D R A F T FOR DISCUSSION ONLY REVISION OF UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS MEETING IN ITS ONE-HUNDRED-AND-SIXTH YEAR SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA JULY 25 þ AUGUST 1, 1997 REVISION OF UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES WITH PREFATORY NOTE AND COMMENTS Copyright 1997 By THE AMERICAN LAW INSTITUTE and NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS The ideas and conclusions set forth in this draft, including the proposed statutory language and any comments or reporterþs notes, have not been passed upon by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws, the American Law Institute, or the Drafting Committee. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Conference and its Commissioners, the Institute and its Members, and the Drafting Committee and its Members and Reporters. Proposed statutory language may not be used to ascertain the intent or meaning of any promulgated final statutory proposal. DRAFTING COMMITTEE TO REVISE UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES ROBERT J. TENNESSEN, 700 Baker Building, 706 South 2nd Avenue, Minneapolis, MN 55402, Chair JOHN FOX ARNOLD, 714 Locust Street, St. Louis, MO 63101 JEAN BRAUCHER, University of Cincinnati, College of Law, Clifton and Calhoun Streets, Cincinnati, OH 45221, The American Law Institute Representative STEPHEN C. CAWOOD, State National Bank Building, Suite 308, 305 Ann Street, Frankfort, KY 40601 ELLEN F. DYKE, Suite 400, 2010 Corporate Ridge, McLean, VA 22102 HENRY DEEB GABRIEL, JR., Loyola University, School of Law, 526 Pine Street, New Orleans, LA 70118 MORRIS W. MACEY, 600 Marquis II, 285 Peachtree Center Avenue, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30303 THOMAS J. McCRACKEN, JR., Room 600, 134 N. LaSalle Street, Chicago, IL 60602 JAMES J. WHITE, University of Michigan, Law School, Room 300, Hutchins Hall, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, The American Law Institute Representative MARION W. BENFIELD, JR., Wake Forest University, School of Law, P.O. Box 7206, Winston-Salem, NC 27109, National Conference Reporter EX OFFICIO BION M. GREGORY, Office of Legislative Counsel, State Capitol, Suite 3021, Sacramento, CA 95814-4996, President NEAL OSSEN, Suite 201, 21 Oak Street, Hartford, CT 06106, Chair, Division C, National Conference EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR FRED H. MILLER, University of Oklahoma, College of Law, 300 Timberdell Road, Norman, OK 73019, Executive Director WILLIAM J. PIERCE, 1505 Roxbury Road, Ann Arbor, MI 48104, Executive Director Emeritus Copies of this Act may be obtained from: NATIONAL CONFERENCE OF COMMISSIONERS ON UNIFORM STATE LAWS 676 North St. Clair Street, Suite 1700 Chicago, Illinois 60611 312/915-0195 REVISION OF UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES TABLE OF CONTENTS PART 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS SECTION 2A-101. SHORT TITLE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 SECTION 2A-102. DEFINITIONS AND INDEX OF DEFINITIONS . . 8 SECTION 2A-103. SCOPE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 SECTION 2A-104. TRANSACTIONS SUBJECT TO OTHER LAW. . . 20 SECTION 2A-105. TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF ARTICLE TO GOODS COVERED BY CERTIFICATE OF TITLE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 SECTION 2A-106. LIMITATION ON POWER OF PARTIES TO CONSUMER LEASE TO CHOOSE APPLICABLE LAW [OR JUDICIAL FORUM] [: CHOICE OF FORUM]. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 SECTION 2A-107. UNCONSCIONABILITY. . . . . . . . . . . 24 SECTION 2A-108. OPTION TO ACCELERATE AT WILL . . . . . 25 SECTION 2A-109. EFFECT OF AGREEMENT. . . . . . . . . . 26 PART 2. FORMATION, TERMS, AND READJUSTMENT OF LEASE CONTRACT [SECTION 2A-201. FORMAL REQUIREMENTS]. . . . . . . . . 27 [SECTION 2A-201. FORMAL REQUIREMENTS; STATUTE OF FRAUDS] 29 SECTION 2A-202. PAROL OR EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE. . . . . . 31 SECTION 2A-203. FORMATION IN GENERAL . . . . . . . . . 32 SECTION 2A-204. FIRM OFFERS: SEALED INSTRUMENTS. . . . 32 SECTION 2A-205. OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE . . . . . . . . . 33 [SECTION 2A-206. CONSUMER CONTRACTS; RECORDS]. . . . . 34 SECTION 2A-207. ATTRIBUTION PROCEDURE. . . . . . . . . 35 SECTION 2A-208. ATTRIBUTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORD, MESSAGE, OR PERFORMANCE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 SECTION 2A-209. AUTHENTICATION EFFECT AND PROOF; ELECTRONIC AGENT AUTHENTICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 SECTION 2A-210. PROOF OF AUTHENTICATION. . . . . . . . 39 SECTION 2A-211. ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS AND MESSAGES: TIMING OF CONTRACT AND EFFECTIVENESS OF MESSAGE. . . . . . . 39 SECTION 2A-212. ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF ELECTRONIC MESSAGE . 40 PART 3. CONSTRUCTION OF LEASE CONTRACT SECTION 2A-301. COURSE OF PERFORMANCE OR PRACTICAL CONSTRUCTION 42 SECTION 2A-302. MODIFICATION, RESCISSION, AND WAIVER . 43 [SECTION 2A-303. CONTINUING CONTRACTUAL TERMS] . . . . 44 SECTION 2A-304. LESSEE UNDER FINANCE LEASE AS BENEFICIARY OF SUPPLY CONTRACT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 [SECTION 2A-305. ELECTRONIC VIRUSES] . . . . . . . . . 46 [SECTION 2A-306. ELECTRONIC REGULATION OF PERFORMANCE] 48 SECTION 2A-307. IDENTIFICATION . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 SECTION 2A-308. INSURANCE AND PROCEEDS . . . . . . . . 50 SECTION 2A-309. RISK OF LOSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 SECTION 2A-310. CASUALTY TO IDENTIFIED GOODS . . . . . 52 SECTION 2A-311. TERMINATION; SURVIVAL OF OBLIGATIONS . 54 PART 4. EFFECT OF LEASE CONTRACT SECTION 2A-401. ENFORCEABILITY OF LEASE CONTRACT . . . 56 SECTION 2A-402. TITLE TO AND POSSESSION OF GOODS . . . 56 SECTION 2A-403. ALIENABILITY OF PARTYþS INTEREST UNDER LEASE CONTRACT OR OF LESSORþS RESIDUAL INTEREST IN GOODS; DELEGATION OF PERFORMANCE; TRANSFER OF RIGHTS . . . . . . . . 56 SECTION 2A-404. SUBSEQUENT LEASE OF GOODS BY LESSOR. . 59 SECTION 2A-405. SALE OR SUBLEASE OF GOODS BY LESSEE. . 61 SECTION 2A-406. PRIORITY OF CERTAIN LIENS ARISING BY OPERATION OF LAW 62 SECTION 2A-407. PRIORITY OF LIENS ARISING BY ATTACHMENT OR LEVY ON, SECURITY INTERESTS IN, AND OTHER CLAIMS TO GOODS . 63 SECTION 2A-408. SPECIAL RIGHTS OF CREDITORS. . . . . . 64 SECTION 2A-409. RIGHTS OF LESSOR AND LESSEE WHEN GOODS BECOME FIXTURES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 SECTION 2A-410. LESSORþS AND LESSEEþS RIGHTS WHEN GOODS BECOME ACCESSIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 SECTION 2A-411. PRIORITY SUBJECT TO SUBORDINATION. . . 71 PART 5. WARRANTIES SECTION 2A-501. DEFINITIONS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 SECTION 2A-502. WARRANTY AGAINST INTERFERENCE AND AGAINST INFRINGEMENT; LESSEEþS OBLIGATION AGAINST INFRINGEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 SECTION 2A-503. EXPRESS WARRANTIES TO IMMEDIATE LESSEE 75 SECTION 2A-504. IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY; USAGE OF TRADE 76 SECTION 2A-505. IMPLIED WARRANTY OF FITNESS FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSE 77 SECTION 2A-506. DISCLAIMER OR MODIFICATION OF WARRANTY 77 SECTION 2A-507. CUMULATION AND CONFLICT OF WARRANTIES. 79 SECTION 2A-508. EXTENSION OF EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTY 80 PART 6. PERFORMANCE OF LEASE CONTRACT: REPUDIATED, SUBSTITUTED, AND EXCUSED SECTION 2A-601. RIGHT TO ADEQUATE ASSURANCE OF PERFORMANCE 82 SECTION 2A-602. ANTICIPATORY REPUDIATION . . . . . . . 83 SECTION 2A-603. RETRACTION OF ANTICIPATORY REPUDIATION 84 SECTION 2A-604. SUBSTITUTED PERFORMANCE. . . . . . . . 84 SECTION 2A-605. EXCUSE BY FAILURE OF PRESUPPOSED CONDITIONS 85 SECTION 2A-606. PROCEDURE ON NOTIFICATION CLAIMING EXCUSE 86 SECTION 2A-607. IRREVOCABLE PROMISES: FINANCE LEASES . 87 PART 7. DEFAULT A. GENERAL SECTION 2A-701. SUBJECT TO GENERAL LIMITATIONS . . . . 88 SECTION 2A-702. DEFAULT: PROCEDURE. . . . . . . . . . 88 SECTION 2A-703. WAIVER OF DEFAULT; PARTICULARIZATION OF NONCONFORMITY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90 SECTION 2A-704. NOTICE AFTER DEFAULT . . . . . . . . . 91 SECTION 2A-705. REMEDIES IN GENERAL. . . . . . . . . . 92 SECTION 2A-706. MEASUREMENT OF DAMAGES IN GENERAL. . . 92 SECTION 2A-707. INCIDENTAL DAMAGES . . . . . . . . . . 93 SECTION 2A-708. CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES. . . . . . . . . 93 SECTION 2A-709. SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE . . . . . . . . . 94 SECTION 2A-710. CANCELLATION; EFFECT . . . . . . . . . 95 SECTION 2A-711. LIQUIDATION OF DAMAGES; DEPOSITS . . . 97 SECTION 2A-712. CONTRACTUAL MODIFICATION OF REMEDY [Alternative A] 98 SECTION 2A-712. CONTRACTUAL MODIFICATION OF REMEDY [Alternative B] 99 SECTION 2A-713. REMEDIES FOR MISREPRESENTATION OR FRAUD 101 SECTION 2A-714. PROOF OF MARKET RENT . . . . . . . . . 101 SECTION 2A-715. LIABILITY OF THIRD PARTIES FOR INJURY TO GOODS 102 SECTION 2A-716. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS . . . . . . . . 103 B. LESSOR'S REMEDIES SECTION 2A-717. LESSORþS REMEDIES IN GENERAL . . . . . 104 SECTION 2A-718. LESSORþS RIGHT TO POSSESSION OF GOODS. 106 SECTION 2A-719. LESSORþS RIGHT TO IDENTIFY GOODS TO LEASE CONTRACT DESPITE DEFAULT OR TO SALVAGE UNFINISHED GOODS . . 107 SECTION 2A-720. LESSORþS REFUSAL TO DELIVER BECAUSE OF LESSEEþS INSOLVENCY; STOPPAGE IN TRANSIT OR OTHERWISE . . . 108 SECTION 2A-721. LESSORþS RIGHTS TO DISPOSE OF GOODS. . 109 SECTION 2A-722. LESSORþS DAMAGES FOR NONACCEPTANCE, FAILURE TO PAY, OR REPUDIATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 SECTION 2A-723. LESSORþS ACTION FOR THE RENT . . . . . 113 SECTION 2A-724. LESSORþS RIGHTS TO RESIDUAL INTEREST . 115 C. LESSEE'S REMEDIES SECTION 2A-725. LESSEEþS REMEDIES IN GENERAL; LESSEEþS SECURITY INTEREST IN REJECTED GOODS . . . . . . . . . . . . 115 SECTION 2A-726. LESSEEþS RIGHTS ON NONCONFORMING DELIVERY; RIGHTFUL REJECTION. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 SECTION 2A-727. INSTALLMENT LEASE CONTRACT: DEFAULT. . 118 SECTION 2A-728. MERCHANT LESSEEþS DUTIES; LESSEEþS OPTIONS AS TO SALVAGE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 SECTION 2A-729. LESSEEþS DUTIES AS TO RIGHTFULLY REJECTED GOODS 120 SECTION 2A-730. CURE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 SECTION 2A-731. ACCEPTANCE OF GOODS. . . . . . . . . . 122 SECTION 2A-732. EFFECT OF ACCEPTANCE OF GOODS; NOTICE OF DEFAULT; BURDEN OF ESTABLISHING DEFAULT AFTER ACCEPTANCE; NOTICE OF CLAIM OR LITIGATION TO PERSON ANSWERABLE OVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 SECTION 2A-733. REVOCATION OF ACCEPTANCE OF GOODS. . . 125 SECTION 2A-734. COVER; LESSEEþS ACQUISITION OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 126 SECTION 2A-735. LESSEEþS DAMAGES FOR NON-DELIVERY, REPUDIATION, DEFAULT, AND BREACH OF WARRANTY IN REGARD TO ACCEPTED GOODS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127 SECTION 2A-736. LESSEEþS DAMAGES FOR DEFAULT REGARDING ACCEPTED GOODS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129 SECTION 2A-737. PREPAYING LESSEEþS RIGHT TO GOODS. . . 130 REVISION OF UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES PREFATORY NOTE Article 2A is being revised to take account of the amendments to Articles 2 and 9 (primarily Article 2) and the promulgation of Article 2B. Article 2A is based largely on Article 2 and in general follows the Article 2 sequence of sections. However, many present Article 2 sections were not adopted in Article 2A because the Article 2 sections dealt with issues which were not significant in the leasing context or stated rules which were inappropriate in leases. Other Article 2 sections were followed exactly or very closely in the analogous Article 2A section. Some Article 2A sections follow the policy of present Article 2, but the specific rules are different because of the differences between sales and leases. Article 2A also contains a few provisions, such as the sections on lessors of fixtures or accessions, which are based on the similar provisions of Article 9. The revision of Article 2 and the prospective promulgation of Article 2B raise the issue of the extent to which Article 2A should be revised to follow changes in policy or language in Article 2 or to adopt rules similar to some of those in new Article 2B. The Article 2A Drafting Committee was appointed to examine that question. The charge to the Committee is to review Article 2 changes to sections used as the basis for Article 2A sections and adopt those Article 2 changes in Article 2A unless differences between leases and sales justify a different rule for leases. Similarly new sections in Article 2 and the provisions of new Article 2B are being reviewed for possible addition to Article 2A. Also, changes made by the Article 9 Committee are being considered for possible adoption in the relevant Article 2A sections. The Article 2A Committee charge is not to second-guess the Article 2 Committee nor to decline to accept Article 2 changes in Article 2A merely because the Article 2A Committee disagrees with the Article 2 Committee decision. The Article 2A Committee does not have authority to make substantive changes to Article 2A which are not related to changes in Articles 2 or 9 or to provisions of new Article 2B. If the Article 2A Drafting Committee discovers a need for substantive change in Article 2A not related to other articles, it must seek authorization from the Scope and Program and Executive Committees to make those changes. The Article 2A Committee has met three times, the last time in February of this year. At each meeting the Article 2A Committee has reviewed the draft of revised Article 2 current at that time. A planned late May meeting of the Article 2A Committee was cancelled to await a more final version of revised Article 2, therefore the Article 2A Committee has not reviewed changes made since January of this year in the Article 2 draft. However, the Article 2A draft submitted to the Conference is based on the Article 2 draft, including changes made after last January, which is also being presented to the Conference this summer. Therefore, we are in the unusual position of presenting to the Conference a draft of Article 2A which contains many language changes and some new sections that have not been reviewed by the Drafting Committee. However, many of the changes in revised Article 2 as it appears now were made by the time of the January, 1997, draft. The Article 2A Committee has considered those changes and concluded that a number of them should not be followed in Article 2A because of differences between leases and sales. The Committee has also identified one area of possible substantive changed unrelated to revisions in other articles. As noted above, the instruction to the Article 2A Drafting Committee is to conform Article 2A to revised Article 2 unless there is a reason for a different rule in leases because of differences between sales and leases, including differences in relevant practice. Therefore, adoption of a revised Article 2 section in Article 2A doesnþt necessarily indicate that the Article 2A Committee believes that the provision is desirable in leases or in sales. It may mean merely that the Article 2A Committee cannot see a reason for a different rule in leases than in sales. In one case the Article 2A Committee has rejected a revision in Article 2 where it may be difficult to argue that there is a reason for a different rule in lease transactions. A discussion follows of (1) matters on which Article 2A has failed to follow revised Article 2 and (2) the one substantive amendment to Article 2A that the Article 2A Committee is considering that is not related to changes in other articles. As a preliminary matter, it should be noted that draft revised Article 2A looks very different than present Article 2A. Language in almost every section, following similar changes in Article 2 , has been changed, and the sections have been rearranged. Many of the language changes are not intended to be substantive. The new language usually merely tries to clarify the meaning of present sections or conform to the current style rules of the Conference. The section reordering is a result of the addition of a number of new sections from Articles 2B and 2 and reorganization, particularly, in the remedies parts of the Act. A. Special rule for determining whether terms in a record are binding on consumers (no Article 2A section) Section 2-206 of revised Article 2 provides that in a consumer transaction, þany non-negotiated term [in a record] that a reasonable consumer in a transaction of this type would not reasonably expect to be in the record is excluded from the contract, unless the consumer had knowledge of the term before agreeing to the record.þ Lessors, particularly of automobiles for short terms, have strongly objected to incorporating such a provision in Article 2A. The Article 2A Committee has previously expressed opposition to earlier similar Article 2 provisions. There is some likelihood that the Article 2A Committee will be inclined to reject Section 2-206 for Article 2A. The issue is, as noted, particularly acute in short term auto rentals. In such cases, the renter is usually in a hurry, other people are standing in line, and the renter often doesnþt want to take time to read or indicate awareness of particular provisions of the contract. But, when, for example, an unexpected accident occurs and the lessor asserts that the renter has thousands of dollars of liability, the renter deny liability on the ground that a reasonable consumer would not have expected to incur such a large liability. What is the appropriate policy regarding the binding effect of unknown terms in a form contract in such a situation? Should a distinction be drawn between short term leases and leases for longer terms? Can a distinction between leases and sales be justified? B. The battle of the forms (no Article 2A section) Present Article 2A does not contain a section analogous to present Section 2-207. That section deals with formation of contract through the exchange of forms, typically a purchase order and an acknowledgment. The provision was omitted from Article 2A because leasing contracts are seldom, if ever, made through such an exchange of forms. The typical leasing pattern is the execution of a single writing (now þrecordþ) by both parties. The Article 2 Drafting Committee has tried a number of different approaches to the battle of forms problem in revised Article 2. The present provisions in the revision are Sections 2-203(d), 2-205(a)(1), and 2-207. Under Sections 2-203(d) and 2-205(a)(1), a definite expression of acceptance in a record is an acceptance even though the record contains terms different from those of the offer, unless the record of one of the parties conspicuously states that the party intents contract only if the other party agrees to all terms in that record. Section 2-207 then states rules for determining the terms of a contract created by an exchange of forms which contain differing terms. The Article 2A Committee has decided to adhere to the original Article 2A decision and not include þbattle of the formsþ provisions in Article 2A. C. Statute of frauds (Section 2A-201) Present Article 2A has a statute of frauds provision modeled closely on the present Article 2 statute of frauds. Until early this year, the Article 2 Drafting Committee proposed repeal of the statute of frauds. The Article 2A Committee had rejected repeal of the statute in Article 2A. The Committee received strong representations from lessor representatives that the present Article 2A statute of frauds should be preserved. Now that Article 2 has adopted a statute of frauds very similar to the present Article 2 statute, the Article 2A Committee must decide whether to conform Section 2A-201 to the revised Article 2 provision or retain the present Article 2A version. There are two major differences between the revised Article 2 draft and present Article 2A. First, Article 2A requires a writing if the lease price is $1,000 or more while revised Article 2 sets the threshold at $10,000. Second, revised Article 2 includes a statutory estoppel provision which adopts the holdings of some courts that a partyþs conduct may estop it from asserting the statute of frauds as a defense The Article 2A Committeeþs decision to reject repeal of the statute of frauds was strongly influenced by a memorandum prepared by Edwin Huddleson, III on behalf of the Equipment Leasing Association of America. Mr. Huddleson spoke for 26 lawyers who represent companies engaged in leasing activity. Following is a brief reprise of those arguments which persuaded the Drafting Committee to retain the statute of frauds. The arguments may be relevant to whether the present Article 2 version of the statute of frauds should be included in Article 2A. The typical leasing transaction is more complex than the typical sale. Most commercially important leases create a long term continuing relationship between the parties which often involves multiple duties on each side. Therefore, it is more important than in a sales transaction that the terms of the agreement be in writing. In fact, even small value leases are essentially always represented by a single written contract signed by both parties. Retaining the statute of frauds creates some additional incentive for parties to get the deal in writing. And this is a good thing. Deleting the statute might lead to an undesirable casualness in making leasing deals. On the other hand, since leases are essentially always put in writing today, retaining the statute of frauds will not interfere with any significant practice of entering into oral leases. Therefore, a statute of frauds for leasing transactions, in any event, does less harm through allowing welshers to defeat deals actually made than may be true in sales. D. Extension of express warranties to remote lessees (no Article 2A section) Section 2-408 of the Article 2 draft gives remote buyers and lessees rights against sellers who make promises or representations in advertising or in materials distributed with products. The Article 2A Committee has decided not to include a similar provision in Article 2A because we know of no instances in which lessors advertise or make representations in material to be delivered to remote lessees. Industry advisors have argued that Article 2A should not contain a warranty provision which deals with a situation which does not exist in the industry. (The Article 2 provision itself extends seller advertised, or with-the-goods, warranties to remote lessees.) It should be noted that revised Section 2A-508 does extend lessor warranties, made to an immediate lessee, to transferees who may be expected to use or be affected by the goods.) E. Contractual modification of remedy (Section 2A-712) Article 2A adopted unchanged Section 2-719 of present Article 2. The Article 2 Drafting Committee has changed that section (now Section 2-810) in two substantive ways. First the revised section states that an agreed remedy þmay not be applied to deprive the aggrieved party of a minimum adequate remedyþ. Second, it makes limitations on consequential damages unenforceable in consumer contracts if the þagreed remedyþ fails to substantially achieve the intended purposes of the parties. The Article 2A Committee rejected these changes to the section. On the first point, the revised Article 2 section retains the present rule that an agreed remedy is not effective if the agreed remedy fails to achieve its purpose. (The revised language is that the agreed remedy is ineffective if it þfails substantially to achieve the intended purpose of the parties.þ) The section also adds a second statutory limitation on the effectiveness of an agreed remedy; it must not þdeprive the aggrieved party of a minimum adequate remedy under the circumstances.þ In present Article 2, there is a reference to þadequate minimum remedy in the Comments to Section 2-719 which explains the intent of the þfailure of essential purposeþ test. The Article 2A Committee rejected the incorporation of the adequate minimum remedy language in the statute because it creates uncertainty as to the relationship between the two stated tests and suggests increased restrictions on the effectiveness of agreed remedies. On the second point, the Article 2A Committee does not believe that the failure of a repair or replacement warranty, for example, should automatically invalidate a disclaimer of liability for consequential damages, even in a consumer transaction. Most cases under present Article 2 hold that a limitation on consequential damages may be effective even if the seller is unable to provide the agreed limited remedy. (The usual agreed remedy is a repair or replacement promise. Therefore, the issue is whether, if the lessor is unable to repair or replace, a consumer lessee is, in all cases, entitled to recover consequential damages even though the contract also separately excludes liability for consequential damages. It is fair to say that it is difficult to argue for a difference between sales and leases on these points, but perhaps the argument can be successfully made. F. Unconscionability and consumers (Section 2A-107 (continues existing variation) Present Article 2A expanded the unconscionability provisions of Article 2 in three ways as to consumer lessees. First, Article 2A gives a court power to grant þappropriate reliefþ if it finds unconscionable conduct in the collection of a claim arising from a lease contract. Second, courts are given power to grant relief if agreement to the lease contract or to a term thereof was induced by unconscionable conduct. Third, attorneyþs fees are given to consumers who prevail on an unconscionability claim (and attorneyþs fees are given to the other party if the court finds that the consumer lessee knew an asserted unconscionability claim to be groundless). The Article 2 Drafting Committee chose to adopt the unconscionable inducement concept and apply it to all sales, not just sales to consumers, but did not adopt the other Article 2A expansions of unconscionability protections in consumer transactions. The Article 2A Committee voted to retain the present Article 2A unconscionability provisions which give greater protection to consumers than does the Article 2 provision. The Article 2A Committee also decided not to extend the unconscionable inducement concept to business transactions. G. Limitation on choice of law and choice of forum in consumer transactions (Section 2A-107) (continues existing variation) Present Article 2A restricts the power of the parties to a consumer lease to chose the applicable law or applicable forum. The law chosen must be that of jurisdiction in which the lessee resides or the jurisdiction in which the goods will be used. A choice of forum is effective only if that jurisdiction would otherwise have jurisdiction over the lessee. Present Article 2 has no such provisions and the Article 2 Drafting Committee has chosen not to adopt similar provisions in Article 2. The Article 2A Committee, adopting the principle that it would not reduce consumer protections in present Article 2A, has voted to retain those provisions. H. Statute of limitations, accrual of cause of action (Section 2A-708) (continues existing variation) In present Article 2 a cause of action accrues when the breach occurs whether or not the other party knows of the breach, and breach of warranty occurs when goods are delivered unless the warranty expressly extends to future performance. The original Article 2A Drafting Committee rejected the time-of-breach rule and instead adopted the rule that the time the other party learned, or should have learned, of the breach is the time of the accrual of the cause of action. (Article 2A adopted the Article 2 four year period for bringing action after accrual of the cause of action.) The Article 2 revision has slightly modified the original statute by extending the statute for an additional year, to five years maximum, if the aggrieved party does not discover the breach until after it has occurred. The Article 2A Committee decided to adhere to the present Article 2A position as to time of accrual of the cause of action. The Committee believes that generally the time the injured party learned, or should have learned, of the breach is a fairer rule and works even handedly between lessors and lessees. In sales, using the time the injured party learned, or should have learned, of the breach would create the possibility of a warranty claim against a seller ten or twenty or more years after the sale and long after the seller had any contact with the buyer or the goods. In leases that problem for lessors exists only to a small degree, if at all. In any event, the lessor business community is willing to accept that small additional risk in order to also gain the advantage of not having the statute of limitations run against lessors until the lessor discovers or should have discovered the breach. I. Proposed amendment of Article 2A title warranties not related to changes in Article 2 (Section 2A-502) Under present Section 2A-211 non-finance lessors warrant only þthat no person holds a claim to or interest in the goods þthat arose from an act or omission of the lessorþ that will interfere with the leasehold estate. Finance lessors make no warranty of quiet enjoyment at all. The Article 2A Committee proposes to modify those warranties so that a non-finance lessor makes a general warranty of quite enjoyment (which protects against title defects even though not caused by an act or omission of the lessor) and a finance lessor warranties against its own acts which cause interference with the leasehold interest. The warranty also covers unfounded but colorable claims which interfere with the leasehold interest. REVISION OF UNIFORM COMMERCIAL CODE ARTICLE 2A þ LEASES PART 1 GENERAL PROVISIONS SECTION 2A-101. SHORT TITLE. This article may be cited as Uniform Commercial Code þ Leases. SECTION 2A-102. DEFINITIONS AND INDEX OF DEFINITIONS. (a) Unless the context otherwise requires, in this article (1) þAuthenticateþ means to sign or to execute or adopt a symbol, or encrypt a record in whole or part, with present intent to identify the authenticating party or to adopt, or accept a record or term, or to establish the authenticity of a record or term that contains the authentication or to which a record containing the authentication refers. (2) þBuyer in ordinary course of businessþ means a person that buys goods in good faith, without knowledge that the sale to violates the rights of another person in the goods, and in the ordinary course from a person, other than a pawnbroker, in the business of selling goods of that kind. A person buys in the ordinary course if the sale to the person comports with the usual or customary practices in the kind of business in which the seller is engaged or with the sellerþs own usual or customary practices. A person that sells minerals or the like, including oil and gas, at the wellhead or minehead is a person in the business of selling goods of that kind. A buyer in the ordinary course of business may buy for cash, by exchange of other property, or on secured or unsecured credit, and may acquire goods or documents of title under a pre-existing contract for sale. Only a buyer that takes possession of the goods or has a right to recover the goods from the seller (Section 2-807, 2-822, or 2-824) may be a buyer in ordinary course of business. A person that acquires goods in a transfer in bulk or in total or partial or total satisfaction of a money debt is not a buyer in ordinary course of business. (3) þCancellationþ means an act by either party which ends a lease contract because of a default by the other party. þCancelþ has a corresponding meaning. (4) þCommercial unitþ means a unit of goods which by commercial usage is a single whole for purposes of lease and whose division materially impairs its character or value in the relevant market or in use. A commercial unit may be a single article, such as a machine; a set of articles, such as a suite of furniture or a line of machinery; a quantity, such as a gross or carload; or any other unit treated in use or in the relevant market as a single whole. (5) þConspicuousþ means so displayed or presented that a reasonable person against whom it operates ought to have noticed it or, in the case of an electronic message intended to evoke a response without the need for review by an individual, in a form that would enable a reasonably configured electronic agent to take it into account or react to it without the review of the message by an individual. A term is conspicuous if it is: (A) a heading in capitals (e.g., NON-NEGOTIABLE BILL OF LADING) equal or greater in size to the surrounding text; (B) language in the body or text of a record or display in larger or other contrasting type or color than other language; (C) a term prominently referenced in the body or text of an electronic record or display that can be readily accessed from the record or display (D) language so positioned in a record or display that a party cannot proceed without taking some additional action with respect to the term or the reference thereto; or (E) language readily distinguishable in another manner. Drafting Comment The definition of conspicuous is from Article 2B. (6) þConformingþ goods or performance under a lease contract means goods or performance that are in accordance with the obligations under the contract. (7) þConsumerþ means an individual who leases or contracts to lease goods that, at the time of contracting, are intended by the individual to be used primarily for personal, family, or household use. The term does not include an individual who leases or contracts to lease goods that, at the time of contracting are intended by the individual to be used primarily for professional or commercial purposes. [(8) þConsumer leaseþ means a lease between a lessor regularly engaged in the business of leasing or selling and a consumer.] Drafting Comment Revised Article 2 defines þconsumer goodsþ and does not include a dollar cap in the definition. Some States have not included a dollar cap in present Article 2A and States which have adopted a dollar cap have stated varying amounts. If a State wishes to include a dollar cap, the cap should be inserted here. Any cap probably should be set high enough to bring within the definition most automobile leasing transactions for personal, family, or household use. (9) þDeliveryþ means the transfer of physical possession or control of goods. (10) þElectronic agentþ means a computer program or other automated means used, selected, or programmed by a party to initiate or respond to electronic messages or performances in whole or in part without review by an individual. (11) þElectronicþ means electrical, digital, magnetic, optical, electromagnetic, or any other form of wave propagation, or by any other technology that entails capabilities similar to those technologies. (12) þElectronic messageþ means a record that, for purposes of communication to another person, is stored, generated, or transmitted by electronic, optical, or similar means. The term includes electronic data interchange, electronic or voice mail, facsimile, telex, telecopying, scanning and similar communications. (13) þElectronic transactionþ means a transaction formed by electronic messages in which the messages of one or both parties will not be reviewed by an individual as an expected step in forming the contract. (14) þFinance leaseþ means a lease with respect to which: (A) the lessor does not select, manufacture, or supply the goods; (B) the lessor acquires the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods in connection with the lease; and (C) one of the following occurs: (i) the lessee receives a copy of the agreement by which the lessor acquired, or proposes to acquire, the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods before authenticating the lease agreement; (ii) the lesseeþs approval of the agreement or of the general contractual terms under which the lessor acquired or proposes to acquire the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods is a condition to the effectiveness of the lease contract; (iii) the lessee, before authenticating the lease agreement, receives an accurate and complete statement designating the promises and warranties, and any disclaimers of warranties, limitations or modifications of remedies, or liquidated damages, including those of a third party, such as the manufacturer of the goods, provided to the lessor by the person supplying the goods in connection with or as part of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods; or (iv) if the lease is not a consumer lease, before the lessee authenticates the lease agreement, the lessor informs the lessee in writing: (I) of the identity of the person supplying the goods to the lessor, unless the lessee has selected that person and directed the lessor to acquire the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods from that person; (II) that the lessee is entitled under this article to the promises and warranties, including those of any third party, provided to the lessor by the person supplying the goods in connection with or as part of the contract by which the lessor acquired the goods or the right to possession and use of the goods; and (III) that the lessee may communicate with the person supplying the goods to the lessor and receive an accurate and complete statement of those promises and warranties, including any disclaimers and limitations of them, or a statement of remedies. Drafting Comment The stricken language in the definition of finance lease was suggested by Jim White. Several people had noted that finance lessors perhaps should be able to have that status as to goods which come back from the original lessee either because of default by the lessee, or at the end of the lease term. However, at a discussion with about 20 members of the Leasing Subcommittee of the UCC Committee of the Business Law Section at the ABA meeting in Atlanta, there was no support for giving finance lease status to the second lease. Incidentally, no one there, apparently, structures deals to fit the definition of finance lease. However, the Ed Huddleson-Equipment Leasing Association memorandum (ELA memorandum) urges the White revision, plus some additional revisions discussed on page 8 of the ELA memorandum. Also, the Stephen Whelan letter from the ABA group urges the White amendment. However, at the February meeting, the Committee voted 4-2 to delete the language. (15) þGood faithþ means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing. (16) þGoodsþ means all things that are movable at the time of identification to a lease contract, or which are fixtures. The term includes the unborn young of animals. The term does not include money in which the rent is to be paid, the subject of foreign exchange transactions, documents, letters of credit, instruments, investment property, accounts, chattel paper, general intangibles, payment intangibles, or minerals, or the like, including oil and gas, before extraction. Drafting Comment The final Comments should state that Article 2A does not apply to oil and gas leases. Drafting Comment Definition of þinstallment leaseþ is moved to Section 2A-726, following Article 2. (17) þLeaseþ means a transfer of the right to possession and use of goods for a period in return for consideration. The term includes a sublease unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. The term does not include a sale, including a sale on approval or a sale or return, or retention or creation of a security interest. (18) þLease agreementþ means the bargain, with respect to the lease, of the lessor and the lessee in fact as found in their language or inferred from other circumstances, including course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade as provided in this article. The term includes a sublease agreement unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. (19) þLease contractþ means the total legal obligation resulting from the lease agreement as affected by this article and other applicable law. The term includes a sublease contract unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. Drafting Comment At the coordinating meeting, it was suggested that the two above definitions be moved to Article 1. It is probably not necessary that those two definitions specifically refer to subleases; the definition of lease does so, and is probably sufficient to bring subleases fully within the Act. When Article 1 is revised, the definitions will probably be deleted here. (20) þLeasehold interestþ means the interest of the lessor or the lessee under a lease contract. (21) þLesseeþ means a person that acquires the right to possession and use of goods under a lease. The term includes a sublessee unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. (22) þLessee in ordinary course of businessþ means a person that, in good faith and without knowledge that its lease is in violation of ownership rights, security interest, or leasehold interest of a third party in the goods, leases in the ordinary course from a person in the business of selling or leasing goods of that kind for cash or by exchange of other property or on secured or unsecured credit, including receiving goods or documents of title under a preexisting lease contract but not including a transfer in bulk or as security for or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt. The term does not include a pawnbroker. Drafting Comment Definition (22) will be moved to Article 1 when that Article is revised to conform to the Article 9 rules. (23) þLessorþ means a person that transfers the right to possession and use of goods under a lease. The term includes a sublessor unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. (24) þLessorþs residual interestþ means the lessorþs interest in goods after expiration, termination, or cancellation of a lease contract. (25) þLienþ means a charge against or interest in goods to secure payment of a debt or performance of an obligation, but the term does not include a security interest. (26) þLotþ means a parcel or single article that is the subject matter of a separate lease or delivery, whether or not it is sufficient to perform the lease contract. (27) þMerchant lesseeþ means a lessee that is a merchant with respect to goods of the kind subject to the lease. (28) Present valueþ means the amount as of a date certain of one or more sums payable in the future, discounted to the date certain. In determining present value, the discount is determined by the interest rate specified by the parties if the rate was not manifestly unreasonable at the time the transaction was entered into. Otherwise, the discount is determined by a commercially reasonable rate that takes into account the facts and circumstances of each case at the time the transaction was entered into. (29) þReceiptþ (A) with respect to goods, means taking delivery; and (B) with respect to an electronic record, means when it enters an information processing system in a form capable of being processed by a system of that type and the recipient uses or has designed that system for the purpose of receiving such records or information. þReceiveþ has an analogous meaning. (30) þRecordþ means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium, or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. (31) þSubleaseþ means a lease of goods whose right to possession and use is acquired by the lessor as a lessee under an existing lease. (32) þSupplierþ means a person from which a lessor buys or leases goods to be leased under a finance lease. (33) þSupply contractþ means a contract under which a lessor buys or leases goods to be leased. (34) þTerminateþ means to end a contract or a part thereof by an act by a party under a power created by agreement or law, or by operation of the terms of the agreement for a reason other than for a breach by the other party. (b) The following definitions in other articles apply to this article: þAccountþ. Section 9-103(a). þBetween merchantsþ. Section 2-102(2). þBuyerþ. Section 2-102(3). þChattel paperþ. Section 9-102(a)(4). þConsumer goodsþ. Section 9-106(a). þDocumentþ. Section 9-102(a)(14). þEntrustingþ. Section 2-504(e). þGeneral intangiblesþ. Section 9-103(b). þInstrumentþ. Section 9-102(a)(23). þMerchantþ. Section 2-102(23). þMortgageþ. Section 9-102(a)(24). þPursuant to commitmentþ. Section 9-102(a)(29). þSaleþ. Section 2-102(27). þSale on approvalþ. Section 2-506(a)(1) þSale or returnþ. Section 2-506(a)(2) þSellerþ. Section 2-102(a)(28). Drafting Comment The citations to other articles have been corrected to the revised articles. (c) In addition, Article 1 contains general definitions and principles of construction that apply throughout this article. SECTION 2A-103. SCOPE. (a) This article applies to any transaction regardless of form which creates a lease. (b) If a transaction involves both information and goods, this article applies to the aspects of the transaction which involve the goods and their performance and rights in the goods other than the physical medium containing the information, its packaging, and its documentation. However, this article applies to a lease of a computer program which was not developed specifically for a particular transaction and that is embedded in goods other than a copy of the program or an information processing machine, if the program is not the subject of a separate license with the lessor. (Section 2-103) Drafting Comment þ January, 1997 The January, 1997 version of Section 2-103 states that except as provided in subsection (b) if another article applies to a transaction governed by Article 2, Article 2 does not apply to the part of the transaction governed by the other Article. I assume that we do not wish to adopt that rule. We state some rules which are different that the Article 9 rules þ arguably they donþt overlap with Article 9, but it may be better no to create the argument. Notes Article 2A covers leases of goods. A pure services contract is not covered by Article 2A, but a court, as in Article 2, could apply Article 2A to a mixed transaction of goods and services if the lease of goods predominates. Also, courts have applied Article 2 to disputes over the quality of goods furnished in transactions in which services predominate. Such results under Article 2A are not precluded by this section. Subsection (b) deals with transactions in which both goods and information licensed under Article 2B are involved. See Section 2B-103 on the scope of Article 2B. Presumably, Article 2B governs all disputes over þlicenses of information and software contractsþ and þrelatedþ support and maintenance agreements. Section 2B-103(a). Article 2A, however, may apply to transactions excluded from Article 2B under Section 2B-103(d). Under Section 2B-103(d) þa sale or lease of a copy of a computer program that was not developed specifically for a particular transaction and that is embedded in goods other than a copy of the program or an information processing machine, if the program was not the subject of a separate license with the buyer or lease.þ Therefore all aspects of such a transaction would be governed by Article 2A if the underlying transaction is a lease of the goods in which the computer program is embedded. SECTION 2A-104. TRANSACTIONS SUBJECT TO OTHER LAW. (a) A transaction subject to this article is also subject to: (1) [list any certificate of title statutes covering automobiles, trailers, mobile homes, boats, farm tractors, or the like]; except as to the rights of a lessee in the ordinary course of business under Sections 2A-404(d) and 2A-405(d) whose rights arise before a certificate of title covering the goods is effective in the name of the [competing?] [ purchaser]. [(2) any applicable certificate-of-title statute of another jurisdiction; ] (3) any applicable law which establishes a different rule for consumer leases. (4) any other law of this State to which the subject matter of this article is subject, such as laws dealing with sale or lease of agricultural products, the consignment or transfer by artists of works of art or fine prints, distribution agreements, franchises and other relationships through which goods are leased, liability for products which cause injury to person or property, the making and disclaimer of warranties, and dealers in particular products, such as automobiles, motorized wheelchairs, agricultural equipment, and hearing aids. (b) [Except for the rights of a lessee in the ordinary course of business, ]in case of conflict between this article, other than Sections 2A-105, 2A-401(c), and 2A-402(c), and a statute or decision referred to in subsection (a), the statute or decision controls. (c) If a law referred to in subsection (a) existing on the effective date of this article applies to a transaction governed by this article, the following rules apply: (1) A requirement that a contractual obligation, waiver, notice, or disclaimer be in writing is satisfied by a record. (2) A requirement that a record or a contractual term be signed is satisfied by an authentication. (3) A requirement that a contractual term be conspicuous or the like is satisfied by a term that is conspicuous in accordance with that article. (d) With respect to this article, failure to comply with a statute or decision referred to in subsection (a) has only the effect specified therein. (Section 2-104) Drafting Comment þ May, 1997 The latest version of Section 2-104 raises a number of issues for Article 2A. First, Section 2-104(a)(1) overrides certificate of title legislation as to rights of buyers in ordinary course under Section 2-504(d) if their rights arose before þa certificate of title covering the goods is effective in the name of the buyer.þ The þbuyer here is probably meant to be a competing buyer. If the last reference to þbuyerþ is to the protected buyer in ordinary course, I donþt understand the subsection. Section 2-504(d) is the entrusting provision of Article 2. Perhaps we should include a similar rule in Article 2A, but Article 2A presently is subject to both in state and other state certificate of title laws with no exception for lessee in ordinary course situations. Note that subsection (e) of Section 2A-404 and Section 2A-405 seems to state a rule contrary to that now being proposed in Article 2 and set out above. The Article 2A Committee must decide what position Article 2A should take. Apparently, a few western States require that lessees in leases longer than a few month by noted on certificates of title as owners with the lessor appearing as þlienholderþ. In most States, apparently, the practice is not to note the lesseeþs interest on the certificate of title. What do you think of the specific listing which is now in subsection (a)(4)? Look at the listing in Section 2-104. I have omitted items, such as blood products, which I thought could not be leased. The reference to certificate of title laws of other States is probably not necessary both because they are already covered under subsection (a)(1) and because of Section 2A-105. SECTION 2A-105. TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF ARTICLE TO GOODS COVERED BY CERTIFICATE OF TITLE. Subject to Sections 2A-401(c) and 2A-402(c), with respect to goods covered by a certificate of title issued under a statute of this State or of another jurisdiction, compliance and the effect of compliance or noncompliance with a certificate-of-title statute are governed by the law, including the conflict-of-laws rules, of the jurisdiction issuing the certificate until the earlier of the time the certificate ceases to be effective under the law of that jurisdiction or the time the goods subsequently become covered by another certificate of title from another jurisdiction. Drafting Comment þ May 1997 Section 2A-105 is conformed to the new rules of Article 9. See Section 9-303 in the April, 1997 draft. SECTION 2A-106. LIMITATION ON POWER OF PARTIES TO CONSUMER LEASE TO CHOOSE APPLICABLE LAW [OR JUDICIAL FORUM] [: CHOICE OF FORUM]. [(a)] A choice-of-law term in a consumer lease contract is not enforceable if the law chosen is that of a jurisdiction other than one in which the lessee resides at the time the lease agreement becomes enforceable or within 30 days thereafter or in which the goods are to be used. [(b) The parties may choose an exclusive judicial form. However, in a consumer lease the choice is not enforceable if the chosen jurisdiction would not otherwise have jurisdiction over the consumer and the choice unfairly disadvantages the consumer. A choice of forum in a term of an agreement is not exclusive unless the agreement expressly so provides.] Drafting Comment The ELA memorandum, page 10, asks that this section specifically state that choice of law/forum selection clauses are valid in commercial leases. Choice of law is dealt with in 1-105, and probably should not be separately addressed in Article 2A. Since Article 2B presently does state specifically that, except in consumer transactions, the parties may choose the forum, perhaps we should also. SECTION 2A-107. UNCONSCIONABILITY. (a) If a court finds as a matter of law that a lease contract or a term of the contract was unconscionable at the time the contract was made, the court may refuse to enforce the contract, enforce the remainder of the contract without the term, or so limit the application of the term to avoid an unconscionable result. (b) With respect to a consumer lease, if the court finds as a matter of law that a lease contract or a term of the contract was induced by unconscionable conduct or that unconscionable conduct has occurred in the collection of a claim arising from the lease contract, the court may grant appropriate relief. (c) Before making a finding of unconscionability under subsection (a) or (b), the court, on motion of a party or its own motion, shall afford the parties a reasonable opportunity to present evidence as to the setting, purpose, and effect of the lease contract or term thereof or of the conduct. (d) In an action in which a lessee claims unconscionability with respect to a consumer lease the following rules apply: (1) If the court finds unconscionability under subsection (a) or (b), the court shall award reasonable attorneyþs fees to the lessee. (2) If the court does not find unconscionability and the lessee claiming unconscionability has brought or maintained an action the lessee knew to be groundless, the court shall award reasonable attorneyþs fees to the party against which the claim is made. (3) In determining attorneyþs fees, the amount of the recovery on behalf of the claimant under subsections (a) and (b) is not controlling. (Section 2-105) Drafting Comment In the October, 1996 meeting, the Drafting Committee voted to retain present Section 2A-108 (new Section 2A-107) with the slight word change in subsection (c). At the February, 1997 meeting, the Committee rejected a proposal to delete the reference to unconscionable conduct in collection. The final version of Article 2A will contain a Comment modeled on a U3C comment of unconscionable inducement. SECTION 2A-108. OPTION TO ACCELERATE AT WILL. (a) A term in a lease agreement providing that one party or that partyþs successor in interest may accelerate payment or performance or require collateral or additional collateral þat willþ or when the party þdeems itself insecureþ or in words of similar import must be construed to mean that the party has power to do so only if it in good faith believes that the prospect of payment or performance is impaired. (b) In a consumer lease, the burden of establishing good faith under subsection (a) is on the party that exercised the power. In all other leases, the burden of establishing lack of good faith is on the party against which the power has been exercised. SECTION 2A-109. EFFECT OF AGREEMENT. (a) Except as otherwise expressly provided in Section 1-102 and this article, the effect of any provision may be varied by agreement. (b) The absence of a phrase such as þunless otherwise agreedþ does not by itself preclude the parties from varying the provision by agreement. (c) Whenever this article allocates a risk or imposes a burden as between the parties, an agreement may shift the allocation and apportion the risk or burden, Drafting Comment Should Article 2A adopt this provision? Do we create an undesirable negative implication if we do not, and Article 2 does? PART 2 FORMATION, TERMS, AND READJUSTMENT OF LEASE CONTRACT [SECTION 2A-201. FORMAL REQUIREMENTS. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a lease contract is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless: (1) the total payments to be made under the lease contract, excluding payments for options to renew or buy, are less than $1,000; or (2) there is a record, authenticated by the party against which enforcement is sought or by the partyþs agent, sufficient to indicate that a lease contract has been made between the parties and to describe the goods leased and the duration of the lease. (b) Any description of the leased goods or of the duration of the lease is sufficient and satisfies subsection (a)(2), whether or not it is specific, if it reasonably identifies what is described. (c) A record is not insufficient because it omits or incorrectly states a term agreed upon, but a lease contract is not enforceable under subsection (a)(2) beyond the duration of the lease and the quantity of goods agreed to in the authenticated record. (d) An otherwise valid lease contract that does not satisfy the requirements of subsection (a) is enforceable: (1) if the goods are to be specially manufactured or obtained for the less and are not suitable for lease or sale by the lessor to others in the ordinary course of business, and the lessor, before notice of repudiation is received and under circumstances that reasonably indicate that the goods are for the lessee, has made either a substantial beginning of their manufacture or commitments for their procurement; (2) if the party against which enforcement is sought admits in its pleading, testimony, or otherwise in court that a lease contract was made, but the lease contract is not enforceable under this provision beyond the quantity of goods admitted; or (3) with respect to goods that have been received and accepted by the lessee. (e) The duration of a lease under a contract referred to in subsection (d) is: (1) if there is a record authenticated by the party against which enforcement is sought or by that partyþs authorized agent specifying the duration of the lease, the period so specified; (2) if the party against which enforcement is sought admits in that partyþs pleading, testimony, or otherwise in court, the duration of the lease, the period so admitted; or (3) a reasonable duration. (f) The affixing of a seal to a record evidencing a contract or offer does not make the record a sealed instrument. The law with respect to sealed instruments does not apply to the contract or offer.] [SECTION 2A-201. FORMAL REQUIREMENTS; STATUTE OF FRAUDS. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, a claim for default under a lease contract in which the total payments are $10,000 or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense against a person that denies that an agreement was made unless there is a record authenticated by the person against which the claim is asserted as the record of that person and which is sufficient to indicate that a contract was made. A record is not insufficient merely because it omits or incorrectly states a term, including a quantity term. If the record contains a quantity term, the claim is not enforceable beyond that quantity. (b) If an authenticated record in confirmation of a contract is sufficient against the sender and is sent within a reasonable time to the other party, the record is sufficient against the other party who is a merchant, unless the merchant sends a notice of objection to the record within 10 days after the record is received. (c) A claim for default under an otherwise valid lease contract which is barred under subsection (a) is enforceable if: (1) the goods are to be specially manufactured or processed for the lessee, and the lessor substantially manufacturers, processes the goods, or makes commitments for the procurement of the goods in performance of a contract believed in good faith to exist, and the lessor cannot relet or sell the goods at a reasonable price; (2) the conduct of both parties in performing the agreement recognizes that a contract was formed; (3) reliance by one party on representations or an agreement under law outside of this [Act] estops the other party from raising the lack of a sufficient authenticated record as a defense; or (4) the party against which enforcement is sought, in pleading or testimony in court or otherwise under oath, admits facts from which lease contract can be found. (d) A claim for breach of a lease contract enforceable under this section is not enforceable on the ground that it is not capable of being performed within one year or any other applicable period after its making.] (Section 2-201) Drafting Comment þ May 1997 At the February meeting of the Article 2A Committee, the Committee decided to return to present Section 2A-201 with style changes. It also decided that it would return to the statute of frauds issue after seeing the new Section 2-201 added by the Article 2 Drafting Committee. Therefore, both present Section 2-201, restyled, and the new Article 2 statute of frauds sections are set out above. To what extent should Article 2A follow new Section 2-201. Among the issues are: (1) Should the dollar threshold be raised? (2) Should a party pleading the statute be forced to deny that a contract was made? (3) Should estoppel principles be stated in the statute? (6) Should the admission which makes the contract enforceable be extended to an admission under oath not make in the pleading or testimony. SECTION 2A-202. PAROL OR EXTRINSIC EVIDENCE. Terms with respect to which confirmatory records of the parties agree, or which are otherwise set forth in a record intended by the parties as a final expression of their agreement with respect to the included terms, may not be contradicted by evidence of a previous agreement or contemporaneous oral agreement. However, terms in a record may be explained by any relevant evidence and may be supplemented by evidence of: (1) course of performance, usage of trade, or course of dealing; and (2) noncontradictory additional terms, unless (A) the terms if agreed upon would certainly have been included in the record, or (B) the court finds that the record was intended as a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of the agreement. (Section 2-202) Drafting Comment þ May, 1997 This section, following Article 2, now a part of Section 2A-204. SECTION 2A-203. FORMATION IN GENERAL. (a) A lease contract may be formed in any manner sufficient to show agreement, including by offer and acceptance, conduct of both parties or the operations of an electronic agent which recognizes the existence of a contract. (b) A lease contract may be found If the parties intend to form a contract, even if the time that the agreement was made cannot be determined, one or more terms are left open or to be agreed upon, or one party reserves the right to modify terms. (c) Even if one or more terms are left open, a lease contract does not fail for indefiniteness if the parties intended to form a contract and there is a reasonably certain basis for giving an appropriate remedy. (Section 2-203) Drafting Comment þ May, 1997 The above draft includes changes made in the March and May Article 2 drafts. See Section 2-203(d) in the July Article 2 draft. That is, apparently, a small remnant of the form contract material in Article 2. It is not included in the above version of Section 2A-203. The Article 1 Committee, in its coordination mode, suggests that the Article 2 Committee again consider whether to retain Section 2-203(d). SECTION 2A-204. FIRM OFFERS: SEALED INSTRUMENTS. (a) An offer by a merchant to enter into a lease contract made in an authenticated record that by its terms gives assurance that the offer will be held open is not revocable for lack of consideration during the time stated. If a time is not stated, the offer is irrevocable for a reasonable time not exceeding 90 days. A term of assurance in a record supplied by the offeree is ineffective unless the term is conspicuous. (b) Affixing a seal to a writing evidencing a lease contract or an offer to enter into a lease contract does not render the record a sealed instrument. The law with respect to sealed instruments does not apply to the lease contract or offer. (Section 2-204) SECTION 2A-205. OFFER AND ACCEPTANCE. (a) Unless otherwise unambiguously indicated by the language or circumstances, an offer to make a lease contract invites acceptance in any manner and by any medium reasonable in the circumstances. (b) If the beginning of a requested performance is a reasonable mode of acceptance, an offeror that is not notified of acceptance within a reasonable time may treat the offer as having lapsed before acceptance. (c) Subject to subsection (d), actions taken by one or more electronic agents which confirm the existence of a contract are effective to form a contract even if no individual representing either party was aware of or reviewed the action or its results. (d) In an electronic transaction, the following rules apply: (1) An agreement is formed by the interaction of two electronic agents if the interaction results in both agents each engaging in operations that signify agreement, such as by engaging in performing the agreement, ordering or instructing performance, accepting performance, or making a record of the existence of an agreement. (2) An agreement may be formed by the interaction of an electronic agent and an individual. An agreement is formed if an individual has reason to know that the individual is dealing with an electronic agent and performs actions the person should know will cause the agent to perform or to permit further use, or that are clearly indicated as constituting acceptance regardless of other contemporaneous expressions by the individual to which the electronic agent cannot react. (3) The terms of the contract include terms on which the parties have previously agreed, terms which the electronic agents could take into account, and, to the extent not covered by the foregoing, terms provided by this article or other law. (Sections 2-205, 2B-307(e) and (f)) [SECTION 2A-206. CONSUMER CONTRACTS; RECORDS. (a) In a consumer lease, if a consumer agrees to a record by authentication or affirmative conduct, any non-negotiated term that a reasonable consumer in a transaction of this type would not reasonably expect to be in the record is excluded from the lease, unless the consumer had knowledge of the term before agreeing to the record. (b) Before deciding whether to exclude a term under subsection (a), the court, on motion of a party or its own motion, after affording the parties a reasonable and expeditious opportunity to present evidence on whether the term should be included or excluded from the lease, shall decide whether the contract should be interpreted to exclude the term. (c) This section shall not operate to exclude an otherwise effective term disclaiming or modifying an implied warranty.] (Section 2-206) Drafting Comment þ May 1997 In the February meeting, the Article 2A Committee decided to examine the latest Article 2 draft dealing with consumer contracting through use of forms. Also note the latest version of Section 2-207, the battle of the forms section. Do we still regard that section as unnecessary in Article 2A? SECTION 2A-207. ATTRIBUTION PROCEDURE. (a) An attribution procedure is a procedure established by agreement or mutually adopted by the parties for the purpose of verifying that electronic records, messages, or performances are those of the respective parties or for detecting errors in the transmission or informational content of an electronic message, record, or performance, if the procedure is commercially reasonable. (b) The commercial reasonableness of an attribution procedure is a question of law to be determined by the court in light of the purposes of the procedure and the commercial circumstances at the time of the agreement[, including the nature of the transaction, sophistication of the parties, volume of similar transactions engaged in by either or both of the parties, availability of alternatives offered to but rejected by the party, cost of alternative procedures, and procedures in general use for similar types of transactions]. An attribution procedure may require the use of algorithms or other codes, identifying words or numbers, encryption, callback procedures, key escrow, or any security devices that are reasonable under the circumstances. SECTION 2A-208. ATTRIBUTION OF ELECTRONIC RECORD, MESSAGE, OR PERFORMANCE. (a) As between the parties, an electronic message, record, or performance received by a party is attributable to the party indicated as the sender if: (1) it was sent by that party, its agent, or its electronic agent; (2) the receiving party, in good faith and in compliance with an attribution procedure concluded that it was sent by the other party; or (3) subject to subsection (b), the message or performance: (A) resulted from acts of a person that obtained access to access numbers, codes, computer programs, or the like from a source under the control of the alleged sender creating the appearance that it came from the alleged sender; (B) the access occurred under circumstances constituting a failure to exercise reasonable care by the alleged sender; and (C) the receiving party reasonably relied to its detriment on the apparent source of the message or performance. (b) In a case governed by subsection (a)(3), the following rules apply: (1) The receiving party has the burden of proving reasonable reliance, and the alleged sender has the burden of proving reasonable care. (2) Reliance on an electronic record or performance that does not comply with an agreed authentication procedure is not reasonable unless authorized by an individual representing the alleged sender. (c) If an electronic message was transmitted pursuant to an attribution procedure for the detection of error and the message contained an error the following rules apply: (1) If the sender complied with the attribution procedure and the error would have been detected had the receiving party also complied with the attribution procedure, the sender is not bound if the error relates to a material element of the message or performance. (2) If the sender receives a notice required by the attribution procedure of the content of the message or performance as received, the sender has a duty to in a commercially reasonable manner review the notice and report any error detected by it. (d) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (a)(1) and (c), if a loss occurs because a party complies with a procedure for attribution that was not commercially reasonable, the party that required use of the procedure bears the loss unless it disclosed the nature of the risk to the other party or offered commercially reasonable alternatives that the party rejected. The partyþs liability under this section is limited to losses that could not have been prevented by the exercise of reasonable care by the other party. (Section 2B-111) SECTION 2A-209. AUTHENTICATION EFFECT AND PROOF; ELECTRONIC AGENT AUTHENTICATION. (a) An authentication is intended to establish the partyþs identity, its adoption and acceptance of a record or a term, and the authenticity of the record or term. (b) Operations of an electronic agent constitute the authentication of a party if the party designed, programmed, or selected the electronic agent for the purpose of achieving results of that type. (c) A record or message is authenticated as a matter of law if party complied with an attribution procedure for authentication. Otherwise, authentication may be proven in any manner including by showing that a procedure existed by which a party necessarily must have executed or adopted a symbol in order to proceed further in the use or processing of the information, or adopted a symbol in order to proceed further in the use or processing of the information. (Section 2B-114) SECTION 2A-210. PROOF OF AUTHENTICATION. (a) Actions by an electronic agent constitute the authentication of a party if the party designed, programmed, or selected the electronic agent for the purpose of achieving results of that type. (b) A record or message is authenticated as a matter of law if a party complied with an attribution procedure for authentication. Otherwise, authentication may be proven in any manner including by showing that a procedure existed by which a party necessarily must have executed. SECTION 2A-211. ELECTRONIC TRANSACTIONS AND MESSAGES: TIMING OF CONTRACT AND EFFECTIVENESS OF MESSAGE. (a) If an electronic message initiated by a party or an electronic agent evokes an electronic message in response and the messages reflect an intent to be bound, a contract exists when: (1) the response signifying acceptance is received; or (2) if the response consists of electronically furnishing the requested information or notice of access to the information when the information or notice is received unless the originating message prohibited that form of response. (b) Subject to Section 2B-212, an electronic message is effective when received, even if no individual is aware of its receipt. SECTION 2A-212. ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF ELECTRONIC MESSAGE. (a) If the originator of an electronic message requests or has agreed with the addressee of the message that receipt of the message must be acknowledged electronically, the following rules apply: (1) If the originator indicated in the message or otherwise that the message was conditional on receipt of an acknowledgment, the message does not bind the originator until acknowledgment is received and lapses if acknowledgment is not received in a reasonable time. (2) If the originator requested acknowledgment but did not state that the message was conditional on acknowledgment and acknowledgment has not been received within an reasonable time after the message was sent, on notice to the other party, the originator may either retract the message or specify a further reasonable time within which acknowledgment must be received or the message will be treated as not having binding effect. If acknowledgment is not received within that additional time, the originator may treat the message as not having binding effect. (3) If the originator requested acknowledgment and specified a time for receipt, the originator may exercise the options in subsection (a)(2) if receipt does not occur within that time. (b) Receipt of acknowledgment establishes that the message was received but does not in itself establish that the content sent corresponds to the content received. (Section 2B-205) PART 3 CONSTRUCTION OF LEASE CONTRACT SECTION 2A-301. COURSE OF PERFORMANCE OR PRACTICAL CONSTRUCTION. (a) A þcourse of performanceþ is a sequence of conduct between the parties to a particular lease transaction that exists if: (1) the agreement of the parties with respect to the transaction involves repeated occasions for performance by a party; (2) that party performs on one or more occasions; and (3) the other party, with knowledge of the nature of the performance and opportunity for objection to it, accepts the performance or acquiesces in it without objection. (b) A course of performance between the parties is relevant to ascertaining the meaning of the partiesþ agreement, may give particular meaning to specific terms of the agreement, and may supplement or qualify the terms of the agreement. (c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (d), the express terms of an agreement and any applicable course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade must be construed, whenever reasonable, as consistent with each other. If such construction is unreasonable: (1) express terms prevail over course of performance, course of dealing, and usage of trade; (2) course of performance prevails over course of dealing and usage of trade, and (3) course of dealing prevails over usage of trade. (d) Subject to Section 2A-302, course of performance is relevant to show a waiver or modification of a term inconsistent with the course of performance. (Section 2-209) Drafting Comment This section will probably be moved to Article 1. SECTION 2A-302. MODIFICATION, RESCISSION, AND WAIVER. (a) An agreement made in good faith which modifies a lease contract is binding without consideration. (b) Except in a consumer lease contract, a lease contract that contains a term that excludes modification or rescission except by an authenticated record may not be otherwise modified or rescinded. However, a party whose language or conduct is inconsistent with the term requiring an authenticated record may not assert that term if the language or conduct induced the other party to change its position reasonably and in good faith. (c) Subject to subsection (b), a term in a contract may be waived by the party for whose benefit it was included. Language, conduct, or a course of performance between the parties may be relevant to show a waiver. The waiver of an executory portion of a contract, however, may be retracted by seasonable notification received by the other party that strict performance is required of any term waived unless the waiver induced the other party to change its position reasonably and in good faith. (Section 2-210) Drafting Comment þ May, 1997 At the October, 1996, meeting, the Committee expressed displeasure with the failure of revised Section 2-210 to retain the rule that a waiver can be retracted unless retraction would be unjust because of a material change of position by the other party. The Article 2 draft still refers merely to þchange of position reasonably and in good faith.þ There is no reference to the materially of the change of position. Such we return to the present Code language under which a waiver can be retracted þunless the retraction would be unjust in view of a material change of position in reliance on the waiver:? [SECTION 2A-303. CONTINUING CONTRACTUAL TERMS. (a) Terms of a lease agreement involving repeated performances apply to all later performances unless modified pursuant to this article, even if the terms are not subsequently displayed or otherwise brought to the attention of the parties or electronic agents in the context of the later performance. (b) A modification in good faith of a continuing lease contract made pursuant to a term in a contract providing that the contract may be modified as to future performances by compliance with a described contractual procedure is effective if: (1) compliance with the procedure reasonably notifies the other party of the change; and (2) in a consumer lease, the procedure permits the lessee to terminate the lease contract if the modified term is material and is in good faith unacceptable to the lessee. (c) A contractual term that specifies standards for reasonable modification is enforceable unless the standards are manifestly unreasonable in light of the commercial circumstances.] (Section 2B-304) Drafting Comment þ June, 1997 The coordination group, at its May, 1997, meeting suggested that the Article 2A Committee consider adding this section SECTION 2A-304. LESSEE UNDER FINANCE LEASE AS BENEFICIARY OF SUPPLY CONTRACT. (a) The benefit of the supplierþs promises to the lessor under a supply contract and of all warranties, whether express or implied, including those of any third party provided in connection with or as part of the supply contract, extends to the lessee to the extent of the lesseeþs leasehold interest under a finance lease related to the supply contract but is subject to the terms of the warranty and supply contract and all defenses or claims arising therefrom. (b) The extension of the benefit of a supplierþs promises and of warranties to the lessee does not modify the rights and obligations of the parties to the supply contract, whether arising therefrom or otherwise, or impose any duty or liability under the supply contract on the lessee. (c) A modification or rescission of a supply contract by the supplier and the lessor is effective between the supplier and the lessee unless, before the modification or rescission, the supplier has received notice that the lessee has entered into a finance lease related to the supply contract. If the modification or rescission is effective between the supplier and the lessee, the lessor assumes by, in addition to the obligations of the lessor to the lessee under the lease contract, the promises of the supplier to the lessor and warranties that were so modified or rescinded as they existed and were available to the lessee before modification or rescission. (d) In addition to the extension of the benefit of the supplierþs promises and of warranties to the lessee under subsection (a), the lessee retains all rights that the lessee may have against the supplier which arise from a contract between the lessee and the supplier or under other law. [SECTION 2A-305. ELECTRONIC VIRUSES. (a) In this section þvirusþ means computer instructions intended to disrupt, damage, destroy, or interfere with use of a communications facility or a computer without the consent or permission of the owner. (b) Unless the circumstances clearly indicate that a duty of care could not be expected, a party shall exercise reasonable care to ensure that its performance or message when completed by it does not contain an undisclosed virus. (c) The duty described in subsection (b) is owed solely to the other party to the lease contract and is satisfied if: (1) the party exercised reasonable care; or (2) except with respect to a consumer lease involving delivery of a copy of information on a physical medium by a merchant dealing in information of the kind, language in a contract states that no action was taken to ensure exclusion of a virus or that a risk exists that viruses have not been excluded. (d) A party is not liable if the virus was introduced by a third party after the party completed its performance or if the party injured by the virus failed to exercise reasonable care to prevent or avoid loss. (e) In determining whether reasonable care has been exercised, the court shall consider the nature of the party, type and value of the transaction, consideration exchanged, circumstances of the transaction, language on packaging or in a display, and general standards of practice prevailing among persons of a similar type for similar transactions at the time of the performance or message. A party is deemed to have exercised reasonable care if it or its agent searches for known viruses using any commercially reasonable virus checking software at or before the time the licensor completes its performance or, as to the licensee, the time the licensee first uses the information. (f) A partyþs obligations with respect to the existence of a virus are determined by this section and the express terms of the contract and not implied warranty.] Drafting Comment Addition of this section to Article 2A was recommended by the coordination group at its May, 1997, meeting. The section, if retained, probably should be moved to Part 5. [SECTION 2A-306. ELECTRONIC REGULATION OF PERFORMANCE. (a) A party entitled to enforce a limitation or restriction may include in the information and utilize a program, code, or device that restricts use in a manner consistent with the agreement if: (1) a term in the contract authorizes use of the program, code, or device; (2) the program, code, or device merely prevents uses of the information that are not consistent with the agreement but does not destroy or alter the information; (3) the program, code, or device merely prevents uses of the information that are not consistent with a licensorþs rights under copyright or patent law and that were not granted to the licensee but does not destroy or alter the information. (4) the information is obtained for a stated period of time not more than 30 days or a stated number of uses and the program, code, or device merely enforces that limitation; or (5) the program, code, or device prevents further use at the expiration of the term of the license and the program, code or device or the licensor gives reasonable notice to the licensee before further use is prevented. (b) Operation of a program, code, or device that restricts use consistent with the agreement is not a breach of contract, and the party that included the program, code, or device is not liable for any loss created by its operation. Operation of a program, code, or device that prevents use permitted by the agreement is a breach of contract.] (c) This section does not preclude electronic replacement or disabling of an earlier version of information by the licensor with a new version of the information pursuant to an agreement with the licensee. (d) A program, code or device included in information pursuant to this section or as authorized under other law does not constitute a virus for purposes of Section 2B-313. SECTION 2A-307. IDENTIFICATION. Identification of goods as goods to which a lease contract refers may be made at any time and in any manner expressly agreed to by the parties. In the absence of express agreement, identification occurs when: (1) the lease contract is made, if the contract is for the lease of existing and described goods; (2) goods are shipped, marked, or otherwise designated by the lessor as goods to which the lease contract refers, if the lease contract is for a lease of goods that are not existing and identified; or (3) young are conceived, if the lease contract is for a lease of unborn young of animals. (Section 2-502) SECTION 2A-308. INSURANCE AND PROCEEDS. (a) A lessee obtains an insurable interest in existing goods identified to the lease contract even if the goods are nonconforming and the lessee has an option to return or reject them. (b) If a lessee has an insurable interest only by reason of the lessorþs identification of the goods, the lessor may substitute other goods for those identified until default or insolvency or notification to the lessee that the identification is final. (c) The lessor also retains an insurable interest until an option to buy has been exercised by the lessee and risk of loss has passed to the lessee. (d) This section does not affect any insurable interest recognized under any other law. (e) The parties, by agreement, may determine that one or more parties have an obligation to obtain and pay for insurance covering the goods and determine the beneficiary of the proceeds of the insurance. (Section 2-502) SECTION 2A-309. RISK OF LOSS. (a) Except in the case of a finance lease, risk of loss is retained by the lessor and does not pass to the lessee. In the case of a finance lease, risk of loss passes to the lessee. (b) If under the lease contract risk of loss will pass to the lessee but the agreement does not specify when the risk passes, except as otherwise provided in subsection (c) Risk of loss passes to the lessee regardless of the conformity of the goods to the contract, as follows: (1) Subject to this subsection, the risk of loss passes to a lessee upon receipt of the goods. If the lessee does not intend to take possession, risk of loss passes to the lessee when the lessee receives control of the goods. (2) If a lease contract requires or authorizes a lessor to ship goods by carrier, the following rules apply: (A) If the contract does not require delivery at a particular destination, risk of loss passes to the lessee when the goods are duly delivered to the carrier. (B) If the contract requires delivery at a particular destination and the goods arrive there in the possession of the carrier, risk of loss passes to the lessee when the goods are so tendered as to enable the lessee to take delivery. (3) If goods are held by a bailee to be delivered without being moved, risk of loss passes to the lessee on acknowledgment by the bailee to the lessee of the lesseeþs right to possession of the goods. (d) A default under the lease contract by either party affects risk of loss only in the following cases: (1) If the lessee rightfully and effective rejects the goods or revokes acceptance of the goods, the lessor has the risk of loss from the time when the rejection or revocation is effective. (2) If the lessor has tendered nonconforming goods, the risk of loss has passed to the lessee, and the goods are damaged or lost before the lessee effectively rejects or revokes acceptance, the seller has the risk of loss to the extent the nonconformity of the goods caused the damage or loss. (3) If conforming goods are identified to the lease contract when the lessee repudiates or is otherwise in breach and the risk of loss has not otherwise passed to the lessee, the lessee has the risk of loss for those goods for a commercially reasonable time after the breach or repudiation. (Section 2-612) Drafting Comment þ January, 1997 At the October, 1996, Committee meeting, the Committee asked that subsection (b) contain some language referring to the failure of the agreement to specify when risk passes if under the agreement risk is to pass to the lessee. SECTION 2A-310. CASUALTY TO IDENTIFIED GOODS. If the parties to a lease contract assume the continued existence and eventual delivery to the lessee of goods identified when the lease contract is made and the goods suffer casualty without fault of the lessee, the lessor, or the supplier before delivery, or if the goods suffer casualty before risk of loss passes to the lessee under the lease agreement or Section 2A-309, and no commercially reasonable substitute is available, the following rules apply: (1) If the loss occurs before the goods are delivered to the lessee, the lessor or supplier shall seasonably notify the lessee of the nature and extent of the loss. (2) If the loss is total, the lease contract is avoided. (3) If the loss is partial or the goods no longer conform to the lease contract, the lessee may nevertheless demand inspection and may treat the lease contract as avoided or, except in a finance lease that is not a consumer lease, accept or retain the goods with due allowance from the rent payable for the balance of the duration of the lease for the nonconformity but without further right against the lessor. (Section 2-714) Drafting Comment þ May, 1997 Addition of the words þor retainþ in subdivision (3) is not required for conformity to Article 2. The Comments to the May draft of Section 2-714 speak to the new language as follows: þThe language regarding commercially reasonable substitution is inserted for discussion to address the following scenario. Seller agrees to sell stock goods, those goods are identified and then destroyed. If the seller had other stock that was the commercially reasonable substitute for the identified goods, this section would not excuse the delivery. In part this narrows the excuse provided by this section back toward the original version of Section 6-613 which allowed an excuse only when the þcontract required for its performance goods identified when the contract was made.þ SECTION 2A-311. TERMINATION; SURVIVAL OF OBLIGATIONS. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), on termination of a lease contract, all obligations that are still executory on both sides are discharged. (b) The following survive termination of a lease contract: (1) a right based on a previous default or performance of the contract (2) a term limiting the scope, manner, method, or location of the exercise of rights in the goods; (3) an obligation of confidentiality, nondisclosure, or noncompetition; (4) an obligation to return or dispose of goods; (5) a choice of law or forum; (6) an obligation to arbitrate or otherwise resolve disputes through alternative dispute resolution procedures; (7) a term limiting the time for commencing an action or for providing notice; (8) an indemnity term; (9) a limitation of remedy or disclaimer of warranty; (10) any term limiting disclosure of information; (11) any right, remedy, or obligation stated in the agreement as surviving; and (12) other rights, remedies, or limitations if in the circumstances such survival is necessary to achieve the purposes of the parties. (c) The obligation under subsection (b)(3) must be promptly performed. (Section 2-310). Drafting Comment þ May 1997 Present Article 2A addresses termination in the section on Termination and Cancellation (present Section 2A-505(2)). That section merely says :þOn termination of the lease contract, all obligations that are still executory on both sides are discharged, but any right based on prior default or performance survives.þ The revised version of present Section 2A-505 (Section 2A-709) deals only with cancellation. The changes in this draft, other than subsection (b)(8), come from decisions of the Article 1 Drafting Committee serving as a coordination committee. Subsection (b)(8) was added by decision of the Article 2A Drafting Committee in February. (Section 2-311) PART 4 EFFECT OF LEASE CONTRACT SECTION 2A-401. ENFORCEABILITY OF LEASE CONTRACT. Except as otherwise provided in this article, a lease contract is effective and enforceable according to its terms between the parties, against purchasers of the goods, and against creditors. SECTION 2A-402. TITLE TO AND POSSESSION OF GOODS. Except as otherwise provided in this article, the application of this article is not affected by whether the lessor or a third party has title to the goods, or the lessor, the lessee, or a third party has possession of the goods, or by any statute or rule of law that possession or the absence of possession is fraudulent. (Section 2-501) SECTION 2A-403. ALIENABILITY OF PARTYþS INTEREST UNDER LEASE CONTRACT OR OF LESSORþS RESIDUAL INTEREST IN GOODS; DELEGATION OF PERFORMANCE; TRANSFER OF RIGHTS. (a) In this section, þcreation of a security interestþ includes the sale of a lease contract that is subject to Article 9 by reason of Section 9-102(1)(b). (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d), a term in a lease agreement which prohibits the voluntary or involuntary transfer, including a transfer by sale, sublease, creation or enforcement of a security interest, or attachment, levy, or other judicial process, of an interest of a party under the lease contract or of the lessorþs residual interest in the goods, or which makes such a transfer an event of default, gives rise to the rights and remedies provided in subsection (e). However, a transfer that is prohibited or is an event of default under the lease agreement is otherwise effective. (c) In a consumer lease, to prohibit the transfer of an interest of a party under the lease contract or to make a transfer an event of default, the language must be specific, be in a record, and be conspicuous. (d) A term of a lease agreement which prohibits the creation or enforcement of a security interest in an interest of a party under the lease contract or in the lessorþs residual interest in the goods, or which makes such a transfer an event of default, is enforceable only to the extent that there is a transfer by the lessee of the lesseeþs right of possession or use of the goods in violation of the provision or a delegation of a material performance of either party to the lease contract in violation of the provision. Neither the granting nor the enforcement of a security interest in the lessorþs interest under the lease contract, or the lessorþs residual interest in the goods, is a transfer that materially impairs the prospect of obtaining return performance by, materially changes the duty of, or materially increases the burden or risk imposed on, the lessee within the meaning of subsection (e) unless, and only to the extent that, there is a delegation of a material performance of the lessor. (e) A term of a lease agreement which prohibits a transfer of a right to damages for default with respect to the whole lease contract or of a right to payment arising out of the transferorþs due performance of the transferorþs entire obligation, or which makes such a transfer an event of default, is not enforceable. Such a transfer is not a transfer that materially impairs the prospect of obtaining return performance by, materially changes the duty of, or materially increases the burden or risk imposed on, the other party to the lease contract within the meaning of subsection (f). (f) Subject to subsections (d) and (e): (1) if a transfer is made that is an event of default under a lease agreement, the other party to the lease contract has the rights and remedies described in Section 2A-702(b) unless that party waives the default or otherwise agrees; and (2) if paragraph (1) does not apply and a transfer is made that is prohibited under a lease agreement or materially impairs the prospect of obtaining return performance by, materially changes the duty of, or materially increases the burden or risk imposed on, the other party to the lease contract, unless the party not making the transfer agrees at any time to the transfer in the lease contract or otherwise or unless limited by contract: (A) the transferor is liable to the party not making the transfer for damages caused by the transfer to the extent that the damages could not reasonably be prevented by the party not making the transfer; and (B) a court having jurisdiction may grant other appropriate relief, including cancellation of the lease contract or an injunction against the transfer. (g) A transfer of þthe leaseþ or of þall my rights under the leaseþ, or a transfer in similar general terms, is a transfer of rights and, unless the language or the circumstances indicate the contrary, as in a transfer for security, the transfer is a delegation of duties by the transferor to the transferee. Acceptance by the transferee constitutes a promise by the transferee to perform those duties. The promise is enforceable by either the transferor or the other party to the lease contract. (h) Unless otherwise agreed by the lessor and the lessee, a delegation of performance does not relieve the transferor as against the other party of any duty to perform or liability for default. (Section 2-503) SECTION 2A-404. SUBSEQUENT LEASE OF GOODS BY LESSOR. (a) Subject to Section 2A-403, a subsequent lessee from a lessor of goods under an existing lease contract obtains, to the extent of the leasehold interest transferred, the leasehold interest which the lessor had or had power to transfer, and except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and (c) and Section 2A-720(d), takes subject to the existing lease contract. (b) A lessor with voidable rights or title acquired in purchase of goods from a transferor that has relinquished possession or control has power to transfer a good leasehold interest to a good-faith, subsequent lessee for value until the transferror regains possession or control, but only to the extent provided in subsection (a). (c) For purposes of this section, a purchase includes a transaction in which: (1) the transferor was deceived as to the identity of the lessor; (2) the delivery was in exchange for a check later dishonored; (3) it was agreed that the transaction was to be a cash sale; or (4) the delivery was procured through fraud punishable under criminal law. (d) A subsequent lessee in the ordinary course of business from a lessor that is a merchant dealing in goods of that kind to which the goods were entrusted by the existing lessee of that lessor before the interest of the subsequent lessee became enforceable against that lessor obtains, to the extent of the leasehold interest transferred, all rights to the goods of that lessor and the existing lessee, and takes free of the existing lease contract. (e) A subsequent lessee from the lessor of goods that are subject to an existing lease contract and are covered by a certificate of title issued under a statute of this State or of another jurisdiction takes no greater rights than those provided both by this section and by the certificate-of-title statute. (Section 2-504) Drafting Comment þ June, 1997 Section 2-504 provides that þentrusting of goods to a merchant . . . gives the merchant and a buyer from that merchant power to transfer all rights and title of the entruster . . .þ Should Article 2A similarly extend the entrusting protection to a lessee from a first lessee that was not itself a lessee in ordinary course? If lessee A entrusts goods to lessor who leases to lessee B who is not a lessee in the ordinary course of business, and lessee B then subleases to lessee C, should lessee C take free of lessee Aþs interest? If lessee B is a lessee in ordinary course, the shelter principle would protect lessee C. If that is the correct rule, is it worth five more words in the statute? SECTION 2A-405. SALE OR SUBLEASE OF GOODS BY LESSEE. (a) Subject to Section 2A-403, a buyer or sublessee from the lessee of goods under an existing lease contract obtains, to the extent of the interest transferred, the leasehold interest in the goods that the lessee had or had power to transfer, and except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) and Section 2A-727(e), takes subject to the existing lease contract. (b) A lessee with a voidable leasehold interest acquired in a lease transaction from a lessor that has relinquished possession or control has power to transfer a good leasehold interest to a good faith buyer for value or a good faith sublessee for value unless the lessor regains possession or control, but only to the extent provided in subsection (a). (c) For purposes of this section, a purchase includes a lease in which: (1) the lessor was deceived as to the identity of the lessee; (2) the delivery was in exchange for a check later dishonored; or (3) the delivery was procured through fraud punishable under criminal law. (d) A buyer in the ordinary course of business or a sublessee in the ordinary course of business from a lessee that is a merchant dealing in goods of that kind to which the goods were entrusted by the lessor obtains, to the extent of the interest transferred, all of the rights of the lessor and lessee to the goods and takes free of the existing lease contract. (e) A buyer or sublessee from the lessee of goods that are subject to an existing lease contract and are covered by a certificate of title issued under a statute of this State or of another jurisdiction takes no greater rights than those provided both by this section and by the certificate-of-title statute. (Section 2-504) SECTION 2A-406. PRIORITY OF CERTAIN LIENS ARISING BY OPERATION OF LAW. If a person in the ordinary course of its business furnishes services or materials with respect to goods subject to a lease contract, a lien upon those goods in the possession of that person given by statute or rule of law for those materials or services has priority over any interest of the lessor or lessee under the lease contract or this article unless the lien is created by statute and the statute provides otherwise, or the lien is created by rule of law and the rule of law provides otherwise. SECTION 2A-407. PRIORITY OF LIENS ARISING BY ATTACHMENT OR LEVY ON, SECURITY INTERESTS IN, AND OTHER CLAIMS TO GOODS. (a) Except as otherwise provided in Section 2A-406, a creditor of a lessee takes subject to the lease contract. (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d) and Sections 2A-406 and 2A-408, a creditor of a lessor takes subject to the lease contract unless: (1) the creditor holds a lien that attached to the goods before the lease contract became enforceable; (2) the creditor holds a security interest in the goods and the lessee did not give value and receive delivery of the goods without knowledge of the security interest; or (3) the creditor holds a security interest in the goods which was perfected under Article 9 before the lease contract became enforceable. (c) A lessee in the ordinary course of business takes the leasehold interest free of a security interest in the goods created by the lessor even if the security interest is perfected under Article 9 and the lessee knows of its existence. (d) A lessee other than a lessee in the ordinary course of business takes a leasehold interest free of a security interest to the extent that it secures future advances made after the secured party acquires knowledge of the lease or more than 45 days after the lease contract becomes enforceable, whichever first occurs, unless the future advances are made pursuant to a commitment entered into without knowledge of the lease and before the expiration of the 45-day period. Drafting Comment þ January, 1997 Subsections (b)(2), (b)(3), (c), and (d) of Section 2A-407 will be included in Article 9 when the Article 9 revision is complete. The Article 9 package of amendments should include repeal of those parts of Section 2A-407. The Article 9 Drafting Committee will be told that the Article 2A Committee is happy with the substance of the rules be transferred to Article 9. SECTION 2A-408. SPECIAL RIGHTS OF CREDITORS. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsections (b) and (c), the rights of creditors of the lessor with respect to goods identified to a lease contract and retained by the lessor are subject to the lesseeþs rights under Sections 2A-709, 2A-723(d), and 2A-738 if the lesseeþs rights vest before a creditorþs claim in rem attaches to the goods. (b) A creditor of a lessor which has retained possession of goods subject to a lease contract may treat the lease contract as void or voidable if, as against the creditor, retention of possession by the lessor is fraudulent or void or voidable under any statute or rule of law. However, it is not fraudulent for a lessor, for a commercially reasonable time after the goods are identified to the lease to retain possession in good faith and current course of trade. (c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (a), this article does not impair the rights of a creditor of the lessor in a case in which identification to the lease contract or delivery is made other than in current course of trade but in satisfaction of or as security for a preexisting claim for money, security, or the like and under circumstances such that the transaction would constitute a fraudulent transfer or voidable preference under a statute or rule of law other than this section. (d) A creditor of a seller may treat a sale or an identification of goods to a contract for sale as void or voidable if, as against the creditor, retention of possession by the seller is fraudulent or void or voidable under any statute or rule of law. However, it is not fraudulent for a seller to retain possession of the goods pursuant to a lease contract entered into by the seller as lessee and the buyer as lessor in connection with the sale or identification of the goods if the buyer bought for value and in good faith. (Section 2-505) Drafting Comment þ June, 1997 The coordination group, at its May, 1997, meeting, suggested that the reference to Article 9 is not necessary. In present Section 2A-308 there is no reference to Article 9. SECTION 2A-409. RIGHTS OF LESSOR AND LESSEE WHEN GOODS BECOME FIXTURES. (a) In this section: (1) þEncumbranceþ includes a real estate mortgage, other lien on real estate, and any other right in real estate which is not an ownership interest. (1) þfixturesþ means goods that have become so related to particular real estate that an interest in them arises under real estate law; (2) þfixture filingþ means a filing, in the office where a mortgage on the real estate would be filed or recorded, of a financing statement covering goods that are or are to become fixtures and conforming to the requirements of Section 9-502(a); (3) þpurchase money leaseþ means a lease in which the lessee does not have possession or use of the goods or the right to possession or use of the goods [before] [until] the lease agreement is enforceable; (4) A mortgage is a þconstruction mortgage toþ the extent that it secures an obligation incurred for the construction of an improvement on land including the acquisition cost of the land, if the recorded record so indicates. (b) A lease under this article may be of goods that are fixtures or may continue in goods that become fixtures, but there may be no lease under this article of ordinary building materials incorporated into an improvement on land. (c) This article does not prevent creation of a lease of fixtures under real estate law. (d) The perfected interest of a lessor of fixtures has priority over a conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of the real estate if: (1) except as otherwise provided in subsection (f), the lease is a purchase money lease, the interest of the encumbrancer or owner arises before the goods become fixtures, the interest of the lessor is perfected by a fixture filing before the goods become fixtures or within 10 days thereafter, and the lessee has an interest of record in the real estate or is in possession of the real estate; or (2) the interest of the lessor is perfected by a fixture filing before the interest of the encumbrancer or owner is of record, the lessorþs interest has priority over any conflicting interest of a predecessor in title of the encumbrancer or owner, and the lessee has an interest of record in the real estate or is in possession of the real estate. (e) The interest of a lessor of fixtures, whether or not perfected, has priority over the conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of the real estate if: (1) the fixtures are readily removable factory or office machines, readily removable equipment that is not primarily used or leased for use in the operation of the real estate, or readily removable replacements of domestic appliances that are goods subject to a consumer lease, and before the goods become fixtures the lease contract is enforceable; or (2) the conflicting interest is a lien on the real estate obtained by legal or equitable proceedings after the lease contract is enforceable; or (3) the encumbrancer or owner has, in a [signed] [authenticated] record, consented to the lease or has disclaimed an interest in the goods as fixtures; or (4) the lessee has a right to remove the goods as against the encumbrancer or owner. If the lesseeþs right to remove terminates, the priority of the interest of the lessor continues for a reasonable time. (f) Subject to subsections (d) and (e), the interest of a lessor of fixtures, including the lessorþs residual interest, is subordinate to the conflicting interest of an encumbrancer of the real estate under a construction mortgage recorded before the goods become fixtures if the goods become fixtures before the completion of the construction. To the extent that it is given to refinance a construction mortgage, a mortgage has this priority to the same extent as the construction mortgage. (g) In cases not within subsections (c) through (g), priority between the interest of a lessor of fixtures, including the lessorþs residual interest, and the conflicting interest of an encumbrancer or owner of the real estate who is not the lessee is determined by the priority rules governing conflicting interests in real estate. (h) If the interest of a lessor of fixtures, including the lessorþs residual interest, has priority over all owners and encumbrancers of the real estate, the lessor or the lessee may on default, expiration, termination, or cancellation of the lease contract but subject to the lease agreement and this article, or if necessary to enforce other rights of the lessor or lessee under this article, remove the goods from the real estate, free and clear of all conflicting interests of all owners and encumbrancers of the real estate. However, the lessor or lessee shall reimburse any encumbrancer or owner of the real estate that is not the lessee and who has not otherwise agreed for the cost of repair of any physical injury, but not for any diminution in value of the real estate caused by the absence of the goods removed or by any necessity of replacing them. A person entitled to reimbursement may refuse permission to remove until the party seeking removal gives adequate security for the performance of this obligation. (i) Even if the lease agreement does not create a security interest, the interest of a lessor of fixtures, including the lessorþs residual interest, is perfected by filing a financing statement as a fixture filing for leased goods that are or are to become fixtures in accordance with the relevant provisions of Article 9. SECTION 2A-410. LESSORþS AND LESSEEþS RIGHTS WHEN GOODS BECOME ACCESSIONS. (a) þAccessionþ mean goods that [are [installed in or affixed to other goods] [physically united with other goods in a manner such that the identity of the original goods is lost]. (b) Except as provided in subsection (d), the interest of a lessor or a lessee under a lease contract entered into before the goods an accession is superior to all interests in the whole. (c) Except as provided in subsection (d) the interest of a lessor or a lessee under a lease contract entered into at the time or after the goods became accessions is valid against all persons subsequently acquiring interests in the whole but is invalid against any person with an interest in the whole which has not, in a record consented to the lease or disclaimed an interest in the goods as part of the whole. (d) The interest of a lessor or a lessee under a lease contract described in subsection (b) or (c) is subordinate to the interest of (1) a buyer in the ordinary course of business or a lessee in the ordinary course of business of any interest in the whole acquired after the goods became accessions; or (2) a creditor with a security interest in the whole perfected before the lease contract was made to the extent that the creditor makes subsequent advances without knowledge of the lease contract. (e) If under this section a lessor or lessee holds an interest in accessions which has priority over the claims of all persons that have interests in the whole, the lessor or lessee may on default, expiration, termination, or cancellation of the lease contract by the other party but subject to the provisions of the lease contract and this article or, if necessary to enforce other rights under this article, remove the goods from the whole. However, the lessor or lessee shall reimburse any holder of an interest in the whole which is not the lessee and which has not otherwise agreed for the cost of repair of any physical injury but not for any diminution in value of the whole caused by the absence of the goods removed or by any necessity for replacing them. A person entitled to reimbursement may refuse permission to remove the goods until the party seeking removal gives adequate security for the performance of this obligation. Drafting Note þ May, 1997 The April 14, 1997 draft of Article 9 has completely rewritten and substantially changed the substance of its accessions section (Section 9-332). The new draft treats all parts of the whole as separate accessions when a new part subject to a separate security interest is added. If, for example, SP-1 has a security interest in a tractor and SP-2 has a security interest in a new engine added to the tractor, both SP-1 and SP-2 now have an accession interest. Carrying out that line of thought, the accessions section states that other provisions of Article 9 determine priorities between the two parties. The new section also provides that a security interest in an accession loses to a security interest in the whole that is perfected by compliance with a certificate of title law. Since Article 2A cannot leave priority issues to other provisions of Article 2A, Article 2A probably should continue its present accession rules. If so, the Committee should reject the alternative underlined definition of accession se out above. The Committee should consider whether it wishes to permit persons who deal with the whole through certificates of title to take priority over a lessorþs interest in accessions to the certificate of title goods. A copy of new Section 9-332 is attached to the notes accompanying this draft. SECTION 2A-411. PRIORITY SUBJECT TO SUBORDINATION. Nothing in this article prevents subordination by agreement by any person entitled to priority. PART 5 WARRANTIES SECTION 2A-501. DEFINITIONS. In this part: (1) þDamageþ means all loss resulting in the ordinary course from a breach of warranty, including injury to a person or property as permitted in Section 2A-707. (2) þGoodsþ includes a component incorporated in substantially the same condition in other goods. (3) þImmediate lesseeþ means a lessee in privity of contract with the lessor. (4) þRemote lesseeþ means a lessee from a lessor other than the lessor or seller against which a claim for breach of warranty is asserted. (5) þRepresentationþ means a description, demonstration, or depiction of the goods, an affirmation of fact relating to the goods, or a sample or model of the goods. Drafting Comment þ June, 1997 The definition of representation is moved from Section 2A-503. (Section 2-401) SECTION 2A-502. WARRANTY AGAINST INTERFERENCE AND AGAINST INFRINGEMENT; LESSEEþS OBLIGATION AGAINST INFRINGEMENT. (a) Except in a finance lease, a lessor in a lease contract warrants that, except for claims by any person by way of infringement or the like, for the duration of the lease no person holds a: (1) claim to or interest in the goods which will interfere with the lesseeþs enjoyment of its leasehold interest, or (2) colorable claim to or interest in the goods which will unreasonably expose the lessee to litigation. (b) A finance lessor warrants that, except for claims by way of infringement or the like, for the duration of the lease no person holds a: (1) claim or interest in the goods that arose from an act or omission of the lessor which will interfere with the lesseeþs enjoyment of its leasehold interest, or (2) colorable claim to or interest in the goods that arose from an act or omission of the lessor which will unreasonably expose the lessee to litigation. (c) Except in a finance lease, a lessor that is a merchant regularly dealing in goods of the kind warrants that the goods will be delivered free of the rightful claim of a third party by way of infringement or the like. However, a lessee that furnishes specifications to the lessor holds the lessor harmless against any claim of infringement or the like that arises out of compliance with the specifications. (d) A warranty under subsections (a) through (c) may be disclaimed or modified only by express language or by circumstances giving the lessee reason to know that the lessor purports to transfer only such right as the lessor or a third party may have. In an electronic transaction that does not involve review of the record by an individual, language is sufficient if it is conspicuous and related to the warranty against third party claims. Otherwise, language in a record is sufficient to disclaim warranties under this section if it is conspicuous and states þThere is no warranty against third-party claims that may interfere with lesseeþs enjoyment of his leasehold interest or against infringement in this leaseþ, or words of similar import. (e) A lessorþs warranty under this section, made to an immediate lessee, extends to any remote lessee that may be reasonably expected to lease the goods and which suffers damage from breach of the warranty. The rights and remedies of a remote lessee against the lessor for breach of the warranty are determined by the terms of the contract between the lessor and the immediate lessee and this article. (Section 2-402) Drafting Comment The warranties under present Section 2A-211 are too narrow. A non-finance lessor presently warrants only against its own conduct which affects lesseeþs quite enjoyment of the lease, and finance lessors seem to make no warranty even against their own acts, though a court could probably deal with that. Present Section 2A-214(4) states the rules for disclaimer of warranties under this section. At the February meeting, the Committee recommended that þcolorable claimsþ be dealt with in a separate sentence. Is the above draft satisfactory? SECTION 2A-503. EXPRESS WARRANTIES TO IMMEDIATE LESSEE. (a) If a lessor makes a representation or promise relating to the goods to an immediate lessee the representation or the promise becomes part of the agreement, unless a reasonable person in the position of the immediate lessee would not believe that the representation or promise became part of the agreement or would believe that the representation was merely of the value of the goods or purported to be merely the sellerþs opinion or commendation of the goods. An obligation may be created under this section even though the lessor does not use formal words such as þwarrantyþ or þguaranty.þ (b) A representation or a promise that becomes part of the agreement is an express warranty and the lessor has an obligation to the immediate lessee that the goods will conform to the representation, or, if a sample is involved, that the whole of the goods will conform to the sample, or that the promise will be performed. The obligation is breached if the goods do not conform to any representation at the time when tender of delivery was completed or if the promise was not performed when due. (c) A lessorþs obligation to the immediate lessee under this section may be created by representations and promises made in a medium for communication to the public, including advertising, if the immediate lessee has knowledge of them at the time of the agreement. (Section 2-403) SECTION 2A-504. IMPLIED WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY; USAGE OF TRADE. (a) Except in a finance lease and subject to Section 2A-506, a lessor that is a merchant with respect to goods of that kind makes in a lease contract an implied warranty that the goods are merchantable. (b) To be merchantable, goods at a minimum must: (1) pass without objection in the trade under the contract description; (2) in the case of fungible goods, be of fair, average quality within the description; (3) be fit for the ordinary purposes for which goods of that description are used; (4) run, within the variation permitted by the lease agreement, of even kind, quality, and quantity within each unit and among all units involved; (5) be adequately contained, packaged, and labeled as the lease agreement or circumstances may require; and (6) conform to promises or affirmations of fact made on the container or label, if any. (c) Subject to 2A-506, implied warranties other than those described in this section may arise from course of dealing or usage of trade. (Section 2-404) SECTION 2A-505. IMPLIED WARRANTY OF FITNESS FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Except in a finance lease and subject to Section 2A-506, if a lessor at the time of contracting has reason to know any particular purpose for which the goods are required and that the lessee is relying on the lessorþs skill or judgment to select or furnish suitable goods, there is an implied warranty that the goods are fit for that purpose. (Section 2-405) Drafting Comment þ June, 1997 Section 2B-405 contains a special fitness warranty that components of an integrated system will work together. See Section 2B-405(b). Should Article 2A contain that warranty in addition to the general fitness warranty? SECTION 2A-506. DISCLAIMER OR MODIFICATION OF WARRANTY. (a) Language or conduct relevant to the creation of an express warranty and language or conduct tending to disclaim or modify an express warranty must be construed wherever reasonable as consistent with each other. Subject to Section 2A-202 with regard to parol or extrinsic evidence, language or conduct disclaiming or modifying an express warranty is ineffective to the extent that this construction is unreasonable. (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c) or (e), an implied warranty is disclaimed or modified by language or an expression that, under the circumstances, makes it clear that the implied warranty has been disclaimed or modified. An implied warranty may also be disclaimed or modified by course of performance, course of dealing, or usage of trade. (c) Except as otherwise provided in Section 2A-502(d) and subsection (e), language in a record is sufficient to disclaim or modify an implied warranty if the language is conspicuous and: (1) in the case of the implied warranty of merchantability, mentions merchantability; (2) in the case of the implied warranty of fitness, states that þthe goods are not warranted to be fit for any particular purposeþ or words of similar import; (3) unless the circumstances indicate otherwise, states that the goods are leased þas isþ or þwith all faultsþ or words of similar import. (d) If a lessee before entering into a contract, has examined the goods, sample, or model as fully as desired or has declined to examine them, there is no implied warranty with regard to conditions that an examination in the circumstances would have revealed to the lessee. (e) Language in a consumer lease contract is sufficient to disclaim or modify an implied warranty only if: (1) At the time of contracting, a lessor in good faith passes through to a lessee an express warranty obligation created by a seller under Section 2-408(a) that is reasonable in scope, duration and remedies and there is conspicuous language in a record stating, for example, þYou are receiving an express warranty obligation from the