LawWiki
HomeCodesSearchGlossaryAPIAbout
LawWiki

Plain English summaries of California law with zero-hallucination AI. Every summary is verified against official source text.

Product

  • Search
  • Codes
  • About

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Disclaimer

© 2026 LawWiki. All rights reserved.

HomeCommercial CodeDiv. 9Ch. 3§ 9303 Certificate Of Title Goods

§ 9303 Certificate Of Title Goods

Commercial Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 9303 Certificate Of Title Goods

Key Takeaways

  • •This law is about things (like cars or boats) that have a title certificate.
  • •A thing is covered by a title when you apply for it and pay the fee. It stops being covered when the title expires or a new title is issued somewhere else.
  • •The rules about who owns the thing and what happens if there’s a problem depend on the laws where the title was issued.

Example

You buy a car in California and get a California title for it.

As long as that California title is valid, California’s rules decide what happens if someone argues over who owns the car or if there’s a loan on it. If you move to Texas and get a Texas title, then Texas rules take over.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 9303 Certificate Of Title Goods

(a) This section applies to goods covered by a certificate of title, even if there is no other relationship between the jurisdiction under whose certificate of title the goods are covered and the goods or the debtor. (b) Goods become covered by a certificate of title when a valid application for the certificate of title and the applicable fee are delivered to the appropriate authority. Goods cease to be covered by a certificate of title at the earlier of the time the certificate of title ceases to be effective under the law of the issuing jurisdiction or the time the goods become covered subsequently by a certificate of title issued by another jurisdiction. (c) The local law of the jurisdiction under whose certificate of title the goods are covered governs perfection, the effect of perfection or nonperfection, and the priority of a security interest in goods covered by a certificate of title from the time the goods become covered by the certificate of title until the goods cease to be covered by the certificate of title. (Repealed and added by Stats. 1999, Ch. 991, Sec. 35. Effective January 1, 2000. Operative July 1, 2001, by Sec. 75 of Ch. 991 and Section 9701.)

Last verified: January 23, 2026

Key Terms

certificate of titleperfectionsecurity interestjurisdiction

Related Statutes

  • § 9306.1 Electronic Chattel Paper Perfection
  • § 17303 Unperfected Security Interests
  • § 17304 Transitional Security Interest Perfection
  • § 9301 Security Interest Perfection Rules
  • § 9304 Bank Deposit Account Security

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Commercial Code. Section 9303.
View Official Source