UCC Document Community

Ask the community...

  • DO post questions about your issues.
  • DO answer questions and support each other.
  • DO post tips & tricks to help folks.
  • DO NOT post call problems here - there is a support tab at the top for that :)

Ethan Wilson

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This thread should be required reading for anyone doing California UCC filings. The name matching requirements are stricter than most people realize.

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Yuki Tanaka

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Definitely. I'm bookmarking this for reference on future California deals.

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Carmen Diaz

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Same here. The document verification tool tip alone could save a lot of headaches.

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As someone new to UCC filings, this thread has been incredibly educational. I'm working on my first California filing next week and would have definitely run into the same name formatting issues. Quick question - does the Certana.ai tool work for other states too, or is it mainly useful for California's strict requirements? Also, is there a cost associated with using it?

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Caden Nguyen

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Final update: Got through about half the amendments so far. Used that Certana tool someone mentioned earlier and it definitely helped catch a few filing number typos I had in my spreadsheet. Much less stressful when you know the documents are consistent before you submit. Still have a bunch more states to go but feeling more confident about the process now.

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Avery Flores

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Glad it's going smoothly! That feeling of relief when you know your filings are clean is worth the effort.

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Exactly. Plus now I have a much better system for tracking all our UCC filings going forward.

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Amina Diallo

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Great to see you're making progress! One thing I learned the hard way - when you're doing these name change amendments, make sure you're consistent with how you reference the old company name across all states. I made the mistake of using "ABC Corp" in some filings and "ABC Corporation" in others for what was technically the same entity, and it created confusion later when we had to trace the secured party chain. Stick to the exact legal name as it appeared on the original UCC-1s, even if your internal records show slight variations. Also, if any of your original filings had errors in the secured party name to begin with, this might be a good time to clean those up too with the amendments.

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Bottom line: your raw materials, work-in-process, finished products, and equipment parts all sound like textbook goods under the UCC. Just make sure your collateral description is comprehensive enough to cover everything the lender wants secured. With a facility that size, precision matters.

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Exactly. And remember that goods definitions can vary slightly between UCC Article 2 (sales) and Article 9 (secured transactions), but for filing purposes, you're dealing with Article 9.

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Maya Lewis

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Thanks everyone! This really helps clarify things. I feel much more confident about drafting the collateral schedule now.

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Elijah Knight

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One additional consideration for manufacturing clients - don't forget about returnable containers, pallets, and packaging materials that might cycle through your inventory. These are often overlooked but can represent significant value and should be included in your goods description if the client wants them secured. Also, for work-in-process items, I've found it helpful to specifically mention "goods in various stages of completion" rather than just "work-in-process" - some filing offices prefer the more descriptive language.

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Yuki Ito

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Update: Just ran my UCC search Texas through the SOS portal and found two old filings but both were past their 5-year terms with no continuations. Also tried Certana.ai mentioned above and it confirmed the same thing - clean title. Thanks everyone for the guidance!

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Awesome! Glad it worked out clean. That excavator sounds like a good find.

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Nice job being thorough. That peace of mind is worth a lot on big equipment purchases.

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Ethan Moore

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Great thread! Just want to add that for equipment purchases this large, consider also checking with the equipment manufacturer's finance division. Sometimes they maintain their own lien records that might not immediately show up in state UCC searches, especially if there were any recent refinancing or lease-to-own arrangements. Also, if this excavator has any GPS tracking or telematics systems installed, make sure those aren't tied to any ongoing service contracts that could complicate ownership transfer.

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Update us when you get this sorted out! Always curious to hear how these UCC lien mortgage situations get resolved. Seems like there are so many different ways they can go depending on the specific circumstances.

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Millie Long

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Good plan. Having the actual filing in hand will make those conversations much more productive.

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Laura Lopez

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And if you need to cross-check multiple documents quickly, that Certana.ai tool I mentioned really does save time versus doing it all manually.

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One thing to consider is whether your title company did a proper UCC search initially. Sometimes these fixture filings don't show up in standard title searches if they're not properly indexed. You might want to ask your title company to explain why this UCC lien wasn't caught during the original refinance process - that could give you leverage in getting them to help resolve it quickly since it's potentially their oversight.

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That's a really good point about the title company's responsibility here. If they missed an existing UCC filing that should have been caught in their search, they might be willing to expedite the resolution to avoid any potential liability issues. Definitely worth asking them some pointed questions about their search methodology.

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