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Introduction
Companies registered in England and Wales sometimes create
a mortgage or charge that must be registered. If so, they
must deliver details of it, together with any document creating
or giving evidence of it, to the Registrar of Companies in
Cardiff.
The documents must
be delivered within 21 days after the creation of the
mortgage or charge to ensure its security in the event of
liquidation. A court order may be required to enable Registration
outside the 21-day limit.
This booklet is a
guide to help companies or any interested parties to send
their documents correctly first time.
Companies need not
notify the Registrar when they pay off (or 'satisfy') a registered
charge. But it is in their best interests to do so, and we
enable companies to do this if they wish. This booklet explains
how.
The registration
of charges is covered by Part XII of the Companies Act 1985.
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CHAPTER 1
Registration of mortgages and charges
1. What are mortgages
and charges?
A charge is
security for the payment of a debt or other obligation that
does not pass 'property' or any right to possession to the
person to whom the charge is given.
A mortgage
is security for the payment of a debt or other obligation
that passes 'property' but no right to possession to the person
to whom the mortgage is given.
Note: When 'charge'
is used in this booklet from now on, it refers also to a mortgage.
2. What charges
must be registered?
Section 396 of the
Companies Act lists the charges that must be registered in
England and Wales. The box on the below lists them and gives
a brief explanation of each.
3. How much does each registration cost?
There is a fee of
£10 for registering each Form 395, 397 and 400 delivered
to Companies House. The fee also applies to Slavenburg charges
(see question 12). There is no fee for
registering a declaration of satisfaction (Form 403a).
There is a fee of
£25 for a copy of a certificate of registration. These
are available from the Certified Copies Section at Companies
House, Cardiff.
The
following require registration in England and Wales:
- A charge
to secure any issue of debentures. A debenture
is an instrument issued by a company as evidence of
a debt or other obligation. It includes debenture
stock, bonds and any other securities of a company,
whether or not it forms a charge on the assets of
the company.
- A charge
on uncalled share capital of the company. Uncalled
share capital is the balance owing for shares that
are issued partly paid.
- A charge
created or evidenced by an instrument, which, if executed
by an individual, would require registration as a
bill of sale. A bill of sale is an instrument creating
or evidencing a charge or mortgage over goods, including
fixtures and agricultural crops in certain cases,
but not ships or aircraft.
- A charge
on land (wherever situated), or any interest in it,
but not a charge for any rent or other periodical
sum arising from land. Technically, land includes
property.
- A charge
on book debts of the company. Book debts are debts
that in the ordinary course of a company's business
are commonly entered in its books.
- A floating
charge on the company's undertaking or property. A
floating charge is a charge that does not affect the
assets charged until some event crystallises the charge,
fixing it to a certain point in time.
- A charge
on calls made but not paid. Calls made are demands
for payment of any part of the balance owing in respect
of shares which are issued partly paid.
- A charge
on a ship or aircraft or any share in a ship.
- A charge
on goodwill, or on a patent, trademark, registered
design, copyright or design right or a licence under
or in respect of any such right.
|
4. What do 'instrument'
and 'evidence' mean in this chapter?
An 'instrument' is
usually a document in legible form but it can also exist in
electronic form.
To 'evidence' means
to provide proof of the existence of something.
5. Which form
should I use?
The form numbers
in this table correspond to the relevant sections of the Companies
Act 1985. Those for which a registration fee is charged are
marked *.
| Purpose |
Form
Number |
| Particulars of
a mortgage or charge |
395* |
| Particulars for
the registration of a charge to secure a series of debentures |
397* |
| Particulars of
an issue of secured debentures in a series |
397a |
| Certificate of
registration in Scotland or Northern Ireland of a charge
comprising property situated there |
398 |
| Particulars of
a charge subject to which property has been acquired |
400* |
| Declaration of
satisfaction in full or in part of a mortgage or charge |
403a |
Declaration that
part of the property or undertaking charged:
(a) has been released from the charge;
(b) no longer forms part of the company's property or
undertaking |
403b |
| Notice of appointment
of receiver or manager |
405(1) |
| Notice of ceasing
to act as receiver or manager |
405(2) |
6. How do I get
it right first time?
- Select the correct
form to send to the correct registration office,
and follow any notes on the form itself. Act as quickly
as possible: you have only 21 days from the date of creation
of the charge to register the correct details.
Extensions of
time to allow for postal delays apply only if a charge
is created outside the UK over property outside the UK.
In that case, the 21 days runs from the date when the
instrument creating or evidencing the charge, or a copy
of it, could have been received in the UK in the normal
course of post, assuming it was despatched with due diligence.
- Send the instrument
creating or evidencing the charge with the form, if there
is an instrument, as there usually will be. An instrument
does not have to be sealed. Unsealed, it will be valid if
it is signed by a director and the company secretary, or
by two directors.
The instrument
must be the original instrument, except in the following
two cases when it can be a verified copy:
(a) When a charge
is created outside the UK over property outside the UK.
(b) When a charge
covers property in Scotland or Northern Ireland, and the
original instrument has been registered there.
- Make sure the details
on the form are correct and match the instrument. If we
find errors, the presenter must authorise their correction
and, if necessary, deliver new forms within the 21-day time
limit. If necessary, we will return certificates, instruments
and documents to the presenter named on the charge form
itself. Please ensure this information is complete and accurate.
- Make sure the company
name and number are correct. Remember that a company name
is only changed on the day the change-of-name certificate
is issued by Companies House.
- Make sure the creation
date and description of the charge agree with the instrument.
- Make sure the amount
secured accurately reflects what is stated in the instrument.
- Make sure the name
of the chargee matches the instrument. ('Chargee' means
the person to whom property is charged.)
- Make sure the short
details of the property charged accurately reflect what
is stated in the instrument.
- For registered
land it is desirable that you give the title number of the
property. Ensure that charging clauses are always inserted,
including reference to fixed and floating charges.
- Sign and date the
form.
- Complete the forms
legibly using black ink or, preferably, type the form. Forms
are reproduced on microfilm so that the public can inspect
them. The Registrar may refuse documents that are not suitable
for scanning and reproduction.
| Please
note If you omit or mis-state any detail in the documents
registered, then you should apply to the court to correct
it under section 404 of the Act: Rectification of register
of charges. |
7. What happens
when the application for registration reaches Companies House?
If the document is
acceptable, we take details from it to produce a certificate
of registration and record an entry on the register of charges.
We return the certificate and instrument to the presenter,
and scan and record the form, copy certificate and register
entry.
8. What if Companies
House has cause to query the application?
We will contact the
presenter with any queries. If the form needs to be corrected,
it must be done within the 21-day time limit.
9. What if the
charge is not registered in time?
If a registrable
charge is not registered in time, then it is void against
the liquidator or
administrator and any creditor of the company. This means
that the debt for which the charge was given will remain payable,
but it will be unsecured.
If a company fails
to deliver a registrable charge, and no interested party has
registered it, then the company and every officer of the company
who is in default are liable to a fine. If the default continues,
they are liable to a daily default fine.
Can
a charge be registered out of time?
Only the court can grant an extension of time for registration
of a charge that was not received in time and correct.
The normal time limit is 21 days from the date of creation
of the charge. |
10. What must
I do if my company acquires property that is already charged?
If the charge is
of a type which the company would have had to register if
it had created the charge itself, then it must notify the
fact that it has acquired this property. To do this the company
must complete and send Form 400
to Companies House, with a certified copy of any instrument
that created or evidenced the charge.
This must be done
within 21 days after the company completed the acquisition
of the property. If the charged property is outside the UK
and the charge was created outside the UK, the 21 days runs
from the date when the copy instrument could have been received
in the UK in the normal course of post, assuming that it had
been despatched with due diligence.
Late delivery of
the details on Form 400 is an offence. The company and every
officer of it who is in default are liable to a fine. If the
default continues, they are liable to a daily default fine.
11. What rights
has the chargee?
If the company does
not send us a charge for registration, then the chargee (the
person to whom property is charged) - or some other interested
person - can register the required documents. In certain circumstances
a chargee can appoint a receiver or manager, or ask the court
to appoint a receiver
or manager, over the property charged - for example, if
the company defaults in payment of the debt secured by the
charge. The chargee must notify the appointment to Companies
House within 7 days using Form 405(1).
We will then enter this in the register of charges.
On ceasing to act,
a receiver or manager must notify us using Form
405(2). We will then enter the fact in the register of
charges. See our booklet, 'Liquidation
and Insolvency', for more information on receivers and
managers.
12. What about oversea companies?
An oversea company
is a company incorporated outside Great Britain. Channel Island
and Isle of Man companies that send charges for registration
are treated as oversea companies.
If an oversea company
has a branch or other place of business in England or Wales
and is registered at Companies House, it must register charges
created by it. This includes:
- charges over property
in England and Wales; and
- property in England
and Wales acquired by the company that is already subject
to a registrable charge.
All the other provisions
mentioned in this chapter which apply to charges over property
in England and Wales in the case of companies registered in
England and Wales, also apply to oversea companies, including
the fee for registration.
| Slavenburg
companies
Some oversea companies which have established a branch
or place of business in England or Wales fail to register
here, as required by the Companies Act 1985. Despite
this, the requirements mentioned above apply to such
oversea companies as if they had in fact registered
here. This was decided in the so-called 'Slavenburg'
case.
In other words,
a charge created by such a company and charging property
in England and Wales should be sent to Companies House.
Likewise, property in England and Wales acquired by
such a company which is already subject to a registrable
charge must also be registered.
On receipt
of the documents, together with the fee
for registration, Companies House enters brief details
on the Slavenburg register in respect of the company
by reference to the date of delivery of the particulars.
Forms 395,
397 or 400,
the original deed or a certified copy and the statutory
fee of £10 must reach Companies House within 21 days
after the creation of the charge or the acquisition
of the property, as the case may be. On receipt, details
of the charge will be entered on the Slavenburg register
in respect of the company by reference to the date of
delivery. Companies House will then issue a letter to
the presenter that should be retained as proof that
the charge has been presented to the Registrar.
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CHAPTER 2
Satisfaction of mortgages and charges
1. What should
I do when the charge is paid off (or 'satisfied')?
The company need
not inform Companies House that a charge has been fully or
partly satisfied. However, it is obviously in the company's
own interests that potential investors and lenders know that
all or part of the debt has been paid off. A director or secretary
of the company may therefore make a statutory declaration
on Form 403a before a Commissioner
for Oaths or equivalent, and send it to us.
2. What if charged
property ceases to be charged or to belong to the company?
As with partly or
fully paid-off charges, the company need not inform Companies
House that its property has been released from a charge or
that the property no longer belongs to the company. However,
it is obviously in the company's interests that potential
investors and lenders should know. A director or secretary
of the company may therefore make a statutory declaration
on Form 403b before a Commissioner
for Oaths or equivalent, and send it to us.
3. Is there a
fee for registering Forms 403a or 403b?
No.
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CHAPTER 3
Further information
1. What if I have
a query about registration?
Our mortgage staff
will willingly answer general queries but not legal points,
which should be addressed in the first instance to a solicitor.
The usual telephone
number is: 0870 3333636
The contact point
for oversea and Slavenburg companies is: 029 2038 0224.
2. Where do I
get forms and guidance booklets?
This is one of a
series of Companies House booklets
which provide a simple guide to the Companies Act.
Statutory forms and
guidance booklets are available, free of charge from Companies
House. The quickest way to get them is through this website
or by telephoning 0870 3333636.
Forms can also be
obtained from legal stationers, accountants, solicitors and
company formation agents - addresses in business phone books.
3. How do I send
information to the Registrar?
We will only acknowledge
receipt of documents at Companies House if you provide a stamped
addressed envelope.
You may deliver documents
by post, by hand (personally or by courier) or by the Hays
Document Exchange service.
If you send documents
by post, you should address them to:
The Registrar
of Companies
Companies House
Crown Way
Cardiff
CF14 3UZ
DX33050 Cardiff
During office hours
you can deliver documents by hand (personally or by courier)
to Companies House in Cardiff, London, Manchester, Birmingham
and Leeds. Outside office hours (including Bank Holidays and
weekends) documents can be delivered by hand to Cardiff and
London.
| Please
note: Companies House does not accept accounts or any
other statutory documents by fax. |
Delivery to any of
these offices within 21 days counts as receipt by the Registrar,
but the forms will be forwarded to Cardiff for examination,
which may cause delay if they need to be returned to the presenter
for amendment.
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