PART IIThe Standard Security

9The standard security

(1)

The provisions of this Part of this Act shall have effect for the purpose of enabling a new form of heritable security to be created to be known as a standard security.

(2)

It shall be competent to grant and record in the Register of Sasines a standard security over any interest in land to be expressed in conformity with one of the forms prescribed in Schedule 2 to this Act.

(3)

A grant of any right over an interest in land for the purpose of securing any debt by way of a heritable security shall only be capable of being effected at law if it is embodied in a standard security.

(4)

Where for the purpose last-mentioned any deed which is not in the form of a standard security contains a disposition or assignation of an interest in land, it shall to that extent be void and unenforceable, and where that deed has been duly recorded the creditor in the purported security may be required, by any person having an interest, to grant any deed which may be appropriate to clear the Register of Sasines of that security.

(5)

A standard security may be used for any other purpose for which a heritable security may be used if any of the said forms is appropriate to that purpose, and for the purpose of any enactment affecting heritable securities a standard security, if so used, or if used as is required by this Act instead of a heritable security as defined therein, shall be a heritable security for the purposes of that enactment.

Act of the Parliament of Scotland, cap. 5.

(6)

The Bankruptcy Act 1696, in so far as it renders a heritable security of no effect in relation to a debt contracted after the recording of that security, and any rule of law which requires that a real burden for money may only be created in respect of a sum specified in the deed of creation, shall not apply in relation to a standard security.

(7)

The provisions of this section shall not affect the operation of the Small Dwellings Acquisition (Scotland) Acts 1899 to 1923, except that in section 11(8) of the M1Small Dwellings Acquisition Act 1899, in the substitution for section 2(e) of that Act, after the words " other security " there shall be inserted the words " not being a security constituted by an ex facie absolute disposition or assignation, whether qualified by a back letter or not. ".

(8)

For the purposes of this Part of this Act—

(a)

" heritable security " (except in subsection (5) of this section if the context otherwise requires) means any security capable of being constituted over any interest in land by disposition or assignation of that interest in security of any debt and of being recorded in the Register of Sasines;

(b)

" interest in land " means any estate or interest in land, other than an entailed estate or any interest therein, which is capable of being owned or held as a separate interest and to which a title may be recorded in the Register of Sasines;

(c)

" debt" means any obligation due, or which will or may become due, to repay or pay money, including any such obligation arising from a transaction or part of a transaction in the course of any trade, business or profession, and any obligation to pay an annuity or ad factum praestandum, but does not include an obligation to pay any feuduty, ground annual, rent or other periodical sum payable in respect of land, and " creditor " and " debtor ", in relation to a standard security, shall be construed accordingly.