Proposed changes to the registration of charges with Companies House
01 October 2012
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In August 2012, the Department for Business,
Innovation and Skills ("BIS") published draft regulations (the
"Regulations") to amend the regime for registration of charges with
Companies House. The purpose of the Regulations is to streamline
and modernise the registration of charges created by companies and
LLP's in the UK. The Regulations are expected to come into force on
6 April 2013, although some provisions remain subject to further
consultation. Here we consider the proposed changes.
The proposed changes include the
following:
1. Single UK-wide
regime: A single UK-wide scheme for registration of
charges irrespective of the place of incorporation of a company or
an LLP within the UK with the exception that the existing
requirement to notify Companies House of an enforcement action (and
the criminal sanction for failing to notify) in respect of a charge
registered with Companies House will not apply to companies or
LLP's in Scotland. This note concentrates on charges created by
companies incorporated in England and Wales, rather than Scotland,
nor do we consider other current, and somewhat controversial,
proposals concerning a possible register of floating charges over
Scottish assets.
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2. What security is
registrable? All charges (except rent deposits, a charge
created by a member of Lloyd's to secure its obligations in
connection with its underwriting business at Lloyd's, pledges or
liens over property or charges excluded by any other Act) can be
registered with Companies House.(1)
3. When should security be
registered? The period within which the charge can be
filed with Companies House remains at 21 days but the Regulations
clarify that it is 21 days beginning with the day after the date of
creation of the charge.(2)
4. Electronic
filing: It will be possible to submit documents for
registration electronically although the Regulations do not expand
on the real practical detail on procedure for electronic filing. It
will continue to be possible to submit paper filings.
5. Documents and details
to be filed: The Regulations aim to increase transparency
and the quality of information available in the public domain in
respect of charges registered with Companies House. The full text
of the instrument creating the charge will be available to the
public. Only a certified copy of the charge instrument will need to
be filed (currently the original must be submitted to Companies
House when filing is being made) and the Regulations provide that
"personal information" including names, bank details and
signatures, but no other commercially sensitive information, may be
redacted from the certified copy of the charge instrument. The
party making the filing will need to submit a "statement of
particulars" including the names of each person entitled to the
charge or of their security agents or trustees. Where there is a
security instrument, and disregarding the position in Scotland,
statements must also be included as to whether:
(a) the charge is expressed to be
a floating charge (and if so, whether it is over all the property
and undertaking of the company);
(b) the charge prohibits or
restricts the creation of any further security ranking equally or
ahead of the charge (i.e. any negative pledge);
(c) any land, ship, aircraft or
intellectual property that is registered or required to be
registered in the UK is subject to a charge (not floating) included
in the instrument; and
(d) the instrument includes a
charge (not floating) over any other tangible/corporeal or
intangible/incorporeal property.
Where there is no security
instrument (i.e. a charge is created orally) the following will
also be required: statement that there is no instrument;
description of the nature of the charge; a short description of the
property or undertaking secured; and the obligations secured.
6. Unique Reference Code
("URC"): On registration of a charge, the Registrar will
allocate a unique URC to the charge which will allow those
searching the register to track a charge more easily and to present
a more accurate picture of the extent to which a company's assets
are encumbered.
7. Removal of criminal
sanctions: Registration is to become discretionary, in the
sense that criminal sanctions will not apply to the company for
failure to register a charge but notwithstanding this the charge
taker will, as at present, need to ensure that the charge is
registered given that the charge will be invalid against a
liquidator, administrator and creditor of the security provider if
it is not registered with Companies House (the onus being on the
presenter to determine whether a charge should be registered), and
that Companies House will still reject a filing made after the 21
day period , unless it is accompanied by a court order permitting
late registration. So far as the company creating the charge is
concerned, criminal sanctions will still apply for failure to
notify Companies House of an enforcement action and, as mentioned
below, for failure to keep a copy of registrable charge.
8. Maintenance of Register
of Charges: A company or LLP will no longer be required to
maintain its own register of charges but there will be a
requirement to retain copies of instruments creating/evidencing
registrable security (including amending instruments), which should
be available for inspection.(4)
9. Notification of
enforcement of security: The requirement to notify the
Registrar of matters relating to the enforcement of security
remains mandatory and criminal sanctions continue to apply (only in
England and Wales and Northern Ireland) for failure to notify the
Companies House of enforcement action. The Regulations do,
however, clarify the information required by Companies House when a
party is notifying it of the appointment of a receiver or manager
pursuant to a charge: the date of its creation, a description of
the instrument, short particulars of the secured property or
undertaking and the URC (if the charge is registered after 6 April
2013) is required to be provided. This information will be placed
on the register.
10. Satisfaction and
release of security: Although concerns have been voiced in
respect of the existing regime for the release of charges, which
allows any person to deliver a statement of full or partial
satisfaction or release, the Regulations do not change it. If that
person is not the charge taker, there is no requirement for them to
explain why they are making the statement, just that they give an
indication of their interest in the charge.
As previously mentioned, it is expected that
the Regulations will come into force on 6 April 2013. We expect BIS
and Companies House to provide further detail on the new procedure
for electronic filing in the coming months. A final comment is that
while the new regime will make registration cheaper and easier, and
will provide those searching the register with more information,
some will be disappointed that the changes do not go further.
In particular the 21 day registration period is still, so far as
someone dealing with a company is concerned, a "period of
invisibility", and a court order is still required for registration
"out of time". Pressure to address these points, and indeed the
whole registration process, will no doubt continue.
For further information, please contact
Susan
McCloskey,
associate in the Finance Group at Field Fisher
Waterhouse LLP.
This is
subject to any other applicable exemption from the requirement to
register, such as that for financial collateral arrangements under
the Financial Collateral Arrangements (No 2) Regulations 2003,
although the drafting of the Regulations on this point is rather
awkward. The term "charge" is defined in the Regulations to include
a mortgage (as it does at present) and also various Scottish forms
of security. The reference to pledges or liens is presumably
clarificatory, since these have generally been regarded as not
constituting registrable charges, but it is unclear whether this is
intended to affect the position in the case of pledges arising from
written attornment by the pledgor, which did arguably require
registration. Certain charges that, although not strictly
registrable, were often registered out of caution, now clearly
require registration, unless some other exemption applies.
Fixed charges over shares and insurance policies are examples.
(3) Whether or not this will
affect the current position as regards who has notice of a negative
pledge is uncertain: indeed the Regulation adds to the uncertainty.
As at present, anyone inspecting the register will presumably be on
notice. There is, however, a draft provision that anyone
taking a charge will have notice of any prescribed particular on
the register, whereas anyone else will not. If the company is
holding property as trustee, this may be noted on the register,
which reflects current practice.
(4) If some of the prescribed
particulars are contained in an instrument other than the charge, a
copy of that instrument must also be available for inspection, so
the parties will usually wish to make sure that the relevant
details are contained in the charge so that the facility agreement,
for example, can remain private. Overseas companies, which are now
outside the registration regime, must continue to maintain a
register of charges.