97-5540. Central Title and Lien Registry for Limited Access Permits  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 44 (Thursday, March 6, 1997)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 10249-10252]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-5540]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
    
    50 CFR Part 600
    
    [Docket No. 970213030-7030-01; I.D. 020597B]
    RIN: 0648-AJ77
    
    
    Central Title and Lien Registry for Limited Access Permits
    
    AGENCY: National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and 
    Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: NMFS requests comments about a central registry (Registry) for 
    limited access permits (LAPs). The Magnuson-Stevens Fishery 
    Conservation and Management Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) requires us to 
    establish the Registry. The Registry will be the exclusive means of 
    perfecting title to LAPs. It will also be the exclusive means of 
    perfecting security interests in, assignments of, and liens and other 
    encumbrances (collectively Liens) against LAPs.
        We want the public's guidance before proposing regulations.
    
    DATES: Comments must be submitted by April 7, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send comments to: Michael L. Grable, Chief, Financial 
    Services Division, NMFS, 1315 East West Highway, Silver Spring, MD 
    20910.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michael L. Grable at (301) 713-2390.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Conservation and management sometimes 
    requires limiting access to Federally-managed fisheries. Only parties 
    with LAPs can fish in these fisheries. Some LAPs are transferable 
    independently of fishing vessels (Transferable). Others are not.
        The Sustainable Fisheries Act of 1996 (SFA) is Public Law 104-297. 
    The SFA amended the Magnuson-Stevens Act. One SFA provision requires 
    NMFS to establish the Registry:
    
        * * * the Secretary [of Commerce] shall establish an exclusive 
    central registry system (which may be administered on a regional 
    basis) for limited access system permits established under section 
    303(b)(6) or other Federal law, including individual fishing quotas, 
    which shall provide for the registration of title to, and interests 
    in, such permits * * *.
    
        Section 110(d) of the SFA makes the Registry the legally exclusive 
    means of perfecting LAP titles and Liens (except Federal tax Liens).
        Before establishing the Registry, NMFS wants the public's guidance. 
    We welcome comments from anyone, but particularly want guidance from:
        1. Fisheries parties who will buy and sell LAPs,
        2. Creditors and other parties who will file Liens for registration 
    against LAPs, and
        3. The Regional Fishery Management Councils.
        We welcome comments about any Registry aspect, but particularly 
    want guidance about the following:
        1. Who should administer the Registry?
        The SFA allows us either to administer the Registry or contract for 
    its administration. We are considering the former alternative because:
        a. The Registry's perpetual nature requires continuity,
        b. Similar functions often appear to be governmentally 
    administered, and
        c. Many Registry title aspects involve LAP administration functions 
    we already perform.
        Should we administer the Registry, or should we contract for its 
    administration? Which is the better alternative, and why?
        2. Where should we locate the Registry?
        Almost 90 per cent of all Transferable LAPs involve Alaska's 
    fisheries. NMFS' Regional Office in Juneau, AK, administers these 
    through its Restricted Access Management (RAM) Division.
        If we administer the Registry, Juneau, AK, could be the most 
    efficient and effective Registry location and the RAM Division the 
    Registry's most suitable manager. A comparable example of a centralized 
    national registry is the U.S. Coast Guard's National Vessel 
    Documentation Center (NVDC) in Falling Waters, WV.
        A centralized Registry could consider ways to facilitate filings 
    from all parts of the country. One alternative could be similar to a 
    NVDC approach that allows facsimile filings contingent upon receiving 
    original documentation within 10 calendar days. If we adopted this 
    approach, a facsimile's date and time could be the date and time of 
    perfection if the original documentation were timely received. 
    Otherwise, the date and time the Registry received the original 
    documentation would be the date and time of perfection.
        The centralization alternative includes only the Registry portion 
    of LAP functions. Regular LAP administrative functions (issuance, 
    renewal, transfer approval, etc.) would remain in their present 
    regional locations.
        3. Should the Registry register LAPs that are not Transferable?
        About 60 per cent of all LAPs are Transferable. They can be bought 
    and sold. They have market value. They can be pledged as collateral.
        The other 40 per cent are not Transferable. They cannot be 
    independently bought and sold. They have no independent market value. 
    They are not useful as collateral. Most of them generally follow the 
    titles of the fishing vessels to which they relate. They have no 
    commercial significance apart from those vessels.
        Although the SFA does not limit registration to Transferable LAPs, 
    we question whether there is a practical reason to register LAPs that 
    are not Transferable. The Registry's purpose is perfecting title to, 
    and Liens against, LAPs. This benefits LAP buyers, sellers, lenders, 
    and other lienholders. LAPs that are not Transferable do not separately 
    involve any of these parties.
        4. Should initial title registration be voluntary or mandatory for 
    all Transferable LAPs?
        In the first alternative, registration would be voluntary for all 
    Transferable LAPs, except those to which title transfers, or against 
    which Liens, were filed for registration. Registration would be 
    mandatory for the excepted LAPs. The Registry would, without LAP holder 
    requests, register these LAPs and bill LAP holders for the registration 
    fees.
        In the second alternative, registration of all Transferable LAPS 
    would be mandatory. This might produce a more stable and dependable 
    Registry that affords all LAP holders, buyers, lenders, and other 
    lienholders greater security and assurance. Potential objections to 
    mandatory registration, however, include:
        a. Those planning neither to sell nor pledge their LAPs might 
    object to mandatory registration's time and cost,
        b. Mandatory registration could be burdensome for seasonal LAPs, 
    and
        c. Registering all LAPs might cause unnecessary Government work.
        Regular LAP administration records disclose the authorized holders 
    of all LAPs. We could automatically register title in the names of the 
    authorized holders and charge a moderate fee for it (the SFA requires a 
    fee). This would minimize the time and cost of mandatory registration. 
    The alternative in question No. 5 might minimize the seasonal LAP 
    problem.
        5. How should the Registry treat seasonal LAPs that merely allocate 
    periodic catch quantities for continuous LAPs?
        The Pacific halibut and sablefish fishery, for example, has two 
    types of LAPs. The first type is Quota Share (Access) permits. These 
    are continuous
    
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    LAPs allowing access to the fishery. The second type is Individual 
    Fishing Quota (Allocation) permits. These are seasonal LAPs that 
    annually allocate the amount of fish each Access permit holder may 
    catch that season. Allocation permit holders may transfer only 10 per 
    cent of allocated catch quantity.
        Separately including this fishery's Allocation permits in the 
    Registry would be burdensome and complicated for everyone. Excluding 
    Allocation permits could compromise minor commercial interests in the 
    Allocation permit's limited transferability, but the time and expense 
    of doing otherwise might not be worth the limited benefit.
        One alternative we are considering would be for initial title 
    registration of this fishery's Access permits (and payment of the 
    registration fee) to include automatic registration of all subsequent 
    Allocation permits (in the name of the LAP title holders of record and 
    without payment of additional registration fees). This would prevent 
    Access permit holders from having each year to register their seasonal 
    Allocation permits and pay annual registration fees. Under this 
    alternative, Liens against the Access permits would also encumber the 
    corresponding Allocation permits.
        6. How should we determine LAP ``value''?
        The SFA limits Registry fees to amounts not exceeding 0.5 per cent 
    of LAP ``value.'' Fees may be less, but not more, than this. We must 
    determine the ``value'' of all LAPs included in the Registry.
        Some LAPs have commonly known market values. We have market-value 
    ranges for other LAPs because buyers and sellers have disclosed 
    purchase prices to us. There may, however, be little or no market-value 
    data for some LAPs.
        Valuation problems should mostly be limited to initial title 
    registration. The registration of subsequent title transfers should 
    involve purchase prices or other consideration that we can objectively 
    value. Where known, we could apply market values to LAPs transferred by 
    gift, trade, or inheritance.
        If initial registration fees are a modest flat fee for all, the 
    valuation problem might be mostly limited to determining that the fee 
    does not exceed 0.5 per cent of the ``value'' of LAPs for which little 
    or no market data exists. We are unsure how to establish the ``value'' 
    of these LAPs.
        7. What fees should the Registry charge?
        The SFA requires fees for initial title registration (Initial Fee) 
    and subsequent title-transfer registration (Transfer Fee). It does not 
    authorize fees for registering Liens (or their renewal, release, 
    assumption, assignment, etc.) or for any other Registry service.
        Presumably, Registry fees should offset Registry expenses.
        Unless fees other than the specifically authorized ones are 
    possible, title and title-transfer registrants will have to bear the 
    cost of all Registry services. Although it might be more equitable if 
    the Registry could also charge the cost of Lien or other services to 
    those seeking them, the SFA does not authorize this.
        How should we determine the Initial Fee? Should it be a modest flat 
    fee or 0.5 per cent of market value, whichever is less? If so, what 
    should control the flat fee's amount? Should it, instead, be a 
    specified percentage (not exceeding 0.5%) of market value? If so, what 
    should control the percentage's amount? Should we publish a schedule of 
    average market values representative of various LAPs and base the 
    percentage on those values?
        Under the mandatory title-registration alternative, the Initial Fee 
    could be moderate. There are about 23,000 Transferable LAPs, if Pacific 
    halibut and sablefish Allocation permits are included. If not, there 
    are about 14,500. Under the voluntary title-registration alternative, 
    however, the Initial Fee may have to be substantially higher.
        How should we determine the Transfer fee, and what should control 
    its amount? Should it be a specified percentage (within the statutory 
    maximum) of LAP purchase price? If so, what should control the 
    percentage's amount? This alternative could include provisions to 
    determine market value for LAP gifts, inheritances, trades, and other 
    title transfers involving considerations other than market value.
        Recent title-transfer activity for Transferable LAPs indicates 
    about 2,300 title transfers annually.
        8. How should we respond when LAP holders required to register LAP 
    titles and pay registration fees do not do so?
        This would apply to all LAP holders included in a mandatory 
    Registry. In a voluntary Registry, it would apply only to those who 
    sell or pledge their LAPs or whose LAPs are otherwise subjected to 
    Liens. The Registry must be able to compel appropriate performance. How 
    should it do this? What should the penalties be?
        9. What Lien registrations should the Registry allow?
        One alternative we are considering would limit registerable Liens 
    to:
        a. Secured interests in LAPs to which the LAPs' holders have, by 
    their signatures, consented,
        b. Liens authorized or constituted by the judgments or orders of 
    duly constituted courts of competent jurisdiction, and
        c. Other Liens authorized by State or Federal statute.
        Should the Registry allow other types of Liens to be registered? 
    Why? Could this create problems or be burdensome?
        10. Should the Registry attempt to validate any title or Lien?
        One alternative we are considering is to accept the validity of 
    title or Lien filings that meet the Registry's minimal filing 
    requirements. Under this alternative, the Registry would not attempt to 
    determine the completeness, accuracy, or validity of any documents 
    filed.
        11. Should the Registry do anything to help prevent unauthorized 
    signatures?
        One alternative might be requiring signatures to be notarized. 
    Would this be useful? Is there a better approach?
        12. Should the Registry require using a standard form for filing 
    Liens for registration?
        One alternative we are considering is to require using a form 
    fulfilling the Registry's minimum filing requirements. This seems to be 
    the practice under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC). For consensual 
    Liens, the Registry could require both the lienholder and the LAP 
    holder to sign this form. Nonconsensual Liens would not require the LAP 
    holder's signature, but could require specifying the nature of, and 
    authority for, the nonconsensual Liens. All forms could identify: the 
    name and address of the LAP holder, the name and address of the 
    lienholder, the LAP against which the Lien is to be registered, and the 
    effective date of the Lien.
        Would the use of a standard form expedite registration or make it 
    more reliable? If so, what should the form require?
        13. Should Lien filing forms be accompanied by the Lien 
    documentation upon which the filings are based?
        If the Registry were to register all Liens that met its minimal 
    filing requirements, should Lien documentation accompany Lien filing 
    forms? If so, why, and what should the Registry do with this 
    documentation?
        14. Should Lien registrations require periodic renewal?
        One alternative we are considering is for Lien registrations to 
    expire if lienholders do not renew them within a certain time. This 
    seems to be the UCC practice. If we should adopt this alternative, what 
    should the periodic renewal period be?
        15. How should the Registry handle registering Lien releases?
    
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        The UCC practice seems to involve release forms signed by 
    lienholders.
        16. What Lien data should the Registry register, and how long 
    should the Registry maintain them?
        Should the Registry register only lienholders' names and addresses? 
    Would registering other Lien characteristics (e.g., nature, amount, and 
    maturity) be useful? Should the Registry perpetually maintain all Lien 
    data or periodically purge all data about terminated Liens?
        17. Should the Registry require using a specific form for filing 
    LAP title transfers for registration and, if so, what should it 
    include?
        We are considering this alternative, because it might expedite 
    title-transfer registration or make it more reliable.
        For voluntary transfers, the form could be signed by the LAP seller 
    and purchaser and could include: the identity of the LAP whose title 
    seller transfers to purchaser, the date seller transfers title to 
    purchaser, and the accompanying instrument evidencing seller's transfer 
    of title to purchaser.
        For involuntary transfers, the form could be signed by the party to 
    whom title involuntarily transfers and include: the identity of the LAP 
    interest whose title involuntarily transfers, the date title 
    involuntarily transfers, and the nature of the accompanying instrument 
    evidencing involuntary title transfer.
        18. Should any evidence of title transfer the Registry might 
    require contain original signatures or would a copy of the original 
    evidence be sufficient?
        19. Should the Registry perpetually maintain any evidence of title 
    transfer it might require?
        20. Should the Registry make available for public inspection any 
    evidence of title transfer it might maintain and, if so, how and under 
    what circumstances?
        21. Should the Registry provide title abstracts (or any other 
    written record of LAP title and lien registration)?
        The statute does not authorize the Registry to charge fees for this 
    purpose. If the Registry provided this, its cost might have to be 
    recovered primarily from fees that the statute authorizes the Registry 
    to collect for title transfers. What would the effect be if the 
    Registry did not provide this? If it did, should it limit provision to 
    certain users for certain purposes? What data should this include?
        22. How should the Registry best provide for nonjudicial 
    foreclosure (NJF)?
        The SFA requires the Registry to provide:
    
    * * * a mechanism for filing notice of a nonjudicial foreclosure * * 
    * by which the holder of a senior security interest acquires or 
    conveys ownership of a permit * * * [and] the interests of the 
    holders of junior security interests are released when the permit is 
    transferred * * *.
    
        How should the Registry best comply? One alternative we are 
    considering is adapting the UCC's NJF procedure. Under this 
    alternative, we would register an NJF title transfer only if one of the 
    following two conditions apply:
        a. The LAP holder and all registered lienholders junior (Junior 
    Lienholders) to the senior security interest being foreclosed 
    nonjudicially (NJF Security) first notify the Registry in writing that 
    they consent to the recordation of the NJF title transfer; or
        b. Absent such consent:
        i. The holder of the NJF Security (NJF Lienholder) certifies to the 
    Registry that the NJF Lienholder:
        A. Is contractually entitled to NJF,
        B. Has, at least 21 calendar days before such certification, 
    notified the LAP Holder and all Junior Lienholders and given the LAP 
    Holder and all Junior Lienholders the opportunity to object in writing 
    to the Registry about the NJF title transfer; and
        ii. The Registry has received no such objection.
        If either of these two conditions apply, the Registry would 
    register NJF title transfer to the NJF Lienholder.
        If neither of these two conditions applied, the Registry would not 
    register NJF title transfer.
        All NJF title transfers would release only such registered Liens as 
    are junior to the NJF Security. The Registry would not release any 
    registered Liens senior to the NJF security, and the title transferred 
    by NJF would continue subject to the unreleased Liens.
        We would not adjudicate conflicting interests. Conflicting 
    interests would have either to be settled by the consent of all 
    relevant parties or by adjudication in a duly constituted court of 
    competent jurisdiction.
        Are there better ways to implement the NJF provisions? What are 
    they and why are they better than the alternative suggested here?
        23. If we adopt the alternative suggested in question No. 22, what 
    certification requirements should the Registry impose?
        One alternative we are considering is a certification, pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. 1746, that:
        a. The NJF Lienholder gave NJF title transfer notice, at least 21 
    calendar days before such certification, to the LAP holder and all 
    Junior Lienholders,
        b. Such notice was in writing and delivered to the LAP holder and 
    each Junior Lienholder both at the address of record maintained at the 
    Registry for the LAP Holder and each Junior Lienholder and at such 
    other address as the NJF Lienholder may have had cause to have known 
    was a better address,
        c. Such notice contained the notice language required by the 
    Registry's regulations,
        d. The NJF Lienholder is contractually entitled to NJF, and
        e. Such certification is made in good faith and without any design 
    to hinder, delay, or defraud the LAP holder or any present or future 
    lienholder or creditor of the LAP holder.
        24. When NJF title transfer is based on consent, should the 
    Registry require using a standard filing form?
        25. When NJF title transfer is based on certification, should the 
    Registry require using a standard form of certification?
        26. Under what circumstances should the Registry register title 
    transfer by judicial foreclosure, as a result of judgment enforcement, 
    or otherwise by involuntary transfer?
        The SFA provides that the Registry shall provide:
    
        * * *procedures for changes in the registration of title to such 
    permits upon the occurrence of involuntary transfers, judicial* * * 
    foreclosure of interests, enforcement of judgments thereon, and 
    related matters deemed appropriate* * *.
    
        The Registry would register judgments as Liens against LAP title. 
    One alternative we are considering, however, is that the Registry would 
    not register LAP title transfer by judicial foreclosure (or as a result 
    of judgment enforcement or other involuntary transfer) unless the party 
    judicially foreclosing (or enforcing a judgment or causing an 
    involuntary transfer) presented to the Registry a bill of sale (or 
    other instrument causing title transfer) issued pursuant to, or 
    confirmed by, the order of a duly constituted court of competent 
    jurisdiction.
        27. How best should the Registry provide public access to Registry 
    data, and what Registry data should be public?
        We are considering putting Registry data on the Internet. Are there 
    additional or better ways of providing public access to Registry data?
        We are considering making the following data publicly available
        a. LAP fishery;
        b. LAP nature;
        c. LAP holder's name and address (tax identification number and 
    other protected or confidential data would be excluded);
        d. Chronological listing of all LAP Lien data (including names and
    
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    addresses of all lienholders and recordation dates for: initial 
    recordation, renewal, expiration, release, assumptions, assignments, 
    etc.); and
        e. Complete chain of post-Registry LAP title, including the name 
    and address of each party to whom LAP title has been registered and the 
    date of each such title registration.
        28. How should the Registry best provide for the perfection of pre-
    Registry Liens?
        The SFA provides that:
    
        Security interests on * * * [LAPs] that are effective and 
    perfected by otherwise applicable law on the date of the final 
    regulations implementing * * * [the Registry] shall remain effective 
    and perfected if, within 120 days after such date, the secured party 
    submits evidence satisfactory to * * * [the Registry] and in 
    compliance with such regulations of the perfection of the security.
    
        The UCC is (in UCC States) the only ``otherwise applicable law'' 
    known to us under which pre-Registry Liens against LAPs could have been 
    ``perfected.'' Should we give priority to Liens perfected under the UCC 
    in strict chronological precedence regardless of the UCC jurisdiction 
    involved? If so, what evidence of UCC perfection and its chronological 
    precedence should we require?
        Are there any other ``otherwise applicable laws'' that we should 
    consider? If so, how would they relate to perfection under the UCC?
        What should the regulations require?
        Before the SFA, we had informally allowed lienholders to register 
    with the RAM Division their Liens against Alaska LAPs. These informal 
    filings are not ``perfected by otherwise applicable law'' and we cannot 
    consider them in determining pre-Registry Lien priorities.
        We welcome all comments on any other Registry aspects.
        This advance notice of proposed rulemaking has been determined to 
    be not significant for purposes of E.O. 12866.
    
        Dated: February 28, 1997.
    Nancy Foster,
    Deputy Assistant Administrator for Fisheries, National Marine Fisheries 
    Service.
    [FR Doc. 97-5540 Filed 3-5-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-22-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/06/1997
Department:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Advance notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.
Document Number:
97-5540
Dates:
Comments must be submitted by April 7, 1997.
Pages:
10249-10252 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 970213030-7030-01, I.D. 020597B
PDF File:
97-5540.pdf
CFR: (1)
50 CFR 600