UTAH CODE (Last Updated: January 16, 2015) |
Title 70A. Uniform Commercial Code |
Chapter 9a. Uniform Commercial Code - Secured Transactions |
Part 1. General Provisions |
§ 70A-9a-103. Purchase-money security interest -- Application of payments -- Burden of establishing.
Latest version.
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(2) A security interest in goods is a purchase-money security interest: (a) to the extent that the goods are purchase-money collateral with respect to that security interest; (b) if the security interest is in inventory that is or was purchase-money collateral, also to the extent that the security interest secures a purchase-money obligation incurred with respect to other inventory in which the secured party holds or held a purchase-money security interest; and (c) also to the extent that the security interest secures a purchase-money obligation incurred with respect to software in which the secured party holds or held a purchase-money security interest. (3) A security interest in software is a purchase-money security interest to the extent that the security interest also secures a purchase-money obligation incurred with respect to goods in which the secured party holds or held a purchase-money security interest if: (a) the debtor acquired its interest in the software in an integrated transaction in which it acquired an interest in the goods; and (b) the debtor acquired its interest in the software for the principal purpose of using the software in the goods. (4) The security interest of a consignor in goods that are the subject of a consignment is a purchase-money security interest in inventory. (5) In a transaction other than a consumer-goods transaction, if the extent to which a security interest is a purchase-money security interest depends on the application of a payment to a particular obligation, the payment must be applied: (a) in accordance with any reasonable method of application to which the parties agree; (b) in the absence of the parties' agreement to a reasonable method, in accordance with any intention of the obligor manifested at or before the time of payment; or (c) in the absence of an agreement to a reasonable method and a timely manifestation of the obligor's intention, in the following order: (i) to obligations that are not secured; and (ii) if more than one obligation is secured, to obligations secured by purchase-money security interests in the order in which those obligations were incurred. (6) In a transaction other than a consumer-goods transaction, a purchase-money security interest does not lose its status as such, even if: (a) the purchase-money collateral also secures an obligation that is not a purchase-money obligation; (b) collateral that is not purchase-money collateral also secures the purchase-money obligation; or (c) the purchase-money obligation has been renewed, refinanced, consolidated, or restructured. (7) In a transaction other than a consumer-goods transaction, a secured party claiming a purchase-money security interest has the burden of establishing the extent to which the security interest is a purchase-money security interest. (8) The limitation of the rules in Subsections (5), (6), and (7) to transactions other than consumer-goods transactions is intended to leave to the court the determination of the proper rules in consumer-goods transactions. The court may not infer from that limitation the nature of the proper rule in consumer-goods transactions and may continue to apply established approaches.
Enacted by Chapter 252, 2000 General Session