Colorado Code
Part 6 - Default
§ 4-9-618. Rights and Duties of Certain Secondary Obligors





(1) Is not a disposition of collateral under section 4-9-610; and
(2) Relieves the secured party of further duties under this article.

Source: L. 2001: Entire article R&RE, p. 1413, § 1, effective July 1.
Editor's note: This section is similar to former § 4-9-504 (5) as it existed prior to 2001.




This section, like former Section 9-504(5), does not constitute a general and comprehensive rule for allocating rights and duties upon assignment of a secured obligation. Rather, it applies only in situations involving a secondary obligor described in subsection (a). In other contexts, the agreement of the parties and applicable law other than Article 9 determine whether the assignment imposes upon the assignee any duty to the debtor and whether the assignor retains its duties to the debtor after the assignment.
Subsection (a)(1) applies when there has been an assignment of an obligation that is secured at the time it is assigned. Thus, if a secondary obligor acquires the collateral at a disposition under Section 9-610 and simultaneously or subsequently discharges the unsecured deficiency claim, subsection (a)(1) is not implicated. Similarly, subsection (a)(3) applies only when the secondary obligor is subrogated to the secured party's rights with respect to collateral. Thus, this subsection will not be implicated if a secondary obligor discharges the debtor's unsecured obligation for a post-disposition deficiency. Similarly, if the secured party disposes of some of the collateral and the secondary obligor thereafter discharges the remaining obligation, subsection (a) applies only with respect to rights and duties concerning the remaining collateral, and, under subsection (b), the subrogation is not a disposition of the remaining collateral .
As discussed more fully in Comment 3, a secondary obligor may receive a transfer of collateral in a disposition under Section 9-610 in exchange for a payment that is applied against the secured obligation. However, a secondary obligor who pays and receives a transfer of collateral does not necessarily become subrogated to the rights of the secured party as contemplated by subsection (a)(3). Only to the extent the secondary obligor makes a payment in satisfaction of its secondary obligation would it become subrogated. To the extent its payment constitutes the price of the collateral in a Section 9-610 disposition by the secured party, the secondary obligor would not be subrogated. Thus, if the amount paid by the secondary obligor for the collateral in a Section 9-610 disposition is itself insufficient to discharge the secured obligation, but the secondary obligor makes an additional payment that satisfies the remaining balance, the secondary obligor would be subrogated to the secured party's deficiency claim. However, the duties of the secured party as such would have come to an end with respect to that collateral. In some situations the capacity in which the payment is made may be unclear. Accordingly, the parties should in their relationship provide clear evidence of the nature and circumstances of the payment by the secondary obligor.
Under subsection (b), the same event (assignment, transfer, or subrogation) that gives rise to rights to, and imposes obligations on, a successor relieves its predecessor of any further duties under this Article. For example, if the security interest is enforced after the secured obligation is assigned, the assignee but not the assignor has the duty to comply with this Part. Similarly, the assignment does not excuse the assignor from liability for failure to comply with duties that arose before the event or impose liability on the assignee for the assignor's failure to comply.

Structure Colorado Code

Colorado Code

Title 4 - Uniform Commercial Code

Article 9 - Secured Transactions

Part 6 - Default

§ 4-9-601. Rights After Default - Judicial Enforcement - Consignor or Buyer of Accounts, Chattel Paper, Payment Intangibles, or Promissory Notes

§ 4-9-602. Waiver and Variance of Rights and Duties

§ 4-9-603. Agreement on Standards Concerning Rights and Duties

§ 4-9-604. Procedure if Security Agreement Covers Real Property or Fixtures

§ 4-9-605. Unknown Debtor or Secondary Obligor

§ 4-9-606. Time of Default for Agricultural Lien

§ 4-9-607. Collection and Enforcement by Secured Party

§ 4-9-608. Application of Proceeds of Collection or Enforcement - Liability for Deficiency and Right to Surplus

§ 4-9-609. Secured Party's Right to Take Possession After Default

§ 4-9-610. Disposition of Collateral After Default

§ 4-9-611. Notification Before Disposition of Collateral

§ 4-9-612. Timeliness of Notification Before Disposition of Collateral

§ 4-9-613. Contents and Form of Notification Before Disposition of Collateral: General

§ 4-9-614. Contents and Form of Notification Before Disposition of Collateral: Consumer-Goods Transaction

§ 4-9-615. Application of Proceeds of Disposition; Liability for Deficiency and Right to Surplus

§ 4-9-616. Explanation of Calculation of Surplus or Deficiency - Definitions

§ 4-9-617. Rights of Transferee of Collateral

§ 4-9-618. Rights and Duties of Certain Secondary Obligors

§ 4-9-619. Transfer of Record or Legal Title

§ 4-9-620. Acceptance of Collateral in Full or Partial Satisfaction of Obligation - Compulsory Disposition of Collateral

§ 4-9-621. Notification of Proposal to Accept Collateral

§ 4-9-622. Effect of Acceptance of Collateral

§ 4-9-623. Right to Redeem Collateral

§ 4-9-624. Waiver

§ 4-9-625. Remedies for Secured Party's Failure to Comply With Article

§ 4-9-626. Action in Which Deficiency or Surplus Is in Issue

§ 4-9-627. Determination of Whether Conduct Was Commercially Reasonable

§ 4-9-628. Nonliability and Limitation on Liability of Secured Party - Liability of Secondary Obligor

§ 4-9-629. Secured Party's Liability When Taking Possession After Default - Legislative Declaration - Fund