104.9108 - Sufficiency of descriptions.
1. Â Except as otherwise provided in subsections 3, 4 and 5, a description of personal or real property is sufficient, whether or not it is specific, if it reasonably identifies what is described.
2. Â Except as otherwise provided in subsection 4, a description of collateral reasonably identifies the collateral if it identifies the collateral by:
(a) Specific listing;
(b) Category;
(c) Except as otherwise provided in subsection 5, a type of collateral defined in the Uniform Commercial Code;
(d) Quantity;
(e) Computational or allocational formula or procedure; or
(f) Except as otherwise provided in subsection 3, any other method, if the identity of the collateral is objectively determinable.
3.  A description of collateral as “all the debtor’s assets” or “all the debtor’s personal property” or using words of similar import does not reasonably identify the collateral.
4. Â Except as otherwise provided in subsection 5, a description of a security entitlement, securities account, or commodity account is sufficient if it describes:
(a) The collateral by those terms or as investment property; or
(b) The underlying financial asset or commodity contract.
5. Â A description only by type of collateral defined in the Uniform Commercial Code is an insufficient description of:
(a) A commercial tort claim; or
(b) In a consumer transaction, consumer goods, a security entitlement, a securities account or a commodity account.
(Added to NRS by 1999, 293)