Australian Law Reform Commission

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Personal Property Securities (ALRC Report 64)

Reports

Final Report—Personal Property Securities (ALRC Report 64) (tabled 27 May 1993)

Background

At the time of the reference the method of dealing with personal property securities was both complex and inefficient. A complicated and often overlapping range of laws applied depending on the nature of the security, the type of property the security was taken out over and the class of debtor. These laws were a mixture of common law and statute law and of federal, state and territory law. They differed widely between jurisdictions. This haphazard method of dealing with personal property securities meant that there was no one simple method of determining whether a particular person had a security interest in certain property. Where two or more people had interests in the one property, there was no clear way of determining which person had priority.

The existing system was inefficient for both borrowers and lenders. Because there were a variety of registers used for different types of property, it was often difficult for those considering a transaction involving that property to determine whether a security interest was attached to it. In addition, the priority rules were unnecessarily complicated and lacked clear standards for businesses to adhere to.

A Discussion Paper Personal Property Securities (ALRC DP 52) was released in 1992 and the ALRC's final report, Personal Property Securities (ALRC Report 64), was tabled in federal parliament on 27 May 1993.

Key recommendations

Implementation

The Australian Law Reform Commission's report was widely criticised by legal practitioners and the finance industry. Some of this criticism related to minor technical aspects of the report, however a substantial portion of the criticism disagreed with the Commission's approach in two areas: the use of a functional definition to determine exactly what is a security, and the Commission's decision to depart from Article 9 of the United States Unified Commercial Code, which has provided the basis for legislative reforms in several other countries. Many critics argued that departing from Article 9 was undertaking unnecessary effort and posed an unnecessary risk.

Since the tabling of the ALRC report in 1993, the US law in this area has been revised and similar laws have been introduced in Canada and New Zealand. Support for reform has continued in Australia, in particular a consideration of introducing consistency between the laws of Australia, the US, Canada and New Zealand.

In April 2006, the Standing Committee of Attorneys-General released an Options Paper on the issues, and the Commonwealth Attorney-General's Department is chairing an officers' working group to develop proposals for Ministers to consider..

Three Discussion Papers seeking further stakeholder input were published in late 2007.

In June 2009, the Australian Government introduced the Personal Property Securities Bill 2009 (Cth) into the Australian Parliament. The Bill proposes a single national law governing security interests in personal property. It would also address the creation and extinguishment of security interests in personal property and set out rules for determining priority among competing interests in personal property, and establish a single national online register of personal property securities (the PPS Register). If passed, the Bill will substantially implement the ALRC’s recommendations from ALRC Report 64.

 

The information on this page was current as of January 2010
This page was posted 29 January 2010

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