Part 2 SFloating charges

Registration and creation etc.S

37Register of Floating ChargesS

(1)The Keeper of the Registers of Scotland (in this Part, the “Keeper”) must establish and maintain a register to be known as the Register of Floating Charges.

(2)The Keeper must accept an application for registration of—

(a)any document delivered to the Keeper in pursuance of section 38, 41, 42, 43 or 44 of this Act; and

(b)any notice delivered to the Keeper in pursuance of section 39 or 45(2) of this Act,

provided that the application is accompanied by such information as the Keeper may require for the purposes of the registration.

(3)On receipt of such an application, the Keeper must note the date of receipt of the application; and, where the application is accepted by the Keeper, that date is to be treated for the purposes of this Part as the date of registration of the document or notice to which the application relates.

(4)The Keeper must, after accepting such an application, complete registration by registering in the Register of Floating Charges the document or notice to which the application relates.

(5)The Keeper must—

(a)make the Register of Floating Charges available for public inspection at all reasonable times;

(b)provide facilities for members of the public to obtain copies of the documents in the Register; and

(c)supply an extract of a document in the Register, certified as a true copy of the original, to any person requesting it.

(6)An extract certified as mentioned in subsection (5)(c) above is sufficient evidence of the original.

(7)The Keeper may charge such fees—

(a)for registering a document or notice in the Register of Floating Charges; or

(b)in relation to anything done under subsection (5) above,

as the Scottish Ministers may by regulations prescribe.

(8)The Scottish Ministers may by regulations make provision as to—

(a)the form and manner in which the Register of Floating Charges is to be maintained;

(b)the form of documents (including notices as mentioned in sections 39(1) and 45(2) of this Act) for registration in that Register, the particulars they are to contain and the manner in which they are to be delivered to the Keeper.

(9)Provision under subsection (8) above may, in particular, facilitate the use—

(a)of electronic communication;

(b)of documents in electronic form (and of certified electronic signatures in documents).

Prospective

40Ranking of floating chargesS

(1)Subject to subsections (4) and (5) below, a floating charge—

(a)created on or after the coming into force of this section; and

(b)which has attached to all or any part of the property of a company,

ranks as described in subsection (2) below.

(2)The floating charge referred to in subsection (1) above—

(a)ranks with—

(i)any other floating charge which has attached to that property or any part of it; or

(ii)any fixed security over that property or any part of it,

according to date of creation; and

(b)ranks equally with any floating charge or fixed security referred to in paragraph (a) above which was created on the same date as the floating charge referred to in subsection (1) above.

(3)For the purposes of subsection (2) above—

(a)the date of creation of a fixed security is the date on which the right to the security was constituted as a real right; and

(b)the date of creation of a floating charge subsisting before the coming into force of this section is the date on which the instrument creating the charge was executed by the company granting the charge.

(4)Where all or any part of the property of a company is subject to both—

(a)a floating charge; and

(b)a fixed security arising by operation of law,

the fixed security has priority over the floating charge.

(5)Where the holder of a floating charge over all or any part of the property of a company has received intimation in writing of the subsequent creation of—

(a)another floating charge over the same property or any part of it; or

(b)a fixed security over the same property or any part of it,

the priority of ranking of the first-mentioned charge is restricted to security for the matters referred to in subsection (6) below.

(6)Those matters are—

(a)the present debt incurred (whenever payable);

(b)any future debt which, under the contract to which the charge relates, the holder is required to allow the debtor to incur;

(c)any interest due or to become due on the debts referred to in paragraphs (a) and (b) above;

(d)any expenses or outlays which may be reasonably incurred by the holder; and

(e)in the case of a floating charge to secure a contingent liability (other than a liability arising under any further debts incurred from time to time), the maximum sum to which the contingent liability is capable of amounting, whether or not it is contractually limited.

(7)Subsections (1) to (6) above, and any provision made under section 41(1) of this Act, are subject to sections 175 and 176A (provision for preferential debts and share of assets) of the Insolvency Act 1986 (c. 45).

Prospective

43Alteration of floating chargesS

(1)A document of alteration may alter (whether by addition, deletion or substitution of text or otherwise) the terms of a document granting a floating charge.

(2)If (and in so far as) an alteration to the terms of a document granting a floating charge concerns—

(a)the ranking of the charge with any other floating charge or any fixed security; or

(b)the specification of—

(i)the property that is subject to the charge; or

(ii)the obligations that are secured by the charge,

the alteration is not valid unless subsection (3) below is satisfied.

(3)This subsection is satisfied if the alteration is made by a document of alteration which is—

(a)subscribed by—

(i)the company which granted the charge;

(ii)the holder of the charge; and

(iii)the holder of any other subsisting floating charge, or any subsisting fixed security, which would be adversely affected by the alteration; and

(b)registered in the Register of Floating Charges.

(4)But paragraph (a)(i) of subsection (3) above does not apply in respect of an alteration which—

(a)relates only to the ranking of the floating charge first-mentioned in that subsection with any other floating charge or any fixed security; and

(b)does not adversely affect the interests of the company which granted the charge.

(5)The granting, by the holder of a floating charge, of consent to the release from the scope of the charge of any particular property, or class of property, which is subject to the charge is to be treated as constituting an alteration—

(a)to the terms of the document granting the charge; and

(b)as to the specification of the property that is subject to the charge.

(6)For the purpose of subsection (5) above, property is not to be regarded as released from the scope of a floating charge by reason only of its ceasing to be the property of the company which granted the charge.

Prospective

45Effect of floating charges on winding upS

(1)Where a company goes into liquidation, a floating charge created over property of the company attaches to the property to which it relates.

F1(2). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(3)The attachment of a floating charge to property under subsection (1) above is subject to the rights of any person who—

(a)has effectually executed diligence on the property to which the charge relates or any part of it;

(b)holds over that property or any part of it a fixed security ranking in priority to the floating charge; or

(c)holds over that property or any part of it another floating charge so ranking.

(4)Interest accrues in respect of a floating charge which has attached to property until payment is made of any sum due under the charge.

(5)Part IV, except section 185, of the Insolvency Act 1986 has (subject to subsection (1) above) effect in relation to a floating charge as if the charge were a fixed security over the property to which it has attached in respect of the principal of the debt or obligation to which it relates and any interest due or to become due on it.

(6)Subsections (1) to (5) above do not affect the operation of—

(a)sections 53(7) and 54(6) (attachment of floating charge on appointment of receiver) of the Insolvency Act 1986;

(b)sections 175 and 176A of that Act; or

(c)paragraph 115(3) of Schedule B1 (attachment of floating charge on delivery of a notice by an administrator) to that Act.

(7)For the purposes of this section, reference to a company going into liquidation—

F2(a). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(b)F3... is to be construed in accordance with section 247(2) and (3) of the Insolvency Act 1986 (c. 45).

F4(8). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Prospective

47InterpretationS

In this Part—

  • [F5central institution ” means—

    (a)

    the Bank of England,

    (b)

    the central bank of a country or territory outside the United Kingdom, or

    (c)

    the European Central Bank;]

  • company” means an incorporated company (whether or not a company [F6as defined in section 1(1) of the Companies Act 2006]);

  • fixed security”, in relation to any property of a company, means any security (other than a floating charge or a charge having the character of a floating charge) which on the winding up of the company in Scotland would be treated as an effective security over that property including, in particular, a heritable security (within the meaning of section 9(8) of the Conveyancing and Feudal Reform (Scotland) Act 1970 (c. 35)).

Textual Amendments

F5S. 47: definition of "central institution" inserted (21.2.2009) by Banking Act 2009 (c. 1), ss. 253(7), 263(1)(2) (with s. 247); S.I. 2009/296, art. 3, Sch. para. 11