Prospective
65Pledge enforcement noticeS
(1)Before taking any other steps to enforce a pledge, the secured creditor must serve a notice in, or as nearly as may be in, the form prescribed for the purposes of this subsection (to be known as a “pledge enforcement notice”) on—
(a)the provider,
(b)the debtor in the secured obligation (if a person other than the provider),
(c)the holder of any other right in security over all or part of the encumbered property,
(d)any creditor who has executed diligence against all or part of the encumbered property, and
(e)in the case of a statutory pledge over property which is capable of being occupied, any occupier of all or part of the property (if a person other than the provider).
(2)But—
(a)paragraph (c) of subsection (1) is to be disregarded if the secured creditor does not know, and cannot reasonably be expected to know, of the right in security mentioned in that paragraph, and
(b)paragraph (d) of that subsection is to be disregarded if the secured creditor does not know, and cannot reasonably be expected to know, of the diligence executed as mentioned in that paragraph.
(3)If, by virtue of subsection (1)(e) of section 87 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974, a default notice must be served on the provider, the requirements of that section and of section 88 of that Act must be satisfied before a pledge enforcement notice is served.
(4)The Scottish Ministers may by regulations modify this section so as to specify—
(a)further persons, or descriptions of persons, on whom the secured creditor must serve a pledge enforcement notice (being persons who have statutory duties in relation to the provider’s estate),
(b)cases when the requirement to serve a notice on a person specified by virtue of paragraph (a) is to be disregarded.
Commencement Information
I1S. 65 not in force at Royal Assent, see s. 121(2)