A Security Agreement, also known as a Collateral Agreement or Pledge Agreement, gives to a lender or other party a security interest in property that a debtor or obligor owns.
A company provides you with a lump sum in exchange for partial ownership of your home, and/or a share of its future appreciation. You don't make monthly repayments of principal or interest; instead, you settle up when you sell the home or at the end of a multi-year agreement period (typically between 10 and 30 years).
These agreements allow the secured party to perfect a security interest in collateral posted by the pledgor while ensuring that, in the event of the bankruptcy or insolvency of the secured party, such collateral will not become a part of the secured party's estate and will, to the extent owed to the pledgor, be ...
Collateral is a term used in kinship to describe kin, or lines of kin, that are not in a direct line of descent from an individual. Examples of collateral relatives include siblings of parents or grandparents and their descendants (uncles, aunts, and cousins).
Collateral form (plural collateral forms) (linguistics) A synonymous but not identical, coexisting form (variation) of a word, such as an accepted alternative spelling.
Collateral documents include any documents granting a security interest in collateral by the borrower, parent or subsidiary in favor of the lender and all other documents required to be executed or delivered pursuant to those documents. Collateral documents do not include guaranties.
The expression “collateral purpose” used in proviso to Section 49 of Registration Act implies that content of such a document can be used for purpose other than for which it has been executed or entered into by the parties or for a purpose remote to the main transaction.
Examples of collateral documents are a security agreement, guarantee and collateral agreement, pledge agreement, deposit account control agreement, securities account control agreement, mortgage, and UCC-1s.