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Uniform Commercial Code

The Uniform Commercial Code is one of the Uniform Acts that attempts to harmonise the law of the fifty U.S. states in the United States of America. It treats the law of sales and commercial transactions in the United States. This was the first of the Uniform Acts to be proposed, and is the longest and most elaborate such act. It is colloquially known as the UCC.

The Uniform Commercial Code, in one or another of its several amendments, has been enacted in 49 of the 50 States. Louisiana, the sole holdout, has enacted most of the Code, but because that state's commercial law is based on civil law and the Napoleonic Code rather than on common law, it is difficult to harmonize procedure and terminology with the UCC.

The Uniform Commercial Code deals with the following subjects under consecutively numbered Articles:

  1. General provisions, (including most definitions and rules for interpretation);
  2. Sales, including article 2A, on leases;
  3. Commercial paper, (including negotiable instruments[?], the validity of endorsements, and the rights of subsequent holders);
  4. Bank deposits;
  5. Letters of credit;
  6. Bulk transfers, (recommended for repeal[?]);
  7. Warehouse[?] receipts[?];
  8. Investment securities;
  9. Secured transactions (liens and security interests[?] in chattel property);

In 1989, the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws[?] recommended that Article 6 of the UCC, dealing with bulk sales, be repealed as obsolete. It remains in force in several jurisdictions.

The controversial proposal for a Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act was originally meant to be Article 2B of the article on Sales. The controversy surrounding this bill lead first to the article's first being withdrawn from the Uniform Commercial Code to stand on its own; and finally, to the proposed uniform law's being withdrawn by the Uniform Law Commissioners.

The overriding philosophy of the Uniform Commecial Code is to allow people to make the contracts they want, but to fill in any missing provisions where the agreements they make are silent. The law also seeks to impose uniformity and streamlining of routine transactions like the processing of checks, notes, and other routine commercial paper. The law frequently distinguishes between merchants, who customarily deal in a commodity and are presumed to know well the business they are in; and consumers, who are not.

It also seeks to discourage the use of legal formalities in making business contracts, in order to allow business to move forward without the intervention of lawyers or the preparation of elaborate documents. This last is perhaps the most questionable part of its underlying philosophy; it has been argued that legal formalities discourages litigation by requiring some kind of ritual that provides a clear dividing line that tells people when they have made a final deal they could be sued over.

See also: commercial law



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