ITT Cmercl Fin Corp v. Bank of the West ( 1999 )


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  •                       Revised February 9, 1999
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _____________________
    No. 97-50500
    _____________________
    ITT COMMERCIAL FINANCE CORPORATION,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    BANK OF THE WEST,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Western District of Texas
    _________________________________________________________________
    January 20, 1999
    Before KING, Chief Judge, and WISDOM and DAVIS, Circuit Judges.
    KING, Chief Judge:
    Defendant-appellant Bank of the West appeals the judgment
    of the district court granting plaintiff-appellee ITT Commercial
    Finance Corporation’s motion for summary judgment.      Bank of the
    West challenges the district court’s determinations that the
    security interest of ITT Commercial Finance Corporation has
    priority over Bank of the West’s security interest, and that Bank
    of the West is liable to ITT Commercial Finance Corporation for
    conversion.    Although we agree with the district court’s priority
    determination, we disagree with its conclusion on conversion, and
    we therefore reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for
    further proceedings.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    Defendant-appellant Bank of the West (BOW) and plaintiff-
    appellee ITT Commercial Finance Corporation (ITT) are both
    commercial lenders.    Over the course of several years, both BOW
    and ITT lent money to the same debtor, a fledgling microcomputer
    dealership that operated initially as a sole proprietorship run
    by Carlos Chacon and doing business under the trade name
    “Compucentro USA.”    Two predecessors-in-interest to BOW, Coronado
    Bank and Texas National Bank, made loans to the sole
    proprietorship in August 1988 and February 1990, respectively.
    They filed financing statements in the office of the Secretary of
    State of the State of Texas (the Secretary of State) to perfect
    their security interests in a broad class of current and after-
    acquired property under the names “Carlos Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA” and “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA.”    BOW subsequently purchased these loans from
    the FDIC and now holds the security interests.
    On November 26, 1990, Carlos Chacon incorporated the sole
    proprietorship under the name “Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.”     On
    December 12, 1990, Chacon informed BOW of the incorporation using
    letterhead of the sole proprietorship bearing the name
    2
    “Compucentro USA.”    The letter stated:   “Enclosed please find
    copies of our newly incorporated license.     As you finalize the
    paperwork on our loan you [m]ay want to reflect that we are
    incorporated.”
    On January 28, 1991, BOW filed a notice of assignment of the
    interest underlying Coronado Bank’s 1988 filing with the
    Secretary of State, and, on March 11, 1991, BOW similarly filed a
    notice of assignment of the interest underlying Texas National
    Bank’s 1990 filing.    These assignment notices did not reflect the
    debtor’s recent incorporation.    Rather, they listed the debtor’s
    name as “Chacon, Carlos d/b/a Compucentro, USA” and “Carlos R.
    Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a Compucentro USA,” respectively.
    BOW also independently extended secured financing to the new
    corporation, filing a new financing statement on January 18, 1991
    covering a broad class of current and after-acquired property and
    specifying the name of the debtor as “Compucentro, USA, Inc.”
    Notably, the filing left out the hyphen in the corporation’s
    legal name.
    On October 1, 1991, ITT agreed to extend a line of credit
    for inventory purchases to Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.     On October
    14, 1991, ITT filed a financing statement covering a broad class
    of current and after-acquired property and specifying the name of
    the debtor as “Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.”     In the course of
    conducting a credit review of the corporation, ITT learned,
    through a loan application and a credit report, that Compu-
    3
    Centro, USA, Inc. had existed before its November 1990
    incorporation with a different name and business structure.     ITT
    also possessed financial documents of the Chacons that listed a
    $68,000 liability to BOW for a loan.   ITT did not investigate
    further, and, on October 18, 1991, ITT obtained an official
    search of the Secretary of State’s records in the name “Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc.”   ITT’s filing was the sole filing reflected
    on the search report.
    In the course of its business, Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.
    entered into a contract with the federal government to supply a
    medical center with computers.   Neither ITT nor BOW provided
    Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. with funding to obtain these computers.
    Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. established an account at BOW in which it
    deposited the proceeds of the government contract.   No other
    funds were deposited into this account.   In 1993, Compu-Centro,
    USA, Inc. paid BOW $300,000 out of the $1.3 million received as
    proceeds of the government contract by a check drawn on the BOW
    account.   The purpose of the payment was to satisfy, in part, the
    outstanding balance on the debt owed to BOW.   BOW did not
    instruct Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. to make payment out of these
    proceeds and never offset or froze the account.    At the time of
    the payment, Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. was in default on its
    obligation to ITT in the amount of $117,795.14.1
    1
    Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. formally defaulted on its
    obligation to ITT on June 4, 1993.
    4
    On March 7, 1994, ITT filed this diversity action against
    BOW seeking a declaratory judgment regarding the priority of its
    security interest in the collateral of Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.,
    and alleging that BOW had converted the proceeds of the
    government contract.   On cross-motions for summary judgment, the
    district court granted summary judgment in favor of ITT on the
    declaratory judgment claim, finding that ITT’s lien had priority
    because BOW’s earlier-filed financing statements were seriously
    misleading.   Thereafter, the case was transferred to a second
    district court judge, who granted ITT’s motion for summary
    judgment on its conversion claim on the ground that BOW had not
    received the government contract proceeds from Compu-Centro, USA,
    Inc. in the ordinary course of business because the payment was
    in partial satisfaction of a money debt.    The district court
    entered final judgment in favor of ITT in the amount of
    $86,959.98 plus pre- and post-judgment interest.    BOW timely
    appealed.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo,
    and applies the same standard used by the district court.     See
    Norman v. Apache Corp., 
    19 F.3d 1017
    , 1021 (5th Cir. 1994).
    Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions,
    answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with
    the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
    5
    any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law.”   Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c).   All
    factual questions are viewed in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party.   See Quest Exploration & Dev. Co. v. Transco
    Energy Co., 
    24 F.3d 738
    , 741 (5th Cir. 1994).   In this diversity
    action, we must follow Texas law.    See Cosden Oil & Chem. Co. v.
    Karl O. Helm Aktiengesellschaft, 
    736 F.2d 1064
    , 1069 (5th Cir.
    1984).
    III.   DISCUSSION
    A.   Who Has Priority?
    If BOW’s filings perfected its security interest in the
    collateral of the debtor corporation Compu-Centro, USA, Inc., BOW
    enjoys first priority and consequently cannot be liable to ITT
    for conversion of the proceeds of the government contract.
    Although BOW’s filings precede ITT’s filing, ITT argues, and the
    district court held, that ITT has first priority with respect to
    the debtor corporation’s collateral.
    1.   The District Court Opinion
    In a thorough and careful opinion, the district court first
    addressed whether the 1988 and 1990 financing statements
    pertaining to Coronado Bank’s and Texas National Bank’s loans to
    the sole proprietorship sufficiently perfected BOW’s security
    interest in the collateral at issue in this case--collateral
    6
    Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. indisputably acquired more than four
    months after its incorporation.   According to the district court,
    because collateral acquired more than four months after Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc.’s incorporation, by definition, had not been
    transferred from the sole proprietorship to the new corporation,2
    BOW could not rely upon the 1988 and 1990 financing statements to
    perfect its security interest in that collateral unless those
    filings were not seriously misleading with respect to the
    debtor’s name after incorporation.3   See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN.
    § 9.402(g) (West 1991).
    A financing statement is not seriously misleading if “a
    reasonably prudent subsequent creditor would have discovered the
    prior security interest.”   Continental Credit Corp. v. Wolfe City
    Nat’l Bank, 
    823 S.W.2d 687
    , 689 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1991, no
    2
    The Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), as adopted in Texas,
    provides: “A filed financing statement remains effective with
    respect to collateral transferred by the debtor even though the
    secured party knows of or consents to the transfer.” TEX. BUS. &
    COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g) (West 1991).
    3
    Section 9.402(g) further provides:
    Where the debtor so changes his name or in the case of an
    organization its name, identity or corporate structure that
    a filed financing statement becomes seriously misleading,
    the filing is not effective to perfect a security interest
    in collateral acquired by the debtor more than four months
    after the change, unless a new appropriate financing
    statement is filed before the expiration of that time.
    TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g). Therefore, the pre-
    incorporation financing statements would sufficiently perfect
    BOW’s security interest in the after-acquired collateral of the
    new corporation provided they were not “seriously misleading.”
    7
    writ).   The district court found that the pre-incorporation
    financing statements were seriously misleading as to the new name
    of the debtor, and therefore BOW was required to file a new
    financing statement after the debtor’s incorporation to perfect
    its security interest in the collateral acquired more than four
    months after incorporation.   The district court “recognize[d] the
    obvious futility of discovering a financing statement [that]
    lists the debtor as an individual under the name ‘Carlos
    Chacon’ . . . in a search of a corporation under the name ‘Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc.’”   (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The court similarly found that BOW’s filings of the notices
    of assignment of the pre-incorporation security interests were
    seriously misleading because they too were filed under the pre-
    incorporation name of the debtor.    According to the court, the
    filings under “Carlos Chacon d/b/a Compucentro USA” and/or
    “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a Compucentro USA” were
    seriously misleading because no reasonably prudent creditor
    searching for filings pertaining to a corporation named “Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc.” could be expected to find them.
    The remaining question for the district court, therefore,
    was whether BOW’s post-incorporation financing statement filed
    January 18, 1991 under “Compucentro, USA, Inc.” effectively
    perfected its security interest in the collateral of the new
    8
    corporation.4   This required analysis of the Texas non-uniform
    amendment which provides that:
    [f]iling under a trade name or assumed name alone shall not
    be sufficient to perfect a security interest unless the
    trade name or assumed name is so similar to the debtor’s
    legal name that the trade name or assumed name filing would
    be discovered in a search of the filing officer’s
    records . . . conducted in response to a request using the
    legal name of the debtor.
    TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g).   ITT argued that BOW’s
    January 1991 filing under the name “Compucentro, USA, Inc.” was
    in the corporation’s trade name, and that, therefore, its January
    1991 filing was invalid because of the Texas non-uniform
    amendment.   There is no dispute that ITT’s search under the
    debtor’s legal name, “Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.,” did not discover
    BOW’s January 1991 filing.
    BOW argued that it did not file under a trade name, but
    rather misspelled the debtor’s legal name, and that the Texas
    non-uniform amendment is therefore inapplicable.      According to
    BOW, the proper standard for evaluating BOW’s filing is whether
    the filing would be seriously misleading to a reasonably prudent
    subsequent creditor.    See 
    id. § 9.402(h).5
    4
    This filing will be referred to as the “January 1991
    filing.”
    5
    Section 9.402(h) of the Texas UCC provides that “[a]
    financing statement substantially complying with the requirements
    of this section is effective even though it contains minor errors
    which are not seriously misleading.” TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. §
    9.402(h).
    9
    The district court held that the Texas non-uniform amendment
    does not invalidate BOW’s filing.     It reasoned that because
    “Compucentro USA,” and not “Compucentro, USA, Inc.,” was the
    debtor’s trade name, it was clear from BOW’s inclusion of the
    “Inc.” in its filing designating “Compucentro, USA, Inc.” as the
    name of the debtor that its intention was to file under the
    corporation’s actual name, not its trade name.
    We agree with the district court’s analysis and conclude
    that the Texas non-uniform amendment does not apply.       That
    amendment applies only to trade name filings, and not to
    misspellings or typographical errors.     See Jerald M. Pomerantz,
    Trade Name Filings Under UCC Article 9:     Anatomy of a Nonuniform
    Amendment, 47 Consumer Fin. L.Q. Rep. 34, 36 (1993) (noting that
    the Texas non-uniform amendment “is not intended to deal with the
    problem of misspellings and typographical errors, which are
    covered by section 9.402(h) (the ‘not seriously misleading’
    section)”) (footnote omitted).   The appropriate analysis,
    therefore, is whether BOW’s January 1991 filing under the name
    “Compucentro, USA, Inc.” was seriously misleading such that it
    constituted an ineffective filing.     See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. §
    9.402(h).
    The district court began its analysis of whether BOW’s
    January 1991 filing was seriously misleading by describing the
    filing system utilized by the Secretary of State.      Before the
    advent of computerization, debtors were indexed alphabetically in
    10
    an index book that contained all of the financing statements on
    file.   A search in response to a request from a prospective
    creditor required an employee of the Secretary of State to look
    manually through the index book, much as someone would page
    through a telephone book.   A benefit of manual searching is that
    the searcher can retrieve and list not only those financing
    statements that exactly match the requested name, but also those
    statements that are similar enough to the requested name to fall
    in close proximity in the index.
    Computerized searching, however, has become the norm.      As of
    April 1995, the district court found, thirty-seven states had
    adopted a computerized filing system, and four more were in the
    process of doing so--a response to the ever-increasing volume of
    financing statements flooding the filing offices.    The Secretary
    of State converted its records from a manual to a computerized
    filing system in 1972, although manual systems are still used in
    roughly 95% of the county clerks’ offices in Texas.
    Ironically, computerized searching can be less flexible than
    manual searching; because of the search parameters used by many
    computers, computerized searching often retrieves only names that
    exactly match the requested name.    The Secretary of State’s
    computer software has some built-in mechanisms to retrieve
    filings that do not match exactly, but are similar to, the
    requested name.   For example, the system retrieves financing
    statements matching two or three words in the requested name.     It
    11
    does not, however, retrieve similar prefixes, suffixes, or
    alternative spellings of the debtor’s name.   Most importantly for
    this case, when searching for a hyphenated word, the search
    program ignores the hyphen and leaves a space in its place, with
    the result that the system treats a hyphenated name as two
    separate words.   It searches under each of those separate words,
    but does not search under the combination of the two.
    In reaching its decision, the district court focused on an
    important policy interest behind the Uniform Commercial Code
    (UCC)--providing notice to potential creditors of the security
    interests of earlier creditors.    In light of this policy interest
    and the reality of computerized searching, the district court
    concluded that a financing statement listing a misspelled name
    for the debtor that is not discovered in a search by the
    Secretary of State under the debtor’s correct legal name does not
    comply with the requirements of § 9.402.   Applying this standard,
    the court held that because the name designated by BOW in its
    January 1991 filing, Compucentro, USA, Inc., was not discovered
    by a search using the corporation’s actual legal name, Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc., BOW’s January 1991 filing was seriously
    misleading and did not perfect its security interest.    ITT
    therefore had first priority with respect to the corporation’s
    collateral because all of BOW’s filings were seriously
    misleading.
    12
    BOW argues on appeal that, in reaching the conclusion that
    BOW’s filings were seriously misleading, the district court
    improperly applied a bright-line test rather than examining
    whether ITT acted as a reasonably prudent subsequent creditor.
    2.    Analysis
    Because we agree with the district court’s conclusion that
    the Texas non-uniform amendment does not invalidate BOW’s January
    1991 filing, we focus our attention on whether BOW’s pre- and
    post-incorporation filings were seriously misleading.6
    Evaluating whether a filing is seriously misleading requires the
    court to apply the law to the individual facts of the case.     See
    Borg-Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Fedders Fin. Corp. (In re
    Hammons), 
    614 F.2d 399
    , 402-03 (5th Cir. 1980) (stating that
    court must independently make legal conclusions on basis of facts
    of case); First Bank v. Eastern Livestock Co., 
    837 F. Supp. 792
    ,
    802, 803 (S.D. Miss. 1993) (evaluating financing statement on
    summary judgment motion and concluding that statement is not
    seriously misleading).   Here, the material facts are not in
    dispute.
    6
    These filings include the 1988 and 1990 Coronado Bank and
    Texas National Bank filings under the names “Carlos Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA” and “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA,” the 1991 notices of assignment of the 1988 and
    1990 security interests under the names “Chacon, Carlos d/b/a
    Compucentro, USA” and “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA,” and the January 1991 filing under the name
    “Compucentro, USA, Inc.”
    13
    Our first task must be to define what constitutes a
    seriously misleading filing.   Because “‘[t]he purpose of the
    filing system is to give notice to creditors and other interested
    parties that a security interest exists in property of the
    debtor,’”   National Bank v. West Tex. Wholesale Supply Co. (In re
    McBee), 
    714 F.2d 1316
    , 1321 (5th Cir. 1983) (quoting Brushwood v.
    Citizens Bank (In re Glasco, Inc.), 
    642 F.2d 793
    , 795 (5th Cir.
    Unit B Apr. 1981)), the relevant inquiry in analyzing the
    validity of a filing is whether the filing would suffice to put
    subsequent creditors on notice of the prior security interest.
    Therefore, as discussed above, a filing is legally sufficient
    only if a “reasonably prudent subsequent creditor” would have
    discovered the financing statement.   Continental Credit 
    Corp., 823 S.W.2d at 689
    ; see In re 
    McBee, 714 F.2d at 1321
    .    While the
    UCC does not require exactitude, “there can be less tolerance of
    errors in a debtor’s name, since such errors may prevent a
    searcher from discovering the financing statement.”     Transamerica
    Commercial Fin. Corp. v. General Elec. Capital Corp. (In re
    Wardcorp, Inc.), 
    133 B.R. 210
    , 215 (Bankr. S.D. Ind. 1990).
    Financing statements containing minor errors or financing
    statements in names other than the debtor’s legal name are not
    invalid, therefore, if they meet the objective of providing
    notice to future creditors, i.e., if they are not seriously
    misleading.   Financing statements that are not likely to be
    located by reasonably prudent subsequent creditors, however,
    14
    cannot provide effective notice to them, undermining the purpose
    of the UCC filing system.   Our inquiry, then, must be whether
    BOW’s pre- and post-incorporation filings were sufficient to
    inform subsequent creditors of BOW’s security interest in the
    collateral that Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. acquired post-
    incorporation.7
    7
    We note that revisions to Article Nine of the UCC are
    contemplated. A recent American Law Institute draft of a
    proposed revision of Article Nine provides that, to be effective,
    a financing statement must contain the proper legal name of the
    debtor, and also that a filing that does not accurately list the
    debtor’s legal name is seriously misleading unless it is
    discovered by a search under the debtor’s legal name:
    (a) A financing statement sufficiently provides the name of
    the debtor:
    (1) if the debtor is a registered organization, only
    if the financing statement provides the name of the
    debtor as shown on the public records of the debtor’s
    jurisdiction of organization;
    . . . .
    (c) A financing statement that provides only the debtor’s
    trade name does not sufficiently provide the name of the
    debtor.
    U.C.C. § 9.503 (Proposed Final Draft Apr. 15, 1998).
    (a) A financing statement substantially complying with the
    requirements of this part is effective even if it contains
    minor errors or omissions, unless the errors or omissions
    make the financing statement seriously misleading.
    (b) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (c), a
    financing statement that fails sufficiently to provide the
    name of the debtor in accordance with Section 9-503(a) is
    seriously misleading.
    (c) If a search of the records of the filing office under
    the debtor’s correct name, utilizing the filing office’s
    15
    We first examine the 1988 and 1990 Coronado Bank and Texas
    National Bank filings.    If these pre-incorporation filings did
    not become seriously misleading once the debtor incorporated,
    they would effectively perfect BOW’s security interest in the
    collateral acquired by Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. more than four
    months after its incorporation.8       We conclude that no reasonably
    prudent subsequent creditor searching for filings relating to a
    corporation named Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. could be expected to
    find filings under “Carlos Chacon d/b/a Compucentro USA” and
    “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a Compucentro USA.”       The
    name used on these pre-incorporation filings (that of the owner
    of the sole proprietorship) and the name of the new corporation
    have nothing in common.    No reasonably prudent subsequent
    standard search logic, if any, would disclose a financing
    statement that fails sufficiently to provide the name of the
    debtor in accordance with Section 9-503(a), the name
    provided does not make the financing statement seriously
    misleading.
    
    Id. § 9.506.
    Because we decide this case under the law currently in
    effect, we need not respond to the parties’ arguments on the
    relationship between the current law and the proposed revision.
    8
    Where the debtor so changes his name or in the case of
    an organization its name, identity or corporate
    structure that a filed financing statement becomes
    seriously misleading, the filing is not effective to
    perfect a security interest in collateral acquired by
    the debtor more than four months after the change,
    unless a new appropriate financing statement is filed
    before the expiration of that time.
    TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g).
    16
    creditor searching for filings relating to the new corporation
    could be expected to find the pre-incorporation filings under the
    name Chacon.9    See Stevens v. Century Furniture Co. (In re CL
    Furniture Galleries, Inc.), No. 95 C 50103, 
    1995 WL 756853
    , at *5
    (N.D. Ill. Dec. 20, 1995); 4 James J. White & Robert S. Summers,
    Uniform Commercial Code § 33-19, at 212-13, 214 (4th ed. 1995).10
    Therefore, the 1988 and 1990 Coronado Bank and Texas National
    Bank filings under the names “Carlos Chacon d/b/a Compucentro
    USA” and “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a Compucentro
    USA” became seriously misleading upon incorporation and did not
    perfect BOW’s security interest as to collateral acquired by the
    corporation more than four months afterwards because no
    reasonably prudent subsequent creditor would have found them when
    extending financing to a corporation named “Compu-Centro, USA,
    Inc.”     Similarly, the 1991 notices of assignment of the 1988 and
    1990 security interests under the names “Chacon, Carlos d/b/a
    9
    While the pre-incorporation filings also listed the trade
    name of the sole proprietorship, as discussed infra, in Texas, no
    reasonably prudent subsequent creditor has a duty to search for
    filings under a debtor’s trade name because of the Texas non-
    uniform amendment. See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g).
    10
    Professors White and Summers provide support for this
    conclusion. In their discussion of a hypothetical in which a
    bank lent money to a debtor named “Acme Co.” that later changed
    its name to “Ajax Co.,” they note that “[n]o reasonably diligent
    searcher looking under the new name of the debtor, Ajax Co.,
    would be likely to find the financing statement showing Bank’s
    interest in equipment and inventory of Ajax.” See White &
    Summers, supra, § 31-19, at 213. They reach the same conclusion
    in the case where Acme Co. incorporates under the name Ajax Co.
    See 
    id. at 214.
    17
    Compucentro, USA” and “Carlos R. Chacon and Lorena Chacon d/b/a
    Compucentro USA” were seriously misleading.    Because the notices
    of assignment merely changed the name of the holder of the 1988
    and 1990 security interests from Coronado Bank and Texas National
    Bank to BOW, but did not change the name of the debtor to reflect
    the debtor’s newly-incorporated status, these notices of
    assignment would not have been found by a reasonably prudent
    subsequent creditor searching for filings pertaining to the new
    corporation Compu-Centro, USA, Inc., and thus did not perfect
    BOW’s interest in Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.’s collateral.
    The remaining question, then, is whether BOW’s January 1991
    filing was seriously misleading.11   BOW’s position is that
    outstanding factual questions preclude the resolution of this
    issue on a summary judgment motion, mandating a remand to the
    district court.   When identifying which factual questions stand
    in the way of summary judgment, BOW points to facts known to ITT:
    that Chacon had operated under the trade name Compucentro, USA
    (without a hyphen), had recently incorporated the sole
    proprietorship, and had a loan from BOW.12    BOW argues that this
    11
    Section 9.402(h) of the Texas UCC provides that “[a]
    financing statement substantially complying with the requirements
    of this section is effective even though it contains minor errors
    which are not seriously misleading.” TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN.
    § 9.402(h).
    12
    We note that the relevant inquiry is whether the law
    recognizes the facts relied on by BOW as relevant to whether
    BOW’s filings were seriously misleading, not whether material
    facts are in dispute.
    18
    knowledge should have led ITT to discover BOW’s security interest
    in Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.’s collateral.
    As to ITT’s knowledge of the debtor’s trade name, a search
    under the former trade name of the sole proprietorship,
    “Compucentro, USA,” would have led ITT to all of BOW’s filings.
    However, after the enactment of the Texas non-uniform amendment,
    potential creditors need not search under a debtor’s trade name,
    even if they have knowledge of that name, because in Texas a
    trade-name filing is insufficient to perfect a security interest
    unless a search under the debtor’s legal name would reveal that
    trade-name filing.     See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.402(g);
    
    Pomerantz, supra, at 42
    .13     Therefore, a reasonably prudent
    subsequent creditor in Texas would not conduct a search under the
    debtor’s trade name.     ITT’s knowledge of Chacon’s recent
    incorporation and personal indebtedness to BOW is similarly
    irrelevant in this case because even if BOW had conducted a
    13
    The Texas non-uniform amendment was a legislative
    response to this court’s decision In re McBee, 
    714 F.2d 1316
    (5th
    Cir. 1983). See 
    Pomerantz, supra, at 34-36
    . In In re McBee, we
    held that a filing under the debtor’s trade name was not
    seriously misleading, even though the trade name and the debtor’s
    actual name shared no words in common, because the facts of the
    case indicated that subsequent creditors should have known to
    search for the debtor’s trade name. 
    See 714 F.2d at 1324-25
    .
    This result placed upon subsequent creditors the burden of
    searching under trade names. See 
    Pomerantz, supra, at 36
    . The
    purpose behind the Texas non-uniform amendment was to reallocate
    this burden and place upon the first creditor the duty to file
    carefully. See 
    id. (noting that
    the Texas non-uniform amendment
    places “risk of loss on the party who is in the best position to
    guard against the loss,” the first creditor, comporting with the
    notice filing system envisioned by UCC’s drafters).
    19
    search in the name of the owner of the sole proprietorship,
    Chacon, it would not have found the January 1991 filing in the
    name “Compucentro, USA, Inc.”
    As discussed above, whether BOW’s January 1991 filing was
    seriously misleading turns on whether the January 1991 filing was
    capable of providing notice to a reasonably prudent subsequent
    creditor of BOW’s security interest.   As a reasonably prudent
    subsequent creditor, ITT was required to conduct a search under
    the debtor’s legal name.   Here, that search did not discover
    BOW’s January 1991 filing.   At first blush, the difference
    between a filing under the name “Compucentro, USA, Inc.” and a
    filing under the debtor’s legal name “Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.”
    appears so minor that it seems counterintuitive to conclude that
    a filing under the first name is ineffective.   However, the law
    requires more than a comparison between the two names.   BOW
    incorrectly listed the debtor’s name on its January 1991 filing.
    Reasonably prudent subsequent creditors are not required to
    search under every conceivable misspelling of a debtor’s name.
    See In re 
    Wardcorp, 133 B.R. at 215
    (“Any rule that would burden
    a searcher with guessing misspellings and misconfigurations of a
    legal name . . . would not provide creditors with the certainty
    that is essential in these commercial transactions.”).
    Therefore, because the name Compucentro, USA, Inc. did not appear
    in connection with a search under the debtor’s legal name, which
    would have placed the subsequent creditor on notice to inquire
    20
    further, see Paramount Int’l, Inc. v. First Midwest Bank, N.A.
    (In re Paramount Int’l, Inc.), 
    154 B.R. 712
    , 715 (Bankr. N.D.
    Ill. 1993), BOW’s January 1991 filing was seriously misleading
    because no reasonably prudent subsequent creditor could be
    expected to find it.   Although this outcome may appear harsh, it
    comports with the policies underlying the UCC.   “[P]lacing on the
    filing creditor the burden of ascertaining and filing under a
    debtor’s legal name is necessary to effectuate the UCC’s policy
    of certainty and simplicity in these commercial transactions.”
    In re 
    Wardcorp, 133 B.R. at 216-17
    .14
    We reject BOW’s contention that, under the facts of this
    case, ITT had a duty to broaden its search beyond the debtor’s
    legal name.   BOW has presented no other facts on appeal from
    which to conclude that a reasonably prudent creditor lending
    money to Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. would have searched under any
    name other than the debtor’s correct legal name.   Therefore, the
    district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of ITT
    on the issue of priority.15
    14
    We are not presented with a case where the Secretary of
    State’s computer search logic is limited to retrieving names that
    exactly match the legal name of the debtor, and therefore need
    not decide whether a reasonably prudent creditor in that
    situation would have broadened its search.
    15
    Because we conclude that a reasonably prudent subsequent
    creditor lending money to Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. would not, on
    this record, have searched under a name other than the debtor’s
    legal name, we have no occasion to consider the validity of the
    district court’s holding that reasonably prudent subsequent
    creditors in every situation need only search under the legal
    21
    B.   Did BOW convert funds that rightfully belonged to ITT?
    Because ITT has first priority with respect to Compu-Centro,
    USA, Inc.’s collateral, we must decide whether BOW converted the
    proceeds of the government contract.     Under Texas law, conversion
    is the wrongful exercise of dominion and control over another’s
    property in violation of the property owner’s rights.       See
    Amarillo Nat’l Bank v. Komatsu Zenoah America, Inc., 
    991 F.2d 273
    , 274 (5th Cir. 1993); Tripp Village Joint Venture v. Mbank
    Lincoln Ctr., N.A., 
    774 S.W.2d 746
    , 750 (Tex. App.--Dallas 1989,
    writ denied).
    ITT argues that its security interest in Compu-Centro, USA,
    Inc.’s collateral afforded it the right to the proceeds of the
    government contract.16   A properly perfected security interest
    extends to the identifiable cash proceeds of a sale of collateral
    subject to that security interest.     See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN.
    § 9.306(b) & (c)(2) (West 1991 & Supp. 1999).      The holder of the
    security interest is entitled to recover cash proceeds from
    unauthorized subsequent transferees.     See 
    id. § 9.306
    cmt. 3;
    Amarillo Nat’l 
    Bank, 991 F.2d at 275
    .     In the instant case, the
    proceeds of the government contract were identifiable because
    they were paid into a special account at BOW into which no other
    name of the debtor.
    16
    Under § 9.503, ITT acquired a right of immediate
    possession of Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.’s collateral on June 4,
    1993, the date on which Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. defaulted on its
    obligations to ITT. See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.503.
    22
    funds were deposited, and Compu-Centro, USA, Inc.’s payment to
    BOW was drawn on that account.    ITT never authorized Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc.’s payment to BOW.
    Comment 2(c) to § 9.306, however, suggests an exception to a
    senior creditor’s right to recover transferred proceeds:
    Where cash proceeds are covered into the debtor’s checking
    account and paid out in the operation of the debtor’s
    business, recipients of the funds of course take free of any
    claim which the secured party may have in them as proceeds.
    What has been said relates to payments and transfers in
    ordinary course. The law of fraudulent conveyances would no
    doubt in appropriate cases support recovery of proceeds by a
    secured party from a transferee out of ordinary course or
    otherwise in collusion with the debtor to defraud the
    secured party.
    TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.306 cmt. 2(c).   Thus, if Compu-
    Centro, USA, Inc. made payment to BOW “in ordinary course,” BOW
    would take the proceeds free of ITT’s security interest.
    The definition of “ordinary course” is the problematic
    issue.   The district court utilized the definition of “buyer in
    ordinary course of business” found in § 1.201(9):
    “Buyer in ordinary course of business” means a person who in
    good faith and without knowledge that the sale to him is in
    violation of the ownership rights or security interest of a
    third party in the goods buys in ordinary course from a
    person in the business of selling goods of that kind . . . .
    “Buying” may be for cash or by exchange of other property or
    on secured or unsecured credit and includes receiving goods
    or documents of title under a pre-existing contract for sale
    but does not include a transfer in bulk or as security for
    or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt.
    23
    
    Id. § 1.201(9)
    (emphasis added).17   Applying this definition in
    the context of Comment 2(c), the district court reasoned that
    because Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. paid BOW the government contract
    proceeds in partial satisfaction of a money debt, the payment was
    not in ordinary course for purposes of Comment 2(c).   The
    district court consequently found that Comment 2(c) did not allow
    BOW to accept the payment of the government contract proceeds
    free of ITT’s superior security interest and therefore granted
    ITT’s motion for summary judgment on its conversion claim.
    BOW challenges the district court’s conclusion that the
    definition of “ordinary course” for purposes of Comment 2(c) is
    coextensive with § 1.201(9)’s definition of “buyer in ordinary
    course of business.”   The critical question is whether an element
    of § 1.201(9)’s definition of “buyer in ordinary course of
    business”--that the payment cannot be made in total or partial
    satisfaction of a money debt--is also an element of “ordinary
    course” for purposes of Comment 2(c), as the district court held.
    BOW contends that it is not.   According to BOW, excluding
    payments made in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt
    from “ordinary course” for purposes of Comment 2(c) would render
    Comment 2(c) meaningless because every junior or unsecured
    17
    The district court also relied upon Professors White and
    Summers for the proposition that, for purposes of Comment 2(c),
    junior creditors receiving payment of proceeds in ordinary course
    should be treated like buyers in the ordinary course under
    § 1.201(9). See 4 James J. White & Robert S. Summers, Uniform
    Commercial Code § 33-19.5, at 75 (4th ed. Supp. 1998).
    24
    creditor who accepts a payment of proceeds from a debtor--
    including a vendor accepting a trade debt payment, a landlord
    accepting a rent payment, an employee accepting a payment of
    wages, an insurance agent accepting a policy premium payment, or
    a bank accepting a payment to reduce loan debt--does so in total
    or partial satisfaction of a money debt.     Under the district
    court’s interpretation of Comment 2(c), therefore, every junior
    or unsecured creditor who accepts proceeds as payment will be
    liable for conversion, a result that would eviscerate Comment
    2(c).   We find BOW’s analysis persuasive.
    ITT urges us to affirm the district court’s conclusion that
    Compu-Centro, USA, Inc. paid BOW outside the ordinary course of
    its business for purposes of Comment 2(c) because the payment was
    in partial satisfaction of a money debt.     ITT cites cases holding
    that recipients of collateral transferred in total or partial
    satisfaction of a money debt fall outside the definition of
    “buyer in ordinary course of business.”      See Amarillo Nat’l Bank
    v. Komatsu Zenoah America, Inc., 
    991 F.2d 273
    (5th Cir. 1993);
    Permian Petroleum Co. v. Petroleos Mexicanos, 
    934 F.2d 635
    (5th
    Cir. 1991); Central Appraisal Dist. v. Dixie-Rose Jewels, Inc.,
    
    894 S.W.2d 841
    (Tex. App.--Eastland 1995, no writ); Chrysler
    Credit Corp. v. Malone, 
    502 S.W.2d 910
    (Tex. App.--Fort Worth
    1973, no writ).   These cases, however, do not speak to whether a
    payment in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt is
    excluded from “ordinary course” under Comment 2(c), nor do they
    25
    even mention the provision.    Rather, they pertain explicitly to
    creditors who receive collateral in satisfaction of money debts
    and therefore fail to qualify as a “[b]uyer in ordinary course of
    business” under § 1.201(9) (emphasis added).    See Amarillo Nat’l
    
    Bank, 991 F.2d at 276
    ; Permian Petroleum 
    Co., 934 F.2d at 648-49
    ;
    Central Appraisal 
    Dist., 894 S.W.2d at 842-43
    ; Chrysler Credit
    
    Corp., 502 S.W.2d at 912-13
    .   Neither ITT nor the district court
    has cited any authority that would exclude from the definition of
    “ordinary course” in the context of Comment 2(c) the payment of
    proceeds in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt.
    We agree with BOW that the district court’s interpretation
    of Comment 2(c) cannot stand.18    We see no need to import
    § 1.201(9)’s exclusion of transfers in total or partial
    satisfaction of money debts into Comment 2(c) because that
    exclusion arises specifically in the context of defining
    “buying,” a term that, while necessary for purposes of defining
    “buyer in ordinary course of business,” is not applicable to
    Comment 2(c):
    Buying may be for cash or by exchange of other property or
    on secured or unsecured credit and includes receiving goods
    or documents of title under a pre-existing contract for sale
    but does not include a transfer in bulk or as security for
    or in total or partial satisfaction of a money debt.
    18
    Having found no Texas authority directly on point, we
    look to the law of other jurisdictions and interpret the law as
    we believe the Texas courts would. See Orix Credit Alliance,
    Inc. v. Sovran Bank, N.A., 
    4 F.3d 1262
    , 1266 (4th Cir. 1993).
    26
    TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 1.201(9) (emphasis added).   The
    district court improperly imported the part of the definition of
    “buyer” that excludes payments in satisfaction of money debts
    into the definition of “in ordinary course” for purposes of
    Comment 2(c), and therefore it applied the wrong standard in
    awarding summary judgment to ITT on its conversion claim.
    The proper definition of “ordinary course” for purposes of
    Comment 2(c) remains to be determined.     Looking to the remainder
    of § 1.201(9)’s definition of “buyer in ordinary course of
    business” (that is, without adding the requirements specific to
    the term “buyer”), we concur with our sister circuits that have
    found that Comment 2(c) protects payments made in the operation
    of the debtor’s business absent improper conduct on the part of
    the recipient of the transferred proceeds.     In Harley-Davidson
    Motor Co. v. Bank of New England--Old Colony, N.A., 
    897 F.2d 611
    (1st Cir. 1990) (considering identical Rhode Island UCC
    provision), the First Circuit interpreted the phrase “ordinary
    course” in Comment 2(c) broadly, suggesting that only conduct
    “that, in the commercial context, is rather clearly improper”
    falls outside its scope.   
    Id. at 622.
        The court cautioned
    against an overly-narrow reading lest “ordinary suppliers,
    sellers of gas, electricity, tables, chairs, etc., . . . find
    themselves called upon to return ordinary payments . . . to a
    debtor’s secured creditor.”   
    Id. Under the
    court’s
    interpretation, there are “good commercial reasons” for
    27
    “even . . . sophisticated suppliers or secondary lenders, who are
    aware that inventory financers often take senior secured
    interests in ‘all inventory plus proceeds,’” to escape liability
    absent improper conduct.    
    Id. Building upon
    this precedent, the Seventh Circuit in J.I.
    Case Credit Corp. v. First Nat’l Bank, 
    991 F.2d 1272
    (7th Cir.
    1993) (interpreting identical Indiana UCC provision), concluded
    that “under Comment 2(c), a payment is within the ordinary course
    if it was made in the operation of the debtor’s business and if
    the payee did not know and was not reckless about whether the
    payment violated a third party’s security interest.”        
    Id. at 1279.
      In reaching this conclusion, the court interpreted the
    language of Comment 2(c), which in Indiana, as in Texas, provides
    that a secured party can recover proceeds “from a transferee out
    of ordinary course or otherwise in collusion with the debtor to
    defraud the secured party.”       TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 9.306
    cmt. 2(c); see J.I. Case 
    Credit, 991 F.2d at 1276
    , 1277.
    According to the court, the use of the word “otherwise” in the
    above quotation implies that the definition of “out of ordinary
    course” must contain an element also found in the definitions of
    fraud and collusion.   “If ‘out of ordinary course’ was not meant
    to involve common elements with collusion and fraud, the more
    natural phrasing would have been ‘out of ordinary course or in
    collusion . . . .’”    J.I. Case 
    Credit, 991 F.2d at 1277
    .       The
    court therefore decided that transfer “out of ordinary course”
    28
    requires knowledge on the part of the transferee that the
    transfer violates a superior security interest:       Payment to a
    third party in the operation of the debtor’s business is in the
    ordinary course “unless [the third party] knows the payment
    violates a superior secured interest in those funds.”       Id.; cf.
    Orix Credit Alliance, Inc. v. Sovran Bank, N.A., 
    4 F.3d 1262
    ,
    1267 (4th Cir. 1993) (holding that knowledge of prior security
    interest alone does not indicate that the transfer of proceeds
    occurred outside ordinary course under identical Virginia UCC
    provision).   As an alternative to establishing knowledge, the
    court decided that recklessness about whether a payment violated
    a prior security interest also takes the payment out of the
    ordinary course.   See J.I. Case 
    Credit, 991 F.2d at 1278
    .
    It is significant that the J.I. Case Credit court considered
    its interpretation of Comment 2(c) to be consistent with
    § 1.201(9)’s definition of “buyer in ordinary course of
    business.”    Section 1.201(9)’s definition protects those who buy
    “in good faith and without knowledge that the sale . . . is in
    violation of the ownership rights or security interest of a third
    party.”   TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 1.201(9).   By analogy to this
    provision, the court reasoned that “ordinary course” for purposes
    of Comment 2(c) similarly requires good faith and lack of
    knowledge of the violation of a superior security interest.          See
    J.I. Case 
    Credit, 991 F.2d at 1277
    -78.     Notably, although the
    court looked to § 1.201(9), it did not import that provision’s
    29
    exclusion of payments made in total or partial satisfaction of
    money debts.
    Professors White and Summers provide further support for
    this approach.   They agree with the reasoning of the courts that
    have found that junior creditors do not commit conversion merely
    by accepting payment with knowledge of a senior claim:
    [A]ny payment of proceeds paid in good faith and in the
    ordinary course to a junior creditor are free of the claim
    of the senior, and their taking does not constitute
    conversion by the junior creditor. We would treat the
    junior creditors here like buyers in the ordinary course
    under 1-201(9). A buyer can be in the ordinary course even
    though he knows of a security interest in the asset he is
    buying as long as he does not know that the transfer to him
    is in violation of that security interest. By the same
    token we would argue that the junior should take free of the
    prior party’s perfected security interest in proceeds even
    though he knows of the security interest, as long as he does
    not know of a term in the senior’s agreement or an event in
    that relationship that could make the payment to him a
    violation of the debtor’s promise to the senior creditor.
    4 James J. White & Robert S. Summers, Uniform Commercial Code
    § 33-19.5, at 75 (4th ed. Supp. 1998).19
    19
    Contrary to the interpretation of ITT and the district
    court, the suggestion in the above quotation that, for purposes
    of Comment 2(c), junior creditors should be treated like buyers
    in the ordinary course under § 1.201(9) does not support adopting
    § 1.201(9)’s requirement that the transfer cannot be made in
    total or partial satisfaction of a money debt. Rather, as the
    text of the quotation makes clear, Professors White and Summers
    would treat a junior creditor under Comment 2(c) like a buyer in
    the ordinary course under § 1.201(9) only to the extent that both
    take free of a senior party’s security interest, even with
    knowledge of that interest, so long as they lack knowledge “of a
    term in the senior’s agreement or an event in that relationship
    that could make the payment . . . a violation of the debtor’s
    promise to the senior creditor.” White & Summers, supra, § 33-
    19.5, at 75.
    30
    We agree with the reasoning of the courts and commentators
    discussed above, and we therefore hold that, for purposes of
    Comment 2(c), a payment is within the “ordinary course” if made
    in the operation of the debtor’s business and if the recipient of
    the payment acted in good faith and without knowledge of or
    recklessness about whether the payment violated a third party’s
    security interest.     This result is consistent with the relevant
    portions of the definition of “buyer in ordinary course of
    business” under § 1.201(9), which requires good faith, a lack of
    knowledge of the violation of a superior security interest, and a
    purchase from a person in the business of selling goods of that
    kind.    See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE ANN. § 1.201(9).
    In light of the above principles, the district court
    improperly granted summary judgment to ITT on its conversion
    claim.    We therefore reverse its judgment and remand for
    application of the proper legal standard.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of the
    district court, and remand for proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    31