Florida 2022 2022 Regular Session

Florida House Bill H0451 Analysis / Analysis

Filed 12/01/2021

                    This docum ent does not reflect the intent or official position of the bill sponsor or House of Representatives. 
STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 
DATE: 12/1/2021 
 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES STAFF ANALYSIS  
 
BILL #: HB 451    Sufficiency of Description of Security Interests 
SPONSOR(S): Robinson, W. 
TIED BILLS:   IDEN./SIM. BILLS: SB 406 
 
REFERENCE 	ACTION ANALYST STAFF DIRECTOR or 
BUDGET/POLICY CHIEF 
1) Civil Justice & Property Rights Subcommittee 17 Y, 0 N Mawn Jones 
2) Insurance & Banking Subcommittee   
3) Judiciary Committee    
SUMMARY ANALYSIS 
A security interest arises when, in exchange for a loan, a borrower pledges in a security agreement specified 
assets he or she owns that the lender may take if the borrower defaults on the loan. A security interest also 
assures the lender that, if the borrower enters bankruptcy, the lender may be able to recover the loan’s value 
by taking the asset. Under Florida law, a description of an asset, whether or not the description is specific, is 
sufficient to pledge the asset under a security agreement if it reasonably identifies what is described. However, 
a description of assets in general terms, such as “all the debtor’s assets,” “all the debtor’s personal property,” 
or similar phrasing, does not sufficiently identify the collateral for purposes of a security interest. 
 
Florida Law protects certain assets from legal process so that they remain out of a creditor’s reach, including: 
 Funds held in individual retirement accounts (“IRA”) and other tax-exempt accounts. 
 The cash surrender value of a life insurance policy and the proceeds of an annuity contract.  
 Funds held in qualified tuition programs and medical, Coverdell education, and hurricane savings 
accounts. 
 Disability income benefits. 
 Wages and unemployment compensation benefits.  
 Homestead property and certain personal property items. 
 Social security benefits; unemployment compensation, or public assistance benefits; veterans’ benefits; 
alimony, support, or separate maintenance; and stock or pension plans under specified circumstances. 
 
Historically, exempt assets not specifically pledged in a security agreement remained exempt from a creditor’s 
reach. However, a recent Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals decision changed this rule by finding that a security 
agreement granting a security interest in “all assets and rights of the Pledgor” pledged the debtor’s IRA as 
security for a loan even though the IRA was not specifically identified in the agreement. This decision may 
have significant federal tax consequences for Floridians, as the use of certain tax-exempt accounts as security 
for a loan is considered distribution of the funds to the owner, who then owes federal income tax on the money 
and may owe a tax penalty for early distribution.  
 
HB 451 provides that a general description only by type of collateral is an insufficient description to pledge 
certain statutorily-exempt assets for the purposes of a security agreement. The bill applies retroactively.   
 
The bill does not appear to have a fiscal impact on state or local governments.  
 
The bill provides an effective date of upon becoming a law.    STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 	PAGE: 2 
DATE: 12/1/2021 
  
FULL ANALYSIS 
I.  SUBSTANTIVE ANALYSIS 
 
A. EFFECT OF PROPOSED CHANGES: 
 
Background 
Security Interests 
 
A security interest arises when, in exchange for a loan, a borrower pledges in a security agreement
1
 
specified assets owned by the borrower that the lender may take if the borrower defaults on the loan.
2
 
A security interest also assures the lender that, if the borrower enters bankruptcy, the lender may be 
able to recover the loan’s value by taking possession of the asset.
3
  
 
Under Florida law, a description of personal or real property, whether or not it is specific, is sufficient for 
the purposes of a security agreement if it reasonably identifies what is described.
4
 An effective 
description of collateral
5
 in a security agreement identifies the asset by: 
 Specific listing; 
 Category; 
 Type of collateral; 
 Quantity, computational, or allocational formula; or  
 Any method under which the identity of the collateral is objectively determinable.
6
 
 
However, a general description of collateral as “all the debtor’s assets,” “all the debtor’s personal 
property,” or similar phraseology, does not sufficiently identify the collateral for purposes of a security 
interest.
7
 Further, a description only by type of collateral is an insufficient description of: 
 A commercial tort claim; 
 In a consumer transaction, consumer goods, a security entitlement, a securities account, or a 
commodity account; or  
 An account consisting of a right to payment of a monetary obligation for the sale of real property 
that is the debtor’s homestead under Florida law.
8
 
 
Asset Exemptions 
 
Florida law protects certain assets from legal process so that they remain out of a creditor’s reach, 
including: 
 Funds held in an individual retirement account (“IRA”) and other tax-exempt accounts.
9
 
 A life insurance policy’s proceeds.
10
 
 A life insurance policy’s cash surrender value and an annuity contract’s proceeds.
11
  
 Funds held in qualified tuition programs, medical savings accounts, Coverdell education 
accounts, and hurricane savings accounts.
12
 
 Disability income benefits.
13
 
 Wages and reemployment assistance or unemployment compensation payments.
14
  
                                                
1
 “Security agreement” means an agreement that creates or provides for a security interest. S. 679.1021(1)(uuu), F.S.  
2
 Legal Information Institute, Secured Transactions, https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/secured_transactions (last visited Nov. 22, 2021).  
3
 Id.  
4
 S. 679.1081(1), F.S. 
5
 “Collateral” means the property subject to a security interest. The term includes proceeds to which a security interest attaches; 
accounts, chattel paper, payment intangibles, and promissory notes that have been sold; and goods that are the subject of 
consignment. S. 679.1021(1)(l), F.S. 
6
 S. 679.1081(2), F.S. 
7
 S. 679.1081(3), F.S. 
8
 S. 649.1081(5), F.S. 
9
 S. 222.21, F.S. 
10
 S. 222.13, F.S. 
11
 S. 222.14, F.S. 
12
 S. 222.22, F.S. 
13
 S. 222.18, F.S.  STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 	PAGE: 3 
DATE: 12/1/2021 
  
 Homestead property.
15
 
 Certain personal property items.
16
 
 A debtor’s interest in a motor vehicle, up to $1,000 in value, and any professionally prescribed 
health aides.
17
 
 Social security benefits; unemployment compensation, or public assistance benefits; veterans’ 
benefits; alimony, support, or separate maintenance; and stock or pension plans under 
specified circumstances.
18
 
 
Historically, exempt assets have remained exempt from a creditor’s reach unless specifically pledged in 
a security agreement.
19
  
 
Recent Case Law 
 
In Kearney Constr. Co., LLC v. Travelers Casualty & Surety Co. of America, the federal Eleventh Circuit 
Court of Appeals significantly altered the historic tradition of maintaining asset exemptions unless the 
asset is specifically pledged. In Kearney, the debtor obtained a line of credit and pledged the following 
collateral as a security interest: 
 
[A]ll assets and rights of the Pledgor, wherever located, whether now owned or hereafter 
acquired or arising, and all proceeds and products thereof, all goods (including 
inventory, equipment and any accessories thereto), instruments (including promissory 
notes)[,] documents, accounts, chattel paper, deposit accounts, letters of credit, rights, 
securities and all other investment property, supporting obligation[s], and contract or 
contract rights or rights to the payment of money, insurance claims, and proceeds, and 
general intangibles.
20
  
 
The Court held that this language was an “unambiguous pledge” of the debtor’s IRA as security for the 
loan even though the IRA was not specifically identified in the agreement and the borrower testified that 
he did not intend to pledge it.
21
  
 
Practically speaking, the Kearney decision makes it possible for a borrower to inadvertently pledge as a 
security interest assets historically exempt from the reach of creditors under Florida law.
22
 This may 
affect Florida consumers with security agreements containing general language similar to the language 
at issue in Kearney. 
 
The decision could also have significant federal tax implications, as the use of certain tax-exempt 
accounts as security for a loan is considered a distribution of the funds in the account to the owner, who 
then may owe federal income tax on the distribution.
23
 The Tax Code also imposes a ten percent tax 
penalty for early distributions from certain tax-exempt accounts.
24
   
                                                                                                                                                                                 
14
 Ss. 225.15 and 225.16, F.S. 
15
 S. 222.01-222.05, F.S.; Art. X, Sec. 4, Fla. Const. 
16
 S. 222.061, F.S. 
17
 S. 222.25, F.S. 
18
 S. 222.201, F.S. 
19
 Real Property, Probate, and Trust Law Section of the Florida Bar (“RPPTL”), White Paper (Jan. 26, 2021); see, e.g., Havoco of Am. 
Ltd. v. Hill, 790 So. 2d 1018 (Fla. 2001); Connor v. Seaside Nat’l Bank, 135 So. 3d 508 (Fla. 5th DCA 2014); Killian v. Lawson, 387 So. 
2d 960 (Fla. 1980).   
20
 795 Fed. Appx. 671 (11th Cir. 2019). 
21
 Id. 
22
 The exception is homestead property, as a waiver of such rights must be “knowing, voluntary, and intelligent” to have any effect. See 
RPPTL, supra note 19; see also Chames v. DeMayo, 972 So. 2d 850 (Fla. 2007) (citing State v. Upton, 658 So. 2d 86 (Fla. 1995)).  
23
 I.R.C. 408(e)(4) and (d)(1); I.R.C. 72(p)(1)(B).  
24
 I.R.C. 72(t).   STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 	PAGE: 4 
DATE: 12/1/2021 
  
Effect of Proposed Changes 
 
HB 451 provides that a general description only by type of collateral is an insufficient description to 
pledge, for the purposes of a security agreement, accounts and other entitlements set forth in ss. 
222.13-222.16, 222.18, and 222.201-222.22, F.S. These include: 
 Funds held in an IRA and other tax-exempt accounts. 
 A life insurance policy’s proceeds. 
 A life insurance policy’s cash surrender value and an annuity contract’s proceeds.  
 Funds held in qualified tuition programs, medical savings accounts, Coverdell education 
accounts, and hurricane savings accounts. 
 Disability income benefits. 
 Wages and reemployment assistance or unemployment compensation payments. 
 Social security benefits; unemployment compensation, or public assistance benefits; veterans’ 
benefits; alimony, support, or separate maintenance; and stock or pension plans under 
specified circumstances. 
 
The bill provides that it is remedial in nature and applies retroactively. 
 
The bill provides an effective date of upon becoming a law.   
 
B. SECTION DIRECTORY: 
Section 1: Amends s. 679.1081, F.S., relating to sufficiency of description. 
Section 2: Provides that the bill is remedial in nature and applies retroactively. 
Section 3:  Provides an effective date of upon becoming a law. 
II. FISCAL ANALYSIS & ECONOMIC IMPACT STATEMENT 
 
A. FISCAL IMPACT ON STATE GOVERNMENT: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
B. FISCAL IMPACT ON LOCAL GOVERNMENTS: 
 
1. Revenues: 
None. 
 
2. Expenditures: 
None. 
 
C. DIRECT ECONOMIC IMPACT ON PRIVATE SECTOR: 
The bill may prevent Floridians from inadvertently pledging as security specified exempt assets and 
suffering any related federal tax consequences.  
 
D. FISCAL COMMENTS: 
None. 
III.  COMMENTS 
 
A. CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES: 
  STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 	PAGE: 5 
DATE: 12/1/2021 
  
 1. Applicability of Municipality/County Mandates Provision: 
Not applicable. The bill does not appear to require counties or municipalities to spend funds or take 
action requiring the expenditures of funds; reduce the authority that counties or municipalities have 
to raise revenues in the aggregate; or reduce the percentage of state tax shared with counties or 
municipalities. 
 
 2. Other: 
Impairment of Contracts and Due Process 
 
Both the Florida and the United States Constitutions prohibit the state from passing a law impairing 
contractual obligations.
25
 However, the Legislature may provide that a non-criminal law, including 
one that affects existing contractual obligations, applies retroactively in certain situations.
26
 In 
determining whether a law may be applied retroactively, courts first determine whether the law is 
procedural, remedial, or substantive in nature.
27
 A purely procedural or remedial law may apply 
retroactively without offending the Constitution, but a substantive law generally may not apply 
retroactively absent clear legislative intent to the contrary.
28
 However, even where the Legislature 
has expressly stated that a law will have retroactive application, a court may reject that application if 
the law impairs a vested right, creates a new obligation, or imposes a new penalty.
29
 Further, where 
a law is designed to serve a remedial purpose, a court may decide not to apply the law retroactively 
where doing so “would attach new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.”
30
  
 
Moreover, both the Florida and United States Constitutions prohibit the taking of life, liberty, or 
property without due process of law.
31
 The right to contract, as long as no fraud or deception is 
involved and the contract is otherwise legal, is both a liberty and a property right subject to due 
process protections, and the impairment of contracts may, in certain instances, be viewed as the 
taking of property without due process.
32
 
 
HB 451 contains a statement of legislative intent indicating that the bill is remedial in nature and 
applies retroactively. Some parties who entered into security agreements after the Kearney decision 
may have used general language to create a security interest with the understanding that such 
language was sufficient to pledge certain exempt assets. Whether the Legislature’s retroactive 
modification of the meaning of such language is procedural, remedial, or substantive, and whether 
such modification implicates the constitutional right to contract or the constitutional right to due 
process, is for the courts to decide.  
 
B. RULE-MAKING AUTHORITY: 
Not applicable.  
 
C. DRAFTING ISSUES OR OTHER COMMENTS: 
None. 
IV.  AMENDMENTS/COMMITTEE SUBSTITUTE CHANGES 
 
                                                
25
 U.S. Const. art. I, s. 10; Art. I, s. 10, Fla. Const. 
26
 U.S. Const. art. I, ss. 9 and 10; Art. 1, s. 10, Fla. Const.  
27
 A procedural law merely establishes the means and methods for applying or enforcing existing duties or rights. A remedial law 
confers or changes a remedy, i.e., the means employed in enforcing an existing right or in redressing an injury. A substantive law 
creates, alters, or impairs existing substantive rights. Windom v. State, 656 So. 2d 432 (Fla. 1995); St. John’s Village I, Ltd. v. Dept. of 
State, 497 So. 2d 990 (Fla. 5th DCA 1986); McMillen v. State Dept. of Revenue, 74 So. 2d 1234 (Fla. 1st DCA 1999). 
28
 State Farm Mutual Automobile Ins. Co. v. Laforet, 658 So. 2d 55 (Fla. 1995). 
29
 Menendez v. Progressive Exp. Ins. Co., Inc., 35 So. 3d 873 (Fla. 2010). 
30
 L. Ross, Inc. v. R.W. Roberts Const. Co., 481 So. 2d 484 (Fla. 1986).  
31
 U.S. Const. amends. V and XIV; Art. I, s. 21, Fla. Const. 
32
 Miles v. City of Edgewater Police Dept., 190 So. 3d 171 (Fla. 1st DCA 2016); see, e.g., Griffin v. Sharpe, 65 So. 2d 751 (Fla. 1953) 
(finding that a statute removing a specific deed restriction’s expiration date both impaired contracts and constituted a taking of private 
property without due process).  STORAGE NAME: h0451a.CIV 	PAGE: 6 
DATE: 12/1/2021