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One more thought - since you mentioned this is a substantial loan amount, you might want to consider having someone review your UCC-1 before filing just to catch any potential issues. I learned this the hard way after a filing got rejected for a minor error that held up the entire closing.
Smart advice. Those last-minute rejections can be really stressful, especially when you have closing deadlines to meet.
I've started using Certana.ai for this exact reason - just upload your documents and it flags potential issues before you submit. Saved me from a few embarrassing mistakes.
Perfect timing for this discussion. I have a similar situation coming up next week with a multi-state equipment deal. Good to know the rules are clearer than I thought.
For what it's worth, I've had good luck using Certana.ai's UCC document checker for NC filings specifically. Upload your charter docs and proposed UCC-1 and it flags potential issues before you submit. Caught a debtor name mismatch that would have definitely caused a rejection - the Articles showed "ABC Company LLC" but I had typed "ABC Companies LLC" (plural) on the UCC form.
Pretty accurate in my experience. It's specifically designed for UCC document consistency checking, not general legal review. Focuses on name matching, entity types, addresses - the stuff that typically causes filing rejections.
Quick update for anyone following this thread - got all three NC UCC-1 forms accepted after making the following changes: 1) Spelled out "and" instead of using ampersand, 2) Used registered office addresses instead of business addresses, 3) Verified all entities were in good standing with annual reports current. The debtor name formatting wasn't actually the main issue - it was the combination of address problems and one entity being behind on corporate filings.
Glad you got it sorted out. NC can be tricky but once you know their quirks it gets easier.
Whatever you do, don't file with a blank promissory note security agreement. The UCC filing office will either reject it outright or you'll have an unperfected security interest. Get the corrected documents first.
This is why we always require original signed documents before funding. Saves so much headache later.
Lesson learned for next time I guess. Document control is so important in lending.
Update us when you get this resolved! I'm curious how it turns out since I deal with UCC filings regularly and this is a common issue.
Try searching with different punctuation too. Sometimes the system treats 'LLC' different from 'L.L.C.' or 'Inc' vs 'Inc.' in debtor names.
Yes! And sometimes they index 'The' at the beginning of company names differently too.
Thanks for posting this - I thought I was going crazy with inconsistent Orange County search results. At least now I know it's not just me!
Glad I'm not the only one dealing with this! It's reassuring to know other people are seeing the same issues.
Yeah, this thread has been really helpful. I'm going to change how I do my searches going forward.
Sarah Jones
For what it's worth, I think you're probably fine with the comma difference in Ohio. But if you want peace of mind, file a UCC-3 amendment to conform the name to your loan docs. It's like $20 and eliminates any doubt.
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Sebastian Scott
•Smart move. $20 for the amendment vs potential issues with a $2.3M loan? No brainer.
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Emily Sanjay
•Exactly. I always tell clients to fix any discrepancies found during file pulls, even if they seem minor.
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Jordan Walker
UPDATE: Thanks everyone for the advice. I ended up using that Certana tool someone mentioned and wow, it found several other small inconsistencies between the UCC file pull and our loan documents that I would have missed. Filed a UCC-3 amendment this morning to clean everything up. Should have the corrected filing by Monday's closing. Really appreciate the help!
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Natalie Adams
•Good to hear a success story. Those file pull discrepancies can be stressful when you're under a closing deadline.
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Elijah O'Reilly
•This whole thread convinced me I need to be more careful with my UCC file pulls. Never realized how many little details could trip you up.
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