REALWorld Law

Real estate finance

Imperfect security

If a security interest has not been validly perfected, what is the position of the holder of that security if the borrower becomes insolvent?

Germany

Germany

If the security has not been validly perfected before the opening of insolvency proceedings it can not be perfected at a later stage. With the opening of the proceedings, the right to manage and dispose of the debtor’s assets passes from the management of the debtor to the appointed insolvency administrator.

In preliminary insolvency proceedings (the time between the petition for the opening of the insolvency proceedings and the actual opening) the court can prohibit or stay execution measures being taken against the debtor and can order that certain movable assets (including receivables) which are subject to creditors’' security rights may not be removed from the insolvent estate if those assets are required for the continuation of the debtor’s business. In addition, the court may (and almost always does) appoint a preliminary insolvency administrator.

The preliminary insolvency administrator’s power to control the debtor's assets will depend upon the level of restrictions imposed on the debtor by the court. The court may appoint either a ‘strong’ preliminary insolvency administrator with authority to take over the management of the debtor completely or a ‘weak’ preliminary insolvency administrator with authority only to supervise continued management by the directors. In practice the appointment of a ‘weak’ administrator is the most common route adopted, since in general the management will not act without the administrator's approval. This means that, so long as preliminary insolvency proceedings last security interests cannot be perfected, that is to say not without the consent of the preliminary insolvency administrator. Even if the ‘weak’ preliminary insolvency administrator consents to a perfection of the security, the transaction would be subject to claw-back by the insolvency administrator in any subsequent full insolvency proceedings.