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89(R) HB 3929 - Introduced version - Bill Text
89R9915 AJA-F
By: Lambert
H.B. No. 3929
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to choice of law and assignment or acquisition of claims
and demands in connection with certificated and uncertificated
securities.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
SECTION 1. Section 8.110, Business & Commerce Code, is
amended by adding Subsection (g) to read as follows:
(g)
If a security is determined not to be valid under the
local law of the issuer's jurisdiction, the law of the jurisdiction
agreed by the issuer of the security to govern the construction or
interpretation of documents evidencing or containing the terms of
the security and matters arising out of or relating to the security
and documents, including the enforceability of the security and the
rights and remedies available to a purchaser of such a security,
governs the consequences to the issuer and the purchaser of the
invalidity.
SECTION 2. Section 8.302, Business & Commerce Code, is
amended by adding Subsections (d) and (e) to read as follows:
(d)
The rights acquired by a purchaser of a certificated or
uncertificated security, unless otherwise agreed in writing,
include, without limitation, all of the following claims and
demands of the transferor, regardless of whether the claims and
demands are known to exist:
(1)
a claim or demand for damages or rescission
against the issuer or other party to the security;
(2)
a claim or demand for damages against the trustee,
depositary, or other party under any indenture under which the
security was issued or is outstanding;
(3)
a claim or demand for damages against any issuer,
underwriter, trustee, depositary, guarantor, or other party to the
obligations of the issuer; and
(4)
a claim or demand to enforce any rights of a
securityholder under the terms of the security, including rights
arising prior to the date of the transfer.
(e)
Except as specifically provided by statute with respect
to assignments of the claims and demands of a transferor to the
purchaser of a certificated or uncertificated security, no issuer
or other party subject to any obligation, or to any claim or demand
for damages, with respect to any such security may assert a defense
to such an obligation, claim, or demand, or assert a claim against
the purchaser, based on the intent of the purchaser, or an assignor
or assignee of the purchaser, to assert or pursue through
litigation or other lawful means the enforcement of the purchaser's
rights thereto.
SECTION 3. Section 271.005, Business & Commerce Code, is
amended by adding Subsections (a-1) and (c) to read as follows:
(a-1)
Unless otherwise agreed in writing, the choice of
governing law specified in the terms applicable to a certificated
or uncertificated security issued in a qualified transaction,
including any change in that governing law, applies retroactively
to all issues relating to the security.
(c)
A security issued in a qualified transaction may be
modified or amended, in accordance with the security's terms, to
permit amendment of the terms of the security by less than unanimous
consent, and to choose the law of a different jurisdiction to govern
the security.
An amendment described by this subsection applies
retroactively unless otherwise agreed by the parties in writing.
SECTION 4. This Act takes effect September 1, 2025.