Source: L. 2001: Entire article R&RE, p. 1329, § 1, effective July 1. L. 2012: Entire section amended, (HB 12-1262), ch. 170, p. 596, § 2, effective July 1, 2013.
A secured party's control of electronic chattel paper (i) may substitute for an authenticated security agreement for purposes of attachment under Section 9-203, (ii) is a method of perfection under Section 9-314, and (iii) is a condition for obtaining special, non-temporal priority under Section 9-330. Because electronic chattel paper cannot be transferred, assigned, or possessed in the same manner as tangible chattel paper, a special definition of control is necessary. In descriptive terms, this section provides that control of electronic chattel paper is the functional equivalent of possession of "tangible chattel paper" (a term also defined in Section 9-102).
This section and the concept of control of electronic chattel paper are not based on the same concepts as are control of deposit accounts (Section 9-104), security entitlements, a type of investment property (Section 9-106), and letter-of-credit rights (Section 9-107). The rules for control of those types of collateral are based on existing market practices and legal and regulatory regimes for institutions such as banks and securities intermediaries. Analogous practices for electronic chattel paper are developing nonetheless. The flexible approach adopted by this section, moreover, should not impede the development of these practices and, eventually, legal and regulatory regimes, which may become analogous to those for, e.g., investment property.
Structure Colorado Code
Title 4 - Uniform Commercial Code
Article 9 - Secured Transactions
§ 4-9-102. Definitions and Index of Definitions
§ 4-9-104. Control of Deposit Account
§ 4-9-105. Control of Electronic Chattel Paper
§ 4-9-106. Control of Investment Property
§ 4-9-107. Control of Letter-of-Credit Right
§ 4-9-108. Sufficiency of Description
§ 4-9-110. Security Interests Arising Under Article 2 or 2.5