BILL 7
Securities Transfer
Act
Her Majesty, by and with the advice
and consent of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, enacts as
follows:
PART 1
INTERPRETATION AND GENERAL PROVISIONS
Definitions and interpretation
1(1) The following definitions apply in this Act.
“adverse claim” means a claim
that (opposition)
(a) the claimant
has a property interest in a financial asset, and
(b) it is a violation
of the rights of the claimant for another person to hold, transfer
or deal with the financial asset.
“appropriate person” means (personne compétente)
(a) with respect to an
endorsement, the person specified by a security certificate or by
an effective special endorsement to be entitled to the security,
(b) with respect to an instruction, the registered owner
of an uncertificated security,
(c) with respect to an
entitlement order, the entitlement holder,
(d) in the case of a person
referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) being deceased, that person’s
successor taking under the law, other than this Act, or that person’s
personal representative acting for the estate of the deceased person,
or
(e) in the case of a person referred to in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) lacking
capacity, that person’s guardian or other similar representative
who has power under the law, other than this Act, to transfer the
security or other financial asset.
“bearer form”, in respect of
a certificated security, means a form in which the security is payable
to the bearer of the security certificate according to the security
certificate’s terms but not by reason of an endorsement. (au porteur)
“broker” means a dealer as
defined in the Securities Act. (courtier)
“certificated security” means
a security that is represented by a certificate. (valeur mobilière avec certificat)
“clearing agency” means a person (agence de compensation)
(a) who carries on a business
or activity as a clearing agency or clearing house within the meaning
of the Securities Act or the
securities regulatory law of another province or territory in Canada,
(b) who is recognized or otherwise regulated as a clearing
agency or clearing house by the New Brunswick Securities Commission
or by a securities regulatory authority of another province or territory
in Canada, and
(c) who is a securities and derivatives clearing
house for the purposes of section 13.1 of the Payment Clearing and Settlement Act (Canada) or whose clearing and settlement system is designated under
Part I of that Act.
“communicate” means (communiquer)
(a) send a signed writing,
or
(b) transmit information by any other means agreed to by
the person transmitting the information and the person receiving the
information,
and “communication” has a corresponding
meaning.
“control” has the meaning set
out in sections 23 to 26. (maîtrise)
“corporation” means any body
corporate whether or not it is incorporated under the laws of New
Brunswick. (société)
“delivery”, with respect to
a certificated or uncertificated security, has the meaning set out
in section 68, and “deliver”
has a corresponding meaning. (livraison)
“effective”, in relation to
an endorsement, instruction or entitlement order, has the meaning
set out in sections 29 to 32, and “effectiveness”, “ineffective”
and “ineffectiveness” have corresponding meanings. (valide)
“endorsement” means a signature
that, alone or accompanied by other words, is made on a security certificate
in registered form or on a separate document for the purpose of assigning,
transferring or redeeming the security or granting a power to assign,
transfer or redeem the security. (endossement)
“entitlement holder”
means a person identified in the records of a securities intermediary
as the person having a security entitlement against the securities
intermediary and includes a person who acquires a security entitlement
by virtue of paragraph 95(1)(b) or (c). (titulaire du droit)
“entitlement order” means a
notice communicated to a securities intermediary directing the transfer
or redemption of a financial asset to which the entitlement holder
has a security entitlement. (ordre relatif à un droit)
“financial asset”, except as
otherwise provided in sections 10 to 16, means (actif financier)
(a) a security,
(b) an obligation of a person that
(i) is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on financial markets,
or
(ii) is recognized in any other market
or area in which it is issued or dealt in as a medium for investment,
(c) a share, participation or other interest in a person,
or in property or an enterprise of a person, that
(i) is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on financial markets,
or
(ii) is recognized in any other market
or area in which it is issued or dealt in as a medium for investment,
(d) any property that is held by a securities intermediary
for another person in a securities account if the securities intermediary
has expressly agreed with the other person that the property is to
be treated as a financial asset under this Act, or
(e) a credit balance
in a securities account, unless the securities intermediary has expressly
agreed with the person for whom the account is maintained that the
credit balance is not to be treated as a financial asset under this
Act.
“genuine” means free of forgery
or counterfeiting. (authentique)
“government” means (gouvernement)
(a) the Crown in right
of Canada or in right of New Brunswick or another province of Canada,
(b) the government of a territory in Canada,
(c) a municipality in Canada, or
(d) the government
of a foreign country or of any political subdivision of it.
“in collusion” means
in concert, by conspiratorial arrangement or by agreement for the
purpose of violating a person’s rights in respect of a financial
asset. (collusion)
“instruction” means a notice
communicated to the issuer of an uncertificated security that directs
that the transfer of the security be registered or that the security
be redeemed. (instructions)
“issuer”, (émetteur)
(a) with respect to a
registration of a transfer of a security, means a person on whose
behalf transfer books are maintained, and
(b) with respect to an
obligation on or a defence to a security, includes
(i) a person who places or authorizes the placing of the person’s
name on a security certificate, other than as authenticating trustee,
registrar, transfer agent or the like, to evidence
(A) a share, participation or other interest in the person’s
property or in an enterprise, or
(B) the
person’s duty to perform an obligation represented by the security
certificate,
(ii) a person who creates a share,
participation or other interest in the person’s property or
in an enterprise, or undertakes an obligation, that is an uncertificated
security,
(iii) a person who directly or
indirectly creates a fractional interest in the person’s rights
or property, if the fractional interest is represented by a security
certificate,
(iv) a guarantor, to the extent
of the guarantor’s guarantee, whether or not the guarantor’s
obligation is noted on a security certificate, and
(v) a person who becomes responsible for, or in place of, another
person described as an issuer in this definition.
“knowledge” means actual knowledge,
and “know” and “known” have corresponding
meanings. (connaissance)
“overissue” means the issue
of securities in excess of the amount that the issuer is authorized
to issue. (émission excédentaire)
“person” means an individual,
including an individual in his or her capacity as trustee, executor,
administrator or other representative, a sole proprietorship, a partnership,
an unincorporated association, an unincorporated syndicate, an unincorporated
organization, a trust, including a business trust, a corporation,
a government or an agency of a government, or any other legal or commercial
entity. (personne)
“protected purchaser” means
a purchaser of a certificated or uncertificated security, or of an
interest in the security, who (acquéreur protégé)
(a) gives value,
(b) does not have notice
of any adverse claim to the security, and
(c) obtains control of
the security.
“purchase” means a taking by
sale, discount, negotiation, mortgage, hypothec, pledge, security
interest, issue or reissue, gift or any other voluntary transaction
that creates an interest in property. (acquisition)
“purchaser” means a
person who takes by purchase. (acquéreur)
“registered form”, in respect
of a certificated security, means a form in which (nominatif)
(a) the security certificate
specifies a person entitled to the security, and
(b) a transfer
of the security may be registered on books maintained for that purpose
by or on behalf of the issuer, or the security certificate states
that it may be so registered.
“representative” means any
person empowered to act for another, including an agent, an officer
of a corporation or association and a trustee, executor or administrator
of an estate. (représentant)
“secured party” means a secured
party as defined in the Personal
Property Security Act. (créancier garanti)
“securities account”
means an account to which a financial asset is or may be credited
in accordance with an agreement under which the person maintaining
the account undertakes to treat the person for whom the account is
maintained as entitled to exercise the rights that constitute the
financial asset. (compte de titres)
“securities intermediary” means (intermédiaire en valeurs mobilières)
(a) a clearing agency, or
(b) a person, including
a broker, bank or trust company, that in the ordinary course of its
business maintains securities accounts for others and is acting in
that capacity.
“security”, except as otherwise
provided in sections 10 to 16, means an obligation of an issuer or
a share, participation or other interest in an issuer or in property
or an enterprise of an issuer (valeur mobilière)
(a) that is represented by a security certificate in bearer
form or registered form, or the transfer of which may be registered
on books maintained for that purpose by or on behalf of the issuer,
(b) that is one of a class or series, or by its terms is
divisible into a class or series, of shares, participations, interests
or obligations, and
(c) that
(i) is, or is of a type, dealt in or traded on securities exchanges
or securities markets, or
(ii)
is a medium for investment and by its terms expressly provides that
it is a security for the purposes of this Act.
“security certificate” means
a certificate representing a security, but does not include a certificate
in electronic form. (certificat de valeur mobilière)
“security entitlement” means
the rights and property interest of an entitlement holder with respect
to a financial asset that are specified in Part 6. (droit intermédié)
“security interest” means a
security interest as defined in the Personal Property Security Act. (sûreté)
“unauthorized”, when used with
reference to a signature or endorsement, means a signature or endorsement
that is made without actual, implied or apparent authority or that
is forged. (non autorisé)
“uncertificated security” means
a security that is not represented by a certificate. (valeur mobilière sans certificat)
“value” means any consideration
sufficient to support a simple contract and includes an antecedent
debt or liability. (contrepartie)
1(2) As the context requires, “financial asset” means
either the interest itself or the means by which a person’s
claim to it is evidenced, including a certificated or uncertificated
security, a security certificate and a security entitlement.
1(3) The characterization of a person, business or transaction for
the purposes of this Act does not determine the characterization of
the person, business or transaction for the purposes of any other
statute, law, regulation or rule.
Meaning of valid security
2 A security is valid if it is issued in accordance with the applicable
law described in subsection 44(2)
and the constating provisions governing the issuer.
Notice and knowledge
3(1) For the purposes of this Act, a person has notice of a fact if
(a) the person has knowledge of it,
(b) the person has received a notice of it, or
(c) information comes to the person’s attention under
circumstances in which a reasonable person would take cognizance of
it.
3(2) A person gives a notice to another
person by taking such steps as may be reasonably required to inform
the other person in the ordinary course, whether or not the other
person comes to know of it.
3(3) A person receives a notice when
(a) the notice comes to the person’s attention,
(b) in the case of a notice under a contract, the
notice is duly delivered to the place of business through which the
contract was made, or
(c) the notice is duly delivered to any other place held
out by that person as the place for receipt of those notices.
3(4) Notice, knowledge or a notice received by an organization is
effective for a particular transaction from the time when it is brought
to the attention of the individual conducting the transaction and,
in any event, from the time when it would have been brought to the
attention of that individual if the organization had exercised due
diligence.
3(5) For the purpose of subsection (4),
an organization exercises due diligence if it maintains reasonable
routines for communicating significant information to the individual
conducting the transaction and there is reasonable compliance with
those routines.
3(6) For the purpose of subsection (4), due diligence does not require
an individual acting for the organization to communicate information
unless
(a) that communication is part of the individual’s
regular duties, or
(b) the individual has reason to know of the transaction
and that the transaction would be materially affected by the information.
Obligation of good faith
4(1) In this section, “good faith” means honesty in fact
and the observance of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing.
4(2) Every contract to which this Act applies and every duty imposed
by this Act imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance
or enforcement.
Variation by agreement
5(1) Subject to subsection (2), the effect of provisions of this Act
may be varied by agreement.
5(2) The obligations of good faith, diligence, reasonableness and
care imposed by this Act may not be disclaimed by agreement, but the
parties may by agreement determine the standards by which the performance
of such obligations is to be measured so long as such standards are
not manifestly unreasonable.
Principles of law and equity apply
6 Except in so far as they are inconsistent with this Act, the principles
of law and equity supplement this Act and continue to apply, including
(a) the law merchant,
(b) the law relating to the capacity to contract, principal
and agent, estoppel, fraud, misrepresentation, duress, coercion and
mistake, and
(c) other validating or invalidating rules of law.
Clearing agency rules prevail
7 A rule adopted by a clearing agency governing rights and obligations
between the clearing agency and its participants or between participants
in the clearing agency is effective even if the rule conflicts with
this Act or the Personal Property
Security Act and affects another person who does not consent
to the rule.
This Act binds the Crown
8 This Act binds the Crown.
Existing proceedings
9 This Act does not affect a legal proceeding that was commenced before
this section comes into force.
PART 2
GENERAL MATTERS CONCERNING SECURITIES AND
OTHER FINANCIAL ASSETS
Division A
Classification of Obligations and Interests
Share or similar equity interest
10 A share or similar equity interest issued by a corporation, business
trust or similar entity is a security.
Mutual fund security
11(1) The following definitions apply in this section.
“mutual fund security” means
a share, unit or similar equity interest issued by an open-end mutual
fund, but does not include an insurance policy, endowment policy or
annuity contract issued by an insurance company. (titre de fonds commun de placement)
“open-end mutual fund” means
an entity that makes a distribution to the public of its shares, units
or similar equity interests and that carries on the business of investing
the consideration it receives for the shares, units or similar equity
interests it issues, all or substantially all of which shares, units
or similar equity interests are redeemable on the demand of their
holders or owners. (fonds commun de placement à capital
variable)
11(2) A mutual fund security is a security.
Interest in partnership or limited liability
company
12(1) In this section, “limited liability
company” means an unincorporated association, other than a partnership,
formed under the laws of another jurisdiction, that grants to each
of its members limited liability with respect to the liabilities of
the association.
12(2) An interest in a partnership or limited liability company is
not a security unless
(a) that interest is dealt in or traded on securities exchanges
or in securities markets,
(b) the terms of that interest expressly provide that the
interest is a security for the purposes of this Act, or
(c) that interest is a mutual fund security within the meaning
of section 11.
12(3) An interest in a partnership or limited liability company is
a financial asset if it is held in a securities account.
Bill of exchange or promissory note
13 A bill of exchange or promissory note to which the Bills of Exchange Act (Canada) applies
is not a security, but is a financial asset if it is held in a securities
account.
Depository bill or depository
note
14 A depository bill or depository note to
which the Depository Bills and Notes
Act (Canada) applies is not a security, but is a financial
asset if it is held in a securities account.
Clearing house option
15(1) In this section, “clearing house option” means a
clearing house option as defined in the Personal Property Security Act.
15(2) A clearing house option or similar obligation is not a security,
but is a financial asset.
Futures contract
16(1) In this section, “futures contract” means a futures
contract as defined in the Personal
Property Security Act.
16(2) A futures contract is not a security or a financial asset.
Division B
Acquisition of Financial Assets or Interests
in Them
Acquisition of financial
assets or interests in them
17(1) A person acquires a security or an interest in a security under
this Act if
(a) the person is a purchaser to whom a security is delivered
under section 68, or
(b) the person acquires a security entitlement to the security
under section 95.
17(2) A person acquires a financial asset, other than a security, or
an interest in such a financial asset under this Act if the person
acquires a security entitlement to the financial asset.
17(3) A person who acquires a security entitlement to a security or
other financial asset has the rights specified in Part 6, but is a
purchaser of any security, security entitlement or other financial
asset held by a securities intermediary only to the extent provided
in section 97.
17(4) Unless the context of another statute, law, regulation, rule
or agreement shows that a different meaning is intended, a person
who is required by that statute, law, regulation, rule or agreement
to transfer, deliver, present, surrender, exchange or otherwise put
in the possession of another person a security or other financial
asset satisfies that requirement by causing the other person to acquire
an interest in the security or other financial asset as set out in
subsection (1) or (2).
Division C
Notice of Adverse Claims
What constitutes notice of adverse claim
18 A person has notice of an adverse claim if
(a) the person knows of the adverse claim,
(b) the person is aware of facts sufficient to indicate
that there is a significant probability that the adverse claim exists
and deliberately avoids information that would establish the existence
of the adverse claim, or
(c) the person has a duty, imposed by statute or regulation,
to investigate whether an adverse claim exists and the investigation,
if carried out, would establish the existence of the adverse claim.
Notice of transfer
19(1) Having knowledge that a financial asset, or an interest in a
financial asset, is being or has been transferred by a representative
does not impose any duty of inquiry into the rightfulness of the transaction
and is not notice of an adverse claim.
19(2) Despite subsection (1), a person has notice of an adverse claim
if that person knows that
(a) a representative has transferred a financial asset,
or an interest in a financial asset, in a transaction, and
(b) the transaction is, or the proceeds of the transaction
are being used,
(i) for the individual benefit of the
representative, or
(ii) otherwise in breach of a duty owed
by the representative.
Delay
20 An act or event that creates a right to immediate performance of
the principal obligation represented by a security certificate, or
that sets a date on or after which a security certificate is to be
presented or surrendered for redemption or exchange, does not by itself
constitute notice of an adverse claim except in the case of a transfer
that takes place more than
(a) one year after a date set for presentation or surrender
for redemption or exchange, or
(b) six months after a date set for payment of money against
presentation or surrender of the security certificate, if money was
available for payment on that date.
Statement on security certificate
21(1) A purchaser of a certificated security has notice of an adverse
claim if the security certificate
(a) whether in bearer form or registered form, has been
endorsed “for collection” or “for surrender”
or for some other purpose not involving a transfer, or
(b) is in bearer form and has on it an unambiguous statement
that it is the property of a person other than the transferor.
21(2) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), the mere writing of a name on a security certificate does
not by itself constitute an unambiguous statement that the security
certificate is the property of a person other than the transferor.
Registration of financing statement
22 The registration of a financing statement under the Personal Property Security Act is
not notice of an adverse claim.
Division D
Control of Financial Assets
Purchaser’s control of certificated
security
23(1) A purchaser has control of a certificated
security that is in bearer form if the certificated security is delivered
to the purchaser.
23(2) A purchaser has control of a certificated security that is in
registered form if the certificated security is delivered to the purchaser
and
(a) the security certificate is endorsed to the purchaser
or in blank by an effective endorsement, or
(b) the security certificate is registered in the name of
the purchaser at the time of the original issue or registration of
transfer by the issuer.
Purchaser’s control of uncertificated
security
24(1) A purchaser has control of an uncertificated
security if
(a) the uncertificated security is delivered to the purchaser,
or
(b) the issuer has agreed that the issuer will comply with
instructions that are originated by the purchaser without the further
consent of the registered owner.
24(2) A purchaser to whom subsection (1) applies in relation to an
uncertificated security has control of the uncertificated security
even if the registered owner retains the right
(a) to make substitutions for the uncertificated security,
(b) to originate instructions to the issuer, or
(c) to otherwise deal with the uncertificated security.
Purchaser’s control of security entitlement
25(1) A purchaser has control of a security entitlement if
(a) the purchaser becomes the entitlement holder,
(b) the securities intermediary has agreed that
it will comply with entitlement orders that are originated by the
purchaser without the further consent of the entitlement holder, or
(c) another person has control of the security entitlement
on behalf of the purchaser or, having previously obtained control
of the security entitlement, acknowledges that the person has control
on behalf of the purchaser.
25(2) A purchaser to whom subsection (1) applies in relation to a security
entitlement has control of the security entitlement even if the entitlement
holder retains the right
(a) to make substitutions for the security entitlement,
(b) to originate entitlement orders to the securities
intermediary, or
(c) to otherwise deal with the security entitlement.
Securities intermediary’s control
of security entitlement
26 If an interest in a security entitlement is granted by the entitlement
holder to the entitlement holder’s own securities intermediary,
the securities intermediary has control of the security entitlement.
Agreement re control of uncertificated
security
27(1) An issuer shall not enter into an agreement
of the kind referred to in paragraph 24(1)(b) without the consent
of the registered owner.
27(2) An issuer that has entered into an agreement of the kind referred
to in paragraph 24(1)(b) is not required to confirm the
existence of the agreement to another person unless requested to do
so by the registered owner.
27(3) An issuer is not required to enter into an agreement of the kind
referred to in paragraph 24(1)(b) even if the registered owner
so requests.
Agreement re control of security entitlement
28(1) A securities intermediary shall not enter into an agreement of
the kind referred to in paragraph 25(1)(b) without the consent
of the entitlement holder.
28(2) A securities intermediary that has entered into an agreement
of the kind referred to in paragraph 25(1)(b) is not required to
confirm the existence of the agreement to another person unless requested
to do so by the entitlement holder.
28(3) A securities intermediary is not required to enter into an agreement
of the kind referred to in paragraph 25(1)(b) even if the entitlement
holder so requests.
Division E
Endorsements, Instructions and Entitlement
Orders
Effectiveness of endorsement,
instruction or entitlement order
29 An endorsement, instruction or entitlement order is effective if
(a) it is made by the appropriate person,
(b) it is made by a person who, in the case of an
endorsement or instruction, has the power under the law of agency
to transfer the security, or in the case of an entitlement order,
has the power under the law of agency to transfer the financial asset,
on behalf of the appropriate person, including,
(i) in the case of an instruction referred
to in paragraph 24(1)(b), the person who has control of
the uncertificated security, or
(ii) in the case of an entitlement order
referred to in paragraph 25(1)(b), the person who has control of
the security entitlement, or
(c) the appropriate person has ratified it or is otherwise
precluded from asserting its ineffectiveness.
Effectiveness of endorsement, instruction
or entitlement order made by representative
30 An endorsement, instruction or entitlement order made by a representative
is effective even if
(a) the representative has failed to comply with a controlling
instrument or with the law of the jurisdiction governing the representative’s
rights and duties, including any law requiring the representative
to obtain court approval of the transaction, or
(b) the representative’s action in making the endorsement,
instruction or entitlement order or using the proceeds of the transaction
is otherwise a breach of duty owed by the representative.
Endorsement, instruction or entitlement
order remains effective
31 If a security is registered in the name of or specially endorsed
to a person described as a representative, or if a securities account
is maintained in the name of a person described as a representative,
an endorsement, instruction or entitlement order made by the person
is effective even if the person is no longer serving in that capacity.
Date when effectiveness is determined
32(1) The effectiveness of an endorsement, instruction or entitlement
order is determined as of the date that the endorsement, instruction
or entitlement order is made.
32(2) An endorsement, instruction or entitlement order does not become
ineffective by reason of any later change of circumstances.
Division F
Warranties Applicable to Direct Holdings
Warranties on transfer of certificated
security
33 A person who transfers a certificated security
to a purchaser for value warrants to the purchaser and, if the transfer
is by endorsement, also warrants to any subsequent purchaser, that
(a) the security certificate is genuine and has
not been materially altered,
(b) the transferor does not know of any fact that might
impair the validity of the security,
(c) there is no adverse claim to the security,
(d) the transfer does not violate any restriction on transfer,
(e) if the transfer is by endorsement, the endorsement
is made by the appropriate person or, if the endorsement is by an
agent, the agent has actual authority to act on behalf of the appropriate
person, and
(f) the transfer is otherwise effective and rightful.
Warranties on transfer of uncertificated
security
34(1) A person who originates an instruction
for registration of transfer of an uncertificated security to a purchaser
for value warrants to the purchaser that
(a) the instruction is made by the appropriate person or,
if the instruction is made by an agent, the agent has actual authority
to act on behalf of the appropriate person,
(b) the security is valid,
(c) there is no adverse claim to the security, and
(d) at the time that the instruction is presented
to the issuer,
(i) the purchaser will be entitled to
the registration of transfer,
(ii) the transfer will be registered by
the issuer free from all liens, security interests, restrictions and
claims other than those specified in the instruction,
(iii) the transfer will not violate any
restriction on transfer, and
(iv) the transfer will otherwise be effective
and rightful.
34(2) A person who transfers an uncertificated security to a purchaser
for value and does not originate an instruction in connection with
the transfer warrants to the purchaser that
(a) the security is valid,
(b) there is no adverse claim to the security,
(c) the transfer does not violate any restriction on transfer,
and
(d) the transfer is otherwise effective and rightful.
Warranties on endorsement of security certificate
35 A person who endorses a security certificate warrants to the issuer
that
(a) there is no adverse claim to the security, and
(b) the endorsement is effective.
Warranties on instruction
36 A person who originates an instruction for the registration of transfer
of an uncertificated security warrants to the issuer that
(a) the instruction is effective, and
(b) at the time that the instruction is presented to the
issuer, the purchaser will be entitled to the registration of transfer.
Warranty on presentation of security certificate
37 A person who presents a certificated security for the registration
of transfer or for payment or exchange warrants to the issuer that
the person is entitled to the registration, payment or exchange, but
a purchaser for value and without notice of adverse claims to whom
transfer is registered warrants to the issuer only that the person
has no knowledge of any unauthorized signature in a necessary endorsement.
Warranties by agent delivering certificated
security
38 If
(a) a person acts as agent of another person in delivering
a certificated security to a purchaser,
(b) the identity of the principal was known to the person
to whom the security certificate was delivered, and
(c) the security certificate delivered by the agent was
received by the agent from the principal or from another person at
the direction of the principal,
the person delivering the security certificate
warrants, to the purchaser, only that the delivering person has authority
to act for the principal and does not know of any adverse claim to
the certificated security.
Warranties on redelivery of security certificate
39 A secured party who redelivers a security certificate received, or
after payment and on order of the debtor delivers the security certificate
to another person, makes only the warranties of an agent set out in
section 38.
Broker’s warranties
40(1) Except as otherwise provided in section 38, a broker acting for a customer makes to the issuer and
a purchaser the warranties set out in sections 33 to 37.
40(2) A broker that delivers a security certificate to the broker’s
customer makes to the customer the warranties set out in section 33 and has the rights and privileges of
a purchaser provided under sections 33, 38 and 39.
40(3) A broker that causes the broker’s
customer to be registered as the owner of an uncertificated security
makes to the customer the warranties set out in section 34 and has
the rights and privileges of a purchaser provided under section 34.
40(4) The warranties of and in favour of the broker acting as an agent
are in addition to applicable warranties given by and in favour of
the customer.
Division G
Warranties Applicable to Indirect Holdings
Warranties on entitlement order
41 A person who originates an entitlement order to a securities intermediary
warrants to the securities intermediary
(a) that the entitlement order is made by the appropriate
person or, if the entitlement order is made by an agent, that the
agent has actual authority to act on behalf of the appropriate person,
and
(b) that there is no adverse claim to the security entitlement.
Warranties on security credited to securities
account
42(1) A person who delivers a security certificate
to a securities intermediary for credit to a securities account makes
to the securities intermediary the warranties set out in section 33.
42(2) A person who originates an instruction with respect to an uncertificated
security directing that the uncertificated security be credited to
a securities account makes to the securities intermediary the warranties
set out in section 34.
Securities intermediary’s warranties
43(1) If a securities intermediary delivers a security certificate
to its entitlement holder, the securities intermediary makes to the
entitlement holder the warranties set out in section 33.
43(2) If a securities intermediary causes its entitlement holder to
be registered as the owner of an uncertificated security, the securities
intermediary makes to the entitlement holder the warranties set out
in section 34.
Division H
Conflict of Laws
Applicable law
44(1) In this section, “issuer’s jurisdiction” means
(a) if the issuer is incorporated under a law of
Canada, the province or territory in Canada in which the issuer has
its registered or head office or, if permitted by the law of Canada,
another jurisdiction specified by the issuer;
(b) if the issuer is the Crown in right of Canada, the jurisdiction
specified by the issuer;
(c) if the issuer is the Crown in right of a province in
Canada, the province or, if permitted by the law of that province,
another jurisdiction specified by the issuer;
(d) if the issuer is the Commissioner of a territory in
Canada, the territory or, if permitted by the law of that territory,
another jurisdiction specified by the issuer; and
(e) in any other case, the jurisdiction under which the
issuer is incorporated or otherwise organized or, if permitted by
the law of that jurisdiction, another jurisdiction specified by the
issuer.
44(2) The validity of a security is governed
by the following laws:
(a) if the issuer is incorporated under a law of Canada,
the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of Canada;
(b) if the issuer is the Crown in right of Canada, the law,
other than the conflict of law rules, of Canada;
(c) if the issuer is the Crown in right of a province in
Canada, the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the province;
(d) if the issuer is the Commissioner of a territory
in Canada, the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the territory;
(e) in any other case, the law, other than the conflict
of law rules, of the jurisdiction under which the issuer is incorporated
or otherwise organized.
44(3) The law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the issuer’s
jurisdiction governs
(a) the rights and duties of the issuer with respect to
the registration of transfer,
(b) the effectiveness of the registration of transfer by
the issuer,
(c) whether the issuer owes any duties to an adverse claimant
to a security, and
(d) whether an adverse claim can be asserted against a person
(i) to whom the transfer of a certificated
or uncertificated security is registered, or
(ii) who obtains control of an uncertificated
security.
44(4) The following issuers may specify the
law of another jurisdiction as the law governing the matters referred
to in paragraphs (3)(a) to
(d):
(a) an issuer incorporated or otherwise organized under
the law of New Brunswick;
(b) the Crown in right of New Brunswick.
44(5) Whether a security is enforceable against an issuer despite a
defence or defect described in sections 57 to 59 is governed by
the following laws:
(a) if the issuer is incorporated under a law of Canada,
the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the province or
territory in Canada in which the issuer has its registered or head
office;
(b) if the issuer is the Crown in right of Canada, the law,
other than the conflict of law rules, of the issuer’s jurisdiction;
(c) if the issuer is the Crown in right of a province
in Canada, the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the province;
(d) if the issuer is the Commissioner of a territory
in Canada, the law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the territory;
(e) in any other case, the law, other than the conflict
of law rules, of the jurisdiction under which the issuer is incorporated
or otherwise organized.
Matters governed by law of securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction
45(1) In this section, “securities intermediary’s jurisdiction”
means the jurisdiction determined in accordance with the following
rules:
(a) if an agreement between a securities intermediary and
its entitlement holder governing the securities account expressly
provides that a particular jurisdiction is the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction for the purposes of the law of that jurisdiction, this
Act or any provision of this Act, the jurisdiction expressly provided
for is the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction;
(b) if paragraph (a) does not apply and an agreement between the securities intermediary
and its entitlement holder governing the securities account expressly
provides that the agreement is governed by the law of a particular
jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction;
(c) if neither paragraph (a) nor (b) applies
and an agreement between a securities intermediary and its entitlement
holder governing the securities account expressly provides that the
securities account is maintained at an office in a particular jurisdiction,
that jurisdiction is the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction;
(d) if none of the preceding paragraphs applies,
the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction
in which the office identified in an account statement as the office
serving the entitlement holder’s account is located;
(e) if none of the preceding paragraphs applies,
the securities intermediary’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction
in which the chief executive office of the securities intermediary
is located.
45(2) In determining a securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction, the following matters are not to be taken into account:
(a) the physical location of certificates representing
financial assets;
(b) if an entitlement holder has a security entitlement
with respect to a financial asset, the jurisdiction in which the issuer
of the financial asset is incorporated or otherwise organized;
(c) the location of facilities for data processing
or other record keeping concerning the securities account.
45(3) The law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the securities
intermediary’s jurisdiction governs
(a) acquisition of a security entitlement from the securities
intermediary,
(b) the rights and duties of the securities intermediary
and entitlement holder arising out of a security entitlement,
(c) whether the securities intermediary owes any
duty to a person who has an adverse claim to a security entitlement,
and
(d) whether an adverse claim may be asserted against a person
who
(i) acquires a security entitlement from
the securities intermediary, or
(ii) purchases a security entitlement,
or interest in it, from an entitlement holder.
Adverse claim governed by law of jurisdiction
of security certificate
46 The law, other than the conflict of law rules, of the jurisdiction
in which a security certificate is located at the time of delivery
governs whether an adverse claim may be asserted against a person
to whom the security certificate is delivered.
Division I
Seizure
Seizure governed by laws re civil enforcement
of judgments
47 Subject to any necessary modifications for the purposes of permitting
the operation of sections 48 to 51, the laws governing the civil enforcement
of judgments apply to seizures described in those sections.
Seizure of interest in certificated security
48(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (2) and in section 51, the interest of a judgment debtor
in a certificated security may be seized only by actual seizure of
the security certificate by a sheriff.
48(2) A certificated security for which the security certificate has
been surrendered to the issuer may be seized by a sheriff serving
a notice of seizure on the issuer at the issuer’s chief executive
office.
Seizure of interest in
uncertificated security
49 Except as otherwise provided in section 51, the interest of a judgment debtor in an uncertificated
security may be seized only by a sheriff serving a notice of seizure
on the issuer at the issuer’s chief executive office.
Seizure of interest in security entitlement
50 Except as otherwise provided in section 51, the interest of a judgment debtor in a security entitlement
may be seized only by a sheriff serving a notice of seizure on the
securities intermediary with whom the judgment debtor’s securities
account is maintained.
Notice of seizure to secured party
51 The interest of a judgment debtor in any of the following may be
seized by a sheriff serving a notice of seizure on the secured party:
(a) a certificated security for which the security
certificate is in the possession of a secured party;
(b) an uncertificated security registered in the name of
a secured party;
(c) a security entitlement maintained in the name of a secured
party.
Division J
Enforceability of Contracts and Rules of
Evidence
Enforceability of contracts
52 A contract or modification of a contract for the sale or purchase
of a security is enforceable whether or not there is some writing
signed or record authenticated by a person against whom enforcement
is sought.
Rules of evidence re certificated
security
53(1) The following definitions apply in
this section.
“defendant” includes respondent. (défendeur)
“plaintiff” means a person
attempting to recover on a security certificate in a legal proceeding,
whether described in that proceeding as a plaintiff, appellant, claimant,
petitioner, applicant or any other term. (demandeur)
53(2) The evidentiary rules set out in this section apply to a legal
proceeding on a certificated security against the issuer of that security.
53(3) Unless specifically denied in the pleadings, each signature on
a security certificate or in a necessary endorsement is admitted.
53(4) A signature on a security certificate is presumed to be genuine
and authorized but, if the effectiveness of the signature is put in
issue, the burden of establishing that it is genuine and authorized
is on the party claiming under the signature.
53(5) If signatures on a security certificate are admitted or established,
the production of the security certificate entitles a holder to recover
on the security certificate unless the defendant establishes a defence
or defect that goes to the validity of the security.
53(6) If it is shown that a defence or defect that goes to the validity
of the security exists, the plaintiff has the burden of establishing
that the defence or defect cannot be asserted against
(a) the plaintiff, or
(b) a person under whom the plaintiff claims.
Division K
Securities Intermediaries — Liability
and Status as Purchasers for Value
Securities intermediary’s liability
to adverse claimant
54(1) Subject to subsection (3), a securities intermediary that has
transferred a financial asset in accordance with an effective entitlement
order is not liable to a person having an adverse claim to, or a security
interest in, the financial asset.
54(2) Subject to subsection (3), a broker or other agent or bailee
who has dealt with a financial asset at the direction of a customer
or principal is not liable to a person having an adverse claim to,
or a security interest in, the financial asset.
54(3) A securities intermediary referred to in subsection (1) or a
broker or other agent or bailee referred to in subsection (2) is liable
to a person having an adverse claim to, or a security interest in,
the financial asset if the securities intermediary, broker or other
agent or bailee, as the case may be, did one or more of the following:
(a) took the action described in subsection (1)
or (2) after having been served with an injunction, restraining order
or other legal process issued by a court of competent jurisdiction
enjoining the securities intermediary, broker or other agent or bailee,
as the case may be, from doing so and after having had a reasonable
opportunity to obey or otherwise abide by the injunction, restraining
order or other legal process;
(b) acted in collusion with the wrongdoer in violating the
rights of the person who has the adverse claim or the person who has
the security interest;
(c) in the case of a security certificate that has been
stolen, acted with notice of the adverse claim.
Securities intermediary as purchaser for
value
55(1) A securities intermediary that receives
a financial asset and establishes a security entitlement to the financial
asset in favour of an entitlement holder is a purchaser for value
of the financial asset.
55(2) A securities intermediary that acquires a security entitlement
to a financial asset from another securities intermediary acquires
the security entitlement for value if the securities intermediary
acquiring the security entitlement establishes a security entitlement
to the financial asset in favour of an entitlement holder.
PART 3
ISSUE AND ISSUER
Terms of a security
56(1) Even against a purchaser for value and without notice, the terms
of a certificated security include
(a) the terms stated on the security certificate, and
(b) any terms made part of the security by reference
on the security certificate to another instrument, indenture or other
document or to a statute, regulation, rule, order or the like, to
the extent that those terms do not conflict with the terms stated
on the security certificate.
56(2) A reference described in paragraph (1)(b) does not by itself constitute
notice to a purchaser for value of a defect that goes to the validity
of the security, even if the security certificate expressly states
that a person accepting it admits notice.
56(3) The terms of an uncertificated security include those stated
in any instrument, indenture or other document or in a statute, regulation,
rule, order or the like under which the security is issued.
Enforcement of security
57(1) An unauthorized signature placed on a security certificate before
or in the course of issue is ineffective except that the signature
is effective in favour of a purchaser for value of the certificated
security if the purchaser is without notice of the lack of authority
and the signing has been done by
(a) an authenticating trustee, registrar, transfer agent
or other person entrusted by the issuer with the signing of the security
certificate or of any similar security certificate or with the immediate
preparation for signing of any of those security certificates, or
(b) an employee of the issuer, or of any persons
referred to in paragraph (a), entrusted with responsible handling of the security certificate.
57(2) Except as provided in subsection (3), a security issued with
a defect going to its validity is enforceable against the issuer if
held by a purchaser for value and without notice of the defect.
57(3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a security issued by a government
or agency of it unless
(a) there has been substantial compliance with the legal
requirements governing the issue, or
(b) the issuer has received all or a substantial part of
the consideration for the issue as a whole or for the particular security
and the purpose of the issue is one for which the issuer has power
to borrow money or issue the security.
Lack of genuineness of certificated security
58 Except as otherwise provided in subsection 57(1), lack of genuineness of a certificated security is a
complete defence, even against a purchaser for value and without notice
of the lack of genuineness.
Other defences
59 All other defences of the issuer of a security that are not referred
to in sections 56 to 58, including non-delivery and conditional
delivery of a security, are ineffective against a purchaser for value
who has taken the security without notice of the particular defence.
Right to cancel contract
60 Nothing in sections 56 to 59 affects the right of a party to a “when,
as and if issued” contract or a “when distributed”
contract to cancel the contract in the event of a material change
in the character of the security that is the subject of the contract
or in the plan or arrangement under which the security is to be issued
or distributed.
Staleness deemed to be notice of defect
or defence
61(1) After an act or event that creates
a right to immediate performance of the principal obligation represented
by a certificated security or that sets a date on or after which the
security is to be presented or surrendered for redemption or exchange,
a purchaser is deemed to have notice of any defect in the security’s
issue or of any defence of the issuer
(a) if
(i) the act or event requires that, on
presentation or surrender of the security certificate, money be paid,
a certificated security be delivered or a transfer of an uncertificated
security be registered,
(ii) the money or security is available
on the date set for payment or exchange, and
(iii) the purchaser takes delivery of
the security more than one year after the date referred to in subparagraph
(ii), or
(b) if
(i) the act or event is not one to which
paragraph (a) applies, and
(ii) the purchaser takes delivery
of the security more than 2 years after the date on which performance
became due or the date set for presentation or surrender.
61(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a call that has been revoked.
Effect of issuer’s restriction on
transfer
62 A restriction on the transfer of a security
imposed by the issuer, even if otherwise lawful, is ineffective against
a person without knowledge of the restriction unless
(a) the security is a certificated security and the restriction
is noted conspicuously on the security certificate, or
(b) the security is an uncertificated security and the registered
owner has been given a notice of the restriction by a person required
to give such notice in order to make the restriction effective.
Completion of security certificate
63(1) If a security certificate contains the signatures necessary to
the security’s issue or transfer but is incomplete in any other
respect,
(a) any person may complete the security certificate by
filling in the blanks in accordance with the person’s authority,
and
(b) even if any of the blanks are incorrectly filled in,
the security certificate as completed is enforceable by a purchaser
who took the security certificate for value and without notice of
the incorrectness.
63(2) A complete security certificate that has been improperly altered,
even if fraudulently, remains enforceable, but only according to its
original terms.
Rights and duties of issuer re registered
owners
64(1) Before due presentation for registration
of transfer of a certificated security in registered form or the receipt
of an instruction requesting registration of transfer of an uncertificated
security, an issuer or indenture trustee may treat the registered
owner as the person exclusively entitled
(a) to vote,
(b) to receive notices,
(c) to receive any interest, dividend or other payments,
and
(d) to otherwise exercise all the rights and powers of an
owner.
64(2) Nothing in this Act affects the liability
of the registered owner of a security for a call, assessment or the
like.
Warranties by person signing
security certificate
65(1) A person signing a security certificate as authenticating trustee,
registrar, transfer agent or the like warrants to a purchaser for
value of the certificated security, if the purchaser is without notice
of a particular defect in respect of that security, that
(a) the security certificate is genuine,
(b) the person’s own participation in the issue of
the security is within the person’s capacity and within the
scope of the authority received by the person from the issuer, and
(c) the person has reasonable grounds to believe
that the certificated security is in the form and within the amount
the issuer is authorized to issue.
65(2) Unless otherwise agreed, a person signing a security certificate
under subsection (1) does not assume responsibility for the validity
of the security in any respect other than that set out in subsection
(1).
Issuer’s lien
66 A lien in favour of an issuer on a certificated security is valid
against a purchaser only if the right of the issuer to the lien is
noted conspicuously on the security certificate.
Overissue
67(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (2) and (3), the
provisions of this Act that make a security enforceable against an
issuer despite a defence or defect or that compel a security’s
issue or reissue do not apply to the extent that the application of
such provision would result in an overissue.
67(2) If an identical security not constituting an overissue is reasonably
available for purchase, a person entitled to issue of a security,
or a person entitled to enforce a security against an issuer despite
a defence or defect as provided under section 57, 58 or 59 or under a similar law of another jurisdiction,
may compel the issuer to purchase the security and deliver it, if
certificated, or register its transfer, if uncertificated, against
surrender of any security certificate the person holds.
67(3) If an identical security not constituting an overissue is not
reasonably available for purchase, a person entitled to issue of a
security, or a person entitled to enforce a security against an issuer
despite a defence or defect as provided under section 57, 58 or 59 or under a similar law of
another jurisdiction, may recover from the issuer the price that the
last purchaser for value paid for the security with interest from
the date of the person’s demand.
67(4) An overissue is deemed not to have occurred if appropriate action
has cured the overissue.
PART 4
TRANSFER OF CERTIFICATED AND UNCERTIFICATED
SECURITIES
Division A
Delivery and Rights of Purchaser
Delivery of security
68(1) Delivery of a certificated security to a purchaser occurs when
(a) the purchaser acquires possession of the security
certificate,
(b) another person, other than a securities intermediary,
either
(i) acquires possession of the security
certificate on behalf of the purchaser, or
(ii) having previously acquired possession
of the security certificate, acknowledges that the person holds the
security certificate for the purchaser, or
(c) a securities intermediary acting on behalf of the purchaser
acquires possession of the security certificate, the security certificate
is in registered form and the security certificate is
(i) registered in the name of the purchaser,
(ii) payable to the order of the
purchaser, or
(iii) specially endorsed to the purchaser
by an effective endorsement and has not been endorsed to the securities
intermediary or in blank.
68(2) Delivery of an uncertificated security to a purchaser occurs
when
(a) the issuer registers the purchaser as the registered
owner, on the original issue or the registration of transfer, or
(b) another person, other than a securities intermediary,
either
(i) becomes the registered owner of the
uncertificated security on behalf of the purchaser, or
(ii) having previously become the registered
owner, acknowledges that the person holds the uncertificated security
for the purchaser.
Rights of purchaser
69(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (2) and (3), a purchaser
of a certificated or uncertificated security acquires all rights in
the security that the transferor had or had power to transfer.
69(2) A purchaser of a limited interest in a security acquires rights
only to the extent of the interest purchased.
69(3) A purchaser of a certificated security who as a previous holder
had notice of an adverse claim does not improve that purchaser’s
position by virtue of taking from a protected purchaser.
Protected purchaser
70 A protected purchaser, in addition to acquiring the rights of a purchaser,
also acquires the purchaser’s interest in the security free
of any adverse claim.
Division B
Endorsements and Instructions
Form of endorsement
71(1) An endorsement may be in blank or special.
71(2) An endorsement in blank includes an endorsement to bearer.
71(3) For an endorsement to be a special endorsement, the endorsement
must specify to whom the security is to be transferred or who has
power to transfer the security.
71(4) A holder may convert an endorsement in blank to a special endorsement.
Endorsement of part of a security certificate
72 An endorsement of a security certificate, if the endorsement purports
to be in respect of only some of the units represented by the certificate,
is effective to the extent of the endorsement if the units are intended
by the issuer to be separately transferable.
When endorsement constitutes transfer of
security
73 An endorsement of a security certificate,
whether special or in blank, does not constitute a transfer of the
security
(a) until the delivery of the security certificate on which
the endorsement appears, or
(b) if the endorsement is on a separate document, until
the delivery of both the security certificate and the document on
which the endorsement appears.
Endorsement missing
74 If a security certificate in registered form has been delivered to
a purchaser without a necessary endorsement, the purchaser may become
a protected purchaser only when the endorsement is supplied, but against
the transferor, the transfer is complete on delivery and the purchaser
has a specifically enforceable right to have any necessary endorsement
supplied.
Notice of adverse claim
on endorsement
75 A purported endorsement of a security certificate in bearer form
may constitute notice of an adverse claim to the security certificate,
but the purported endorsement does not otherwise affect any right
that the holder has.
Obligations of endorser
76 Unless otherwise agreed, a person making an endorsement makes only
the warranties set out in sections 33 and 35 and does not warrant that
the security will be honoured by the issuer.
Completion of instruction
77 If an instruction has been originated by the appropriate person but
is incomplete in any other respect, any person may complete the instruction
in accordance with the person’s authority and the issuer may
rely on the instruction as completed, even if it has been completed
incorrectly.
Obligations of person originating an instruction
78 Unless otherwise agreed, a person originating an instruction makes
only the warranties set out in sections 34 and 36 and does not warrant
that the security will be honoured by the issuer.
Division C
Signature Guarantees and Other Requisites
for Registration of Transfer
Warranties by guarantor of endorser’s
signature
79 A person who guarantees a signature of
an endorser of a security certificate warrants that, at the time of
signing,
(a) the signature was genuine,
(b) the signer was the appropriate person to endorse or,
if the signature is by an agent, the agent had actual authority to
act on behalf of the appropriate person, and
(c) the signer had legal capacity to sign.
Warranties by guarantor of signature of
originator of instruction
80(1) A person who guarantees a signature of the originator of an instruction
warrants that, at the time of signing,
(a) the signature was genuine,
(b) if the person specified in the instruction as being
the registered owner was, in fact, the registered owner, the signer
was the appropriate person to originate the instruction or, if the
signature is by an agent, the agent had actual authority to act on
behalf of the appropriate person, and
(c) the signer had legal capacity to sign.
80(2) A person who guarantees a signature of the originator of an instruction
does not by that guarantee warrant that the person who is specified
in the instruction as the registered owner is in fact the registered
owner.
Warranties by special
guarantor of signature of originator of instruction
81 A person who specially guarantees the signature of an originator
of an instruction makes the warranties of a signature guarantor under
section 80 and also warrants that,
at the time that the instruction is presented to the issuer,
(a) the person specified in the instruction as the
registered owner of the uncertificated security will be the registered
owner, and
(b) the transfer of the uncertificated security requested
in the instruction will be registered by the issuer free from all
liens, security interests, restrictions and claims other than those
specified in the instruction.
Warranty re rightfulness of transfer by
guarantor
82(1) A guarantor under section 79 or 80 or a special guarantor under section 81 does not otherwise warrant the rightfulness of the transfer.
82(2) A person who guarantees an endorsement of a security certificate
makes the warranties of a signature guarantor under section 79 and also warrants the rightfulness
of the transfer in all respects.
82(3) A person who guarantees an instruction that requests the transfer
of an uncertificated security makes the warranties of a special guarantor
under section 81 and also warrants
the rightfulness of the transfer in all respects.
Guarantee may not be condition to registration
of transfer
83 An issuer shall not require a special guarantee
of signature, a guarantee of endorsement or a guarantee of instruction
as a condition to the registration of transfer.
Liability of guarantor, endorser and originator
84(1) The warranties under sections 79 to 82 are made to a person taking
or dealing with the security in reliance on the guarantee and the
guarantor is liable to the person for any loss resulting from any
breach of those warranties.
84(2) An endorser or an originator of an instruction whose signature,
endorsement or instruction has been guaranteed is liable to a guarantor
for any loss suffered by the guarantor resulting from any breach of
the warranties of the guarantor.
Purchaser’s right to requisites for
registration of transfer
85(1) Unless otherwise agreed, the transferor of a security shall,
on demand, supply the purchaser with proof of authority to transfer
or with any other requisite necessary to obtain registration of the
transfer of the security.
85(2) Despite subsection (1), if the transfer is not for value, a transferor
need not comply with a demand made under subsection (1) unless the
purchaser pays the necessary expenses.
85(3) If the transferor fails within a reasonable time to comply with
the demand made under subsection (1), the purchaser may reject or
rescind the transfer.
PART 5
REGISTRATION
Duty of issuer to register transfer
86(1) If a certificated security in registered form is presented to
an issuer with a request to register a transfer of the certificated
security or an instruction is presented to an issuer with a request
to register a transfer of an uncertificated security, the issuer shall
register the transfer as requested if
(a) under the terms of the security, the proposed transferee
is eligible to have the security registered in that person’s
name,
(b) the endorsement or instruction is made by the appropriate
person or by an agent who has actual authority to act on behalf of
the appropriate person,
(c) reasonable assurance is given that the endorsement or
instruction is genuine and authorized,
(d) any applicable law relating to the collection of taxes
has been complied with,
(e) the transfer does not violate any restriction on transfer
imposed by statute or by the issuer in accordance with section 62,
(f) in the case of a demand made under section 88 that the issuer not register a transfer,
(i) the demand has not become effective
under section 88, or
(ii) the issuer has complied with section 89, but legal process has not been obtained
or an indemnity bond has not been provided to the issuer in accordance
with section 90, and
(g) the transfer is rightful or is to a protected purchaser.
86(2) If, under subsection (1), an issuer is under a duty to register
a transfer of a security, the issuer is liable to a person presenting
a certificated security or an instruction for registration, or to
that person’s principal, for any loss resulting from unreasonable
delay in registration or the failure or refusal to register the transfer.
Assurances re endorsement or instruction
87(1) The following definitions apply in this section.
“appropriate evidence of appointment
or incumbency” means (preuve appropriée de la nomination
ou du mandat)
(a) in the case of a fiduciary
appointed or qualified by a court, a document issued by or under the
direction or supervision of the court or an officer of the court and
dated within 60 days before the date of presentation for transfer,
and
(b) in any other case,
(i) a
copy of a document showing the appointment,
(ii) a certificate certifying the appointment issued by or on behalf
of a person reasonably believed by the issuer to be a responsible
person, or
(iii) in the absence of a document
or certificate referred to in subparagraph (i) or (ii), other evidence
that the issuer reasonably considers appropriate.
“fiduciary” means any person
acting in a fiduciary capacity, and includes a personal representative
acting for the estate of a deceased person. (représentant)
“guarantee” means a guarantee
signed by or on behalf of a person reasonably believed by the issuer
to be a responsible person. (garantie)
87(2) For the purposes of the definition “guarantee” in
subsection (1), an issuer may adopt any standards with respect to
responsibility so long as those standards are not manifestly unreasonable.
87(3) An issuer may require the following assurance that each necessary
endorsement or each instruction is genuine and authorized:
(a) in all cases, a guarantee of the signature of the person
making the endorsement or originating the instruction, including,
in the case of an instruction, reasonable assurance of identity;
(b) if the endorsement is made or the instruction
is originated by an agent, appropriate assurance of actual authority
to act;
(c) if the endorsement is made or the instruction is originated
by a fiduciary or successor referred to in paragraph (d) or (e) of the definition “appropriate person” in subsection 1(1), appropriate evidence of appointment
or incumbency;
(d) if there is more than one fiduciary or successor referred
to in paragraph (d) or (e) of the definition “appropriate
person” in subsection 1(1),
reasonable assurance that all who are required to sign have done so;
(e) if the endorsement is made or the instruction
is originated by a person not referred to in paragraph (b), (c) or (d), assurance
appropriate to the case corresponding as nearly as may be to the assurance
required by paragraph (b),
(c) or (d).
87(4) An issuer may elect to require reasonable assurance beyond that
specified in this section.
Demand that issuer not register transfer
88(1) A person who is the appropriate person to make an endorsement
or to originate an instruction may demand that the issuer not register
a transfer of a security by communicating a notice to the issuer setting
out
(a) the identity of the registered owner,
(b) the issue of which the security is a part, and
(c) an address of the person making the demand to
which communications may be sent.
88(2) A demand made under subsection (1) becomes effective when the
issuer has had a reasonable opportunity to act on the demand, having
regard to the time and manner of receipt of the demand by the issuer.
Duty of issuer re demand not to register
transfer
89(1) If, after a demand made under section 88 becomes effective, a certificated security
in registered form is presented to an issuer with a request to register
a transfer or an instruction is presented to an issuer with a request
to register a transfer of an uncertificated security, the issuer shall
promptly give a notice as described in subsection (2) to the following
persons:
(a) the person who initiated the demand, at the address
provided in the demand;
(b) the person who presented the security for the registration
of transfer or originated the instruction requesting the registration
of transfer.
89(2) A notice given by an issuer under subsection (1) shall state
(a) that the certificated security has been presented
for the registration of transfer or the instruction for the registration
of transfer of the uncertificated security has been received,
(b) that a demand that the issuer not register a
transfer had previously been received, and
(c) that the issuer will withhold registration of transfer
for a period of time stated in the notice in order to provide the
person who initiated the demand an opportunity to obtain legal process
or to provide an indemnity bond referred to in section 90.
89(3) The period of time that may be provided for under paragraph (2)(c) shall not exceed 30 days from
the date the notice was given and the issuer may specify a shorter
period of time in the notice so long as the shorter period of time
being specified is not manifestly unreasonable.
Liability of issuer re demand not to register
transfer
90(1) An issuer is not liable, to a person
who initiated a demand under section 88 that the issuer not register a transfer, for any loss that the person
suffers as a result of the registration of a transfer in accordance
with an effective endorsement or instruction if the person who initiated
the demand does not, within the time stated in the issuer’s
notice given under section 89, either
(a) obtain an appropriate restraining order, injunction
or other process from a court of competent jurisdiction enjoining
the issuer from registering the transfer, or
(b) provide the issuer with an indemnity bond sufficient
in the issuer’s judgment to protect the issuer and any transfer
agent, registrar or other agent of the issuer involved from any loss
that those persons may suffer by refusing to register the transfer.
90(2) Nothing in subsection (1) or in section 88 or 89 relieves an issuer
from liability for registering a transfer under an endorsement or
instruction that was not effective.
Wrongful registration of transfer
91(1) Except as otherwise provided in section 93, an issuer is liable for wrongful registration of transfer
if
(a) the issuer has registered a transfer of a security to
a person not entitled to the security, and
(b) the transfer was registered by the issuer
(i) under an ineffective endorsement or
instruction,
(ii) after a demand that the issuer not
register a transfer became effective under section 88 and the issuer did not comply with
section 89,
(iii) after the issuer had been served
with an injunction, restraining order or other legal process referred
to in section 90 enjoining the issuer
from registering the transfer and the issuer had a reasonable opportunity
to obey or otherwise abide by the injunction, restraining order or
other legal process, or
(iv) acting in collusion with the wrongdoer.
91(2) An issuer that is liable for the wrongful registration of transfer
under subsection (1) shall, on demand, provide the person entitled
to the security with
(a) a like certificated or uncertificated security, as the
case may be, and
(b) any payments or distributions that the person did not
receive as a result of the wrongful registration.
91(3) If the provision of a security under subsection (2) would result
in an overissue, the issuer’s liability to provide the person
with a like security is governed by section 67.
91(4) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (1) or in any applicable
law of Canada or of any province or territory of Canada relating to
the collection of taxes, an issuer is not liable to an owner or other
person suffering loss as a result of the registration of transfer
of a security if the registration was made under an effective endorsement
or instruction.
Replacement of security certificate
92(1) If an owner of a certificated security, whether in registered
form or bearer form, claims that the security certificate has been
lost, destroyed or wrongfully taken, the issuer shall issue a new
security certificate if the owner
(a) so requests before the issuer has notice that the lost,
destroyed or wrongfully taken security certificate has been acquired
by a protected purchaser,
(b) provides the issuer with an indemnity bond sufficient
in the issuer’s judgment to protect the issuer from any loss
that the issuer may suffer by issuing a new certificate, and
(c) satisfies any other reasonable requirements
imposed by the issuer.
92(2) If, after the issue of a new security certificate, a protected
purchaser of the original security certificate presents the original
security certificate for the registration of transfer, the issuer
(a) shall register the transfer unless the registration
would result in an overissue, in which case the issuer’s liability
is governed by section 67,
(b) may exercise the rights the issuer may have
under the indemnity bond referred to in paragraph (1)(b), and
(c) may recover the new security certificate from a person
to whom it was issued or from any person, other than a protected purchaser,
taking under that person.
Obligation to notify issuer
93 An owner of a security may not assert against the issuer a claim
for wrongful registration of transfer under section 91 or a claim to a new security certificate
under section 92 if
(a) a security certificate has been lost, apparently destroyed
or wrongfully taken and the owner fails to give a notice to the issuer
of that fact within a reasonable time after the owner has notice of
it, and
(b) the issuer registers a transfer of the security before
receiving a notice of the loss, apparent destruction or wrongful taking
of the security certificate.
Obligation of trustee, registrar, transfer
agent or other agent
94 A person acting as authenticating trustee, registrar, transfer agent
or other agent for an issuer in the registration of a transfer of
the issuer’s securities, in the issue of new security certificates
or uncertificated securities or in the cancellation of surrendered
security certificates has the same obligation to the holder or owner
of a certificated or uncertificated security with regard to the particular
function performed as the issuer has in regard to that function.
PART 6
SECURITY ENTITLEMENTS
Acquisition of security entitlement
95(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (3) and (4), a person
acquires a security entitlement if a securities intermediary
(a) indicates by book entry that a financial asset
has been credited to the person’s securities account,
(b) receives a financial asset from the person or
acquires a financial asset for the person and, in either case, accepts
it for credit to the person’s securities account, or
(c) becomes obligated under another statute, law, regulation
or rule to credit a financial asset to the person’s securities
account.
95(2) If a condition of subsection (1) has
been met, a person has a security entitlement even if the securities
intermediary does not itself hold the financial asset.
95(3) A person is to be treated as holding a financial asset directly
rather than as having a security entitlement with respect to the financial
asset if a securities intermediary holds the financial asset for that
person and the financial asset
(a) is registered in the name of, payable to the order of
or specially endorsed to that person, and
(b) has not been endorsed to the securities intermediary
or in blank.
95(4) Issuance of a security is not establishment of a security entitlement.
Protection of entitlement holders from
adverse claim
96 A legal proceeding based on an adverse claim to a financial asset,
however framed, may not be brought against a person who acquires a
security entitlement under section 95 for value and without notice of the adverse claim.
Property interest of entitlement holders
in financial asset
97(1) To the extent necessary for a securities intermediary to satisfy
all security entitlements with respect to a particular financial asset,
all interests in that financial asset held by the securities intermediary
(a) are held by the securities intermediary for
the entitlement holders,
(b) are not the property of the securities intermediary,
and
(c) are not subject to claims of creditors of the securities
intermediary, except as otherwise provided in section 105.
97(2) An entitlement holder’s property interest with respect
to a particular financial asset under subsection (1) is a proportionate
property interest in all interests in that financial asset held by
the securities intermediary, without regard to
(a) the time that the entitlement holder acquired the security
entitlement, or
(b) the time that the securities intermediary acquired the
interest in that financial asset.
97(3) An entitlement holder’s property interest with respect
to a particular financial asset under subsection (1) may be enforced
against the securities intermediary only by the exercise of the entitlement
holder’s rights under sections 99 to 102.
97(4) An entitlement holder’s property interest with respect
to a particular financial asset under subsection (1) may be enforced
against a purchaser of the financial asset, or interest in it, only
if
(a) bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings have been initiated
by or against the securities intermediary,
(b) the securities intermediary does not have sufficient
interests in the financial asset to satisfy the security entitlements
of all of its entitlement holders to that financial asset,
(c) the securities intermediary violated its obligations
under section 98 by transferring
the financial asset, or interest in it, to the purchaser, and
(d) the purchaser is not protected under subsection
(7).
97(5) For the purposes of subsection (4),
a trustee or other liquidator acting on behalf of all entitlement
holders having security entitlements with respect to a particular
financial asset may recover the financial asset, or interest in it,
from the purchaser.
97(6) If the trustee or other liquidator elects not to pursue the right
provided under subsection (5), an entitlement holder whose security
entitlement remains unsatisfied has the right to recover the entitlement
holder’s interest in the financial asset from the purchaser.
97(7) A legal proceeding based on the entitlement holder’s property
interest with respect to a particular financial asset under subsection
(1), however framed, may not be brought against any purchaser of a
financial asset, or interest in it, who
(a) gives value,
(b) obtains control or possession, and
(c) does not act in collusion with the securities intermediary
in violating the securities intermediary’s obligations under
section 98.
Duty of securities intermediary re financial
asset
98(1) A securities intermediary shall promptly
obtain and then maintain a financial asset in a quantity corresponding
to the aggregate of all security entitlements that the securities
intermediary has established in favour of its entitlement holders
with respect to that financial asset.
98(2) The securities intermediary may maintain the financial asset
referred to in subsection (1) directly or through one or more other
securities intermediaries.
98(3) Except to the extent otherwise agreed to by its entitlement holder,
a securities intermediary may not grant any security interests in
a financial asset it is obligated to maintain under subsection (1).
98(4) A securities intermediary satisfies the duty imposed under subsection
(1) if
(a) the securities intermediary acts with respect to the
duty as agreed to by the entitlement holder and the securities intermediary,
or
(b) in the absence of an agreement referred to in paragraph
(a), the securities intermediary
exercises due care in accordance with reasonable commercial standards
to obtain and maintain the financial asset.
98(5) This section does not apply to a clearing agency that is itself
the obligor of an option or similar obligation to which its entitlement
holders have security entitlements.
Duty of securities intermediary re payments
and distributions
99(1) A securities intermediary shall take action to obtain a payment
or distribution made by the issuer of a financial asset.
99(2) A securities intermediary is obligated to its entitlement holder
for a payment or distribution made by the issuer of a financial asset
if the payment or distribution is received by the securities intermediary.
99(3) A securities intermediary satisfies the duty imposed under subsection
(1) if
(a) the securities intermediary acts with respect to the
duty as agreed to by the entitlement holder and the securities intermediary,
or
(b) in the absence of an agreement referred to in paragraph
(a), the securities intermediary
exercises due care in accordance with reasonable commercial standards
to attempt to obtain the payment or distribution.
Duty of securities intermediary to exercise
rights
100(1) A securities intermediary shall exercise
rights with respect to a financial asset if directed to do so by an
entitlement holder.
100(2) A securities intermediary satisfies the duty imposed under subsection
(1) if
(a) the securities intermediary acts with respect to the
duty as agreed to by the entitlement holder and the securities intermediary,
or
(b) in the absence of an agreement referred to in paragraph
(a), the securities intermediary
either
(i) places the entitlement holder in a
position to exercise the rights directly, or
(ii) exercises due care in accordance
with reasonable commercial standards to follow the direction of the
entitlement holder.
Duty of securities intermediary to comply
with entitlement order
101(1) A securities intermediary shall comply with an entitlement order
if
(a) the entitlement order is originated by the appropriate
person,
(b) the securities intermediary has had a reasonable opportunity
to assure itself that the entitlement order is genuine and authorized,
and
(c) the securities intermediary has had a reasonable opportunity
to comply with the entitlement order.
101(2) If a securities intermediary transfers a financial asset under
an ineffective entitlement order, the securities intermediary shall
(a) re-establish a security entitlement in favour
of the person entitled to it, and
(b) pay or credit any payments or distributions that the
person did not receive as a result of the wrongful transfer.
101(3) If a securities intermediary does not re-establish a security
entitlement in accordance with subsection (2), the securities intermediary
is liable to the entitlement holder for damages.
101(4) A securities intermediary satisfies the duty imposed under subsection
(1) if
(a) the securities intermediary acts with respect to the
duty as agreed to by the entitlement holder and the securities intermediary,
or
(b) in the absence of an agreement referred to in paragraph
(a), the securities intermediary
exercises due care in accordance with reasonable commercial standards
to comply with the entitlement order.
Duty of securities intermediary re entitlement
holder’s direction
102(1) A securities intermediary shall act at the direction of an entitlement
holder
(a) to change a security entitlement into another available
form of holding for which the entitlement holder is eligible, or
(b) to cause the financial asset to be transferred
to a securities account of the entitlement holder with another securities
intermediary.
102(2) A securities intermediary satisfies the duty imposed under subsection
(1) if
(a) the securities intermediary acts with respect to the
duty as agreed to by the entitlement holder and the securities intermediary,
or
(b) in the absence of an agreement referred to in paragraph
(a), the securities intermediary
exercises due care in accordance with reasonable commercial standards
to follow the direction of the entitlement holder.
Duties of securities intermediary —
general
103(1) If the substance of a duty imposed
on a securities intermediary under section 98, 99, 100, 101 or 102 is the subject of another
statute, regulation or rule, compliance with that other statute, regulation
or rule satisfies the duty.
103(2) The obligation of a securities intermediary to perform the duties
imposed under sections 98 to 102 is subject to
(a) the rights of the securities intermediary arising out
of a security interest, whether that security interest arises under
a security agreement with the entitlement holder or otherwise, and
(b) the rights of the securities intermediary under
another statute, law, regulation, rule or agreement to withhold performance
of its duties as a result of unfulfilled obligations of the entitlement
holder to the securities intermediary.
103(3) Nothing in sections 98 to 102 requires a securities intermediary
to take any action that is prohibited by another statute, regulation
or rule.
103(4) To the extent that specific standards
for the performance of any duties of a securities intermediary or
the exercise of the rights of an entitlement holder are not specified
by another statute, regulation or rule or by agreement between the
securities intermediary and the entitlement holder, the securities
intermediary shall perform its duties and the entitlement holder shall
exercise the entitlement holder’s rights in a commercially reasonable
manner.
Rights of purchaser re
adverse claim
104(1) In a case not covered by the priority rules under the Personal Property Security Act or the rules set out in subsection (3), a legal proceeding based
on an adverse claim to a financial asset or a security entitlement,
however framed, may not be brought against a person who purchases
a security entitlement, or interest in it, from an entitlement holder
if that purchaser
(a) gives value,
(b) does not have notice of the adverse claim, and
(c) obtains control.
104(2) If a legal proceeding based on an adverse claim could not have
been brought against an entitlement holder under section 96, a legal proceeding based on the adverse
claim may not be brought against a person who purchases a security
entitlement, or interest in it, from the entitlement holder.
104(3) In a case not covered by the priority rules under the Personal Property Security Act,
the following rules apply:
(a) a purchaser for value of a security entitlement, or
interest in it, who obtains control has priority over a purchaser
of a security entitlement, or interest in it, who does not obtain
control;
(b) except as otherwise provided in subsection (4), purchasers
who have control rank according to priority in time of
(i) the purchaser’s becoming the
person for whom the securities account in which the security entitlement
is carried is maintained, if the purchaser obtained control under
paragraph 25(1)(a),
(ii) the securities intermediary’s
agreement to comply with the purchaser’s entitlement orders
with respect to security entitlements carried or to be carried in
the securities account in which the security entitlement is carried,
if the purchaser obtained control under paragraph 25(1)(b), or
(iii) if the purchaser obtained control
through another person under paragraph 25(1)(c), the time
on which priority would be based under this subsection if the other
person were the purchaser.
104(4) A securities intermediary as purchaser has priority over a conflicting
purchaser who has control unless otherwise agreed by the securities
intermediary.
Priority of entitlement holders to financial
asset
105(1) Except as otherwise provided in subsections
(2) and (3), if a securities intermediary does not have sufficient
interests in a particular financial asset to satisfy both the securities
intermediary’s obligations to entitlement holders who have security
entitlements to that financial asset and the securities intermediary’s
obligation to a creditor of the securities intermediary who has a
security interest in that financial asset, the claims of entitlement
holders, other than the creditor, have priority over the claim of
the creditor.
105(2) A claim of a creditor of a securities intermediary who has a
security interest in a financial asset held by a securities intermediary
has priority over claims of the securities intermediary’s entitlement
holders who have security entitlements with respect to that financial
asset if the creditor has control over the financial asset.
105(3) If a clearing agency does not have sufficient financial assets
to satisfy both the clearing agency’s obligations to entitlement
holders who have security entitlements with respect to a financial
asset and the clearing agency’s obligation to a creditor of
the clearing agency who has a security interest in that financial
asset, the claim of the creditor has priority over the claims of entitlement
holders.
PART 7
CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS AND
COMMENCEMENT
Business Corporations
Act
106(1) Subsection 44(2) of the Business Corporations
Act, chapter B-9.1 of the Acts of New Brunswick, 1981, is amended
by striking out “Subject to subsection 47(8), the” and
substituting “The”.
106(2) The Act is amended by adding after section 45 the following:
Transfer of shares
45.1(1) Subject to this Act and any other Act, the Securities Transfer Act applies
to the transfer and transmission of the shares of a corporation.
45.1(2) The shares of a corporation are securities for the purposes of
the Securities Transfer Act.
106(3) Section 46 of the Act is repealed.
106(4) Section 47 of the Act is amended
(a) by repealing subsection
(8);
(b) in subsection (9) by
striking out “those words shall be deemed to be a notice of
a restriction, lien, agreement or endorsement for the purpose of subsection
(8)” and substituting “those words, for the purposes of
the Securities Transfer Act, shall be deemed to be a notice that the shares or a transfer of
the shares may be subject to a restriction, to a lien in favour of
the corporation, to a unanimous shareholder agreement or to an endorsement
under subsection 131(10)”.
106(5) Section 49 of the Act is amended
(a) by repealing subsection
(3) and substituting the following:
49(3) “Evidence” as described in subsection (2) means appropriate
evidence of appointment or incumbency as defined in subsection 87(1)
of the Securities Transfer Act.
(b) by adding after subsection
(9) the following:
49(10) Subsections (7), (8) and (9) do not limit any right of a person
to transfer shares or obtain registration of transfer in accordance
with the Securities Transfer Act.
106(6) Subsection 51(2) of the Act is amended
by striking out “by delivery of the warrant” and substituting “in accordance with
the provisions of the Securities
Transfer Act relating to a security certificate in bearer form”.
106(7) Subsection 126(8) of the Act is amended by striking out “Subject
to subsection 47(8), a” and substituting “A”.
106(8) Subsection 133(4) of the Act is repealed and the following is substituted:
133(4) Concurrently with sending the offeror’s
notice under subsection (3) to a dissenting offeree, the offeror shall
send to the offeree corporation a copy of the offeror’s notice,
which constitutes a demand under subsection 88(1) of the Securities Transfer Act that the
offeree corporation not register a transfer with respect to each share
held by a dissenting offeree.
Creditors Relief Act
107(1) Section 2.3 of the Creditors Relief Act, chapter C-33 of the Revised
Statutes, 1973, is amended by adding after subsection (6) the following:
2.3(6.1) If personal property that is bound
by a notice of judgment is investment property as defined in the Personal Property Security Act,
(a) the registration of the notice of
judgment does not limit the rights of a protected purchaser of a security
under the Securities Transfer Act,
(b) the interest of a protected purchaser
of a security under the Securities
Transfer Act has priority over the interest of a person referred
to in subsection (5) to the extent provided in that Act, and
(c) the registration of the notice of
judgment does not limit the rights of or impose liability on a person
to the extent that the person is protected against the assertion of
a claim under the Securities Transfer
Act.
107(2) Section 2.4 of the Act is amended by adding
after subsection (2) the following:
2.4(3) If a notice of claim is registered under subsection (1),
(a) the registration of the notice of
claim does not limit the rights of a person who subsequently becomes
a protected purchaser of a security under the Securities Transfer Act,
(b) the interest of a person who subsequently
becomes a protected purchaser of a security under the Securities Transfer Act has priority
over the interest of the person who registered the notice of claim
to the extent provided in that Act, and
(c) the registration of the notice of
claim does not limit the rights of or impose liability on a person
to the extent that the person is protected against the assertion of
a claim under the Securities Transfer
Act.
Memorials
and Executions Act
108(1) Section 23 of the Memorials and Executions Act, chapter M-9 of the
Revised Statutes, 1973, is amended
(a) by repealing subsection
(2);
(b) by repealing subsection
(3);
(c) by repealing subsection
(4);
(d) by repealing subsection
(5);
(e) by repealing subsection
(6).
108(2) The Act is amended by adding after section
23 the following:
SECURITIES AND SECURITY ENTITLEMENTS
Definitions
23.1 In sections 23.2 to 23.7, “appropriate person”, “endorsement”, “entitlement
order”, “instruction”, “issuer”, “securities
intermediary”, “security” and “security entitlement”
have the same meanings as in the Securities Transfer Act.
Effecting seizure
23.2(1) Subject to subsection (2), a sheriff with whom a judgment creditor
has filed an order for seizure and sale may, at the request of the
judgment creditor, seize the interest of a judgment debtor in a security
or a security entitlement in accordance with sections 47 to 51 of
the Securities Transfer Act.
23.2(2) Notwithstanding section 48 of the Securities Transfer Act, if the
jurisdiction that governs the validity of a certificated security
under section 44 of the Securities
Transfer Act is New Brunswick, a sheriff may seize the interest
of a judgment debtor in the certificated security by serving a notice
of seizure on the issuer at the issuer’s chief executive office,
even if the security certificate has not been surrendered to the issuer.
23.2(3) If a seizure under this section is by notice of seizure to an
issuer or securities intermediary, the seizure becomes effective when
the issuer or securities intermediary has had a reasonable opportunity
to act on the seizure, having regard to the time and manner of receipt
of the notice.
Powers of sheriff on seizure
23.3(1) If a judgment debtor’s interest in a security or security
entitlement is seized by a sheriff, the sheriff is the appropriate
person under the Securities Transfer
Act for the purposes of dealing with or disposing of the seized
property and, for the duration of the seizure, the judgment debtor
is not the appropriate person under that Act for the purposes of dealing
with or disposing of the seized property.
23.3(2) On seizure of a judgment debtor’s interest in a security
or a security entitlement, the sheriff may
(a) do any act or thing that could otherwise
have been done by the judgment debtor in relation to the security
or security entitlement,
(b) execute or endorse any document
that could otherwise have been executed or endorsed by the judgment
debtor, and
(c) realize the value of the security
by any means permitted under the terms of the security.
23.3(3) If the sheriff makes or originates an endorsement, instruction
or entitlement order as the appropriate person under subsection (1),
the sheriff shall provide the issuer or securities intermediary with
a certificate of the sheriff stating that the sheriff has the authority
under this Act to make that endorsement, instruction or entitlement
order.
Duties
of issuer
23.4 An issuer that has been served with a notice
of seizure regarding a security of which the judgment debtor is the
registered holder shall
(a) on the request of the sheriff, send
to the sheriff any information or documents and allow the sheriff
to inspect any records that the judgment debtor is entitled to receive
or inspect,
(b) on the request of the sheriff, pay
to the sheriff any distribution, dividend or other payment in respect
of the security that would otherwise be payable by the issuer to the
judgment debtor, and
(c) comply with any direction given
by the sheriff regarding the security where the issuer would be required
to comply with the direction if that direction were given by the judgment
debtor while the security was not under seizure.
Duties of securities intermediary
23.5 Where a sheriff has seized a judgment debtor’s interest in
a security entitlement by serving a notice of seizure on a securities
intermediary whose securities intermediary’s jurisdiction within
the meaning of the Securities Transfer
Act is New Brunswick, the securities intermediary shall
(a) on the request of the sheriff, send
to the sheriff any information or documents and allow the sheriff
to inspect any records that the judgment debtor is entitled to receive
or inspect,
(b) on the request of the sheriff, pay
to the sheriff any distribution, dividend or other payment in respect
of the security entitlement that would otherwise be payable by the
securities intermediary to the judgment debtor, and
(c) comply with any direction given
by the sheriff regarding the security entitlement where the securities
intermediary would be required to comply with the direction if that
direction were given by the judgment debtor while the security entitlement
was not under seizure.
Release from seizure
23.6 If the interest of a judgment debtor in a security or security entitlement
has been seized by a sheriff serving a notice of seizure, the sheriff
may release the seized property or a portion of the seized property
from seizure by serving a notice to that effect on the person on whom
the notice of seizure was served.
Restrictions on transfer
of seized security
23.7(1) The following definitions apply in this section.
“seized security” means the
interest of a judgment debtor in a security that is seized. (valeur mobilière saisie)
“unanimous shareholder agreement”
means a unanimous shareholder agreement as defined in the Business Corporations Act. (convention unanime des actionnaires)
23.7(2) This section applies if the interest of a judgment debtor in
a security is seized by a sheriff and the jurisdiction that governs
the validity of the security under section 44 of the Securities Transfer Act is New Brunswick.
23.7(3) Subject to subsection (5), if the transfer of the seized security
is restricted by the terms of the security, by a restriction imposed
by the issuer or by a unanimous shareholder agreement, the sheriff
is bound by the restriction.
23.7(4) Subject to subsection (5), if a person would otherwise be entitled
to acquire or redeem the seized security for a predetermined price
or at a price fixed by reference to a predetermined formula, the person
is entitled to acquire or redeem the security.
23.7(5) On application by the sheriff or the judgment creditor who made
the request under subsection 23.2(1), if The Court of Queen’s Bench of New Brunswick, having
taken into account the interests of the judgment creditor and of other
persons affected, considers that a restriction on the transfer of
the seized security, or a person’s entitlement to acquire or
redeem the seized security, is unfairly prejudicial to the judgment
creditor, The Court of Queen’s Bench of New Brunswick may make
any order that it considers appropriate regarding the seized security,
including an order doing one or more of the following:
(a) directing the sale or the method
or terms of sale of the seized security, or the method of realizing
the value of the seized security other than through sale;
(b) directing the issuer to pay dividends,
distributions or interest to the sheriff;
(c) directing the issuer to register
the transfer of the seized security to a person despite a restriction
on the transfer of the security described in subsection (3) or the
entitlement of another person to acquire or redeem the security described
in subsection (4);
(d) directing that all or part of a
unanimous shareholder agreement does not apply to a person who acquires
or takes a seized security from the sheriff;
(e) directing that the issuer be dissolved
and its proceeds disposed of according to law.
23.7(6) The sheriff may bring an application under section 141 of the Business Corporations Act as if
he or she were a shareholder under that section, whether or not an
application is brought under subsection (5) of this section.
23.7(7) An application under subsection (5) may be joined with an application
under section 141 of the Business
Corporations Act.
23.7(8) Unless otherwise ordered by The Court of Queen’s Bench
of New Brunswick under subsection (5), a person who acquires or takes
a seized security from the sheriff is deemed to be a party to any
unanimous shareholder agreement or any agreement under subsection
99(1) of the Business Corporations
Act to which the judgment debtor was a party at the time of
the seizure, if the agreement contains provisions intended to preclude
the judgment debtor from transferring the security except to a person
who agrees to be a party to that agreement.
23.7(9) Notwithstanding subsection (8) and any provision in a unanimous
shareholder agreement to the contrary, a person who acquires or takes
a seized security from the sheriff is not liable to make any financial
contribution to the corporation or provide any guarantee or indemnity
of the corporation’s debts or obligations.
Personal Property Security
Act
109(1) The heading “Definitions” preceding
section 1 of the Personal Property Security Act, chapter P-7.1 of
the Acts of New Brunswick, 1993, is repealed and the following is
substituted:
Definitions and interpretation
109(2) Section 1 of the Act is amended
(a) by renumbering the
section as subsection 1(1);
(b) in subsection (1)
(i) by repealing the
definition “account” and substituting the following:
“account” means a monetary
obligation not evidenced by chattel paper, a security or an instrument,
whether or not the obligation has been earned by performance, but
does not include investment property; (compte)
(ii) in
the French version in paragraph b) of the definition « défaut »
by striking out “réalisable” and substituting “opposable”;
(iii) in the definition “goods”
by striking out “a security” and substituting “investment property”;
(iv) in paragraph
(d) of the definition “instrument” by striking out “a
security” and substituting “investment property”;
(v) in the definition “intangible”
by striking out “a security” and substituting “investment property”;
(vi) in the definition “personal
property” by striking out “a security” and substituting “investment property”;
(vii) by repealing
the definition “proceeds” and substituting the following:
“proceeds” means (produit)
(a) identifiable or traceable personal
property that is derived directly or indirectly from any dealing with
collateral or proceeds of collateral and in which the debtor acquires
an interest,
(b) an insurance or other payment that
represents indemnity or compensation for loss of or damage to collateral
or proceeds of collateral, or a right to such a payment,
(c) a payment made in total or partial
discharge or redemption of chattel paper, investment property, an
instrument or an intangible, and
(d) rights arising out of, or property
collected on, or distributed on account of, collateral that is investment
property;
(viii) in the definition “purchase
money security interest”
(A) in paragraph
(a) by striking out “in collateral” and substituting “in collateral, other than
investment property,”;
(B) in paragraph
(b) by striking out “in collateral” and substituting “in collateral, other than
investment property,”;
(ix) by repealing
the definition “security” and substituting the following:
“security” means a security
as defined in the Securities Transfer
Act; (valeur mobilière)
(x) by repealing
the definition “security with a clearing agency”;
(xi)
by adding the following definitions in alphabetical order:
“broker” means a broker
as defined in the Securities Transfer
Act; (courtier)
“certificated security” means
a certificated security as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (valeur mobilière avec certificat)
“clearing house” means an organization
through which trades in options or standardized futures are cleared
and settled; (chambre de compensation)
“clearing house option” means
an option, other than an option on futures, issued by a clearing house
to its participants; (option de chambre de compensation)
“entitlement holder” means
an entitlement holder as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (titulaire du droit)
“entitlement order”
means an entitlement order as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (ordre relatif à un droit)
“financial asset” means a financial
asset as defined in the Securities
Transfer Act; (actif financier)
“futures account” means an
account maintained by a futures intermediary in which a futures contract
is carried for a futures customer; (compte de contrats à
terme)
“futures contract” means a
standardized future or an option on futures, other than a clearing
house option, that is (contrat à terme)
(a) traded on or subject to the rules
of a futures exchange recognized or otherwise regulated by the New
Brunswick Securities Commission or by a securities regulatory authority
of another province or territory of Canada, or
(b) traded on a foreign futures exchange
and carried on the books of a futures intermediary for a futures customer;
“futures customer” means
a person for whom a futures intermediary carries a futures contract
on its books; (client de contrats à terme)
“futures exchange” means
an association or organization operated to provide the facilities
necessary for the trading of standardized futures or options on futures; (bourse de contrats à terme)
“futures intermediary” means
a person who (intermédiaire en contrats à terme)
(a) is registered as a dealer permitted
to trade in futures contracts, whether as principal or agent, under
the securities laws or commodity futures laws of a province or territory
of Canada, or
(b) is a clearing house recognized or
otherwise regulated by the New Brunswick Securities Commission or
by a securities regulatory authority of another province or territory
of Canada;
“investment property” means
a security, whether certificated or uncertificated, security entitlement,
securities account, futures contract or futures account; (bien de placement)
“option” means an agreement
that provides the holder with the right, but not the obligation, to
do one or more of the following on terms or at a price established
by or determinable by reference to the agreement at or by a time established
by the agreement: (option)
(a) receive an amount of cash determinable
by reference to a specified quantity of the underlying interest of
the option;
(b) purchase a specified quantity of
the underlying interest of the option;
(c) sell a specified quantity of the
underlying interest of the option;
“option on futures” means an
option the underlying interest of which is a standardized future; (option sur contrats à terme)
“securities account” means
a securities account as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (compte de titres)
“securities intermediary”
means a securities intermediary as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (intermédiaire en valeurs mobilières)
“security certificate” means
a security certificate as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (certificat de valeur mobilière)
“security entitlement” means
a security entitlement as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (droit intermédié)
“standardized future” means
an agreement traded on a futures exchange pursuant to standardized
conditions contained in the by-laws, rules or regulations of the futures
exchange, and cleared and settled by a clearing house, to do one or
more of the following at a price established by or determinable by
reference to the agreement and at or by a time established by or determinable
by reference to the agreement: (contrat à terme normalisé)
(a) make or take delivery of the underlying
interest of the agreement;
(b) settle the obligation in cash instead
of delivery of the underlying interest;
“uncertificated security” means
an uncertificated security as defined in the Securities Transfer Act; (valeur mobilière sans certificat)
(c) by adding after subsection
(1) the following:
1(2) For the purposes of this Act,
(a) a secured party has control of a
certificated security if the secured party has control in the manner
provided for in section 23 of the Securities Transfer Act,
(b) a secured party has control of an
uncertificated security if the secured party has control in the manner
provided for in section 24 of the Securities Transfer Act,
(c) a secured party has control of a
security entitlement if the secured party has control in the manner
provided for in section 25 or 26 of the Securities Transfer Act,
(d) a secured party has control of a
futures contract if
(i) the secured party is the futures intermediary
with which the futures contract is carried, or
(ii) the futures customer, the secured
party and the futures intermediary have agreed that the futures intermediary
will apply any value distributed on account of the futures contract
as directed by the secured party without further consent by the futures
customer, and
(e) a secured party having control of
all security entitlements or futures contracts carried in a securities
account or futures account has control over the securities account
or futures account.
109(3) Subsection 2(4) of the Act is repealed.
109(4) Section 4 of the Act is amended
(a) in paragraph (b) by
striking out “contract of annuity or”;
(b) by adding after
paragraph (b) the following:
(b.1) a transfer of an interest or claim
in or under a contract of annuity, other than a contract of annuity
held by a securities intermediary for another person in a securities
account;
(c) in paragraph (f) by
striking out “a security” and substituting “investment property”.
109(5) Section 5 of the Act is amended
(a) in paragraph (1)(b)
by striking out “a security,”;
(b) by repealing subsection
(2).
109(6) Section 7 of the Act is amended
(a) in subsection (1) in the portion preceding
paragraph (a) by striking out “purposes of this section”
and substituting “purposes
of this section and section 7.1”;
(b) in paragraph (2)(c)
by striking out “a security,”;
(c) in paragraph (4)(b)
by striking out “a security,”.
109(7) The Act is amended by adding after section 7 the following:
Conflict of laws: investment
property
7.1(1) The validity of a security interest
in investment property is governed by the law, at the time the security
interest attaches,
(a) of the jurisdiction where the certificate
is located if the collateral is a certificated security,
(b) of the issuer’s jurisdiction
if the collateral is an uncertificated security,
(c) of the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction if the collateral is a security entitlement or a securities
account, or
(d) of the futures intermediary’s
jurisdiction if the collateral is a futures contract or a futures
account.
7.1(2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(5), the perfection, effect of perfection or non-perfection and priority
of a security interest in investment property is governed by the law
(a) of the jurisdiction where the certificate
is located if the collateral is a certificated security,
(b) of the issuer’s jurisdiction
if the collateral is an uncertificated security,
(c) of the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction if the collateral is a security entitlement or a securities
account, or
(d) of the futures intermediary’s
jurisdiction if the collateral is a futures contract or a futures
account.
7.1(3) For the purposes of this section,
(a) the location of a debtor is determined
by subsection 7(1),
(b) the issuer’s jurisdiction
is determined by subsection 44(1) of the Securities Transfer Act, and
(c) the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction is determined by subsection 45(1) of the Securities Transfer Act.
7.1(4) For the purposes of this section, the following rules determine
a futures intermediary’s jurisdiction:
(a) if an agreement between the futures
intermediary and futures customer governing the futures account expressly
provides that a particular jurisdiction is the futures intermediary’s
jurisdiction for the purposes of the law of that jurisdiction, this
Act or any provision of this Act, the jurisdiction expressly provided
for is the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction;
(b) if paragraph (a) does not apply
and an agreement between the futures intermediary and futures customer
governing the futures account expressly provides that the agreement
is governed by the law of a particular jurisdiction, that jurisdiction
is the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction;
(c) if neither paragraph (a) nor (b)
applies and an agreement between the futures intermediary and futures
customer governing the futures account expressly provides that the
futures account is maintained at an office in a particular jurisdiction,
that jurisdiction is the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction;
(d) if none of the preceding paragraphs
applies, the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction
in which the office identified in an account statement as the office
serving the futures customer’s account is located; and
(e) if none of the preceding paragraphs
applies, the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction is the jurisdiction
in which the chief executive office of the futures intermediary is
located.
7.1(5) The law of the jurisdiction in which
the debtor is located governs
(a) perfection of a security interest
in investment property by registration,
(b) perfection of a security interest
in investment property granted by a broker or securities intermediary
where the secured party relies on attachment of the security interest
as perfection, and
(c) perfection of a security interest
in a futures contract or futures account granted by a futures intermediary
where the secured party relies on attachment of the security interest
as perfection.
7.1(6) A security interest perfected under the law of the jurisdiction
designated in subsection (5) remains perfected until the earliest
of
(a) sixty days after the day the debtor
relocates to another jurisdiction,
(b) fifteen days after the day the secured
party knows the debtor has relocated to another jurisdiction, and
(c) the day that perfection ceases under
the previously applicable law.
7.1(7) A security interest in investment property that is perfected
under the law of the issuer’s jurisdiction, the securities intermediary’s
jurisdiction or the futures intermediary’s jurisdiction, as
applicable, remains perfected until the earliest of
(a) sixty days after a change of the
applicable jurisdiction to another jurisdiction,
(b) fifteen days after the day the secured
party knows of the change of the applicable jurisdiction to another
jurisdiction, and
(c) the day that perfection ceases under
the previously applicable law.
Law of a jurisdiction
7.2 For the purposes of section 7.1, a reference to the law of a jurisdiction means the internal law
of that jurisdiction excluding its conflict of law rules.
109(8) Section 8 of the Act is amended
(a) by repealing subsection
(1) and substituting the following:
8(1) Notwithstanding sections 5, 6, 7 and 7.1,
(a) procedural issues involved in the
enforcement of the rights of a secured party against collateral are
governed by the law of the jurisdiction in which the enforcement rights
are exercised, and
(b) substantive issues involved in the
enforcement of the rights of a secured party against collateral are
governed by the proper law of the contract between the secured party
and the debtor.
(b) in subsection (2) in
the portion preceding paragraph (a) by striking out “sections
5, 6 and 7” and substituting “sections 5, 6, 7 and 7.1”.
109(9) The heading “Preuve requise pour qu’une sûreté
soit réalisable contre les tierces parties” preceding section
10 of the French version of the Act is amended by striking out “réalisable”
and substituting “opposable”.
109(10) Section 10 of the Act is amended
(a) by repealing subsection
(1) and substituting the following:
10(1) Subject to section 12.1, a
security interest is enforceable against a third party only where
(a) the collateral is
(i) not a certificated security and is
in the possession of the secured party or another person on the secured
party’s behalf,
(ii) a certificated security in registered
form and the security certificate has been delivered to the secured
party under section 68 of the Securities
Transfer Act pursuant to the debtor’s security agreement,
or
(iii) investment property and the secured
party has control under subsection 1(2) pursuant to the debtor’s security agreement, or
(b) the debtor has signed a security
agreement that contains
(i) a description of the collateral by
item or kind or by reference to one or more of the following: “goods”, “document
of title”, “chattel paper”, “investment property”, “instrument”, “money”
or “intangible”,
(ii) a description of collateral that
is a security entitlement, securities account, or futures account
if it describes the collateral by those terms or as “investment
property” or if it describes the underlying financial asset
or futures contract,
(iii) a statement that a security interest
is taken in all of the debtor’s present and after-acquired personal
property, or
(iv) a statement that a security interest
is taken in all of the debtor’s present and after-acquired personal
property except specified items or kinds of personal property or except
one or more of the following: “goods”, “document
of title”, “chattel paper”, “investment property”, “instrument”, “money”
or “intangible”.
(b) in subsection (2) by
striking out “paragraph (1)(a)” and substituting “subparagraph (1)(a)(i)”;
(c) in subsection (3) by
striking out “subparagraph (1)(b)(iii)” and substituting “subparagraph (1)(b)(iv)”;
(d) in subsection (5) of
the French version by striking out “réalisable” and
substituting “opposable”.
109(11) Section 12 of the Act is amended
(a) in subsection (1)
(i) by repealing paragraph
(b) and substituting the following:
(b) the debtor has rights in the collateral
or power to transfer rights in the collateral to a secured party,
and
(ii) in paragraph
(c) of the French version by striking out “réalisable”
and substituting “opposable”;
(b) by adding after subsection
(4) the following:
12(5) The attachment of a security interest in a securities account
is also attachment of a security interest in the security entitlements
carried in the securities account.
12(6) The attachment of a security interest in a futures account is
also attachment of a security interest in the futures contracts carried
in the futures account.
109(12) The Act is amended by adding after section 12 the following:
Security interest on purchase
or delivery
12.1(1) A security interest in favour of a
securities intermediary attaches to a person’s security entitlement
if
(a) the person buys a financial asset
through the securities intermediary in a transaction in which the
person is obligated to pay the purchase price to the securities intermediary
at the time of the purchase, and
(b) the securities intermediary credits
the financial asset to the buyer’s securities account before
the buyer pays the securities intermediary.
12.1(2) The security interest described in subsection (1) secures the
person’s obligation to pay for the financial asset.
12.1(3) A security interest in favour of a person who delivers a certificated
security or other financial asset represented by a writing attaches
to the security or other financial asset if
(a) the security or other financial
asset is
(i) in the ordinary course of business
transferred by delivery with any necessary endorsement or assignment,
and
(ii) delivered under an agreement between
persons in the business of dealing with such securities or financial
assets, and
(b) the agreement calls for delivery
against payment.
12.1(4) The security interest described in subsection (3) secures the
obligation to make payment for the delivery.
109(13) The heading “Security in after-acquired personal property”
preceding section 13 of the English version of the Act is amended
by striking out “Security in” and substituting “Security
interest in”.
109(14) Subsection 17(2) of the Act is amended
by striking out “, a security”.
109(15) The Act is amended by adding after section 17 the following:
Investment property in the secured
party’s control: rights and obligations
17.1(1) Unless otherwise agreed by the parties and notwithstanding section 17, a secured party having control under
subsection 1(2) of investment property
as collateral
(a) may hold as additional security
any proceeds received from the collateral,
(b) shall either apply money or funds
received from the collateral to reduce the secured obligation or remit
that money or those funds to the debtor, and
(c) may create a security interest in
the collateral.
17.1(2) Notwithstanding subsection (1) and section 17, a secured party having control under
subsection 1(2) of investment property
as collateral may sell, transfer, use or otherwise deal with the collateral
in the manner and to the extent provided in the security agreement.
109(16) The Act is amended by adding after section 19 the following:
Securities accounts and futures
accounts
19.1(1) Perfection of a security interest in
a securities account also perfects a security interest in the security
entitlements carried in the securities account.
19.1(2) Perfection of a security interest in a futures account also perfects
a security interest in the futures contracts carried in the futures
account.
Perfection on attachment
19.2(1) A security interest arising in the delivery of a financial asset
under subsection 12.1(3) is perfected
when it attaches.
19.2(2) A security interest in investment property created by a broker
or securities intermediary is perfected when it attaches.
19.2(3) A security interest in a futures contract or a futures account
created by a futures intermediary is perfected when it attaches.
109(17) Section 20 of the Act is amended
(a) in paragraph (2)(b)
by striking out “Winding-up Act (Canada)” and substituting “Winding‑up and Restructuring Act (Canada)”;
(b) in subsection (3) in
the portion preceding paragraph (a) by striking out “in collateral”
and substituting “in
collateral that is not investment property”;
(c) in subsection (4) by
striking out “or a security”.
109(18) The heading “Perfection by possession” preceding section
24 of the Act is repealed and the following is substituted:
Perfection by possession or delivery
109(19) Section 24 of the Act is amended
(a) by repealing paragraph
(1)(d);
(b) by adding after subsection
(2) the following:
24(3) Subject to section 19, a secured
party may perfect a security interest in a certificated security by
taking delivery of the certificated security under section 68 of the Securities Transfer Act.
24(4) Subject to section 19, a security
interest in a certificated security in registered form is perfected
by delivery when delivery of the certificated security occurs under
section 68 of the Securities Transfer
Act and remains perfected by delivery until the debtor obtains
possession of the security certificate.
109(20) The Act is amended by adding after section 24 the following:
Perfection by control of investment
property
24.1(1) Subject to section 19, a security interest in investment
property may be perfected by control of the collateral under subsection 1(2).
24.1(2) Subject to section 19, a security
interest in investment property is perfected by control under subsection 1(2) from the time the secured party obtains
control and remains perfected by control until
(a) the secured party does not have
control, and
(b) one of the following occurs:
(i) if the collateral is a certificated
security, the debtor has or acquires possession of the security certificate;
(ii) if the collateral is an uncertificated
security, the issuer has registered or registers the debtor as the
registered owner; or
(iii) if the collateral is a security
entitlement, the debtor is or becomes the entitlement holder.
109(21) Subsection 26(1) of the Act is amended by striking out the portion
preceding paragraph (a) and substituting the following:
26(1) If a security interest in an instrument or a certificated security
is perfected under section 24 and
the secured party delivers the instrument or certificated security
to the debtor for the purpose of
109(22) Section 28 of the Act is amended by adding after subsection (2) the
following:
28(2.1) The limitation of the amount secured by a security interest
as provided in subsection (2) does not apply where the collateral
is investment property.
109(23) The Act is amended by adding after section 30 the following:
Priority of purchaser of investment
property
30.1(1) A purchaser of a security, other than
a secured party, who
(a) gives value,
(b) does not know that the transaction
constitutes a breach of a security agreement granting a security interest
in the security to a secured party who does not have control of the
security, and
(c) obtains control of the security,
acquires the security free from the security
interest.
30.1(2) A purchaser referred to in subsection
(1) is not required to determine whether a security interest has been
granted in the security or whether the transaction constitutes a breach
of a security agreement.
30.1(3) An action based on a security agreement creating a security interest
in a financial asset, however framed, may not be brought against a
person who acquires a security entitlement under section 95 of the Securities Transfer Act for value
and did not know that there has been a breach of the security agreement.
30.1(4) A person who acquires a security entitlement under section 95
of the Securities Transfer Act is not required to determine whether a security interest has been
granted in a financial asset or whether there has been a breach of
the security agreement.
30.1(5) If an action based on a security agreement creating a security
interest in a financial asset could not be brought against an entitlement
holder under subsection (3), it may not be asserted against a person
who purchases a security entitlement, or an interest in it, from the
entitlement holder.
109(24) The heading “Priority of holders and purchasers of money, instruments,
securities, documents of title or chattel paper” preceding section
31 of the Act is amended by striking out “securities,”.
109(25) Section 31 of the Act is amended
(a) in subsection (3)
(i) in the portion
preceding paragraph (a) by striking out “or a security”
and “or security”;
(ii) in paragraph
(a) by striking out “or security”;
(iii) in paragraph
(b) by striking out “or security”;
(iv) in paragraph
(c) by striking out “or security”;
(b) in subsection (5) by
striking out “or a security”.
109(26) The Act is amended by adding after section 31 the following:
Rights under Securities Transfer Act
31.1(1) This Act does not limit the rights of a protected purchaser of
a security under the Securities Transfer
Act.
31.1(2) The interest of a protected purchaser
of a security under the Securities
Transfer Act takes priority over an earlier security interest,
even if perfected, to the extent provided in that Act.
31.1(3) This Act does not limit the rights of or impose liability on
a person to the extent that the person is protected against the assertion
of a claim under the Securities Transfer
Act.
109(27) Subparagraph 35(1)(a)(iii) of the Act is
amended by striking out “sections 5, 7, 26,” and substituting “sections 5, 7, 7.1, 26,”.
109(28) The Act is amended by adding after section
35 the following:
Priorities affecting investment property
35.1(1) The rules in this section govern priority among conflicting security
interests in the same investment property.
35.1(2) A security interest of a secured party having control of investment
property under subsection 1(2) has
priority over a security interest of a secured party who does not
have control of the investment property.
35.1(3) A security interest in a certificated security in registered
form that is perfected by taking delivery under subsection 24(3) and not by control under section 24.1 has priority over a conflicting security
interest perfected by a method other than control.
35.1(4) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (5) and (6), conflicting
security interests of secured parties each of whom has control under
subsection 1(2) rank according to priority in time of
(a) if the collateral is a security,
obtaining control,
(b) if the collateral is a security
entitlement carried in a securities account,
(i) the secured party’s becoming
the person for whom the securities account is maintained, if the secured
party obtained control under paragraph 25(1)(a) of the Securities Transfer Act,
(ii) the securities intermediary’s
agreement to comply with the secured party’s entitlement orders
with respect to security entitlements carried or to be carried in
the securities account, if the secured party obtained control under
paragraph 25(1)(b) of the Securities
Transfer Act, or
(iii) if the secured party obtained control
through another person under paragraph 25(1)(c) of the Securities Transfer Act, when the
other person obtained control, or
(c) if the collateral is a futures contract
carried with a futures intermediary, the satisfaction of the requirement
for control specified in subparagraph 1(2)(d)(ii) with respect to futures contracts carried or to be carried
with the futures intermediary.
35.1(5) A security interest held by a securities intermediary in a security
entitlement or a securities account maintained with the securities
intermediary has priority over a conflicting security interest held
by another secured party.
35.1(6) A security interest held by a futures intermediary in a futures
contract or a futures account maintained with the futures intermediary
has priority over a conflicting security interest held by another
secured party.
35.1(7) Conflicting security interests granted by a broker, securities
intermediary or futures intermediary that are perfected without control
under subsection 1(2) rank equally.
35.1(8) In all other cases, priority among conflicting security interests
in investment property is governed by section 35.
109(29) Section 50 of Act is amended by adding
after subsection (10) the following:
50(11) Where there is no outstanding secured obligation and the secured
party is not committed to make advances, incur obligations or otherwise
give value, a secured party having control of investment property
under paragraph 25(1)(b) of the Securities
Transfer Act or subparagraph 1(2)(d)(ii) of this Act shall, within 10 days after receipt of a written
demand by the debtor, send to the securities intermediary or futures
intermediary with which the security entitlement or futures contract
is maintained a written record that releases the securities intermediary
or futures intermediary from any further obligation to comply with
entitlement orders or directions originated by the secured party.
109(30) Section 56 of the Act is amended
(a) in subsection (2)
(i) in paragraph (b)
by striking out “and” at the end of the paragraph;
(ii)
by repealing paragraph (c) and substituting the following:
(c) when in possession of collateral
other than investment property, the rights and remedies provided in
section 17, and
(iii) by adding after
paragraph (c) the following:
(d) when in control of collateral that
is investment property, the rights and remedies provided in section 17.1.
(b) in paragraph (3)(c)
by striking out “section 17” and substituting “section 17 or 17.1”;
(c) by repealing subsection (4) and substituting
the following:
56(4) Except as provided in sections 17, 17.1, 59, 60 and 62, no provision of section 17 or 17.1 or sections 57 to 66, to the extent that the provision gives
rights and remedies to the debtor or imposes obligations on the secured
party, can be waived or varied by agreement or otherwise.
109(31) The heading “Right to collect on intangibles, chattel paper,
instruments and securities and to take control of proceeds”
preceding section 57 of the Act is amended by striking out “chattel
paper, instruments and securities” and substituting “chattel paper
and instruments”.
109(32) Paragraph 57(2)(a) of the Act is amended
by striking out “or security”.
109(33) Section 66 of the Act is amended
(a) in subsection (5) by
striking out “section 17, 18, 59 or 60” and substituting “section 17, 17.1, 18, 59 or 60”;
(b) in subsection (6) in
the portion preceding paragraph (a) by striking out “section
17, 18, 59 or 60” and substituting “section 17, 17.1, 18, 59 or 60”.
109(34) The Act is amended by adding after section 74 the following:
Transition regarding Securities Transfer Act
74.1(1) The provisions of the Securities
Transfer Act, including amendments made to this Act by section
109 of the Securities Transfer Act, do not affect an action or proceeding commenced before the commencement
of this section.
74.1(2) No further action is required to continue perfection of a security
interest in a security if
(a) the security interest in the security
was a perfected security interest immediately before the commencement
of this section, and
(b) the action by which the security
interest was perfected would suffice to perfect the security interest
under this Act.
74.1(3) A security interest in a security remains perfected for a period
of 4 months after the commencement of this section and continues to
be perfected after that 4-month period where appropriate action to
perfect the security interest under this Act is taken within that
period, if
(a) the security interest in the security
was a perfected security interest immediately before the commencement
of this section, but
(b) the action by which the security
interest was perfected would not suffice to perfect the security interest
under this Act.
74.1(4) A financing statement or financing change statement may be registered
within the 4-month period referred to in subsection (3) to continue
that perfection, or after that 4-month period to perfect the security
interest, if
(a) the security interest was a perfected
security interest immediately before the commencement of this section,
and
(b) the security interest can be perfected
by registration under this Act.
Commencement
110 This Act or any provision of it comes into
force on a day or days to be fixed by proclamation.