Show pageOld revisionsBacklinksBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Priority in Law: The Ultimate Guide to Who Gets Paid First ====== **LEGAL DISCLAIMER:** This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation. ===== What is Priority? A 30-Second Summary ===== Imagine you're at a popular food truck. Dozens of people are hungry, but there are only ten burgers left. Who gets one? The answer is simple: the first ten people who got in line. The person at the front of the line has **priority**. In the American legal system, **priority** works in much the same way. It's the set of rules that determines the order of rights—who gets "paid" first when there isn't enough money, property, or other assets to satisfy everyone with a legitimate claim. This isn't just an abstract concept for big banks. If you're a small business owner who sold goods on credit, a contractor who hasn't been paid for a home renovation, or even someone who bought a house, you have stood in a legal "line" without even knowing it. Understanding your place in that line—your legal priority—can be the difference between getting what you're owed and walking away with nothing. This guide will walk you through exactly how that line is formed and how to secure your spot at the front. * **Key Takeaways At-a-Glance:** * **The Core Principle:** Legal **priority** is a ranking system that determines the order in which competing claims against a specific asset or debtor are paid, especially in situations like [[bankruptcy]] or [[foreclosure]]. * **Your Direct Impact:** The rules of **priority** directly affect whether you, as a homeowner, business owner, or employee, will recover money owed to you if a person or company becomes insolvent. * **A Critical Action:** Securing your **priority** often requires taking a specific legal step, like recording a [[deed]] or filing a [[ucc-1_financing_statement]], to give the world public notice of your claim. ===== Part 1: The Legal Foundations of Priority ===== ==== The Story of Priority: A Historical Journey ==== The idea of ranking claims is as old as debt itself. It traces its roots to Roman law, which established basic distinctions between secured creditors (those with a claim to a specific piece of property) and unsecured creditors. This concept traveled through English [[common_law]], where courts of equity began developing principles to ensure fairness among lenders and debtors. In the United States, the concept of priority was woven into the fabric of the nation's legal and economic development. As the country expanded westward, clear rules were needed to handle land ownership and disputes. This led to the creation of **recording acts**—state laws that established public registries for land deeds and mortgages. The simple but revolutionary idea was that the first person to formally record their interest in a property at the county courthouse would have a superior claim, or priority, over anyone who came later. This brought order to a chaotic system and created the foundation of modern real estate law. The Industrial Revolution brought new forms of commerce and credit, creating a need for a more sophisticated system. This led to the drafting of the [[uniform_commercial_code]] (UCC) in the mid-20th century, a massive project to standardize business laws across states. Article 9 of the UCC created a comprehensive set of rules for priority in "secured transactions"—loans backed by personal property (like equipment, inventory, or accounts receivable). Finally, the federal [[bankruptcy_code]] represents the ultimate expression of legal priority. It establishes a complex but clear "waterfall" of payments, dictating the exact order—from secured lenders down to shareholders—in which creditors get paid when a business or individual seeks bankruptcy protection. This journey from ancient principles to modern, complex codes shows a consistent theme: society needs clear, predictable rules to determine who is first in line. ==== The Law on the Books: Statutes and Codes ==== While priority is a broad principle, it is defined and enforced by specific, powerful statutes. For anyone dealing with debt, property, or business, these are the rules of the game. * **The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC):** Specifically, `[[ucc_article_9]]` governs secured transactions involving personal property. A key concept is "perfection," the legal step that establishes a creditor's priority against other creditors. For example, UCC § 9-322(a)(1) states: > "Conflicting perfected security interests... rank according to priority in time of filing or perfection. Priority dates from the earlier of the time a filing covering the collateral is first made or the security interest... is first perfected..." **In Plain English:** This is the UCC's version of "first in time, first in right." Generally, the first creditor to either file their public notice (a `[[ucc-1_financing_statement]]`) or otherwise "perfect" their interest wins the priority battle. * **The U.S. Bankruptcy Code:** This federal law is the final arbiter of priority when a debtor is insolvent. Section 507 of the `[[bankruptcy_code]]` is perhaps the most crucial priority statute in the entire country. It lists, in descending order, the types of unsecured claims that get paid *before* general unsecured creditors. This list includes things like: * Certain administrative expenses of the bankruptcy estate. * A limited amount of unpaid wages owed to employees. * Unpaid contributions to employee benefit plans. * Certain taxes owed to the government. **In Plain English:** The Bankruptcy Code recognizes that some claims are more socially important than others. It ensures that employees get some of their back pay and the government gets its taxes before general business lenders or credit card companies see a dime. ==== A Nation of Contrasts: Jurisdictional Differences in Real Estate ==== One of the most critical areas where priority rules differ is in state real estate law, specifically through "recording acts." These laws determine who wins when a property is sold to two different people. Understanding your state's rule is essential. ^ **Recording Act Type** ^ **How It Works** ^ **Representative States** ^ **What It Means For You** ^ | **Race** | The first person to record their deed at the county recorder's office wins, period. It doesn't matter if they knew someone else had already bought the property. It's a pure race to the courthouse. | North Carolina, Louisiana | **Extreme Urgency.** If you buy property in a Race state, you must record your deed immediately. Delaying even by a day could cause you to lose the property to a subsequent buyer who records first. | | **Notice** | A subsequent buyer who purchases a property **without notice** (knowledge) of a prior, unrecorded sale will win. The second buyer's knowledge is the key factor. | Texas, Florida, Illinois | **Due Diligence is Key.** As a buyer, your protection comes from not knowing about prior claims. However, if you are the *first* buyer, you must record your deed to put all future buyers "on notice" and protect your ownership. | | **Race-Notice** | This is a hybrid. To win, a subsequent buyer must (1) purchase without notice of the prior sale AND (2) be the first to record their deed. They must win both the "notice" test and the "race." | California, New York, Washington | **The Gold Standard.** This is the most common system. It rewards diligence (recording first) but doesn't protect a subsequent buyer who knowingly took advantage of a prior, unrecorded sale. You must act fast and in good faith. | ===== Part 2: Deconstructing the Core Elements ===== ==== The Anatomy of Priority: Key Areas of the Law Explained ==== "Priority" isn't a single law; it's a concept that applies differently across various legal fields. Understanding these contexts is crucial to grasping how it affects your specific situation. === Priority in Bankruptcy: The Waterfall of Payments === When a company or individual files for bankruptcy, it's like a financial dam has broken. The court steps in to manage the flow of remaining assets to those who are owed money. This flow follows a strict order of priority, often called the "waterfall." * **1. Secured Claims:** At the top of the waterfall are [[secured_creditor]]s. These are lenders who have a [[lien]] on a specific piece of collateral, like a bank with a mortgage on a house or a car loan. They have the right to be paid from the proceeds of their collateral first. If the house is sold, the mortgage lender gets paid before anyone else from that money. * **2. Administrative Expenses:** Next are the costs of running the bankruptcy itself—fees for the [[bankruptcy_trustee]] and their lawyers. The system pays to keep itself running. * **3. Priority Unsecured Claims:** This is the special list created by Section 507 of the Bankruptcy Code. It includes claims like recent employee wages and certain taxes. These are unsecured (not tied to collateral) but are considered too important to be lumped in with other debts. * **4. General Unsecured Claims:** This is the largest and lowest-priority group. It includes suppliers, credit card companies, and anyone else who extended credit without taking collateral. They only get paid from whatever money is left after all higher-priority claims are fully satisfied. Often, they receive only pennies on the dollar, or nothing at all. * **5. Equity Interests:** At the absolute bottom are the owners or shareholders of the company. Their investment is wiped out unless every single creditor above them is paid in full, which is extremely rare in a [[liquidation]]. A key concept in corporate [[chapter_11_bankruptcy]] is the **[[absolute_priority_rule]]**. This rule forbids a company's reorganization plan from giving anything to a lower-priority class (like shareholders) unless every creditor in a higher-priority class has been paid in full or has agreed to the plan. === Priority in Real Estate & Secured Transactions: Liens on Property === Outside of bankruptcy, priority rules are most often applied to liens on property. A [[lien]] is simply a legal claim against an asset to satisfy a debt. When multiple liens exist on one property, their priority determines who gets paid first when the property is sold, such as in a foreclosure. * **The "First in Time, First in Right" Rule:** This is the bedrock principle. Generally, the first lien to be properly recorded in the public record has priority over all liens recorded later. A mortgage taken out in 2018 will have priority over a home equity line of credit taken out on the same house in 2021. * **Purchase Money Security Interest (PMSI):** This is a powerful exception. A PMSI is a special type of lien that enables a debtor to acquire the collateral. The classic example is a car loan; the loan gives you the money to buy the car. The law gives PMSI lenders special "superpriority," allowing them to jump ahead of some earlier creditors, because their loan created the new value. * **The Superpriority Liens:** Some liens can jump to the very front of the line, even ahead of a first-in-time mortgage. These are typically created by statute. * **Property Tax Liens:** Unpaid property taxes often create a lien that is superior to all others. The government gets its money first. * **[[Mechanics_liens]]:** In many states, contractors, subcontractors, and material suppliers who work on a property but aren't paid can file a mechanic's lien. This lien can sometimes "relate back" in time to when the work began, giving it priority even over a mortgage recorded after the work started but before the lien was filed. === Priority in Intellectual Property: The Race to the Patent Office === For decades, the U.S. patent system operated on a "first-to-invent" basis. Priority was given to the first person who could prove they conceived of the invention, even if someone else filed the patent application first. This led to long, expensive, and complex legal battles. In 2013, the `[[america_invents_act]]` (AIA) fundamentally changed the game, moving the U.S. to a **"first-to-file"** system, aligning it with most of the world. Now, with few exceptions, the first inventor to file a patent application with the `[[u.s._patent_and_trademark_office]]` (USPTO) has priority rights to the invention. This created a clear, date-stamped race to the patent office, emphasizing speed and diligence over proving the exact moment of invention. ==== The Players on the Field: Who's Who in a Priority Dispute ==== * **The Debtor:** The person or company that owes money or an obligation. * **The Creditor:** The person or company to whom the obligation is owed. They can be secured or unsecured. * **The Lienholder:** A type of creditor who has a specific legal claim (a lien) on the debtor's property. * **The Bankruptcy Trustee:** In a bankruptcy case, this is the court-appointed official responsible for gathering the debtor's assets and distributing them to creditors according to the priority rules. * **The County Recorder:** The local government official who manages the public records for real estate. Recording a document with this office is the critical step for establishing priority for mortgages and many other liens. * **The Secretary of State:** The state-level office where UCC-1 financing statements are typically filed to establish priority for liens on personal property. ===== Part 3: Your Practical Playbook ===== ==== Step-by-Step: What to Do to Protect Your Priority ==== Whether you're a lender, a contractor, or a homebuyer, you can take proactive steps to secure your place in line. === Step 1: Conduct Thorough Due Diligence === Before you enter into any significant financial transaction, investigate. * **For Real Estate:** Always perform a `[[title_search]]`. This is a professional examination of the public records to see what liens, mortgages, or other claims already exist against the property. This tells you what "line" you are getting into. * **For Business Lending:** Conduct a UCC search with the Secretary of State. This will reveal if the business's assets (like equipment or inventory) have already been pledged as collateral to another lender. === Step 2: Record and Perfect Your Interest Immediately === Knowledge isn't enough; you must act. "Perfection" is the legal term for the process of making your security interest effective against third parties. * **Mortgages and Deeds:** After a real estate closing, ensure your deed and mortgage are taken directly to the county recorder's office for immediate recording. A delay can be catastrophic. * **UCC Liens:** If you sell goods on credit or lend money against personal property, file a `[[ucc-1_financing_statement]]` with the appropriate state office as soon as the deal is signed. * **Mechanic's Liens:** If you are a contractor, know your state's deadlines for filing a mechanic's lien. Missing the deadline by even one day can extinguish your rights. === Step 3: Understand Your Position in a Bankruptcy === If a person or company that owes you money files for bankruptcy, you will receive a notice from the court. * **File a Proof of Claim:** This is the official form you must file with the bankruptcy court to state what you are owed. If you don't file it, you may not get paid, even if you have a valid claim. * **Analyze Your Priority:** Determine if you are a secured, priority unsecured, or general unsecured creditor. This will manage your expectations about the likelihood and amount of any recovery. === Step 4: Enforce Your Rights and Don't Wait === Legal rights are often subject to a `[[statute_of_limitations]]`, which limits the time you have to file a lawsuit. If someone is not paying you, and you have a lien, you cannot wait forever to act. Consult with an attorney about when and how to begin collection or foreclosure proceedings to enforce your priority position. ==== Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents ==== * **UCC-1 Financing Statement:** This one-page form is the most important document in the world of commercial lending. It is filed with the Secretary of State and gives public notice that a lender has a security interest in a debtor's personal property. It typically lists the debtor, the secured party, and a description of the collateral. * **Deed of Trust / Mortgage:** These are the legal instruments used to create a lien on real property to secure a loan. They are filed in local land records. The `[[deed_of_trust]]` (used in some states) involves three parties (lender, borrower, trustee), while a `[[mortgage]]` involves two (lender, borrower), but both serve the same function: securing the loan and establishing the lender's priority. * **Proof of Claim (Bankruptcy Form 410):** This is the official federal form used by a creditor to get in line for payment in a bankruptcy case. It requires you to state how much you are owed, the basis for the claim, and whether your claim is secured or has priority status. ===== Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law ===== While statutes like the UCC and Bankruptcy Code provide the rules, court cases interpret what those rules mean in the real world. ==== Case Study: Butner v. United States (1979) ==== * **The Backstory:** A debtor in North Carolina owned a mortgaged apartment building. After filing for bankruptcy, the debtor continued to collect rent. The bankruptcy trustee and the mortgage lender both claimed they had the right to that rent money. * **The Legal Question:** Does a federal bankruptcy court use federal law or state law to decide who has property rights (like the right to rents) in assets held by the bankruptcy estate? * **The Court's Holding:** The U.S. Supreme Court held that the bankruptcy court should look to state law to determine property rights. Because North Carolina law said the lender was entitled to the rents, the lender won. * **Impact on You Today:** This case established a fundamental principle: bankruptcy doesn't create new property rights. It respects the priority and property rights you already have under your state's law. This makes state laws on recording and perfection incredibly important, because those are the rights you will take with you into a federal bankruptcy proceeding. ==== Case Study: In re Motors Liquidation Co. (2d Cir. 2015) ==== * **The Backstory:** In the massive General Motors (GM) bankruptcy, a loan of $1.5 billion was secured by a lien on virtually all of GM's assets. However, due to a clerical error, the UCC-3 termination statement (a form that extinguishes a lien) was accidentally filed for this massive loan instead of for a much smaller, unrelated loan. This made it appear to the public that the $1.5 billion loan was no longer secured. * **The Legal Question:** Is a UCC filing still valid if it was filed by mistake? Can a court look at the subjective intent of the parties, or does only the public filing matter? * **The Court's Holding:** The court held that the mistaken filing was still effective. The public record is paramount. The fact that the parties did not *intend* to terminate the lien did not matter. The filing itself was clear, and other creditors are entitled to rely on the public record. * **Impact on You Today:** This case is a terrifying and powerful lesson for all businesses: clerical accuracy is paramount. A simple mistake on a UCC filing can vaporize billions of dollars in priority rights. It underscores that the priority system is formalistic and unforgiving; what is on the public record controls. ===== Part 5: The Future of Priority ===== ==== Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates ==== The world of priority is not static. Debates continue to rage over fairness and the balance of power between different types of creditors. One major area of controversy is **equitable subordination**. This is a legal doctrine that allows a bankruptcy court to punish a creditor for bad behavior (like fraud or exercising excessive control over a debtor) by demoting their claim's priority, putting them further back in the line for payment. Courts and scholars constantly debate how far this doctrine should go and what level of misconduct is required to trigger such a drastic remedy. Another persistent issue is the tension between federal tax liens and other secured creditors. The government has immense power to collect taxes, and federal tax liens can sometimes defeat even previously recorded security interests, creating uncertainty for lenders. ==== On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law ==== The future of priority law may be revolutionized by technology. Blockchain and distributed ledger technology offer the potential for a new kind of public record—one that is decentralized, transparent, and virtually impossible to alter. This could one day replace the centuries-old system of county recorders and secretary of state filings. Imagine a world where a security interest in an asset is recorded instantly and immutably on a blockchain, eliminating disputes over "who filed first." Furthermore, the rise of digital assets, from cryptocurrency to NFTs, presents a new frontier. Courts and legislatures are just beginning to grapple with fundamental questions: What does it mean to have a "lien" on a Bitcoin? How do you "perfect" a security interest in a digital asset that has no physical location? The answers to these questions will require new laws and legal theories to apply the ancient principle of priority to the 21st-century economy. ===== Glossary of Related Terms ===== * **[[absolute_priority_rule]]:** A rule in Chapter 11 bankruptcy that prevents owners from retaining their equity unless all creditors are paid in full. * **[[attachment_(law)]]:** The moment a security interest becomes enforceable between the debtor and the creditor. * **[[collateral]]:** Property that is pledged to a lender to secure a loan. * **[[creditor]]:** A person or entity to whom a debt is owed. * **[[debtor]]:** A person or entity that owes a debt. * **[[foreclosure]]:** The legal process by which a lender seizes and sells collateral after a borrower defaults on a loan. * **[[insolvency]]:** A financial state where a person or entity is unable to pay their debts as they come due. * **[[lien]]:** A legal claim or right against an asset, used to secure the payment of a debt. * **[[perfection_(law)]]:** The legal process, such as filing a public notice, that makes a security interest effective against other creditors. * **[[purchase_money_security_interest_(pmsi)]]:** A special, high-priority security interest that enables a debtor to purchase the collateral. * **[[recording_statute]]:** A state law that governs the public recording of documents related to real estate. * **[[secured_creditor]]:** A creditor who holds collateral for a debt. * **[[subordination_agreement]]:** A legal contract where one creditor agrees to voluntarily lower its priority in relation to another creditor. * **[[unsecured_creditor]]:** A creditor who does not hold any collateral for a debt. * **[[ucc-1_financing_statement]]:** A public notice filed to perfect a security interest in personal property under the Uniform Commercial Code. ===== See Also ===== * [[bankruptcy]] * [[uniform_commercial_code]] * [[lien]] * [[foreclosure]] * [[real_estate_law]] * [[secured_transaction]] * [[contract_law]]