The Sale Leasing and Financing of Aircraft PDF
The Sale Leasing and Financing of Aircraft PDF
The Sale Leasing and Financing of Aircraft PDF
1979
Recommended Citation
Walter W. Eyer, The Sale, Leasing and Financing of Aircraft, 45 J. Air L. & Com. 217 (1979)
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THE SALE, LEASING AND FINANCING OF AIRCRAFT
WALTER W. EYER*
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Purchase Agreements
Commercial aircraft are usually manufactured and sold pursuant
to the terms of long, complex purchase agreements which are the
result of extensive negotiations between teams of technical and
contract specialists representing the seller and the buyer. Each
manufacturer normally has a pro forma purchase agreement
which is made part of the proposal submitted to a customer; the
pro forma reflects the manufacturer's experiences over the years
in manufacturing and selling aircraft throughout the world. In
general, most purchase agreements signed by domestic and foreign
buyers are consistent with the "boilerplate" of the pro forma.
Considered individually, however, each sale is a complex business
transaction, involving considerable arm's length bargaining. The
details of each negotiated agreement will vary from the pro forma
as may be required to fit the particular needs and concerns of
each purchaser.
The negotiated documents are normally composed of a basic
purchase contract, supplemented by exhibits and appendices. The
principal terms of sale are commonly set forth in the basic contract
which describes the aircraft to be manufactured in accordance
with the detail specification (usually attached as an exhibit to the
contract), and specifies the price, terms of payment (including
progress payments) and the delivery schedule for the aircraft. The
basic contract also covers the certification and inspection of the
aircraft and establishes procedures for making changes in the air-
craft's specification during the course of production. Other key
'The estimates were measured in 1978 dollars, excluding the Soviet Union
and the People's Republic of China. Study furnished to the author by The Boeing
Company.
' A Boeing 747-200B sells for approximately $50-65 million, a 747SP for
approximately $45-55 million, a 767 for approximately $35-40 million, a 707
for approximately $21-24 million, a 727-200 for approximately $14-17 million
and a 737-200 for approximately $10-12 million. Information furnished to the
author by The Boeing Company.
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
clauses define the rights and obligations of the parties with respect
to taxes and delays. The contract usually provides that the aircraft
will be delivered in the state in which it is manufactured and that
the purchase agreement will be governed by the law of that state.
Warranties and patent indemnities may be incorporated either
in the basic contract or in exhibits or appendices to the basic
contract. Detailed descriptions of the manuals, drawings and other
technical data to be furnished by the manufacturer, as well as
the extensive product assurance and support commitments of the
manufacturer with respect to the aircraft, are usually set forth in
exhibits or appendices.
Special agreements, such as financing, which are part of the
bargain between seller and buyer are commonly set forth in side
letters to the purchase agreement. Agreements for the sale of spare
parts and support equipment are frequently set forth in general
terms agreements which may apply to all aircraft in the airline's;
fleet which have been produced by the manufacturer.
Agreements with foreign buyers occasionally present special
problems in negotiation, particularly when the parties' legal, eco-
nomic and political systems have few principles in common." Such
agreements, however, are substantially similar to those with United
States carriers, with the exception of aircraft certification and
other requirements of the importing country which vary from
United States requirements.
B. Certain Issues
Aircraft purchase agreements raise a number of significant legal
issues; however, three subjects perennially receive particular atten-
tion: (i) the nature and scope of the warranties and product
assurance commitments of the manufacturer, (ii) the agreements
of the parties with respect to the nature and effect of delays in
delivery of aircraft, and (iii) Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) certification requirements.
. Warranties
A manufacturer's warranties and product assurances for aircraft
contain detailed provisions designed to set forth as clearly as pos-
IThe sale of ten Boeing 707s to the People's Republic of China in 1972
required three months of negotiations over a six-month period.
JOURNAL OF AIR LAW AND COMMERCE
a Sections 2-316, 2-718 and 7-719 of the Uniform Commercial Code permit
a seller by appropriate language to exclude or modify warranties, to agree
on exclusive and limited remedies and to limit or exclude damages, including
consequential damages.
Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 503 F.2d 239 (5th Cir.
1974), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 965 (1975) (allegations of strict liability in tort
and negligence); S.A. Empresa de Viacao Aerea Rio Grandense (Varig Airlines)
v. Boeing Co., [1975-1977 Transfer Binder] PROD. LAB. REP. (CCH) 5 8028
(W.D. Wash. 1977) (allegations of strict liability in tort, negligent misrepre-
sentations and post-delivery negligence); Scandinavian Airlines System, Inc. v.
United Aircraft Corp., No. 74-2609-DWW (C.D. Cal., Dec. 4, 1975) (alle-
gation of defective design, failure to warn, strict liability in tort, and breach
of warranties); Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. Douglas Aircraft Co., 238 Cal. App.
2d 95, 47 Cal. Rptr. 518 (1965) (allegations of active negligence); cf.
Pakistan International Airlines Corp v. Boeing Co., 575 F.2d 1268 (9th Cir.
1978) (upholding an agreement of the buyer to indemnify and holding harm-
less the seller with respect to special services provided under a purchase agree-
ment against allegations of negligent inspection by a survey team following an
accident). In the foregoing cases the courts were satisfied that the language of
the clauses adequately reflected the intent of the parties to exclude the liability
which was asserted. But see, Keystone Aeronautics Corp. v. R. J. Enstrom
Corp., 499 F.2d 146 (3d Cir. 1974) (stressing the requirement that the contract
express the parties' intent with particularity); cf. Jig The Third Corp. v. Puritan
Marine Insurance Underwriters Corp., 519 F.2d 171 (5th Cir. 1975), cert. denied,
424 U.S. 954 (1976) (failure to mention negligence, tort or similar cognates).
8E.g., Delta Air Lines, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp., 503 F.2d 239
(5th Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 965 (1975); S.A. Empresa de Viacao
Aerea Rio Grandense (Varig Airlines) v. Boeing Co., [1975-1977 Transfer
Binder] PROD. LuB. REP. (CCH) 5 8028 (W.D. Wash. 1977).
JOURNAL OF AIR LAW AND COMMERCE
2. Delivery Delays
The impact of delays in delivery of aircraft is a matter of serious
concern to both manufacturer and buyer. Because of the financial
consequences of delays, neither party is willing to rely solely upon
the provisions of statute and common law which, in the absence of
agreement, would define the parameters of force majeure or im-
practicability of performance and would prescribe the remedies
for such delays."0 Accordingly, purchase agreements typically in-
clude extensive provisions which define excusable delays, specify
the consequences of such delays, and allocate the risks of such de-
lays between the parties. In addition to causes of delay such as
fires or accidents, excusable delay clauses will identify other causes,
such as strikes or governmental allocations, which experience has
indicated may occur during production. The following is a typical
excusable delay clause in an aircraft contract:
Seller shall not be responsible for nor be deemed to be in default
under this Agreement on account of any delay in delivery of an
Aircraft or other performance hereunder due to any of the follow-
ing causes: acts of God; war, warlike operations, insurrections or
riots; fires, floods or explosions; serious accidents; epidemics or
quarantine restrictions; any act of government, governmental pri-
orities, allocation regulations or orders affecting materials, facilities
or completed aircraft; strikes or labor troubles causing cessation,
slow-down or interruption of work; delay in transportation; or in-
ability after due and timely diligence to procure materials, acces-
sories, equipment or parts; or due to any other cause to the extent
it is beyond Seller's control or not occasioned by Seller's fault or
negligence. Delays resulting from any of the foregoing causes are
referred to as 'Excusable Delays. '
I U.C.C. § 2-615 relates to excuse by failure of presupposed conditions.
10U.C.C. § 2-616. Note that the version of U.C.C. § 2-616(3) in effect in
most states places limitations upon the ability of a seller and a buyer to allocate
the consequences of an excusable delay: "The provisions of this section may not
be negated by agreement except in so far as the seller has assumed a greater
obligation under the preceding section." While this prohibition (which is a de-
parture from the normal U.C.C. principle of freedom of contract-U.C.C. S
1-102) may make some sense in consumer transactions, it is unreasonable when
applied to negotiated contracts for the manufacture and sale of specially manu-
factured goods. Accordingly, it has not been adopted or has been modified in
several major industrial states. See, e.g., CoNN. GEN. STAT. ANN. § 42a-2-616(3);
WASH. REV. CODE § 62A.2-616.
11For a comprehensive analysis of the effects of a similar clause, see the
discussion of the court in Eastern Air Lines, Inc. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
532 F.2d 957 (5th Cir. 1976). At issue were delays in the delivery of 90 DC-8s
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
A. HistoricalReview.
From the end of World War II through the 1950s, domestic air
carriers usually financed aircraft purchases by using a mixture of
retained earnings, depreciation, commercial bank loans and offer-
ings of equity securities."9 In general, loan terms ranged from three
to seven years. Some domestic carriers obtained financing by pro-
viding security in the form of chattel mortgages and conditional
sales contracts. Foreign air carriers, most of which are government-
owned, financed their equipment acquisitions through capital con-
tributed by their governments, commercial bank loans and loans
from the Export-Import Bank of the United States (Eximbank).
The introduction of expensive jet aircraft forced domestic car-
riers to supplement bank loans repayable over five to seven years
with long-term debt from insurance companies and other institu-
tional lenders. To keep debt/equity ratios in balance, many domes-
tic carriers issued convertible subordinated debentures. Other car-
riers arranged syndicated loans involving both banks and institu-
tional lenders, some of which were secured by mortgage inden-
tures on flight equipment and on other assets of the carrier.
For most domestic carriers the 1960s were profitable years
marked by appreciation in the market value of their securities, an
expanding availability of bank and institutional credit and the
issuance of convertible debentures. Asset financing, in the form of
conditional sales contracts, chattel mortgages and similar security
interests, played a significant role for carriers which were unable
to finance aircraft purchases on an unsecured basis.
During the decade of the 1960s, foreign air carriers made in-
creasing use of loans which were made or guaranteed by Eximbank
(and its foreign equivalents). The decade was also marked by a
limited but growing number of aircraft loans by United States
lenders to foreign carriers which were secured by mortgages,
hypotheques and conditional sales agreements.
The creation of the investment tax credit in the early 1960s pro-
vided an additional incentive for acquisition of new equipment
19 See generally Johnston, Legal Aspects of Aircraft Finance, (pts. 1-2),
29 J. AIR L. & CoM. 161, 299 (1963); Lambert, Survey of Domestic and Inter-
national Aspects of Aircraft Equipment Financing, 18 Bus. LAw. 627, 627-31
(1963).
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
B. FinancingMethods.
Following is a discussion of some of the principal methods
utilized to finance the acquisition of commercial aircraft with par-
ticular emphasis on asset financing, in which the lender or lessor
primarily looks to the security in the asset itself, Eximbank financ-
ing, and government guarantees. As noted in the preceding review,
carriers have also financed and will continue to finance equipment
purchases through the use of earnings, depreciation, and the issu-
ance of equity and other securities as well as from revolving and
term loans by commercial banks and long-term loans by institu-
tional lenders.
1. Security Interests.
a. Conditional Sales Contracts and Chattel Mortgages. Condi-
tional sales contracts and chattel mortgages have been traditional
techniques used by sellers and lenders to secure obligations incurred
by domestic air carriers for the purchase of aircraft. Of the two,
the chattel mortgage has been somewhat more flexible for major
lenders since it has permitted them to obtain the broad security
of a "fleet mortgage," covering newly purchased aircraft, other
flight equipment and spare parts. On the other hand, the condi-
tional sales contract has often been preferred by lenders because
of the preferential rights of repossession accorded a conditional
vendor in a Title X proceeding under Section 116(5) of the Bank-
ruptcy Act, a right which did not extend to the holders of chattel
mortgages." The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) has now
essentially eliminated the distinctions between the title retention
and lien forms of security interests for purposes of the law of
- 11 U.S.C. § 516(5) (1976). The Bankruptcy Act and the changes made by
the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 are more fully discussed in the text accom-
panying notes 38 and 39, infra.
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
series with varying maturities and interest rates. With the proceeds
of the sale (commonly up to 80 percent of the price of the equip-
ment) and a downpayment for the balance from the air carrier,
the trustee purchases the aircraft from the manufacturer pursuant
to an assignment to the trustee from the carrier of its rights under
the purchase agreement with the manufacturer. The trustee, acting
on behalf of the holders of the certificates, retains title to the air-
craft and leases it to the carrier for a term of years (typically up
to 16 years). The carrier pays a periodic rental which is sufficient
to pay the principal of and interest on the certificates and all
expenses of the trust. The carrier assumes all obligations with re-
spect to the aircraft itself, including maintenance, repair, insur-
ance and taxes. At the end of the lease term, title to the aircraft
is transferred by the trustee to the carrier without any further pay-
ment or for a nominal payment. The "lease" is not a true lease
and the carrier is treated as the owner for tax, accounting and
aircraft registration purposes, among others.
Equipment trust financing currently has considerable appeal to
the investment community. This appeal may be due in part to the
excellent reputation for security such techniques have enjoyed in
rail car financing for the troubled railroad industry. The flexibility
of the trust concept which permits the issuance of equipment trust
certificates to a broad range of investors in a public offering or a
private placement is also a significant advantage. As a secured
transaction, however, its principal legal advantage over the chattel
mortgage form of security interest is the right of repossession cur-
rently provided by Section 116(5) of the Bankruptcy Act in a
reorganization proceeding.
For the airline industry, the popularity of equipment trust cer-
tificates in the investment community has allowed some carders to
finance aircraft over repayment terms approximately equivalent
to those in equipment leases while obtaining the benefits of owner-
ship, including the investment tax credit, accelerated depreciation
allowances and the residual value associated with the acquisition
of new equipment.
2. Leasing
a. Short-Term Leases. Short-term leases, which may be from a
few weeks to several years, play only a limited role in new aircraft
19791 AIRCRAFT FINANCING
(3) Lease Terms. Many of the terms and conditions set forth
in leases are similar to those in security agreements. Because the
lessor's investment is typically a higher percentage of the value of
the asset than loans made by a secured party, however, many
covenants, particularly those relating to the equipment, are often
more comprehensive than similar covenants in a security agree-
ment. Leases (and related agreements) commonly contain pro-
visions similar to the following:
(a) The carrier will indemnify the lessor and participants
against the imposition of certain domestic and foreign taxes arising
out of the lease and operation of the aircraft and against loss or un-
availability of the investment tax credit and depreciation benefits
on which the lease is premised. Tax indemnities are, of course,
subject to detailed bargaining and usually take an inordinate
amount of time to negotiate.
(b) The lessor will disclaim any liability with respect to the
condition of the aircraft and will be indemnified by the carrier for
liability arising out of the transaction and the operation of the
aircraft. The lessor (and participants) will be named as additional
insureds under the carrier's aviation liability policy.
(c) The carrier will bear all risk of loss of or damage to the
aircraft. If the aircraft is lost or destroyed, the lessee will be re-
quired to pay an amount, as a stipulated loss value, which is
sufficient to repay the outstanding balance of the investment and
to compensate the participants for agreed losses sustained (includ-
55-540 and Rev. Procs. 72-3 and 75-28. The criteria for a favorable tax ruling
include the following:
a. At the beginning of the lease and at all times during the lease
term, the lessor has a minimum unconditional "at risk" investment
equal to at least 20% of the cost of the leased property.
b. The lessee has no right to purchase or re-lease the property at
the end of the term or at any other time at a price which is less
than the then fair market value or fair market rental value.
c. At the beginning of the lease (i) the estimated fair market
value of the property at the end of the term will equal or exceed
20% of the original cost of the property (excluding inflation
and any cost to the lessor for removal), and (ii) the estimated re-
maining useful life of the property at the end of the initial term will
equal or exceed 20% of the original estimated useful life of the
equipment and, in any event, be at least one year.
d. No part of the cost of the property may have been borne by
the lessee.
A failure to meet the above criteria will not necessarily result in a disallowance
on audit.
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
5. Eximbank Financing.
Eximbank is an independent United States government agency
whose statutory purpose is to provide support for the financing of
exports and imports of goods and services between the United
States and foreign countries." Historically, Eximbank has partici-
pated in financing a major portion of United States manufactured
aircraft purchased by foreign air carriers."
"9See Young, The Aircraft Loan Guarantee Program, COMMUTER AIRLINES
A. AM. TIMES, January 1979, at 9-10.
"Airline Deregulation Act of 1978, Pub. L. No. 95-504, § 42, 92 Stat. 1748
(1978) (to be codified at 49 U.S.C. § 1301).
11 FAA Notice of Proposed Rule Making, 44 Fed. Reg. 5153 (Jan. 25, 1979).
59 12 U.S.C. § 635(b)(1)(A) (1976) states that:
It is the policy of the United States to foster expansion of exports
of . . . goods and services, thereby contributing to the promotion
and maintenance of high levels of employment and real income
and to the increased development of the productive resources of the
United States. To meet this objective, the Export-Import Bank is
directed, in the exercise of its functions, to provide guarantees,
insurance, and extension of credit at rates and on terms and other
conditions which are competitive with the Government-supported
rates and terms and other conditions available for the financing
of exports from the principal countries whose exporters compete
with United States exporters....
"Eximbank has played a crucial role in supporting exports of United States
manufactured aircraft. For example, during 1977, Eximbank authorized approxi-
mately $1.2 billion in long-term direct credits and financial guarantees; more
than 36% was for commercial jet aircraft. 1977 Annual Report of Export-
Import Bank of the United States, at 6. During the period from 1968 through
1977, Eximbank participated in approximately $6.7 billion (or 66%) of
Boeing's commercial export sales of aircraft and related equipment and services.
Study furnished by The Boeing Company to the author. Eximbank's support is
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
A. Registration of Aircraft.
1. Registration. Title V of the FAA Act establishes two related
filing systems applicable to all civil aircraft of the United States:
a system for registration of aircraft and a system for recordation
of conveyances affecting title to and interests in aircraft. Regis-
tration serves a number of governmental purposes not directly
related to the validity or perfection of property interests in aircraft,
including identification, operation, navigation, safety and taxation.
Registration of an aircraft with the FAA does not by itself perfect
title to or any security interests in such aircraft. Indeed, the FAA
Act provides that while registration is conclusive evidence of na-
tionality for international purposes, registration is not evidence of
" 49 U.S.C. § 1301 et seq. (1976); 14 C.F.R. §§ 47 and 49 (1979) set forth
the regulations issued by the FAA with respect to registration of aircraft and
recordation of conveyances pursuant to the FAA Act.
6 Done June 19, 1948, 4 U.S.T. 1830, T.I.A.S. No. 2847, 310 U.N.T.S. 151.
1979] AIRCRAFT FINANCING
3. Engines.
In addition to the registration system for aircraft, the FAA Act
authorizes the FAA to establish "regulations for registration and
identification of aircraft engines, propellers and appliances, in the
interest of safety."'" The FAA has not established such regulations,
however, and no registration system exists comparable to that for
aircraft.
such equipment.
a. Engines and Propellers. Section 503 (a) (2) of the FAA
Act permits the recordation of leases and security instruments
against specifically identified engines capable of 750 or more rated
takeoff horsepower and against specifically identified propellers
capable of absorbing 750 or more rated takeoff horsepower. Inter-
ests in engines and propellers which do not meet requirements
of Section 503 (a) (2) but which are maintained as spare parts
may be recorded under Section 503(a) (3). Section 503(d) pro-
vides that an interest in specifically identified engines and propellers
recorded pursuant to Section 503 (a) (2) will have priority over
a competing interest in the same equipment recorded under Sec-
tion 503 (a) (3).,
b. Spare Parts. Section 503 (a) (3), the so-called "basket
clause," providing for recordation of certain leases of and security
interests in spare parts, is one of the least satisfactory parts of the
FAA recording system." It applies only to engines, propellers,
appliances and spare parts maintained by or on behalf of an air
carrier certificated under Section 604(b) of the FAA Act by the
Civil Aeronautics Board. It does not apply to intrastate carriers or
to operators of private or business aircraft. Further, the benefits of
FAA recording are accorded to such property only while physi-
cally located at the locations specified in the recorded instrument.'
ance with § 6323 (f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Liens imposed pur-
suant to the Employee Retirement Insurance and-Security Act are required to
be filed in the places designated for notices of federal tax liens. 29 U.S.C. § 1368
(1976).
'o' See the discussion in Sigman, The Wild Blue Yonder: Interests in Aircraft
Under Our Federal System, 46 So. CAL. L. REV. 316, 323-25 (1973).
'o 14 C.F.R. § 49.19 (1979).
105
U.C.C. S 9-303.
JOURNAL OF AIR LAW AND COMMERCE
It is clear from the language of the FAA Act and cases decided
under it that Section 503 establishes an exclusive national record-
ing system for conveyances, leases and security instruments affect-
ing title to or interests in aircraft (including those used solely in
intrastate commerce) and that the FAA Act preempts state filing
requirements.11" Further, as a matter of state law, Sections 9-104
and 9-302 of the UCC (in carefully phrased language) preclude
the application of the filing provisions of the UCC to security
interests in property subject to the FAA Act's recordation require-
ments. On the other hand, it is reasonably clear that state law
governs the creation and substantive "validity" of interests in air-
craft and related equipment'. and that an instrument that is not
valid under state law does not become effective merely because it
is filed with the FAA.' Between these two premises lies a trouble-
some "grey area". It results from conflicts between those decisions
which hold that the priority accorded by FAA filing must pre-
vail and those which defer to state priority rules.
7. Priority Questions."
Unlike the elaborate and specific priority rules of the UCC,"'
Section 503 expressly states only two priority rules: (i) an unre-
corded interest is accorded priority against the grantor or maker
thereof, his "heir or devisee" and any other person with actual
notice of the conveyance or instrument creating the interest; and
(ii) an interest in specifically identified engines and propellers
recorded under Section 503 (a) (2) has priority over prior or subse-
quently recorded interests in such equipment under Section
503 (a) (3), the spare parts "basket clause"."
"'0See, e.g., In re Veterans' Air Express Co., 76 F. Supp. 684, 686 (D.C.N.J.
1948); Blalock v. Brown, 78 Ga. App. 537, 51 S.E.2d 610, 615 (1949); Aircraft
Investment Corp. v. Pezzani & Reid Equip. Co., 205 F. Supp. 80, 81 (E.D.
Mich. 1962).
"' See 49 U.S.C. § 1406.
"I See Texas Nat'l Bank v. Aufderheide, 235 F. Supp. 599 (E.D. Ark. 1964).
113 For a comprehensive review of priorities issues with respect to aircraft,
see Sigman, The Wild Blue Yonder: Interests in Aircraft Under Our Federal
System, 46 So. CAL. L. REV. 316 (1973); see also Annot., 22 A.L.R.3d 1270
(1968); Scott, Liens in Aircraft: Priorities,25 J. AIR L. & COM. 193 (1958); Note
19 ST. Louis U. L.J. 122 (1974).
114U.C.C. S§ 9-301 to 9-316.
11549 U.S.C. § 1403(c) and (d) (1976).
JOURNAL OF AIR LAW AND COMMERCE
Unlike the FAA Act, the Mortgage Convention does not provide
for recognition of security interests in specifically identified engines,
except as components of an aircraft or as part of a store of spare
parts.
Article X recognizes security interests in aircraft that extend in
accordance with the law of the flag state to spare parts maintained
for installation in such aircraft and stored in specified places,
subject to complex public notice provisions."' Security interests in
spare parts independent of interests in aircraft are not accorded
protection.
Article VII of the Mortgage Convention provides that proceed-
ings for the sale in execution of an aircraft are subject to the law
of the state where the sale takes place.1" It further prescribes cer-
tain procedures that must be observed in connection with an exe-
cution sale, including a requirement for at least one month's pub-
lic notice of sale and for notification to holders of recorded rights.'
Execution and sale in accordance with the law of the forum is
the only enforcement procedure recognized. Many of the remedies
afforded secured parties by the UCC (including self-help) would
presumably not be available under the Convention. Note also that
no reference is made in the Mortgage Convention to rights of re-
137 Article X provides:
(1) If a recorded right in an aircraft of the nature specified in
Article I, and held as security for the payment of an indebtedness,
extends, in conformity with the law of the Contracting State where
the aircraft is registered, to spare parts stored in a specified place or
places, such right shall be recognized by all Contracting States, as
long as the spare parts remain in the place or places specified, pro-
vided that an appropriate public notice, specifying the description
of the right, the name and address of the holder of this right and
the record in which such right is recorded, is exhibited at the place
where the spare parts are located, so as to give due notification to
third parties that such spare parts are encumbered.
(2) A statement indicating the character and the approximate
number of such spare parts shall be annexed to or included in the
recorded document. Such parts may be replaced by similar parts
without affecting the right of the creditor.
Compare § 503(a) (3) of the FAA Act (49 U.S.C. § 1403(a) (3) (1976)), which
also limits the perfection provided by recordation to parts located in a specific
place (without requirements for placarding) (§ 503 (d)), but which permits filing
only with respect to air carriers certificated under § 604(b) (49 U.S.C. § 1424(b)
1976)).
-1 Mortgage Convention, note 46 supra, Art. VII, 5 1.
139 Id., Art. VII, 5 2.
19791 AIRCRAFT FINANCING
Comment 5(f) to the 1972 version of U.C.C. S 9-103. Note the provisions of
U.C.C. § 9-103(4) (1966 version), which relate to security interests noted on a
certificate of title. Under the 1972 version of the U.C.C., perfection under the
law of the jurisdiction issuing a certificate of title would be effective only "until
four months after the goods are removed from that jurisdiction and thereafter
until the goods are registered in another jurisdiction, but in any event not beyond
surrender of the certificate. After the expiration of that period, the goods are
not covered by the certificate of title within the meaning of this section." In
countries which require that a mortgage or security interest be endorsed on an
aircraft's certificate of title or registration certificate, this provision would prob-
ably supersede the "foreign air carrier" provision of the U.C.C.
274 JOURNAL OF AIR LAW AND COMMERCE [45
V. CONCLUSION