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One of the principal advantages of a secured transaction is the protection it provides against the claims of competing creditors.A creditor asserting a security interest in his debtor's property is likely to find himself in competition with a wide assortment of other claimants.For example, his security interest may be challenged by another creditor with a consensual security interest, by a creditor with a judgment or execution lien, by a creditor claiming a right to the collateral under some general statutory entitlement such as a repairman's lien, by a seller to or a buyer from the debtor, or by the debtor's trustee in bankruptcy.To a considerable extent, the value of a security interest depends upon the degree to which it insulates the secured party from the claims of the debtor's other creditors. 1 Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code contains detailed rules for resolving conflicts between secured creditors and various third parties-rules that tell the secured party what he must do in order to prevent his security interest from being overridden by a competing claimant, or, conversely, what a competitor must do in order to circumvent an existing security interest in the debtor's property.These rules are called "priority" rules since it is their function to determine
Jackson et al. (Tue,) studied this question.