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Thursday 18 July 2013

The Dangers of Amended Terms & Conditions


For us simple folk, the basic difference between ‘transitional’ and ‘non-transitional’ under the PPSA boils down to the simple question – is this a long-standing customer or a new account?

If a supplier’s trading account was in place prior to the PPSR’s start date on 30/01/2012 then any on-going security interests would be dealt with under the PPSA’s transitional rules, after that date and the transitional rules do not apply.

[My earlier post at http://ppsr-blog.blogspot.com.au/2012/05/challenges-to-ppsas-transitional-rules.html should be referred to for an explanation for identifying a transitional security interest.]

Why is the transitional/non-transitional designation so important?

Well, for one thing, the PPSA provides for a 2 year period during which transitional security interests are deemed to have been perfected without needing to be registered.  This is designed to give trade credit suppliers plenty of time to get around to putting all their long-standing accounts on the register before the end of January 2014 deadline.

So a transitional security interest is basically an existing account that hasn’t yet been registered on the PPSR?

Well, not quite.  When you make a registration on the PPSR one of the first questions you get asked is whether the registration is for a transitional or non-transitional security interest.  So PPSR registered interests may also be ‘transitional’. This is because the rules for determining priority are applied differently depending upon the transitional status of the security interest.

Where you have two equivalent security interests competing for the same collateral, priority is given to the security interest that was registered first; UNLESS one or more of the security interests was a transitional security interest in which case those interests are deemed to have been perfected immediately before the PPSR came into effect.

Now it has been argued that, as the PPSR acts as a notice filing system rather than a transaction filing system, aside from those pesky priority issues, it shouldn’t really matter if a registration is designated as a transitional or non-transitional security interest, what really matters is that the presence of a security interest has been made public and interested parties can be made aware of its existence.  The extension of this argument is that if a security interest was wrongly identified as transitional then an Insolvency Practitioner (IP) could simply ignore its transitional designation and treat the security interest as if it were non-transitional. 

A little like a piece of children’s craft work having its age category mislabelled when being entered into a school craft fair, the piece of work should simply be re-allocated to the correct age category and judged accordingly.

Unfortunately, I haven’t seen any evidence of this argument gaining much in the way of traction and many IPs continue to be quick to pounce on any instance where they believe a registration was wrongly categorised as an opportunity to dismiss a supplier’s claim to secured creditor status.  IPs are effectively disqualifying the child’s craft work from the whole competition rather than assessing it in its correct category.

Ok, it sounds harsh but no-one really expected IPs to be the sort to go around kissing babies and patting puppy dogs and if a supplier can’t tell the difference between a long-standing account and a new account then surely they’ve got to take some responsibility for that?

If only it were that straightforward. 

The issue we are now seeing involves instances where suppliers have made changes to the terms & conditions of their original agreements with their long-standing customers, perhaps to make reference to the PPSA or to clarify how payments are to be allocated, or any of a myriad of sensible variations and amendments.

If any of those changes were introduced after the PPSR came into effect on 30/01/2012 then IPs are arguing that the transitional rules can no longer apply to any subsequent security interests.

That may be understandable if the changes to the initial agreement were done in such a way as to form a completely new agreement but most variations are done so as to maintain the integrity of the original agreement.

That may be so but that might not be good enough under the PPSA. 

Section 308(b) of the PPSA defines a transitional security interest as

…a security interest provided for by a transitional security agreement, if:

(b)  in the case of a security interest arising at or after the registration commencement time:
(i) the transitional security agreement as in force immediately before the registration commencement time [30/01/2012] provides for the granting of the security interest;

The specific wording at issue is the reference to the security agreement “as in force” prior to 30/01/2012.

If we assume that the PPSA’s drafters knew what they were doing (a bit of a stretch I know) then we must consider what inferences need to be drawn from their drafting choices. 

They could simply have referred to a transitional security interest as being one that arises from a security agreement “in force” before 30/01/2012 but instead they chose to refer to a security agreement “as in force” before that date.  While the former would not be without its ambiguities, the choice to include the additional two letters appears to lend support to the suggestion that it is not merely the agreement that needed to be in place before 30/01/2012 but that version of the agreement which gave rise to the security interest in question.

If a later version of the credit agreement was introduced after 30/01/2012 then it would be that later version, it is argued, which would be deemed to have created the security interest and thus the transitional rules would not apply.

That’s an awful lot to read into the inclusion of a single two letter word.

Indeed it is and there is no obvious clarification of intent in the original PPS Bill’s Explanatory Memorandum which simply states that:

“A security interest would be a transitional security interest ….. where the security agreement is entered into prior to the registration commencement time and allows for the creation of the security interest”.

However, if there is one thing we’ve learned since the PPSR began it is that IPs will be only too happy to exploit any chink in a supplier’s registration if it means they can increase the value of the grantor’s assets they get to play with.

Therefore, if a supplier’s Terms & Conditions were amended after 30/01/2012 and that supplier wants to avoid a long, drawn out (and potentially unsuccessful) argument with an IP, they should ensure they have a non-transitional registration in place in addition to any transitional registrations.

Hopefully legal precedent will be established that suggests such a belt and braces approach is unnecessary but, until then, this approach appears to be the best way to avoid the risk of losing security interests and/or priority.

This is almost certainly an issue where suppliers would be wise to obtain their own legal advice.


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