Law School

Secured Transactions Part Six — Default, Enforcement, and Remedies Under Article 9

6 snips
Feb 14, 2026
A deep dive into what triggers default in secured deals and why contracts, not the code, usually decide. They cover repossession choices, the risks of breaching the peace, and how deceptive tactics can backfire. Sales must be commercially reasonable, with strict notice and pricing rules. The conversation ends on how bankruptcy upends enforcement and the procedural traps that can doom a secured claim.
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INSIGHT

Default Is Defined By The Security Agreement

  • Article 9 intentionally does not define default so parties keep freedom of contract.
  • The security agreement, not the UCC, typically sets triggers like missed payments, insurance lapses, or covenant breaches.
ADVICE

On Exams Assume Default And Focus On Enforcement

  • Assume default if the fact pattern proceeds to repossession or sale unless facts explicitly dispute it to save time on exams.
  • Don't waste minutes parsing contract language when the question focuses on enforcement mechanics.
INSIGHT

Self Help Requires No Breach Of The Peace

  • Article 9 allows self-help repossession but conditions it on no breach of the peace, a term defined by case law not the UCC.
  • Courts treat breach as risk of violence or disruptive confrontation, not only actual fights.
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