In the case of Orix Credit Alliance Inc. v. Sovran Bank, N.A., the United States District Court at Baltimore, Maryland, reviewed a case where Sovran Bank, which had provided the debtor with a line of credit and several bank accounts, one of which was a depository "cash collateral" account routinely applied against draws on the line of credit, signed an agreement with Orix, a finance company, to subordinate the bank's security interest in a crane (purchased by the debtor with funds from the finance company) to the finance company's interest in the crane. The Court ruled, however, that the bank was entitled to use the proceeds from the sale of the crane to reduce the debtor's obligation under the line of credit. The Court's decision was based upon a finding that the bank's transfer of the proceeds occurred in the debtor's ordinary course of business under Virginia Code §8.9-306, comment 2(c), which extinguished the finance company's interest in the proceeds from the sale of the crane.
This case serves as another example as to why competent legal advice should be sought before relying upon a recorded security interest.
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