouse receipt, the
warehouse's liability may be increased on part or all of the goods
covered by the storage agreement or the warehouse receipt. In this
event, increased rates may be charged based on an increased
valuationof the goods.





(c) Reasonable provisions as to the time and manner of
presenting claims and commencing actions based on the bailment may
be included in the warehouse receipt or storage agreement.
§46-7-205. Title under warehouse receipt defeated in certain
cases.





A buyer in ordinary course of business of fungible goods sold
and delivered by a warehouse that is also in the business of buying
and selling such goods takes the goods free of any claim under a
warehouse receipt even if the receipt is negotiable and has been
duly negotiated.
§46-7-206. Termination of storage at warehouse's option.





(a) A warehouse, by giving notice to the person on whose
account the goods are held and any other person known to claim an
interest in the goods, may require payment of any charges and
removal of the goods from the warehouse at the termination of the
period of storage fixed by the document of title or, if a period is
not fixed, within a stated period not less than 30 days after the
warehouse gives notice. If the goods are not removed before the
date specified in the notice, the warehouse may sell them pursuant
to section 7-210.





(b) If a warehouse in good faith believes that goods are about
to deteriorate or decline in value to less than the amount of its
lien within the time provided in subsection (a) and section 7-210,
the warehouse may specify in the notice given under subsection (a)
any reasonable shorter time for removal of the goods and, if the
goods are not removed, may sell them at public sale held not less
than one week after a single advertisement or posting.





(c) If, as a result of a quality or condition of the goods of
which the warehouse did not have notice at the time of deposit, the
goods are a hazard to other property, the warehouse facilities, or
other persons, the warehouse may sell the goods at public or
private sale without advertisement or posting on reasonable
notification to all persons known to claim an interest in the
goods. If the warehouse, after a reasonable effort, is unable to
sell the goods, it may dispose of them in any lawful manner and
does not incur liability by reason of that disposition.





(d) A warehouse shall deliver the goods to any person entitled
to them under this article upon due demand made at any time before
sale or other disposition under this section.





(e) A warehouse may satisfy its lien from the proceeds of any
sale or disposition under this section but shall hold the balance
for delivery on the demand of any person to which the warehouse
would have been bound to deliver the goods.
§46-7-207. Goods must be kept separate; fungible goods.





(a) Unless the warehouse receipt provides otherwise, a
warehouse shall keep separate the goods covered by each receipt so
as to permit at all times identification and delivery of those
goods . However, different lots of fungible goods may be
commingled.





(b) If different lots of fungible goods are commingled, the
goods are owned in common by the persons entitled thereto and the
warehouse is severally liable to each owner for that owner's share.
If, because of overissue, a mass of fungible goods is insufficient
to meet all the receipts the warehouse has issued against it, the
persons entitled include all holders to which overissued receipts
have been duly negotiated.
§46-7-208. Altered warehouse receipts.





If a blank in a negotiable tangible warehouse receipt has been
filled in without authority, a good-faith purchaser for value and
without notice of the lack of authority may treat the insertion as
authorized. Any other unauthorized alteration leaves any tangible
or electronic warehouse receipt enforceable against the issuer according to its original tenor.
§46-7-209. Lien of warehouse.





(a) A warehouse has a lien against the bailor on the goods
covered by a warehouse receipt or storage agreement or on the
proceeds thereof in its possession for charges for storage or
transportation, including demurrage and terminal charges,
insurance, labor, or other charges, present or future, in relation
to the goods, and for expenses necessary for preservation of the
goods or reasonably incurred in their sale pursuant to law. If the
person on whose account the goods are held is liable for similar
charges or expenses in relation to other goods whenever deposited
and it is stated in the warehouse receipt or storage agreement that
a lien is claimed for charges and expenses in relation to other
goods, the warehouse also has a lien against the goods covered by
the warehouse receipt or storage agreement or on the proceeds
thereof in its possession for those charges and expenses, whether
or not the other goods have been delivered by the warehouse.
However, as against a person to which a negotiable warehouse
receipt is duly negotiated, a warehouse's lien is limited to
charges in an amount or at a rate specified in the warehouse
receipt or, if no charges are so specified, to a reasonable charge
for storage of the specific goods covered by the receipt subsequent
to the date of the receipt.





(b) A warehouse may also reserve a security interest against
the bailor for the maximum amount specified on the receipt for
charges other than those specified in subsection(a), such as for money advanced and interest. The security interest is governed by
article 9.





(c) A warehouse's lien for charges and expenses under
subsection (a) or a security interest under subsection(b) is also
effective against any person that so entrusted the bailor with
possession of the goods that a pledge of them by the bailor to a
good-faith purchaser for value would have been valid. However, the
lien or security interest is not effective against a person





that before issuance of a document of title had a legal
interest or a perfected security interest in the goods and that did
not:





(1) Deliver or entrust the goods or any document of title
covering the goods to the bailor or the bailor's nominee with:





(A) Actual or apparent authority to ship, store, or sell;





(B) Power to obtain delivery under section 7-403; or





(C) Power of disposition under sections 2-403, 2A-304(2), 2A-
305(2), 9-320, or 9-321(c) or other statute or rule of law; or





(2) Acquiesce in the procurement by the bailor or its nominee
of any document.





(d) A warehouse's lien on household goods for charges and
expenses in relation to the goods under subsection (a) is also
effective against all persons if the depositor was the legal
possessor of the goods at the time of deposit. In this subsection,
"household goods" means furniture, furnishings, or personal effects
used by the depositor in a dwelling.





(e) A warehouse loses its lien on any goods that it voluntarily delivers or unjustifiably refuses to deliver.
§46-7-210. Enforcement of warehouse's lien.





(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection(b), a
warehouse's lien may be enforced by public or private sale of the
goods, in bulk or in packages, at any time or place and on any
terms that are commercially reasonable, after notifying all persons
known to claim an interest in the goods. The notification must
include a statement of the amount due, the nature of the proposed
sale, and the time and place of any public sale. The fact that a
better price could have been obtained by a sale at a different time
or in a method different from that selected by the warehouse is not
of itself sufficient to establish that the sale was not made in a
commercially reasonable manner. The warehouse sells in a
commercially reasonable manner if the warehouse sells the goods in
the usual manner in any recognized market therefore, sells at the
price current in that market at the time of the sale, or otherwise
sells in conformity with commercially reasonable practices among
dealers in the type of goods sold. A sale of more goods than
apparently necessary to be offered to ensure satisfaction of the
obligation is not commercially reasonable, except in cases covered
by the preceding sentence.





(b) A warehouse may enforce its lien on goods, other than
goods stored by a merchant in the course of its business, only if
the following requirements are satisfied:





(1) All persons known to claim an interest in the goods must
be notified.






(2) The notification
must include an itemized statement of the claim, a description of
the goods subject to the lien, a demand for payment within a
specified time not less than 10 days after receipt of the
notification, and a conspicuous statement that unless the claim is
paid within that time the goods will be advertised for sale and
sold by auction at a specified time and place.





(3) The sale must conform to the terms of the notification.





(4) The sale must be held at the nearest suitable place to
where the goods are held or stored.





(5) After the expiration of the time given in the
notification, an advertisement of the sale must be published once
a week for two weeks consecutively in a newspaper of general
circulation where the sale is to be held. The advertisement must
include a description of the goods, the name of the person on whose
account the goods are being held, and the time and place of the
sale. The sale must take place at least 15 days after the first
publication. If there is no newspaper of general circulation where
the sale is to be held, the advertisement must be posted at least
10 days before the sale in not fewer than six conspicuous places in
the neighborhood of the proposed sale.





(c) Before any sale pursuant to this section, any person
claiming a right in the goods may pay the amount necessary to
satisfy the lien and the reasonable expenses incurred in complying
with this section. In that event, the goods may not be sold but
must be retained by the warehouse subject to the terms of the receipt and this article.





(d) A warehouse may buy at any public sale held pursuant to
this section.





(e) A purchaser in good faith of goods sold to enforce a
warehouse's lien takes the goods free of any rights of persons
against which the lien was valid, despite the warehouse's
noncompliance with this section.





(f) A warehouse may satisfy its lien from the proceeds of any
sale pursuant to this section but shall hold the balance, if any,
for delivery on demand to any person to which the warehouse would
have been bound to deliver the goods.





(g) The rights provided by this section are in addition to all
other rights allowed by law to a creditor against a debtor.





(h) If a lien is on goods stored by a merchant in the course
of its business, the lien may be enforced in accordance with
subsection (a) or (b).





(i) A warehouse is liable for damages caused by failure to
comply with the requirements for sale under this section and, in
case of willful violation, is liable for conversion.
Part 3--Bills of Lading: Special Provisions.
§46-7-301. Liability for nonreceipt or misdescription; "said to
contain"; "shipper's weight, load and count"; improper handling.





(a) A consignee of a nonnegotiable bill of lading which has
given value in good faith, or a holder to which a negotiable bill
has been duly negotiated, relying upon the description of the goods
in the bill or upon the date shown in the bill, may recover from the issuer damages caused by the misdating of the bill or the
nonreceipt or misdescription of the goods, except to the extent
that the bill indicates that the issuer does not know whether any
part or all of the goods in fact were received or conform to the
description, such as in a case in which the description is in terms
of marks or labels or kind, quantity, or condition or the receipt
or description is qualified by "contents or condition of contents
of packages unknown", "said to contain", "shipper's weight, load,
and count", or words of similar import, if that indication is true.





(b) If goods are loaded by the issuer of a bill of lading;





(1) The issuer shall count the packages of goods if shipped in
packages and ascertain the kind and quantity if shipped in bulk ;
and





(2) Words such as "shipper's weight, load, and count" or words
of similar import indicating that the description was made by the
shipper are ineffective except as to goods concealed in packages.





(c) If bulk goods are loaded by a shipper that makes available
to the issuer of a bill of lading adequate facilities for weighing
those goods, the issuer shall ascertain the kind and quantity
within a reasonable time after receiving the shipper's request in
a record to do so. In that case, "shipper's weight" or words of
similar import are ineffective.





(d) The issuer of a bill of lading, by including in the bill
the words "shipper's weight, load, and count", or words of similar
import, may indicate that the goods were loaded by the shipper,
and, if that statement is true, the issuer is not liable for damages caused by the improper loading. However, omission of such
words does not imply liability for damages caused by improper
loading.





(e) A shipper guarantees to an issuer the accuracy at the time
of shipment of the description, marks, labels, number, kind,
quantity, condition, and weight, as furnished by the shipper, and
the shipper shall indemnify the issuer against damage caused by
inaccuracies in those particulars. This right of indemnity does
not limit the issuer's responsibility or liability under the
contract of carriage to any person other than the shipper.
§46-7-302. Through bills of lading and similar documents of title.





(a) The issuer of a through bill of lading, or other document
of title embodying an undertaking to be performed in part by a
person acting as its agent or by a performing carrier, is liable to
any person entitled to recover on the bill or other document for
any breach by the other person or the performing carrier of its
obligation under the bill or other document. However, to the
extent that the bill or other document covers an undertaking to be
performed overseas or in territory not contiguous to the
continental United States or an undertaking including matters other
than transportation, this liability for breach by the other person
or the performing carrier may be varied by agreement of the
parties.





(b) If goods covered by a through bill of lading or other
document of title embodying an undertaking to be performed in part
by a person other than the issuer are received by that person, the person is subject, with respect to its own performance while the
goods are in its possession, to the obligation of the issuer. The
person's obligation is discharged by delivery of the goods to
another person pursuant to the bill or other document and does not
include liability for breach by any other person or by the issuer.





(c) The issuer of a through bill of lading or other document
of title described in subsection (a) is entitled to recover from
the performing carrier, or other person in possession of the goods
when the breach of the obligation under the bill or other document
occurred:





(1) The amount it may be required to pay to any person
entitled to recover on the bill or other document for the breach,
as may be evidenced by any receipt, judgment, or transcript of
judgment; and





(2) The amount of any expense reasonably incurred by the
issuer in defending any action commenced by any person entitled to
recover on the bill or other document for the breach.
§46-7-303. Diversion; reconsignment; change of instructions.





(a) Unless the bill of lading otherwise provides, a carrier
may deliver the goods to a person or destination other than that
stated in the bill or may otherwise dispose of the goods, without
liability for misdeliver, on instructions from:





(1) The holder of a negotiable bill;





(2) The consignor on a nonnegotiable bill, even if the
consignee has given contrary instructions;





(3) The consignee on a nonnegotiable bill in the absence of contrary instructions from the consignor, if the goods have arrived
at the billed destination or if the consignee is in possession of
the tangible bill or in control of the electronic bill; or





(4) the consignee on a nonnegotiable bill, if the consignee is
entitled as against the consignor to dispose of the goods.





(b) Unless instructions described in subsection (a) are
included in a negotiable bill of lading, a person to which the bill
is duly negotiated may hold the bailee according to the original
terms.
§46-7-304. Tangible bills of lading in a set.





(a) Except as customary in international transportation, a
tangible bill of lading may not be issued in a set of parts. The
issuer is liable for damages caused by violation of this
subsection.





(b) If a tangible bill of lading is lawfully issued in a set
of parts, each of which contains an identification code and is
expressed to be valid only if the goods have not been delivered
against any other part, the whole of the parts constitutes one
bill.





(c) If a tangible negotiable bill of lading is lawfully issued
in a set of parts and different parts are negotiated to different
persons, the title of the holder to which the first due negotiation
is made prevails as to both the document of title and the goods
even if any later holder may have received the goods from the
carrier in good faith and discharged the carrier's obligation by
surrendering its part.





(d) A person that negotiates or transfers a single part of a
tangible bill of lading issued in a set is liable to holders of
that part as if it were the whole set.





(e) The bailee shall deliver in accordance with Part 4 against
the first presented part of a tangible bill of lading lawfully
issued in a set. Delivery in this manner discharges the bailee's
obligation on the whole bill.
§46-7-305. Destination bills.





(a) Instead of issuing a bill of lading to the consignor at
the place of shipment, a carrier, at the request of the consignor,
may procure the bill to be issued at destination or at any other
place designated in the request.





(b) Upon request of any person entitled as against a carrier
to control the goods while in transit and on surrender of
possession or control of any outstanding bill of lading or other
receipt covering the goods, the issuer, subject to section 7-105,
may procure a substitute bill to be issued at any place designated
in the request.
§46-7-306. Altered bills of lading.





An unauthorized alteration or filling in of a blank in a bill
of lading leaves the bill enforceable according to its original
tenor.
§46-7-307. Lien of carrier.





(a) A carrier has a lien on the goods covered by a bill of
lading or on the proceeds thereof in its possession for charges after the date of the carrier's receipt of the goods for storage or
transportation, including demurrage and terminal charges, and for
expenses necessary for preservation of the goods incident to their
transportation or reasonably incurred in their sale pursuant to
law. However, against a purchaser for value of a negotiable bill
of lading, a carrier's lien is limited to charges stated in the
bill or the applicable tariffs or, if no charges are stated, a
reasonable charge.





(b) A lien for charges and expenses under subsection(a) on
goods that the carrier was required by law to receive for
transportation is effective against the consignor or any person
entitled to the goods unless the carrier had notice that the
consignor lacked authority to subject the goods to those charges
and expenses. Any other lien under subsection(a) is effective
against the consignor and any person that permitted the bailor to
have control or possession of the goods unless the carrier had
notice that the bailor lacked authority.





(c) A carrier loses its lien on any goods that it voluntarily
delivers or unjustifiably refuses to deliver.
§46-7-308. Enforcement of carrier's lien.





(a) A carrier's lien on goods may be enforced by public or
private sale of the goods, in bulk or in packages, at any time or
place and on any terms that are commercially reasonable, after
notifying all persons known to claim an interest in the goods. The
notification must include a statement of the amount due, the nature
of the proposed sale, and the time and place of any public sale. The fact that a better price could have been obtained by a sale at
a different time or in a method different from that selected by the
carrier is not of itself sufficient to establish that the sale was
not made in a commercially reasonable manner. The carrier sells
goods in a commercially reasonable manner if the carrier sells the
goods in the usual manner in any recognized market therefor, sells
at the price current in that market at the time of the sale, or
otherwise sells in conformity with commercially reasonable
practices among dealers in the type of goods sold. A sale of more
goods than apparently necessary to be offered to ensure
satisfaction of the obligation is not commercially reasonable,
except in cases covered by the preceding sentence.





(b) Before any sale pursuant to this section, any person
claiming a right in the goods may pay the amount necessary to
satisfy the lien and the reasonable expenses incurred in complying
with this section. In that event, the goods may not be sold but
must be retained by the carrier, subject to the terms of the bill
of lading and this article.





(c) A carrier may buy at any public sale pursuant to this
section.





(d) A purchaser in good faith of goods sold to enforce a
carrier's lien takes the goods free of any rights of persons
against which the lien was valid, despite the carrier's
noncompliance with this section.





(e) A carrier may satisfy its lien from the proceeds of any
sale pursuant to this section but shall hold the balance, if any, for delivery on demand to any person to which the carrier would
have been bound to deliver the goods.





(f) The rights provided by this section are in addition to all
other rights allowed by law to a creditor against a debtor.





((g) A carrier's lien may be enforced pursuant to either
subsection(a) or the procedure set forth in section 7-210(b).





(h) A carrier is liable for damages caused by failure to
comply with the requirements for sale under this section and, in
case of willful violation, is liable for conversion.
§46-7-309. Duty of care; contractual limitation of carrier's
liability.





(a) A carrier that issues a bill of lading, whether negotiable
or nonnegotiable, shall exercise the degree of care in relation to
the goods which a reasonably careful person would exercise under
similar circumstances. This subsection does not affect any
statute, regulation, or rule of law that imposes liability upon a
common carrier for damages not caused by its negligence.





(b) Damages may be limited by a term in the bill of lading or
in a transportation agreement that the carrier's liability may not
exceed a value stated in the bill or transportation agreement if
the carrier's rates are dependent upon value and the consignor is
afforded an opportunity to declare a higher value and the consignor
is advised of the opportunity. However, such a limitation is not
effective with respect to the carrier's liability for conversion to
its own use.





(c) Reasonable provisions as to the time and manner of presenting claims and commencing actions based on the shipment may
be included in a bill of lading or a transportation agreement.
Part 4. Warehouse Receipts and Bills of Lading: General Obligations.
§46-7-401. Irregularities in issue of receipt or bill or conduct
of issuer.





The obligations imposed by this article on an issuer apply to
a document of title even if:





(1) The document does not comply with the requirements of this
article or of any other statute, rule, or regulation regarding its
issuance, form, or content;





(2) The issuer violated laws regulating the conduct of its
business;





(3) The goods covered by the document were owned by the bailee
when the document was issued; or





(4) The person issuing the document is not a warehouse but the
document purports to be a warehouse receipt.
§46-7-402. Duplicate document of title; overissue.





A duplicate or any other document of title purporting to cover
goods already represented by an outstanding document of the same
issuer does not confer any right in the goods, except as provided
in the case of tangible bills of lading in a set of parts,
overissue of documents for fungible goods, substitutes for lost,
stolen, or destroyed documents, or substitute documents issued
pursuant to section 7-105. The issuer is liable for damages caused
by its overissue or failure to identify a duplicate document by a conspicuous notation.
§46-7-403. Obligation of bailee to deliver; excuse.





(a) A bailee shall deliver the goods to a person entitled
under a document of title if the person complies with subsections
(b) and (c), unless and to the extent that the bailee establishes
any of the following:





(1) Delivery of the goods to a person whose receipt was
rightful as against the claimant;





(2) Damage to or delay, loss, or destruction of the goods for
which the bailee is not liable;





(3) Previous sale or other disposition of the goods in lawful
enforcement of a lien or on a warehouse's lawful termination of
storage;





(4) The exercise by a seller of its right to stop delivery
pursuant to section 2-705 or by a lessor of its right to stop
delivery pursuant to section 2A-526;





(5) A diversion, reconsignment, or other disposition pursuant
to section 7-303;
(6) Release,
satisfaction, or any other personal defense against the claimant;
or





(7) Any other lawful excuse.





(b) A person claiming goods covered by a document of title
shall satisfy the bailee's lien if the bailee so requests or if the
bailee is prohibited by law from delivering the goods until the
charges are paid.





(c) Unless a person claiming the goods is a person against which the document of title does not confer a right under section
7-503(a):





(1) The person claiming under a document shall surrender
possession or control of any outstanding negotiable document
covering the goods for cancellation or indication of partial
deliveries; and





(2) The bailee shall cancel the document or conspicuously
indicate in the document the partial delivery or the bailee is
liable to any person to which the document is duly negotiated.





§46-7-404. No liability for good-faith delivery pursuant to
document of title.





A bailee that in good faith has received goods and delivered
or otherwise disposed of the goods according to the terms of a
document of title or pursuant to this article is not liable for the
goods even if:





(1) The person from which the bailee received the goods did
not have authority to procure the document or to dispose of the
goods; or





(2) The person to which the bailee delivered the goods did not
have authority to receive the goods.
Part 5-- Warehouse Receipts and Bills of Lading: Negotiation and Transfer.
§46-7-501. Form of negotiation and requirements of due
negotiation.
(a) The following
rules apply to a negotiable tangible document of title:





(1) If the document's original terms run to the order of a named person, the document is negotiated by the named person's
indorsement and delivery. After the named person's indorsement in
blank or to bearer, any person may negotiate the document by
delivery alone.





(2) If the document's original terms run to bearer, it is
negotiated by delivery alone.





(3) If the document's original terms run to the order of a
named person and it is delivered to the named person, the effect is
the same as if the document had been negotiated.





(4) Negotiation of the document after it has been indorsed to
a named person requires indorsement by the named person and
delivery.





(5) A document is duly negotiated if it is negotiated in the
manner stated in this subsection to a holder that purchases it in
good faith, without notice of any defense against or claim to it on
the part of any person, and for value, unless it is established
that the negotiation is not in the regular course of business or
financing or involves receiving the document in settlement or
payment of a monetary obligation.





(b) The following rules apply to a negotiable electronic
document of title:





(1) If the document's original terms run to the order of a
named person or to bearer, the document is negotiated by delivery
of the document to another person. Indorsement by the named person
is not required to negotiate the document.





(2) If the document's original terms run to the order of a named person and the named person has control of the document, the
effect is the same as if the document had been negotiated.





(3) A document is duly negotiated if it is negotiated in the
manner stated in this subsection to a holder that purchases it in
good faith, without notice of any defense against or claim to it on
the part of any person, and for value, unless it is established
that the negotiation is not in the regular course of business or
financing or involves taking delivery of the document in settlement
or payment of a monetary obligation.





(c) Indorsement of a nonnegotiable document of title neither
makes it negotiable nor adds to the transferee's rights.





(d) The naming in a negotiable bill of lading of a person to
be notified of the arrival of the goods does not limit the
negotiability of the bill or constitute notice to a purchaser of
the bill of any interest of that person in the goods.
§46-7-502. Rights acquired by due negotiation.





(a) Subject to sections 7-205 and 7-503, a holder to which a
negotiable document of title has been duly negotiated acquires
thereby:





(1) Title to the document;





(2) Title to the goods;





(3) All rights accruing under the law of agency or estoppel,
including rights to goods delivered to the bailee after the
document was issued; and





(4) The direct obligation of the issuer to hold or deliver the
goods according to the terms of the document free of any defense or claim by the issuer except those arising under the terms of the
document or under this article, but in the case of a delivery
order, the bailee's obligation accrues only upon the bailee's
acceptance of the delivery order and the obligation acquired by the
holder is that the issuer and any indorser will procure the
acceptance of the bailee.





(b) Subject to section 7-503, title and rights acquired by due
negotiation are not defeated by any stoppage of the goods
represented by the document of title or by surrender of the goods
by the bailee and are not impaired even if:





(1) The due negotiation or any prior due negotiation
constituted a breach of duty;





(2) Any person has been deprived of possession of a negotiable
tangible document or control of a negotiable electronic document by
misrepresentation, fraud, accident, mistake, duress, loss, theft,
or conversion; or





(3) A previous sale or other transfer of the goods or document
has been made to a third person.
§46-7-503. Document of title to goods defeated in certain cases.





(a) A document of title confers no right in goods against a
person that before issuance of the document had a legal interest or
a perfected security interest in the goods and that did not:





(1) Deliver and entrust them the goods or any document of
title covering the goods to the bailor or the bailor's nominee
with:





(A) Actual or apparent authority to ship, store, or sell;





(B) Power to obtain delivery under section 7-403; or





(C) Power of disposition under section 2-403, 2A-304(2), 2A-
305(2), 9-320, or 9-321(c) or other statute or rule of law; or





(2) Acquiesce in the procurement by the bailor or its nominee
of any document.





(b) Title to goods based upon an unaccepted delivery order is
subject to the rights of any person to which a negotiable warehouse
receipt or bill of lading covering the goods has been duly
negotiated. That title may be defeated under section 7-504 to the
same extent as the rights of the issuer or a transferee from the
issuer.





(c) Title to goods based upon a bill of lading issued to a
freight forwarder is subject to the rights of any person to which
a bill issued by the freight forwarder is duly negotiated.
However, delivery by the carrier in accordance with Part 4 pursuant
to its own bill of lading discharges the carrier's obligation to
deliver.
§46-7-504. Rights acquired in absence of due negotiation; effect
of diversion; stoppage of delivery.





(a) A transferee of a document of title, whether negotiable or
nonnegotiable, to which the document has been delivered but not
duly negotiated, acquires the title and rights that its transferor
had or had actual authority to convey.





(b) In the case of a transfer of a nonnegotiable document of
title, until but not after the bailee receives notice of the
transfer, the rights of the transferee may be defeated:





(1) By those creditors of the transferor which could treat the
transfer as void under section 2-402 or 2A-308 ;





(2) By a buyer from the transferor in ordinary course of
business if the bailee has delivered the goods to the buyer or
received notification of the buyer's rights;





(3) By a lessee from the transferor in ordinary course of
business if the bailee has delivered the goods to the lessee or
received notification of the lessee's rights; or





(4) As against the bailee, by good-faith dealings of the
bailee with the transferor.





(c) A diversion or other change of shipping instructions by
the consignor in a nonnegotiable bill of lading which causes the
bailee not to deliver the goods to the consignee defeats the
consignee's title to the goods if the goods have been delivered to
a buyer in ordinary course of business or a lessee in ordinary
course of business and, in any event, defeats the consignee's
rights against the bailee.





(d) Delivery of the goods pursuant to a nonnegotiable document
of title may be stopped by a seller under section 2-705 or a lessor
under section 2A-526, subject to the requirements of due
notification in those sections. A bailee that honors the seller's
or lessor's instructions is entitled to be indemnified by the
seller or lessor against any resulting loss or expense.
§46-7-505. Indorser not guarantor for other parties.





The indorsement of a tangible document of title issued by a
bailee does not make the indorser liable for any default by the bailee or previous indorsers.
§46-7-506. Delivery without indorsement: right to compel
indorsement.





The transferee of a negotiable tangible document of title has
a specifically enforceable right to have its transferor supply any
necessary indorsement, but the transfer becomes a negotiation only
as of the time the indorsement is supplied.
§46-7-507. Warranties on negotiation or delivery of document of
title.





If a person negotiates or delivers a document of title for
value, otherwise than as a mere intermediary under section 7-508,
unless otherwise agreed the transferor, in addition to any warranty
made in selling or leasing the goods, warrants to its immediate
purchaser only that:





(1) The document is genuine;





(2) The transferor does not have knowledge of any fact that
would impair the document's validity or worth; and





(3) The negotiation or delivery is rightful and fully
effective with respect to the title to the document and the goods
it represents.
§46-7-508. Warranties of collecting bank as to documents of title.





A collecting bank or other intermediary known to be entrusted
with documents of title on behalf of another or with collection of
a draft or other claim against delivery of documents warrants by
the delivery of the documents only its own good faith and authority, even if the collecting bank or other intermediary has
purchased or made advances against the claim or draft to be
collected.
§46-7-509. Adequate compliance with commercial contract.





Whether a document of title is adequate to fulfill the
obligations of a contract for sale, a contract for lease, or the
conditions of a letter of credit is determined by article 2, 2A, or
5.
Part 6 - Warehouse Receipts and Bills of Lading: Miscellaneous Provisions.
§46-7-601. Lost, stolen or destroyed of title.





(a) If a document of title is lost, stolen, or destroyed, a
court may order delivery of the goods or issuance of a substitute
document and the bailee may without liability to any person comply
with the order. If the document was negotiable, a court may not
order delivery of the goods or issuance of a substitute document
without the claimant's posting security unless it finds that any
person that may suffer loss as a result of nonsurrender of
possession or control of the document is adequately protected
against the loss. If the document was nonnegotiable, the court may
require security. The court may also order payment of the bailee's
reasonable costs and attorney's fees in any action under this
subsection.





(b) A bailee that, without a court order, delivers goods to a
person claiming under a missing negotiable document of title is
liable to any person injured thereby. If the delivery is not in
good faith, the bailee is liable for conversion. Delivery in good faith is not conversion if the claimant posts security with the
bailee in an amount at least double the value of the goods at the
time of posting to indemnify any person injured by the delivery
which files a notice of claim within one year after the delivery.
§46-7-602. Judicial process against goods covered by negotiable





document of title.





Unless a document of title was originally issued upon delivery
of the goods by a person that did not have power to dispose of
them, a lien does not attach by virtue of any judicial process to
goods in the possession of a bailee for which a negotiable document
of title is outstanding unless possession or control of the
document is first surrendered to the bailee or the document's
negotiation is enjoined. The bailee may not be compelled to
deliver the goods pursuant to process until possession or control
of the document is surrendered to the bailee or to the court. A
purchaser of the document for value without notice of the process
or injunction takes free of the lien imposed by judicial process.
§46-7-603. Conflicting claims; interpleader.





If more than one person claims title to or possession of the
goods, the bailee is excused from delivery until the bailee has a
reasonable time to ascertain the validity of the adverse claims or
to commence an action for interpleader. The bailee may assert an
interpleader either in defending an action for nondelivery of the
goods or by original action.
Part 7 - Miscellaneous Provisions.
§46-7-701. Applicability.





This article applies to a document of title that is issued or
a bailment that arises on or after the effective date of this
article. This article does not apply to a document of title that
is issued or a bailment that arises before the effective date of
this article even if the document of title or bailment would be
subject to this article if the document of title had been issued or
bailment had arisen on or after the effective date of this article.
This article does not apply to a right of action that has accrued
before the effective date of this article.
§46-7-702. Savings clause.





A document of title issued or a bailment that arises before
the effective date of this article and the rights, obligations, and
interests flowing from that document or bailment are governed by
any statute or other rule amended or repealed by this article as if
amendment or repeal had not occurred and may be terminated,
completed, consummated, or enforced under that statute or other
rule.
ARTICLE 8. INVESTMENT SECURITIES.
§46-8-102. Definitions.





(a) In this article:





(1) "Adverse claim" means a claim that a claimant has a
property interest in a financial asset and that it is a violation
of the rights of the claimant for another person to hold, transfer,
or deal with the financial asset.





(2) "Bearer form", as applied to a certificated security,
means a form in which the security is payable to the bearer of the
security certificate according to its terms but not by reason of an
indorsement.





(3) "Broker" means a person defined as a broker or dealer
under the federal securities laws, but without excluding a bank
acting in that capacity.





(4) "Certificated security" means a security that is
represented by a certificate.





(5) "Clearing corporation" means:





(i) A person that is registered as a "clearing agency" under
the federal securities laws;




(ii) A federal reserve bank; or





(iii) Any other person that provides clearance or settlement
services with respect to financial assets that would require it to
register as a clearing agency under the federal securities laws but
for an exclusion or exemption from the registration requirement, if
its activities as a clearing corporation, including promulgation of
rules, are subject to regulation by a federal or state governmental
authority.





(6) "Communicate" means to:





(i) Send a signed writing; or





(ii) Transmit information by any mechanism agreed upon by the
persons transmitting and receiving the information.





(7) "Entitlement holder" means a person identified in the
records of a securities intermediary as the person having a security entitlement against the securities intermediary. If a
person acquires a security entitlement by virtue of section
8-501(b)(2) or (3), that person is the entitlement holder.





(8) "Entitlement order" means a notification communicated to
a securities intermediary directing transfer or redemption of a
financial asset to which the entitlement holder has a security
entitlement.





(9) "Financial asset", except as otherwise provided in section
8-103, means:





(i) A security;





(ii) An obligation of a person or a share, participation, or
other interest in a person or in property or an enterprise of a
person, which is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on financial
markets or which is recognized in any area in which it is issued or
dealt in as a medium for investment; or





(iii) Any property that is held by a securities intermediary
for another person in a securities account if the securities
intermediary has expressly agreed with the other person that the
property is to be treated as a financial asset under this article.
As context requires, the term means either the interest itself or
the means by which a person's claim to it is evidenced, including
a certificated or uncertificated security, a security certificate
or a security entitlement.





(10)[reserved]





(11) "Indorsement" means a signature that alone or accompanied
by other words is made on a security certificate in registered form or on a separate document for the purpose of assigning,
transferring or redeeming the security or granting a power to
assign, transfer or redeem it.





(12) "Instruction" means a notification communicated to the
issuer of an uncertificated security which directs that the
transfer of the security be registered or that the security be
redeemed.





(13) "Registered form", as applied to a certificated security,
means a form in which:





(i) The security certificate specifies a person entitled to
the security; and





(ii) A transfer of the security may be registered upon books
maintained for that purpose by or on behalf of the issuer, or the
security certificate so states.





(14) "Securities intermediary" means:





(i) A clearing corporation; or





(ii) A person, including a bank or broker, that in the
ordinary course of its business maintains securities accounts for
others and is acting in that capacity.





(15) "Security", except as otherwise provided in section
8-103, means an obligation of an issuer or a share, participation
or other interest in an issuer or in property or an enterprise of
an issuer:





(i) Which is represented by a security certificate in bearer
or registered form, or the transfer of which may be registered upon
books maintained for that purpose by or on behalf of the issuer;





(ii) Which is one of a class or series or by its terms is
divisible into a class or series of shares, participations,
interests or obligations; and





(iii) Which:





(A) Is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on securities
exchanges or securities markets; or





(B) Is a medium for investment and by its terms expressly
provides that it is a security governed by this article.





(16) "Security certificate" means a certificate representing
a security.





(17) "Security entitlement" means the rights and property
interest of an entitlement holder with respect to a financial asset
specified in Part 5.





(18) "Uncertificated security" means a security that is not
represented by a certificate.





(b) Other definitions applying to this article and the
sections in which they appear are:



"Appropriate person"








Section 8-107



"Control"
Section 8-106



"Delivery"
Section 8-301



"Investment company security"




Section 8-103



"Issuer"
Section 8-201



"Overissue"
Section 8-210



"Protected purchaser"







Section 8-303



"Securities account"








Section 8-501



(c) In addition, article one contains general definitions and principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout
this article.



(d) The characterization of a person, business or transaction
for purposes of this article does not determine the
characterization of the person, business or transaction for
purposes of any other law, regulation or rule.
§46-8-103. Rules for determining whether certain obligations and
interests are securities or financial assets.



(a) A share or similar equity interest issued by a
corporation, business trust, joint stock company or similar entity
is a security.



(b) An "investment company security" is a security.
"Investment company security" means a share or similar equity
interest issued by an entity that is registered as an investment
company under the federal investment company laws, an interest in
a unit investment trust that is so registered or a face-amount
certificate issued by a face-amount certificate company that is so
registered. Investment company security does not include an
insurance policy or endowment policy or annuity contract issued by
an insurance company.



(c) An interest in a partnership or limited liability company
is not a security unless it is dealt in or traded on securities
exchanges or in securities markets, its terms expressly provide
that it is a security governed by this article or it is an
investment company security. However, an interest in a partnership
or limited liability company is a financial asset if it is held in a securities account.



(d) A writing that is a security certificate is governed by
this article and not by article three of this chapter, even though
it also meets the requirements of that article. However, a
negotiable instrument governed by article three is a financial
asset if it is held in a securities account.



(e) An option or similar obligation issued by a clearing
corporation to its participants is not a security, but is a
financial asset.



(f) A commodity contract, as defined in section 9-102(a)(15),
is not a security or a financial asset.



(g) A document of title is not a financial asset unless
section 8-102(a)(9)(iii) applies.
ARTICLE 9. SECURED TRANSACTIONS.
§46-9-102. Definitions and index of definitions.



(a) Article 9 definitions. In this article:



(1) "Accession" means goods that are physically united with
other goods in such a manner that the identity of the original
goods is not lost.



(2) "Account", except as used in "account for", means a right
to payment of a monetary obligation, whether or not earned by
performance: (i) For property that has been or is to be sold,
leased, licensed, assigned or otherwise disposed of; (ii) for
services rendered or to be rendered; (iii) for a policy of
insurance issued or to be issued; (iv) for a secondary obligation incurred or to be incurred; (v) for energy provided or to be
provided; (vi) for the use or hire of a vessel under a charter or
other contract; (vii) arising out of the use of a credit or charge
card or information contained on or for use with the card; or
(viii) as winnings in a lottery or other game of chance operated or
sponsored by a state, governmental unit of a state or person
licensed or authorized to operate the game by a state or
governmental unit of a state. The term includes
health-care-insurance receivables. The term does not include: (i)
Rights to payment evidenced by chattel paper or an instrument; (ii)
commercial tort claims; (iii) deposit accounts; (iv) investment
property; (v) letter-of-credit rights or letters of credit; or (vi)
rights to payment for money or funds advanced or sold, other than
rights arising out of the use of a credit or charge card or
information contained on or for use with the card.



(3) "Account debtor" means a person obligated on an account,
chattel paper or general intangible. The term does not include
persons obligated to pay a negotiable instrument, even if the
instrument constitutes part of chattel paper.



(4) "Accounting", except as used in "accounting for", means a
record:



(A) Authenticated by a secured party;



(B) Indicating the aggregate unpaid secured obligations as of
a date not more than thirty-five days earlier or thirty-five days
later than the date of the record; and



(C) Identifying the components of the obligations in reasonable detail.



(5) "Agricultural lien" means an interest, other than a
security interest, in farm products:



(A) Which secures payment or performance of an obligation for:



(i) Goods or services furnished in connection with a debtor's
farming operation; or



(ii) Rent on real property leased by a debtor in connection
with its farming operation;



(B) Which is created by statute in favor of a person that:



(i) In the ordinary course of its business furnished goods or
services to a debtor in connection with a debtor's farming
operation; or



(ii) Leased real property to a debtor in connection with the
debtor's farming operation; and



(C) Whose effectiveness does not depend on the person's
possession of the personal property.



(6) "As-extracted collateral" means:



(A) Oil, gas or other minerals that are subject to a security
interest that:



(i) Is created by a debtor having an interest in the minerals
before extraction; and



(ii) Attaches to the minerals as extracted; or



(B) Accounts arising out of the sale at the wellhead or
minehead of oil, gas or other minerals in which the debtor had an
interest before extraction.



(7) "Authenticate" means:



(A) To sign; or



(B) To execute or otherwise adopt a symbol, or encrypt or
similarly process a record, in whole or in part, with the present
intent of the authenticating person to identify the person and
adopt or accept a record.



(8) "Bank" means an organization that is engaged in the
business of banking. The term includes savings banks, savings and
loan associations, credit unions and trust companies.



(9) "Cash proceeds" means proceeds that are money, checks,
deposit accounts or the like.



(10) "Certificate of title" means a certificate of title with
respect to which a statute provides for the security interest in
question to be indicated on the certificate as a condition or
result of the security interest's obtaining priority over the
rights of a lien creditor with respect to the collateral.



(11) "Chattel paper" means a record or records that evidence
both a monetary obligation and a security interest in specific
goods, a security interest in specific goods and software used in
the goods, a security interest in specific goods and license of
software used in the goods, a lease of specific goods or a lease of
specific goods and license of software used in the goods. In this
paragraph, "monetary obligation" means a monetary obligation
secured by the goods or owed under a lease of the goods and
includes a monetary obligation with respect to software used in the
goods. The term does not include: (i) Charters or other contracts
involving the use or hire of a vessel; or (ii) records that evidence a right to payment arising out of the use of a credit or
charge card or information contained on or for use with the card.
If a transaction is evidenced by records that include an instrument
or series of instruments, the group of records taken together
constitutes chattel paper.



(12) "Collateral" means the property subject to a security
interest or agricultural lien. The term includes:



(A) Proceeds to which a security interest attaches;



(B) Accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles and
promissory notes that have been sold; and



(C) Goods that are the subject of a consignment.



(13) "Commercial tort claim" means a claim arising in tort
with respect to which:



(A) The claimant is an organization; or



(B) The claimant is an individual and the claim:



(i) Arose in the course of the claimant's business or
profession; and



(ii) Does not include damages arising out of personal injury
to or the death of an individual.



(14) "Commodity account" means an account maintained by a
commodity intermediary in which a commodity contract is carried for
a commodity customer.



(15) "Commodity contract" means a commodity futures contract,
an option on a commodity futures contract, a commodity option or
another contract if the contract or option is:



(A) Traded on or subject to the rules of a board of trade that has been designated as a contract market for such a contract
pursuant to federal commodities laws; or



(B) Traded on a foreign commodity board of trade, exchange or
market and is carried on the books of a commodity intermediary for
a commodity customer.



(16) "Commodity customer" means a person for which a commodity
intermediary carries a commodity contract on its books.



(17) "Commodity intermediary" means a person that:



(A) Is registered as a futures commission merchant under
federal commodities law; or



(B) In the ordinary course of its business provides clearance
or settlement services for a board of trade that has been
designated as a contract market pursuant to federal commodities
law.



(18) "Communicate" means:



(A) To send a written or other tangible record;



(B) To transmit a record by any means agreed upon by the
persons sending and receiving the record; or



(C) In the case of transmission of a record to or by a filing
office, to transmit a record by any means prescribed by filing-
office rule.



(19) "Consignee" means a merchant to which goods are delivered
in a consignment.



(20) "Consignment" means a transaction, regardless of its
form, in which a person delivers goods to a merchant for the
purpose of sale and:



(A) The merchant:



(i) Deals in goods of that kind under a name other than the
name of the person making delivery;



(ii) Is not an auctioneer; and



(iii) Is not generally known by its creditors to be
substantially engaged in selling the goods of others;



(B) With respect to each delivery, the aggregate value of the
goods is one thousand dollars or more at the time of delivery;



(C) The goods are not consumer goods immediately before
delivery; and



(D) The transaction does not create a security interest that
secures an obligation.



(21) "Consignor" means a person that delivers goods to a
consignee in a consignment.



(22) "Consumer debtor" means a debtor in a consumer
transaction.



(23) "Consumer goods" means goods that are used or bought for
use primarily for personal, family or household purposes.



(24) "Consumer-goods transaction" means a consumer transaction
in which:



(A) An individual incurs an obligation primarily for personal,
family or household purposes; and



(B) A security interest in consumer goods secures the
obligation.



(25) "Consumer obligor" means an obligor who is an individual
and who incurred the obligation as part of a transaction entered into primarily for personal, family or household purposes.



(26) "Consumer transaction" means a transaction in which: (i)
An individual incurs an obligation primarily for personal, family
or household purposes; (ii) a security interest secures the
obligation; and (iii) the collateral is held or acquired primarily
for personal, family or household purposes. The term includes
consumer-goods transactions.



(27) "Continuation statement" means an amendment of a
financing statement which:



(A) Identifies, by its file number, the initial financing
statement to which it relates; and



(B) Indicates that it is a continuation statement for, or that
it is filed to continue the effectiveness of, the identified
financing statement.



(28) "Debtor" means:



(A) A person having an interest, other than a security
interest or other lien, in the collateral, whether or not the
person is an obligor;



(B) A seller of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles
or promissory notes; or



(C) A consignee.



(29) "Deposit account" means a demand, time, savings, passbook
or similar account maintained with a bank. The term does not
include investment property or accounts evidenced by an instrument.



(30) "Document" means a document of title or a receipt of the
type described in section 7-201(b).



(31) "Electronic chattel paper" means chattel paper evidenced
by a record or records consisting of information stored in an
electronic medium.



(32) "Encumbrance" means a right, other than an ownership
interest, in real property. The term includes mortgages and other
liens on real property.



(33) "Equipment" means goods other than inventory, farm
products or consumer goods.



(34) "Farm products" means goods, other than standing timber,
with respect to which the debtor is engaged in a farming operation
and which are:



(A) Crops grown, growing or to be grown, including:



(i) Crops produced on trees, vines and bushes; and



(ii) Aquatic goods produced in aquacultural operations;



(B) Livestock, born or unborn, including aquatic goods
produced in aquacultural operations;



(C) Supplies used or produced in a farming operation; or



(D) Products of crops or livestock in their unmanufactured
states.



(35) "Farming operation" means raising, cultivating,
propagating, fattening, grazing or any other farming, livestock or
aquacultural operation.



(36) "File number" means the number assigned to an initial
financing statement pursuant to section 9-519(a).



(37) "Filing office" means an office designated in section
9-501 as the place to file a financing statement.



(38) "Filing-office rule" means a rule adopted pursuant to
section 9-526.



(39) "Financing statement" means a record or records composed
of an initial financing statement and any filed record relating to
the initial financing statement.



(40) "Fixture filing" means the filing of a financing
statement covering goods that are or are to become fixtures and
satisfying section 9-502(a) and (b). The term includes the filing
of a financing statement covering goods of a transmitting utility
which are or are to become fixtures.



(41) "Fixtures" means goods that have become so related to
particular real property that an interest in them arises under real
property law.



(42) "General intangible" means any personal property,
including things in action, other than accounts, chattel paper,
commercial tort claims, deposit accounts, documents, goods,
instruments, investment property, letter-of-credit rights, letters
of credit, money and oil, gas or other minerals before extraction.
The term includes payment intangibles and software.



(43) [reserved].



(44) "Goods" means all things that are movable when a security
interest attaches. The term includes: (i) Fixtures; (ii) standing
timber that is to be cut and removed under a conveyance or contract
for sale; (iii) the unborn young of animals; (iv) crops grown,
growing or to be grown, even if the crops are produced on trees,
vines or bushes; and (v) manufactured homes. The term also includes a computer program embedded in goods and any supporting
information provided in connection with a transaction relating to
the program if: (i) The program is associated with the goods in
such a manner that it customarily is considered part of the goods;
or (ii) by becoming the owner of the goods, a person acquires a
right to use the program in connection with the goods. The term
does not include a computer program embedded in goods that consist
solely of the medium in which the program is embedded. The term
also does not include accounts, chattel paper, commercial tort
claims, deposit accounts, documents, general intangibles,
instruments, investment property, letter-of-credit rights, letters
of credit, money or oil, gas, or other minerals before extraction.



(45) "Governmental unit" means a subdivision, agency,
department, county, parish, municipality or other unit of the
government of the United States, a state or a foreign country. The
term includes an organization having a separate corporate existence
if the organization is eligible to issue debt on which interest is
exempt from income taxation under the laws of the United States.



(46) "Health-care-insurance receivable" means an interest in
or claim under a policy of insurance which is a right to payment of
a monetary obligation for health-care goods or services provided.



(47) "Instrument" means a negotiable instrument or any other
writing that evidences a right to the payment of a monetary
obligation, is not itself a security agreement or lease, and is of
a type that in ordinary course of business is transferred by
delivery with any necessary indorsement or assignment. The term does not include: (i) Investment property; (ii) letters of credit;
or (iii) writings that evidence a right to payment arising out of
the use of a credit or charge card or information contained on or
for use with the card.



(48) "Inventory" means goods, other than farm products, which:



(A) Are leased by a person as lessor;



(B) Are held by a person for sale or lease or to be furnished
under a contract of service;



(C) Are furnished by a person under a contract of service; or



(D) Consist of raw materials, work in process or materials
used or consumed in a business.



(49) "Investment property" means a security, whether
certificated or uncertificated, security entitlement, securities
account, commodity contract or commodity account.



(50) "Jurisdiction of organization", with respect to a
registered organization, means the jurisdiction under whose law the
organization is organized.



(51) "Letter-of-credit right" means a right to payment or
performance under a letter of credit, whether or not the
beneficiary has demanded or is at the time entitled to demand
payment or performance. The term does not include the right of a
beneficiary to demand payment or performance under a letter of
credit.



(52) "Lien creditor" means:



(A) A creditor that has acquired a lien on the property
involved by attachment, levy or the like;



(B) An assignee for benefit of creditors from the time of
assignment;



(C) A trustee in bankruptcy from the date of the filing of the
petition; or



(D) A receiver in equity from the time of appointment.



(53) "Manufactured home" means a structure, transportable in
one or more sections, which, in the traveling mode, is eight body
feet or more in width or forty body feet or more in length, or,
when erected on site, is three hundred twenty or more square feet,
and which is built on a permanent chassis and designed to be used
as a dwelling with or without a permanent foundation when connected
to the required utilities, and includes the plumbing, heating,
air-conditioning and electrical systems contained therein. The
term includes any structure that meets all of the requirements of
this paragraph except the size requirements and with respect to
which the manufacturer voluntarily files a certification required
by the United States secretary of housing and urban development and
complies with the standards established under Title 42 of the
United States Code.



(54) "Manufactured-home transaction" means a secured
transaction:



(A) That creates a purchase-money security interest in a
manufactured home, other than a manufactured home held as
inventory; or



(B) In which a manufactured home, other than a manufactured
home held as inventory, is the primary collateral.



(55) "Mortgage" means a consensual interest in real property,
including fixtures, which secures payment or performance of an
obligation.



(56) "New debtor" means a person that becomes bound as debtor
under section 9-203(d) by a security agreement previously entered
into by another person.



(57) "New value" means: (i) Money; (ii) money's worth in
property, services or new credit; or (iii) release by a transferee
of an interest in property previously transferred to the
transferee. The term does not include an obligation substituted
for another obligation.



(58) "Noncash proceeds" means proceeds other than cash
proceeds.



(59) "Obligor" means a person that, with respect to an
obligation secured by a security interest in or an agricultural
lien on the collateral: (i) Owes payment or other performance of
the obligation; (ii) has provided property other than the
collateral to secure payment or other performance of the
obligation; or (iii) is otherwise accountable, in whole or in part,
for payment or other performance of the obligation. The term does
not include issuers or nominated persons under a letter of credit.



(60) "Original debtor" except as used in section 9-310(c),
means a person that, as debtor, entered into a security agreement
to which a new debtor has become bound under section 9-203(d).



(61) "Payment intangible" means a general intangible under
which the account debtor's principal obligation is a monetary obligation.



(62) "Person related to", with respect to an individual,
means:



(A) The spouse of the individual;



(B) A brother, brother-in-law, sister or sister-in-law of the
individual;



(C) An ancestor or lineal descendant of the individual or the
individual's spouse; or



(D) Any other relative, by blood or marriage, of the
individual or the individual's spouse who shares the same home with
the individual.



(63) "Person related to", with respect to an organization,
means:



(A) A person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by
or under common control with the organization;



(B) An officer or director of, or a person performing similar
functions with respect to, the organization;



(C) An officer or director of, or a person performing similar
functions with respect to, a person described in subparagraph (A);



(D) The spouse of an individual described in subparagraph (A),
(B) or (C); or



(E) An individual who is related by blood or marriage to an
individual described in subparagraph (A), (B), (C) or (D) and
shares the same home with the individual.



(64) "Proceeds", except as used in section 9-609(b), means the
following property:



(A) Whatever is acquired upon the sale, lease, license,
exchange or other disposition of collateral;



(B) Whatever is collected on, or distributed on account of,
collateral;



(C) Rights arising out of collateral;



(D) To the extent of the value of collateral, claims arising
out of the loss, nonconformity, or interference with the use of,
defects or infringement of rights in, or damage to, the collateral;
or



(E) To the extent of the value of collateral and to the extent
payable to the debtor or the secured party, insurance payable by
reason of the loss or nonconformity of, defects or infringement of
rights in, or damage to, the collateral.



(65) "Production-money crops" means crops that secure a
production-money obligation incurred with respect to the production
of those crops.



(66) "Production-money obligation" means an obligation of an
obligor incurred for new value given to enable the debtor to
produce crops if the value is in fact used for the production of
the crops.



(67) "Production of crops" includes tilling and otherwise
preparing land for growing, planting, cultivating, fertilizing,
irrigating, harvesting and gathering crops and protecting them from
damage or disease.



(68) "Promissory note" means an instrument that evidences a
promise to pay a monetary obligation, does not evidence an order to pay, and does not contain an acknowledgment by a bank that the bank
has received for deposit a sum of money or funds.



(69) "Proposal" means a record authenticated by a secured
party which includes the terms on which the secured party is
willing to accept collateral in full or partial satisfaction of the
obligation it secures pursuant to sections 9-620, 9-621 and 9-622.



(70) "Public-finance transaction" means a secured transaction
in connection with which:



(A) Debt securities are issued;



(B) All or a portion of the securities issued have an initial
stated maturity of at least twenty years; and



(C) The debtor, obligor, secured party, account debtor or
other person obligated on collateral, assignor or assignee of a
secured obligation, or assignor or assignee of a security interest
is a state or a governmental unit of a state.



(71) "Pursuant to commitment", with respect to an advance made
or other value given by a secured party, means pursuant to the
secured party's obligation, whether or not a subsequent event of
default or other event not within the secured party's control has
relieved or may relieve the secured party from its obligation.



(72) "Record", except as used in "for record", "of record",
"record or legal title" and "record owner", means information that
is inscribed on a tangible medium or which is stored in an
electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.



(73) "Registered organization" means an organization organized
solely under the law of a single state or the United States and as to which the state or the United States must maintain a public
record showing the organization to have been organized.



(74) "Secondary obligor" means an obligor to the extent that:



(A) The obligor's obligation is secondary; or



(B) The obligor has a right of recourse with respect to an
obligation secured by collateral against the debtor, another
obligor or property of either.



(75) "Secured party" means:



(A) A person in whose favor a security interest is created or
provided for under a security agreement, whether or not any
obligation to be secured is outstanding;



(B) A person that holds an agricultural lien;



(C) A consignor;



(D) A person to which accounts, chattel paper, payment
intangibles or promissory notes have been sold;



(E) A trustee, indenture trustee, agent, collateral agent or
other representative in whose favor a security interest or
agricultural lien is created or provided for; or



(F) A person that holds a security interest arising under
section 2-401, 2-505, 2-711(3), 2A-508(5), 4-210 or 5-118.



(76) "Security agreement" means an agreement that creates or
provides for a security interest.



(77) "Send," in connection with a record or notification,
means:



(A) To deposit in the mail, deliver for transmission, or
transmit by any other usual means of communication, with postage or cost of transmission provided for, addressed to any address
reasonable under the circumstances; or



(B) To cause the record or notification to be received within
the time that it would have been received if properly sent under
paragraph (A).



(78) "Software" means a computer program and any supporting
information provided in connection with a transaction relating to
the program. The term does not include a computer program that is
included in the definition of goods.



(79) "State" means a state of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the United States Virgin Islands or any
territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States.



(80) "Supporting obligation" means a letter-of-credit right or
secondary obligation that supports the payment or performance of an
account, chattel paper, a document, a general intangible, an
instrument or investment property.



(81) "Tangible chattel paper" means chattel paper evidenced by
a record or records consisting of information that is inscribed on
a tangible medium.



(82) "Termination statement" means an amendment of a financing
statement which:



(A) Identifies, by its file number, the initial financing
statement to which it relates; and



(B) Indicates either that it is a termination statement or
that the identified financing statement is no longer effective.



(83) "Transmitting utility" means a person primarily engaged
in the business of:



(A) Operating a railroad, subway, street railway or trolley
bus;



(B) Transmitting communications electrically,
electromagnetically or by light;



(C) Transmitting goods by pipeline or sewer; or



(D) Transmitting or producing and transmitting electricity,
steam, gas, or water.
(b) Definitions in other articles. "Control" as provided in
section 7-106 and the following definitions in other articles apply
to this article:
"Applicant"


















Section 5-102.
"Beneficiary"

















Section 5-102.
"Broker"



















Section 8-102.
"Certificated security"













Section 8-102.
"Check"




















Section 3-104.
"Clearing corporation"













Section 8-102.
"Contract for sale"














Section 2-106.
"Customer" 


















Section 4-104.
"Entitlement holder"












Section 8-102.
"Financial asset"














Section 8-102.
"Holder in due course"













Section 3-302.
"Issuer" (with respect to a letter of
credit or letter-of-credit right)







Section 5-102.
"Issuer" (with respect to a security)





Section 8-201.
"Issuer" (with respect to documents 





Section 7-102.
of title)
"Lease"




















Section 2A-103.
"Lease agreement"














Section 2A-103.
"Lease contract"















Section 2A-103.
"Leasehold interest"












Section 2A-103.
"Lessee"



















Section 2A-103.
"Lessee in ordinary course of business"




Section 2A-103.
"Lessor"



















Section 2A-103.
"Lessor's residual interest"











Section 2A-103.
"Letter of credit"














Section 5-102.
"Merchant"


















Section 2-104.
"Negotiable instrument"













Section 3-104.
"Nominated person"














Section 5-102.
"Note"





















Section 3-104.
"Proceeds of a letter of credit"








Section 5-114.
"Prove"




















Section 3-103.
"Sale"





















Section 2-106.
"Securities account"Section 8-501.
"Securities intermediary"










Section 8-102.
"Security"


















Section 8-102.
"Security certificate"













Section 8-102.
"Security entitlement"













Section 8-102.
"Uncertificated security"










Section 8-102.
(c) Article 1 definitions and principles. Article 1 contains
general definitions and principles of construction and interpretation applicable throughout this article.
§46-9-203. Attachment and enforceability of security interest;
proceeds; supporting obligations; formal requisites.
(a) Attachment. A security interest attaches to collateral
when it becomes enforceable against the debtor with respect to the
collateral, unless an agreement expressly postpones the time of
attachment.
(b) Enforceability. Except as otherwise provided in
subsections (c) through (i), inclusive, of this section, a security
interest is enforceable against the debtor and third parties with
respect to the collateral only if:
(1) Value has been given;
(2) The debtor has rights in the collateral or the power to
transfer rights in the collateral to a secured party; and
(3) One of the following conditions is met:
(A) The debtor has authenticated a security agreement that
provides a description of the collateral and, if the security
interest covers timber to be cut, a description of the land
concerned;
(B) The collateral is not a certificated security and is in
the possession of the secured party under section 9-313 pursuant to
the debtor's security agreement;
(C) The collateral is a certificated security in registered
form and the security certificate has been delivered to the secured
party under section 8-301 pursuant to the debtor's security
agreement; or
(D) The collateral is deposit accounts, electronic chattel
paper, investment property letter-of-credit rights, or electronic
documents, and the secured party has control under section 7-106,
9-104, 9-105, 9-106 or 9-107 pursuant to the debtor's security
agreement.
(c) Other UCC provisions. Subsection (b) of this section is
subject to section 4-210 on the security interest of a collecting
bank, section 5-118 on the security interest of a letter-of-credit
issuer or nominated person, section 9-110 on a security interest
arising under article two or two-a of this chapter and section
9-206 on security interests in investment property.
(d) When person becomes bound by another person's security.
A person becomes bound as debtor by a security agreement entered
into by another person if, by operation of law other than this
article or by contract:
(1) The security agreement becomes effective to create a
security interest in the person's property; or
(2) The person becomes generally obligated for the obligations
of the other person, including the obligation secured under the
security agreement, and acquires or succeeds to all or
substantially all of the assets of the other person.
(e) Effect of new debtor becoming bound. If a new debtor
becomes bound as debtor by a security agreement entered into by
another person:
(1) The agreement satisfies subsection (b)(3) of this section
with respect to existing or after-acquired property of the new debtor to the extent the property is described in the agreement;
and
(2) Another agreement is not necessary to make a security
interest in the property enforceable.
(f) Proceeds and supporting obligations. The attachment of a
security interest in collateral gives the secured party the rights
to proceeds provided by section 9-315 and is also attachment of a
security interest in a supporting obligation for the collateral.
(g) Lien securing right to payment. The attachment of a
security interest in a right to payment or performance secured by
a security interest or other lien on personal or real property is
also attachment of a security interest in the security interest,
mortgage or other lien.
(h) Security entitlement carried in securities account. The
attachment of a security interest in a securities account is also
attachment of a security interest in the security entitlements
carried in the securities account.
(i) Commodity contracts carried in commodity account. The
attachment of a security interest in a commodity account is also
attachment of a security interest in the commodity contracts
carried in the commodity account.
§46-9-207. Rights and duties of secured party having possession or
control of collateral.
(a) Duty of care when secured party in possession. Except as
otherwise provided in subsection (d), a secured party shall use
reasonable care in the custody and preservation of collateral in the secured party's possession. In the case of chattel paper or an
instrument, reasonable care includes taking necessary steps to
preserve rights against prior parties unless otherwise agreed.
(b) Expenses, risks, duties and rights when secured party in
possession. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), if a
secured party has possession of collateral:
(1) Reasonable expenses, including the cost of insurance and
payment of taxes or other charges, incurred in the custody,
preservation, use or operation of the collateral are chargeable to
the debtor and are secured by the collateral;
(2) The risk of accidental loss or damage is on the debtor to
the extent of a deficiency in any effective insurance coverage;
(3) The secured party shall keep the collateral identifiable,
but fungible collateral may be commingled; and
(4) The secured party may use or operate the collateral:
(A) For the purpose of preserving the collateral or its value;
(B) As permitted by an order of a court having competent
jurisdiction; or
(C) Except in the case of consumer goods, in the manner and to
the extent agreed by the debtor.
(c) Duties and rights when secured party in possession or
control. Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d) of this
section, a secured party having possession of collateral or control
of collateral under section 7-106, 9-104, 9-105, 9-106 or 9-107:
(1) May hold as additional security any proceeds, except money
or funds, received from the collateral;
(2) Shall apply money or funds received from the collateral to
reduce the secured obligation, unless remitted to the debtor; and
(3) May create a security interest in the collateral.
(d) Buyer of certain rights to payment. If the secured party
is a buyer of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, or
promissory notes or a consignor:
(1) Subsection (a) of this section does not apply unless the
secured party is entitled under an agreement:
(A) To charge back uncollected collateral; or
(B) Otherwise to full or limited recourse against the debtor
or a secondary obligor based on the nonpayment or other default of
an account debtor or other obligor on the collateral; and
(2) Subsections (b) and (c) of this section do not apply.
§46-9-208. Additional duties of secured party having control of
collateral.
(a) Applicability of section. This section applies to cases
in which there is no outstanding secured obligation and the secured
party is not committed to make advances, incur obligations, or
otherwise give value.
(b) Duties of secured party after receiving demand from
debtor. Within ten days after receiving an authenticated demand by
the debtor:
(1) A secured party having control of a deposit account under
section 9-104(a)(2) shall send to the bank with which the deposit
account is maintained an authenticated statement that releases the
bank from any further obligation to comply with instructions originated by the secured party;
(2) A secured party having control of a deposit account under
section 9-104(a)(3) shall:
(A) Pay the debtor the balance on deposit in the deposit
account; or
(B) Transfer the balance on deposit into a deposit account in
the debtor's name;
(3) A secured party, other than a buyer, having control of
electronic chattel paper under section 9-105 shall:
(A) Communicate the authoritative copy of the electronic
chattel paper to the debtor or its designated custodian;
(B) If the debtor designates a custodian that is the
designated custodian with which the authoritative copy of the
electronic chattel paper is maintained for the secured party,
communicate to the custodian an authenticated record releasing the
designated custodian from any further obligation to comply with
instructions originated by the secured party and instructing the
custodian to comply with instructions originated by the debtor; and
(C) Take appropriate action to enable the debtor or its
designated custodian to make copies of or revisions to the
authoritative copy which add or change an identified assignee of
the authoritative copy without the consent of the secured party;
(4) A secured party having control of investment property
under section 8-106(d)(2) or 9-106(b) shall send to the securities
intermediary or commodity intermediary with which the security
entitlement or commodity contract is maintained an authenticated record that releases the securities intermediary or commodity
intermediary from any further obligation to comply with entitlement
orders or directions originated by the secured party;
(5) A secured party having control of a letter-of-credit right
under section 9-107 shall send to each person having an unfulfilled
obligation to pay or deliver proceeds of the letter of credit to
the secured party an authenticated release from any further
obligation to pay or deliver proceeds of the letter of credit to
the secured party; and
(6) A secured party having control of an electronic document
shall:
(A) Give control of the electronic document to the debtor or
its designated custodian;
(B) If the debtor designates a custodian that is the
designated custodian with which the authoritative copy of the
electronic document is maintained for the secured party,
communicate to the custodian an authenticated record releasing the
designated custodian from any further obligation to comply with
instructions originated by the secured party and instructing the
custodian to comply with instructions originated by the debtor; and
(C) Take appropriate action to enable the debtor or its
designated custodian to make copies of or revisions to the
authoritative copy which add or change an identified assignee of
the authoritative copy without the consent of the secured party.
§46-9-301. Law governing perfection and priority of security
interests.
Except as otherwise provided in sections 9-303 through 9-306,
the following rules determine the law governing perfection, the
effect of perfection or nonperfection and the priority of a
security interest in collateral:
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, while a
debtor is located in a jurisdiction, the local law of that
jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of perfection or
nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in
collateral.
(2) While collateral is located in a jurisdiction, the local
law of that jurisdiction governs perfection, the effect of
perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a possessory
security interest in that collateral.
(3) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (4) of this
section, while tangible negotiable documents, goods, instruments,
money or tangible chattel paper is located in a jurisdiction, the
local law of that jurisdiction governs:
(A) Perfection of a security interest in the goods by filing
a fixture filing;
(B) Perfection of a security interest in timber to be cut; and
(C) The effect of perfection or nonperfection and the priority
of a nonpossessory security interest in the collateral.
(4) The local law of the jurisdiction in which the wellhead or
minehead is located governs perfection, the effect of perfection or
nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in
as-extracted collateral.
§46-9-310. When filing required to perfect security interest or
agricultural lien; security interests and agricultural liens
to which filing provisions do not apply.
(a) General rule: perfection by filing. Except as otherwise
provided in subsection (b) of this section and section 9-312(b), a
financing statement must be filed to perfect all security interests
and agricultural liens.
(b) Exceptions: filing not necessary. The filing of a
financing statement is not necessary to perfect a security
interest:
(1) That is perfected under section 9-308(d), (e), (f) or (g);
(2) That is perfected under section 9-309 when it attaches;
(3) In property subject to a statute, regulation or treaty
described in section 9-311(a);
(4) In goods in possession of a bailee which is perfected
under section 9-312(d)(1) or (2);
(5) In certificated securities, documents, goods or
instruments which is perfected without filing, control, or
possession under section 9-312(e), (f) or (g);
(6) In collateral in the secured party's possession under
section 9-313;
(7) In a certificated security which is perfected by delivery
of the security certificate to the secured party under section
9-313;
(8) In deposit accounts, electronic chattel paper, electronic documents, investment property or letter-of-credit rights which is
perfected by control under section 9-314;
(9) In proceeds which is perfected under section 9-315; or
(10) That is perfected under section 9-316.
(c) Assignment of perfected security interest. If a secured
party assigns a perfected security interest or agricultural lien,
a filing under this article is not required to continue the
perfected status of the security interest against creditors of and
transferees from the original debtor.
§46-9-312. Perfection of security interests in chattel paper,
deposit accounts, documents, goods covered by documents,
instruments, investment property, letter-of-credit rights and
money; perfection by permissive filing; temporary perfection
without filing or transfer of possession.
(a) Perfection by filing permitted. A security interest in
chattel paper, negotiable documents, instruments or investment
property may be perfected by filing.
(b) Control or possession of certain collateral. Except as
otherwise provided in section 9-315(c) and (d) for proceeds:
(1) A security interest in a deposit account may be perfected
only by control under section 9-314; and
(2) Except as otherwise provided in section 9-308(d), a
security interest in a letter-of-credit right may be perfected only
by control under section 9-314; and
(3) A security interest in money may be perfected only by the secured party's taking possession under section 9-313.
(c) Goods covered by negotiable document. While goods are in
the possession of a bailee that has issued a negotiable document
covering the goods:
(1) A security interest in the goods may be perfected by
perfecting a security interest in the document; and
(2) A security interest perfected in the document has priority
over any security interest that becomes perfected in the goods by
another method during that time.
(d) Goods covered by nonnegotiable document. While goods are
in the possession of a bailee that has issued a nonnegotiable
document covering the goods, a security interest in the goods may
be perfected by:
(1) Issuance of a document in the name of the secured party;
(2) The bailee's receipt of notification of the secured
party's interest; or
(3) Filing as to the goods.
(e) Temporary perfection: new value. A security interest in
certificated securities, negotiable documents or instruments is
perfected without filing or the taking of possession or control for
a period of twenty days from the time it attaches to the extent
that it arises for new value given under an authenticated security
agreement.
(f) Temporary perfection: goods or documents made available to
debtor. A perfected security interest in a negotiable document or
goods in possession of a bailee, other than one that has issued a negotiable document for the goods, remains perfected for twenty
days without filing if the secured party makes available to the
debtor the goods or documents representing the goods for the
purpose of:
(1) Ultimate sale or exchange; or
(2) Loading, unloading, storing, shipping, transshipping,
manufacturing, processing or otherwise dealing with them in a
manner preliminary to their sale or exchange.
(g) Temporary perfection: delivery of security certificate or
instrument to debtor. A perfected security interest in a
certificated security or instrument remains perfected for twenty
days without filing if the secured party delivers the security
certificate or instrument to the debtor for the purpose of:
(1) Ultimate sale or exchange; or
(2) Presentation, collection, enforcement, renewal or
registration of transfer.
(h) Expiration of temporary perfection. After the twenty-day
period specified in subsection (e), (f) or (g) of this section
expires, perfection depends upon compliance with this article.
§46-9-313. When possession by or delivery to secured party
perfects security interest without filing.
(a) Perfection by possession or delivery. Except as
otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this section, a secured
party may perfect a security interest in tangible negotiable
documents, goods, instruments, money or tangible chattel paper by
taking possession of the collateral. A secured party may perfect a security interest in certificated securities by taking delivery
of the certificated securities under section 8-301.
(b) Goods covered by certificate of title. With respect to
goods covered by a certificate of title issued by this state, a
secured party may perfect a security interest in the goods by
taking possession of the goods only in the circumstances described
in section 9-316(d).
(c) Collateral in possession of person other than debtor.
With respect to collateral other than certificated securities and
goods covered by a document, a secured party takes possession of
collateral in the possession of a person other than the debtor, the
secured party or a lessee of the collateral from the debtor in the
ordinary course of the debtor's business, when:
(1) The person in possession authenticates a record
acknowledging that it holds possession of the collateral for the
secured party's benefit; or
(2) The person takes possession of the collateral after having
authenticated a record acknowledging that it will hold possession
of collateral for the secured party's benefit.
(d) Time of perfection by possession; continuation of
perfection. If perfection of a security interest depends upon
possession of the collateral by a secured party, perfection occurs
no earlier than the time the secured party takes possession and
continues only while the secured party retains possession.
(e) Time of perfection by delivery; continuation of
perfection. A security interest in a certificated security in registered form is perfected by delivery when delivery of the
certificated security occurs under section 8-301 and remains
perfected by delivery until the debtor obtains possession of the
security certificate.
(f) Acknowledgment not required. A person in possession of
collateral is not required to acknowledge that it holds possession
for a secured party's benefit.
(g) Effectiveness of acknowledgment; no duties or
confirmation. If a person acknowledges that it holds possession
for the secured party's benefit:
(1) The acknowledgment is effective under subsection (c) of
this section or section 8-301(a), even if the acknowledgment
violates the rights of a debtor; and
(2) Unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this
article otherwise provides, the person does not owe any duty to the
secured party and is not required to confirm the acknowledgment to
another person.
(h) Secured party's delivery to person other than debtor. A
secured party having possession of collateral does not relinquish
possession by delivering the collateral to a person other than the
debtor or a lessee of the collateral from the debtor in the
ordinary course of the debtor's business if the person was
instructed before the delivery or is instructed contemporaneously
with the delivery:
(1) Effect of delivery under subsection (h); no duties or
confirmation. To hold possession of the collateral for the secured party's benefit; or
(2) To redeliver the collateral to the secured party.
(i) A secured party does not relinquish possession, even if a
delivery under subsection (h) of this section violates the rights
of a debtor. A person to which collateral is delivered under
subsection (h) of this section does not owe any duty to the secured
party and is not required to confirm the delivery to another person
unless the person otherwise agrees or law other than this article
otherwise provides.
§46-9-314. Perfection by control.
(a) Perfection by control. A security interest in investment
property, deposit accounts, letter-of-credit rights, electronic
chattel paper, or electronic documents may be perfected by control
of the collateral under section 7-106, 9-104, 9-105, 9-106 or
9-107.
(b) Specified collateral: time of perfection by control;
continuation of perfection. A security interest in deposit
accounts, electronic chattel paper, letter-of-credit rights, or
electronic documents is perfected by control under section 7-106,
9-104, 9-105 or 9-107 when the secured party obtains control and
remains perfected by control only while the secured party retains
control.
(c) Investment property: time of perfection by control;
continuation of perfection. A security interest in investment
property is perfected by control under section 9-106 from the time
the secured party obtains control and remains perfected by control until:
(1) The secured party does not have control; and
(2) One of the following occurs:
(A) If the collateral is a certificated security, the debtor
has or acquires possession of the security certificate;
(B) If the collateral is an uncertificated security, the
issuer has registered or registers the debtor as the registered
owner; or
(C) If the collateral is a security entitlement, the debtor is
or becomes the entitlement holder.
§46-9-317. Interests that take priority over or take free of
security interest or agricultural lien.
(a) Conflicting security interests and rights of lien
creditors. A security interest or agricultural lien is subordinate
to the rights of:
(1) A person entitled to priority under section 9-322; and
(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (e) of this
section, a person that becomes a lien creditor before the earlier
of the time: (A) The security interest or agricultural lien is
perfected; or (B) one of the conditions specified in section
9-203(b)(3) is met and a financing statement covering the
collateral is filed.
(b) Buyers that receive delivery. Except as otherwise
provided in subsection (e) of this section, a buyer, other than a
secured party, of tangible chattel paper, tangible documents,
goods, instruments or a security certificate takes free of a security interest or agricultural lien if the buyer gives value and
receives delivery of the collateral without knowledge of the
security interest or agricultural lien and before it is perfected.
(c) Lessees that receive delivery. Except as otherwise
provided in subsection (e) of this section, a lessee of goods takes
free of a security interest or agricultural lien if the lessee
gives value and receives delivery of the collateral without
knowledge of the security interest or agricultural lien and before
it is perfected.
(d) Licensees and buyers of certain collateral. A licensee of
a general intangible or a buyer, other than a secured party, of
accounts, electronic chattel paper, electronic documents, general
intangibles or investment property other than a certificated
security takes free of a security interest if the licensee or buyer
gives value without knowledge of the security interest and before
it is perfected.
(e) Purchase-money security interest. Except as otherwise
provided in sections 9-320 and 9-321, if a person files a financing
statement with respect to a purchase-money security interest before
or within twenty days after the debtor receives delivery of the
collateral, the security interest takes priority over the rights of
a buyer, lessee or lien creditor which arise between the time the
security interest attaches and the time of filing.
§46-9-338. Priority of security interest or agricultural lien
perfected by filed financing statement providing certain
incorrect information.
If a security interest or agricultural lien is perfected by a
filed financing statement providing information described in
section 9-516(b)(5) which is incorrect at the time the financing
statement is filed:
(1) The security interest or agricultural lien is subordinate
to a conflicting perfected security interest in the collateral to
the extent that the holder of the conflicting security interest
gives value in reasonable reliance upon the incorrect information;
and
(2) A purchaser, other than a secured party, of the collateral
takes free of the security interest or agricultural lien to the
extent that, in reasonable reliance upon the incorrect information,
the purchaser gives value and, in the case of tangible chattel
paper, tangible documents, goods, instruments, or a security
certificate, receives delivery of the collateral.
§46-9-516. What constitutes filing; effectiveness of filing.
(a) What constitutes filing. Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (b) of this section, communication of a record to a
filing office and tender of the filing fee or acceptance of the
record by the filing office constitutes filing.
(b) Refusal to accept record; filing does not occur. Filing
does not occur with respect to a record that a filing office
refuses to accept because:
(1) The record is not communicated by a method or medium of
communication authorized by the filing office;
(2) An amount equal to or greater than the applicable filing
fee is not tendered;
(3) The filing office is unable to index the record because:
(A) In the case of an initial financing statement, the record
does not provide a name for the debtor;
(B) In the case of an amendment or correction statement, the
record:
(i) Does not identify the initial financing statement as
required by section 9-512 or 9-518, as applicable; or
(ii) Identifies an initial financing statement whose
effectiveness has lapsed under section 9-515;
(C) In the case of an initial financing statement that
provides the name of a debtor identified as an individual or an
amendment that provides a name of a debtor identified as an
individual which was not previously provided in the financing
statement to which the record relates, the record does not identify
the debtor's last name; or
(D) In the case of a record filed or recorded in the filing
office described in section 9-501(a)(1), the record does not
provide a sufficient description of the real property to which it
relates;
(4) In the case of an initial financing statement or an
amendment that adds a secured party of record, the record does not
provide a name and mailing address for the secured party of record;
(5) In the case of an initial financing statement or an
amendment that provides a name of a debtor which was not previously provided in the financing statement to which the amendment relates,
the record does not:
(A) Provide a mailing address for the debtor;
(B) Indicate whether the debtor is an individual or an
organization; or
(C) If the financing statement indicates that the debtor is an
organization, provide:
(i) A type of organization for the debtor;
(ii) A jurisdiction of organization for the debtor; or
(iii) An organizational identification number for the debtor
or indicate that the debtor has none;
(6) In the case of an assignment reflected in an initial
financing statement under section 9-514(a) or an amendment filed
under section 9-514(b), the record does not provide a name and
mailing address for the assignee; or
(7) In the case of a continuation statement, the record is not
filed within the six-month period prescribed by section 9-515(d).
(c) Rules applicable to subsection (b). For purposes of
subsection (b):
(1) A record does not provide information if the filing office
is unable to read or decipher the information; and
(2) A record that does not indicate that it is an amendment or
identify an initial financing statement to which it relates, as
required by section 9-512, 9-514 or 9-518, is an initial financing
statement.
(d) Refusal to accept record; record effective as filed record. A record that is communicated to the filing office with
tender of the filing fee, but which the filing office refuses to
accept for a reason other than one set forth in subsection (b) of
this section, is effective as a filed record except as against a
purchaser of the collateral which gives value in reasonable
reliance upon the absence of the record from the files.
(e)
Administrative review.
If the Secretary of State
determines that a financing statement which identities a public
official or employee as a debtor is fraudulent or that an
individual debtor and an individual secured party would appear to
be the same individual on the financing statement or that the
individual debtor claims to be a transmitting utility, without
supporting documents
, the Secretary may commence administrative
proceedings to remove the statement from its records in accordance
with the provisions of article five, chapter twenty-nine-a of this
code.
(1) Upon the commencement of proceedings pursuant to this
subsection, the Secretary of State shall identify the financing
statement in its records as subject to administrative review and
publish a notice in the West Virginia Register regarding the
proceedings.
(2) A financing statement may be found to be fraudulent only
if, based upon clear and convincing evidence, no good faith basis
exists upon which to conclude that the secured party was authorized
to file the statement and the statement was submitted for the
purpose of harassment or intimidation or fraudulent intent of the alleged debtor.
(3) If upon the completion of administrative review, it is
determined that the filing of a financing statement was fraudulent,
the filing party shall be assessed all costs incurred by the
Secretary in reaching a final determination, including
reimbursement for all costs of the hearing. The filing party may
also be subject to a civil penalty not exceeding five hundred
dollars per fraudulent filing. If upon completion of
administrative review or any subsequent appeal of a decision of the
Secretary of State, it is determined that a filing subject to
appeal is not fraudulent, the secretary or court may award the
prevailing party reasonable costs and expenses, including attorney
fees.
(4) The Secretary of State shall annually submit a report to
the Legislature regarding actions taken against fraudulent filings
pursuant to this section which identifies the number and
characteristics of such proceedings, identifies any creditors found
to have made fraudulent filings, describes proceedings initiated by
the secretary in which it is ultimately determined that fraudulent
filings did not occur, describes the number and type of complaints
received by the Secretary in which it is alleged that fraudulent
filings have occurred, and describes the actions taken by the
secretary to investigate complaints concerning allegedly fraudulent
filings and the results of the investigations.
(5) A decision by the secretary to remove a financing
statement determined to have been fraudulently filed subject to appeal de novo to the Circuit Court of Kanawha County. Pending the
outcome of an appeal, the financing statement may not be removed
from the records of the Secretary, but shall be identified in the
records as having been adjudicated to be fraudulent, subject to a
pending appeal by the putative creditor.
(6) A financing statement filed by a regulated financial
institution is not subject to the provisions of this section. For
the purposes of this section, a regulated financial institution is
a bank, bank and trust company, trust company, savings bank,
savings association, building and loan association, credit union,
consumer finance company, insurance company, investment company,
mortgage lender or broker, securities broker, dealer or
underwriter, or other institution chartered, licensed, registered
or otherwise authorized under federal law, the law of this state or
any other state, to engage in secured lending.
§46-9-601. Rights after default; judicial enforcement; consignor
or buyer of accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles or
promissory notes.
(a) Rights of secured party after default. After default, a
secured party has the rights provided in this part and, except as
otherwise provided in section 9-602, those provided by agreement of
the parties. A secured party:
(1) May reduce a claim to judgment, foreclose or otherwise
enforce the claim, security interest or agricultural lien by any
available judicial procedure; and
(2) If the collateral is documents, may proceed either as to
the documents or as to the goods they cover.
(b) Rights and duties of secured party in possession or
control. A secured party in possession of collateral or control of
collateral under section 7-106, 9-104, 9-105, 9-106 or 9-107 has
the rights and duties provided in section 9-207.
(c) Rights cumulative; simultaneous exercise. The rights
under subsections (a) and (b) of this section are cumulative and
may be exercised simultaneously.
(d) Rights of debtor and obligor. Except as otherwise
provided in subsection (g) of this section and section 9-605, after
default, a debtor and an obligor have the rights provided in this
part and by agreement of the parties.
(e) Lien of levy after judgment. If a secured party has
reduced its claim to judgment, the lien of any levy that may be
made upon the collateral by virtue of an execution based upon the
judgment relates back to the earliest of:
(1) The date of perfection of the security interest or
agricultural lien in the collateral;
(2) The date of filing a financing statement covering the
collateral; or
(3) Any date specified in a statute under which the
agricultural lien was created.
(f) Execution sale. A sale pursuant to an execution is a
foreclosure of the security interest or agricultural lien by
judicial procedure within the meaning of this section. A secured party may purchase at the sale and thereafter hold the collateral
free of any other requirements of this article.
(g) Consignor or buyer of certain rights to payment. Except
as otherwise provided in section 9-607(c), this part imposes no
duties upon a secured party that is a consignor or is a buyer of
accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles or promissory notes.