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CORPORATE TRANSACTIONS & COMPLIANCE BLOG

An Unintended Space Can Render a Financing Statement Serious Misleading – At Least in Wisconsin

By: Despina Shields, COGENCY GLOBAL on Wed, Oct 18, 2017

Case: United States SEC v. ISC, Inc., 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 139258 (W.D. Wis. Aug. 30, 2017)

What’s the difference between “ISC, Inc .” and “ISC, Inc.”? Did you notice the single space between the second “c” and the period in the first variation? Would you have caught that discrepancy if you’d been reviewing a financing statement for accuracy? Not noticing a space that doesn’t belong can happen to the most careful of UCC filers. That barely noticeable single space seems like almost nothing. Yet in a recent case from Wisconsin, it caused a financing statement to become insufficient.

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The Case of Double Bubble, LTD

In 2012, Double Bubble, LTD (secured party) filed an initial UCC1 financing statement with the Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions, the central filing office in Wisconsin. The debtor’s name was styled as “ISC, Inc .” The extra space before the period caused the UCC1 to be deemed seriously misleading and ineffective to perfect the security interest.

Minor Errors and Omissions Usually Don’t Make a Filing Seriously Misleading

Article 9 of the UCC places the burden of the UCC filing squarely on the shoulders of the filer, which is most often the secured party. It’s their responsibility to indicate the debtor name correctly. Generally, the “correct name” is the name as it appears in the public organic record reflecting any amendments in the state of formation.

Wisconsin Search Logic

So why did the court rule that the filing was seriously misleading and thus ineffective? The reason is that a third party searcher is only required to search on the true and correct legal name of the debtor in the state of formation using the filing office’s standard search logic. If a search meets this criteria and the filing is disclosed in the search results, then the filing is NOT seriously misleading and is an effective lien. In this situation, using the Wisconsin Department of Financial Institution’s website, and searching on the correct legal name, “ISC, Inc.” with the corporate indicator, the search did not disclose Double Bubble, LTD’s UCC filing. In Wisconsin, the following search logic methodology is applied for organization names by the state website:

  1. There shall be no limit to the number of matches that may be returned in response to the search criteria.
  2. No distinction shall be made between upper and lower case letters.
  3. Only characters which appear on a standard keyboard shall be considered searchable characters.
  4. For names identified as an organization, the logical equivalent of all names that begin with the exact names presented for searching shall be returned.

Wisconsin Search Logic Differs From Model Administrative Rules

Wisconsin search logic differs significantly from the search logic found in the Model Administrative Rules (MARS) that the vast majority of states have adopted. Under MARS, spaces and punctuation are removed during the search process. The two rules in MARS not incorporated into Wisconsin’s search methodology are as follows:

1.4 Punctuation marks and accents are disregarded. For the purposes of this rule, punctuation and accents include all characters other than the numerals 0 through 9 and the letter A through Z (in any case) of the English alphabet.

1.7 All spaces are disregarded.

Tips to Avoid Costly UCC Filing Errors

When you file, remember the following:

1. The debtor name is key to the UCC filing perfection, and even the slightest error could cause it to be deemed seriously misleading and ineffective.

2. Timely file UCC3 debtor name changes should the debtor change its name.

3. While state search logic may help with minor errors or omissions in a debtor name, state search logic may vary from the MARS.

4. A state may change its search logic at any time making a once effective lien ineffective if the debtor name was not indicated on the UCC exactly as it appears in the public organic record.

The easiest way to ensure this kind of search logic issue doesn’t make your UCC filing seriously misleading is to list the debtor name on the financing statement exactly as it appears in the public organic record (reflecting any amendments) in the formation state, including spaces and punctuation.

If you’re unsure about a filing, consider using an experienced service company. It’s an effective way to help you to avoid the kind of error illustrated in this case.

Topics: UCC