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Create a Quebec conventional hypothec deed (acte d'hypothèque conventionnelle) governed by the Code civil du Québec (CCQ arts. 2660-2802). French-language notarial document covering property designation, secured obligation, creditor's rights (droit de suite, droit de préférence), hypothecary recourses, and publication at the land registry.

What Is a Conventional Hypothec (Quebec)?

A Quebec conventional hypothec (hypothèque conventionnelle) is a real right on immovable property governed by articles 2660 through 2802 of the Code civil du Québec (C.c.Q.). Unlike a common law mortgage used in other Canadian provinces, the Quebec hypothec operates under fundamentally different civil law principles derived from the French legal tradition. Understanding these differences is essential for anyone purchasing property or securing financing in Quebec.

The hypothec is defined in article 2660 C.c.Q. as a real right on movable or immovable property made liable for the performance of an obligation. It confers upon the creditor two fundamental rights that distinguish it from other security interests: the droit de suite (right of following), which allows the creditor to follow the property into whatever hands it may pass, and the droit de préférence (right of preference), which gives the creditor priority on the proceeds of a sale according to the rank of publication at the land registry.

A critical principle of Quebec hypothec law is that the hypothec is purely an accessory right. Article 2661 C.c.Q. provides that a hypothec is merely an accessory and subsists only as long as the obligation whose performance it secures continues to exist. This means that when the underlying loan or obligation is fully repaid, the hypothec automatically ceases to exist as a matter of law, though formal cancellation (radiation) at the land registry is still required for practical purposes.

The formality requirements for immovable hypothecs are strict and mandatory. Article 2693 C.c.Q. requires that a conventional hypothec on an immovable be constituted by notarial deed in original form (acte notarié en minute), on pain of absolute nullity. This means that a hypothec agreement signed as a private writing (sous seing privé) without a notary is completely void and produces no legal effect whatsoever. The notary plays an essential role: authenticating the deed, verifying the identity and legal capacity of the parties, ensuring the property description meets the precision requirements of article 2694 C.c.Q., conducting title searches, and arranging for publication at the registre foncier.

Article 2694 C.c.Q. requires that the hypothec deed describe the hypothecated property with sufficient precision (désignation suffisante). For immovable property, this means providing the cadastral lot number from the Quebec land register, the complete address, the land registry division (circonscription foncière), and a physical description of the property. Without this precision, the hypothec is invalid.

When a debtor defaults on the secured obligation, the creditor has access to the hypothecary recourses set out in articles 2748 to 2794 C.c.Q. These are distinct from common law foreclosure procedures. The creditor may: take possession of the property for administration purposes (prise de possession pour fins d'administration, art. 2773); take the property in payment (prise en paiement, art. 2778), which extinguishes the debt entirely; sell the property under judicial authority (vente sous contrôle de justice, art. 2784); or sell the property directly. Before exercising any recourse, the creditor must serve a prior notice of exercise (préavis d'exercice, art. 2757), and the debtor has a mandatory 60-day period to remedy the default (délai de déchéance, art. 2758).

The ranking of hypothecs in Quebec is governed by the publicity system. Article 2945 C.c.Q. provides that the rank of a real right is determined by the date, hour, and minute of its publication at the registre foncier, not by the date of its creation. This means that timely publication is crucial: a hypothec created first but published second will rank below a hypothec created second but published first. Legal hypothecs (hypothèques légales) under articles 2724 to 2732 C.c.Q. may have special ranking rules.

The extinction of hypothecs is governed by articles 2795 to 2802 C.c.Q. A hypothec is extinguished by the full payment of the secured obligation, by the renunciation of the creditor, by prescription, or by the taking in payment. After extinction, the creditor must consent to the cancellation (radiation) of the hypothec inscription at the land registry under article 3057 C.c.Q.

When Do You Need a Conventional Hypothec (Quebec)?

When purchasing residential or commercial real estate in Quebec and requiring mortgage financing from a bank or financial institution. The hypothec deed is the legal instrument that secures the lender's interest in the property.

When an individual in Quebec wishes to use their property as security for a personal loan, business loan, or line of credit from a financial institution or private lender.

When refinancing an existing property in Quebec, which requires the creation of a new hypothec to replace the previous one, with proper cancellation of the prior inscription at the land registry.

When a property owner wants to understand the specific civil law protections available to them as a debtor under the Code civil du Québec, including the mandatory 60-day cure period before the creditor can exercise hypothecary recourses.

When conducting real estate transactions in Quebec and needing a reference document that outlines all the essential clauses of a conventional hypothec deed, including property designation, obligation secured, creditor's rights, debtor's obligations, and publication requirements.

What to Include in Your Conventional Hypothec (Quebec)

Property Designation -- The hypothec deed must describe the immovable property with sufficient precision under article 2694 C.c.Q. This includes the complete street address, the cadastral lot number from the Quebec land register, the land registry division (circonscription foncière), and a detailed physical description. The hypothec extends to everything immovable by nature, destination, or operation of law, including future improvements.

Secured Obligation -- The principal amount of the loan, the annual interest rate (fixed or variable), the loan term (amortization period), the hypothec term, and the monthly payment amount. Under article 2661 C.c.Q., the hypothec is merely an accessory right and subsists only as long as the underlying obligation exists.

Creditor's Rights -- The droit de suite (right to follow the property into any hands) and the droit de préférence (right to be preferred on sale proceeds according to publication rank). In case of default, hypothecary recourses under articles 2748-2794 C.c.Q. include possession for administration, taking in payment, and judicial sale.

Notarization Requirement -- Article 2693 C.c.Q. mandates that the deed be constituted by notarial act in authentic form (en minute), on pain of absolute nullity. The notary authenticates the parties, verifies capacity, and arranges publication.

Publication at the Land Registry -- The deed must be published at the registre foncier. Under article 2945 C.c.Q., the rank of the hypothec is determined by the date, hour, and minute of publication, not by the date of creation.

Debtor's Obligations -- The debtor must maintain the property, pay all property taxes, maintain insurance with the creditor as beneficiary, and not alienate or further encumber the property without consent.

Good Faith (Bonne Foi) -- Article 1375 C.c.Q. requires that all obligations be performed in good faith, governing the conduct of both parties throughout the life of the hypothec.

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