United States An analogous (but not identical) concept in the
United States to the floating charge is the
floating lien, which was implemented by Article 9 of the
Uniform Commercial Code and is a lien that expanded to cover any additional property that is acquired by the lienee while the debt is outstanding. A critical difference between the floating charge and the floating lien is that UCC security interests, including floating liens, can be granted by
any kind of debtor, including individuals or partnerships (and will thus have priority in bankruptcy), whereas the floating charge can be granted only by corporate entities. The U.S. never adopted the floating charge directly because at the time it was developing in England in the 19th century, U.S. courts generally held that a debtor simply could not create a security interest in future property; general creditors ought to have a pool of unencumbered assets to look to; and even if such a thing could exist, it was a
fraudulent conveyance. However, creditors' lawyers gradually developed a diverse variety of methods, some authorized by state legislatures and others tolerated by state courts, to evade the general ban on security interests in future property. As it had become clear that creditors and debtors were going to find ways to create enforceable
de facto security interests in after-acquired property and general intangibles whether courts liked it or not, the UCC drafters in the 1940s (particularly
Grant Gilmore) successfully argued that such interests should be legitimized and simplified in the form of the floating lien.
Quebec When the
Quebec Civil Code came into force in 1994 and superseded the
Civil Code of Lower Canada, it abolished the
charge flottante "floating charge" and created and introduced an analogous security device into
Quebec law under the name
hypothèque ouverte, or "floating
mortgage". As a mortgage, it can be taken over immovables and movables (real and personal property); must be in due form, i.e. passed before a
notary and registered; confers
rights in rem including priority ranking, right of pursuit (that is, it runs with the land and cannot be defeated by a
bona fide purchaser), creditor's consent required to dispose of subject; and grants powers of recourse, including
repossession,
judicial foreclosure, sale by mortgagee in possession, or
administrative receivership. The floating mortgage can be specific or general with respect to immovables and movables, separately or together. The mortgage is not perfected until it crystallises. Crystallisation occurs upon default of the mortgagor and registration of a notice of default, and the mortgage ranks from the date notice is filed. This means that a floating mortgage ranks lower than a fixed mortgage.
Civil law countries Civil law countries generally allow for a commercial
pledge to be taken over the pooled movable
assets held or acquired for the use of a
business or
income-producing activity (
going concern) and not for sale. The pool is restricted to movable (
personal)
property of a long-term nature and of value to the operation of the business, specifically
inventory and
fixed assets, which include movable tangibles such as
trade fixtures, equipment, machinery, tools, furniture; and
legal intangibles such as company style (name),
logos,
goodwill,
intellectual property,
leases. The pledge never crystallises like a floating charge; instead the pool is a
universitas rerum and treated as a single movable security subject. The asset pool is referred to as a
fonds de commerce (French),
fondo de comercio (Spanish),
fondo di commercio (Italian),
Geschäftsfonds (German),
handelsfonds (Dutch), and so on. Besides the class of assets secured, the civilian commercial pledge differs from a floating charge in that fixed assets are not always changing, and the creditor ranks prior to all secured and unsecured claims. Commercial pledges exist in
common law countries but are usually taken over working capital (
floating assets and
investments). ==See also==