DocketNumber: M-55
Judges: Crawford Martin
Filed Date: 7/2/1967
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 2/18/2017
Honorable John T. Cox Opinion No. M-55 County.Attorney Belton, Texas Re: The method to be used by the County Clerk to ex- tend or renew chattel mortgages-recorded prior to July 1, 1966, the effective date of the Texas Uniform Commercial Dear Mr. Cox: Code, and related questions. Your letter requesting an opinion from this office on the above subject matter is as follows: "What method must the County Clerk use to extend or renew,chattel mortgages record- ed prior to July 1, 1966, the effective date of the Texas Uniform Commercial Code, and would such extension or renewal be a prior lien if some secured party filed a financing statement after July 1, '1966, and prior to such extension and renewal? "Prior to July.1, 1966, Articles 5499 and 5499a, V.A.T.S., provided for aestruc- tion of chattel mortgages after six years from maturity of the secured indebtedness and ten years from the date of filing, re- spectively, unless the 'creditor filed with .theCounty Clerk an affidavit stating the indebtedness had not been paid, Section 10-102(l) of the Uniform Commercial Code expressly repeals these statutes, but Sec- tion lo-iO2(2) states transactions entered into prior to July 1, 1966, remain valid thereafter and may be 'completed, consummated - 251 - Hon. John T. Cox, Page 2 (M-55) or enforced' inaccordance with prior law. Therefore;.the.'question~isif a-chattel mort- gage'is about to be destroyed pursuant to Articles 5499 or.~5499a~,whethertheaffidavit required by those statutes'comes'withinthe meaning of *completed, consummated or enfor- ced * or if the creditor must create a new security interest pursuant to thenUniform Commercial Code in order to maintain his lien." The Texas Uniform Commercial Code became effective in Texas at midnight June 30, 1966 as set out in Section lo-101 of the Code. Section lo-102(l)'of the,Texas Uniform Commercial Code specifically repeals, among other statutes, Articles 5489-99, Vernon's Civil Statutes, as amended, which were the chattel mortgage statutes. Article I, Section 16, of the Constitution of Texas provides that no retroactive lSW or any law impairing the obligation of contracts shall be made. The Legislature showed they did not wish to in- validate or destroy any existing property rights created under the above repealed statutes by adopting the savings clause set out in Section lo-102(2) of the Uniform Commercial Code which reads as follows: "Transactions validly entered into before the effective date specified in Section lo-101 and the riqhts, duties and interests flowinq from them remain valid thereafter and mav be terminated, completed, consummated or enforced as required by any statute or other Law amend- ed or reoealed by this act as thouqh such re- *do; amendment had not occurred." (Emphasis . A chattel mortgage,validly entered into and pro- perly recorded prior to July 1, 1966,clearly is a transaction -~252 - Hon. John T. Cox, page 3 (M-55) entered into prior to July 1, 1966; therefore, all statutes in effect prior to midnight June 30, 1966, should apply to saia transaction as well as all rights, duties and interests flowing from it. Cur Courts have held that statutes will not be applied retrospectively unless it appears by fair implication from the language used that it was the intention of the Legis- lature to make it applicable to both past and future trans- actions. State v. Humble Oil 61Refininq Co,,141 Tex. 40
,169 S.W.2d 707
(1943). The following quoted statute applied to chattel mortgages prior to July 1, 1966, in counties in this State having a population less than six hundred thousand. Article 5499, Vernon's Civil Statutes, reads as followsr "All chattel mortgages filed with the county clerks of this State in accordance with law shall be prima facie presumed to have been paid after the 'expirationof six years from the . 'date‘of the maturity of the debts au&h mor't-" " '~ gages were intended to secure, unless the owner or holder of such mortgages, his agent or attor- ney p shall, within three months next before the expiration of said time, file an affidavit in writing with the county clerk stating that such debt has not been paid, and the amount still due thereon. If such affidavit is not filed, the clerk shall, at the expiration of said time, either deliver such mortgage to the maker or destroy the same." Article 5499a, cited by,you, only applies to counties having a population of six hundred thousand or more. Although this Article was repealed, and is not applicable to Bell County, this opinion will necessarily apply also to this Article. In other states where the question has been raised on a transaction recorded prior to the effective date of the - 253 - Hon. ,7ohnT. Cox. Page 4 W55) Uniform Commercial Code which required re-filing to extend the lien after the effective date of the Uniform Commercial Code, the majority of the Attorney General's Opinions have held that re-filing would be under the statutes in effect prior to the effective date of the Code. Ky. Att. Gen. Op. No. 60-513, 1960, extension of chattel mortgage lien: Cal. Att. Gen. Op. No. 64-247, 10-7-64, chattel mortgage: Wyo. Att. Gen. Op. No. 26, 11-14-62, re-filing trust receipt: Ark. Att. Gen. Op., 6-20-62, extension of trust receipt: and Md. Att. Gen. Op., 2-5-64 and 5-14-64 held that party re-filing conditional sales contract could instruct clerk to file under laws effective prior,to adoption of Uniform Commercial Code. 29 Tex.B,.J;.345. Also in other states, in cases deciding which law to apply where there was a savings clause as to laws repealed by the Code, the laws in effect prior to the Code were applied to pre-code transactions. Wilson v. Prudential Ins. Co. of America,396 S.W.2d 300
(Ark. 1965): First Nat. Bank of Marvsville v. Bahan, 198 N.E.Zd 272 (Ohio C.P. 1964); Streeter v. Middleman,240 Md. 169
,213 A.2d 471
(1965); Luker v. Kells,411 P.2d 511
(Gkla. 1966). InTexas our Courts have held that renewal of a lien does not affect the lien, nor is it a new transaction. Willis V. Sanger,40 S.W. 229
(Tex.Civ.App. 1897, error ref.). It is therefore our opinion that the re-filing by affidavit required to extend the chattel mortgage lien under Article 5499 of Vernon's Civil Statutes after the effective date of the Uniform Commercial Code would not be a new trans- action within the meaning of the Uniform Commercial Code, but is an extension of the transaction entered into by the parties prior to July 1, 1966. Such filing should be made with the County Clerk. In the absence of specific instructions by the mortgagee, to the Clerk, designating the statute under which he wishes it to be filed, an instrument in affidavit form showing itself to be an extension of an agreement entered into prior to July 1, 1966, should be filed in accordance with Article 5499, Vernon's Civil Statutes. However,an instrument - 254 - Hon. John T. Cox, page 5 (M-55) purporting to be a continuation statement should be filed in accordance with the provisions of the Texas Uniform Commercial Code. As to your question on priority of liens, this office cannot answer that question as submitted by you, as the Texas Uniform Commercial Code places no duty on the county clerk to determine this matter. SUMMARY Chattel mortgages filed prior to July 1, 1966, should be renewed or extended by filing affidavit with County Clerk as required by Article 5499 and recorded under chattel mort- gage laws in effect prior to July 1, 1966. ORD C. MARTIN Prepared by William J. Craig Assistant Attorney General APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE Hawthorne Phillips, Chairman W. V. Geppert, Co-Chairman W. 0. Shults Gordon Cass Ralph Rash Houghton Brownlee STAFF LEGAL ASSISTANT A. J. Carubbi, Jr. - 255 -