Don’t Let a Typo (or Other Clerical Mistake) Ruin Your Lien – Part 2


Last month, we wrote about a typo in a security agreement that lead to a bank losing its lien on collateral.  Now the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals has issued a decision that reminds us that the “law of unintended consequences” has real-world impact.  The case is Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors of Motors Liquidation Co. v. JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA, case 13-2187, decided January 21, 2015. 

Before deciding on the Committee’s appeal of the Bankruptcy Court decision, the Second Circuit sought a ruling from the Delaware Supreme Court on a limited question of interpreting UCC Article 9  –  “is it enough that the secured creditor review and knowingly approve for filing a UCC-3 purporting to extinguish the perfected security interest, or must the secured lender intend to terminate the particular security interest that is listed on the UCC-3?”  The Delaware Supreme Court ruled that if a secured party authorizes the filing of a UCC-3 termination statement, then that filing is effective “regardless of whether the secured party subjectively intends or understands the effect of that filing”.

With this ruling by the Delaware Supreme Court, the Second Circuit addressed the issue of whether or not JPMorgan authorized the filing of the UCC-3 termination statement for the term loan.  Among other facts, the Court noted that the termination documents (which included a closing checklist identifying the Lease UCCs and the Term Loan UCC, the draft UCC-3 termination statements for them, and an escrow agreement with closing instructions) were sent to a managing director at JPMorgan who supervised the prepayment of the synthetic lease and to Simpson Thacher, that JPMorgan did not raise any concern about the documents and that the Simpson Thacher attorney even complimented Mayer Brown on the termination documents (quote “Nice job on the documents”).  The Court ruled that even though the facts presented clearly showed that JPMorgan never intended to terminate the Term Loan UCC, the actions of JPMorgan and its counsel constituted authorization to file the UCC-3 for the term loan and that, therefore, the Term Loan UCC has been terminated.  In the Court’s words, “JPMorgan reviewed and assented to the filing of that statement. Nothing more is needed.”

For banks and other creditors with secured credit facilities, this decision is a strong incentive to review your portfolio management procedures for loan payoffs and to direct staff and legal counsel to carefully check that any lien releases are narrowly focused on the specific credit facility being terminated. 


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National Law Review, Volume V, Number 56