Title 7 › Chapter 38— DISTRIBUTION AND MARKETING OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS › Subchapter I— GENERAL PROVISIONS › § 1631
Protects buyers of farm products from having to pay twice. If you buy farm goods in the normal course of business, you generally get them free of a lender’s claim, even if that claim is perfected and you know about it. You still may have to pay the lender only if one of three things happens: you got a written notice about the claim within 1 year before the sale and did not meet any payment obligations the notice required; or the sale happened in a State that has a central filing system and you did not register before buying while the lender had filed a proper financing statement covering the goods; or the Secretary of State sent a notice naming the seller and the product and you did not get a waiver or release by paying or otherwise. What counts as “received” is decided by the law of the State where the buyer lives. The same basic rule applies to commission merchants and selling agents. A central filing system is a statewide filing run by the Secretary of State and certified by the USDA Secretary that keeps a master list of financing statements organized by product, debtor name, ID number, county or parish, and crop year. Effective financing statements must be signed or properly filed electronically, include the secured party and debtor names and addresses, the debtor’s ID number, and a description of the farm products (with amount, crop year, and county where applicable); they must be updated in writing within 3 months for major changes, last 5 years (renewable by refiling within 6 months before they expire), and require a filing fee. Registered buyers, commission merchants, and selling agents get regular copies of the parts of the master list they request; unregistered buyers can get oral confirmation within 24 hours and a written confirmation on request. If a security agreement requires a farmer to list expected buyers, the farmer must tell the secured party in writing at least 7 days before selling to someone not on the list or give the secured party the sale proceeds within 10 days, or face a fine of $5,000 or 15 percent of the value received, whichever is greater. The Secretary of Agriculture had to issue rules within 90 days after December 23, 1985, and the law took effect 12 months after that date. Definitions (one line each): buyer in the ordinary course — a person who normally buys farm products from someone in the farming business; central filing system — a certified statewide filing of financing statements; commission merchant — a person who sells farm products on commission for others; effective financing statement — the filed document that describes the lender’s claim; farm product — crops, livestock, or their unprocessed products in a farmer’s possession; security interest — a lender’s claim on farm products; selling agent — a person who negotiates sales of farm products for a farmer.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 1631
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60