The Personal Property Security Act ("PPSA") is the name given to each of the statutes passed by all common law provinces, as well as the territories, of Canada that regulate the creation and registration of security interests in all personal property within their respective jurisdictions.
It is similar in structure to Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code in the United States, but there are important differences.
The British Sale of Goods Act 1893 was followed closely in Canada in the first half of the twentieth century. In the 1970s it was noticed in Ontario that the law of contract had departed from the 1893 Act. To remedy this shortcoming, the Law Reform Commission proposed a new regime, which was duly enacted by the provincial government as the Uniform Sale of Goods Act.
The legislation that implemented the PPSA scheme was first introduced in Ontario, followed by the remaining provinces and territories (which followed a newer uniform model with notable differences). The Atlantic provinces, together with the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, have fully computerized registries, while the others have varying degrees of electronic and paper registration. The following is a brief outline of how the regime generally works.
The scope of the Act is extremely broad, as it is concerned with every transaction which in substance creates a security interest, without regard to its form and without regard to the person who has title to the collateral. There are small differences between the provinces as to how far this extends, but the concept is basically the same. That said, however, there are some items that are specifically excluded:
Personal property is classified into the following categories:
Security interests are created through attachment, which can be followed on by perfection.
Attachment occurs when
Perfection can occur by possession of the collateral, or by registration. In certain circumstances, possession can be considered to be the superior form of perfection.
A PMSI is a special type of security interest taken in collateral by a party who gives value for the purpose of enabling the debtor to acquire rights in the collateral. Some examples are:
In specified circumstances, PPSA registrants can obtain "super-priority" status over other secured parties, when the following steps are taken:
PPSA security interests can have priority over real property security interests against fixtures, when the secured party registers notice against the land at the local registry or land titles office. Where attachment occurs before the affixation to the land, the interest will have priority, However, where attachment occurs after affixation, the interest is subordinate unless where the debtor otherwise consents.
Other intersections can also occur with interests in land. For example, a lender that grants a mortgage over a rental property will also register a PPSA security interest against the rents being generated, in order to attorn the rents in the event the mortgage goes into default.
In the absence of any other special priority rules, the general order of priority is as follows:
For moveable property in Québec, secured creditors create their security interests by way of hypothec through the Registre des droits personnels et réels mobiliers (RDPRM).
Federal legislation has also created certain security interests that may take precedence over provincial legislation. They notably include:
S. 89(1) of the Indian Act governs the application of security interests on reserves:
Recent jurisprudence has tended to restrict how this provision should be applied.
There can also be complex interplay with security interests under admiralty law.