RANDALL, Circuit Judge:
The Comptroller of Public Accounts for the State of Texas (the Comptroller) brings this appeal from a judgment of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas in a proceeding instituted by Tigert Printing Co., Inc. (Tigert), a debt- or in possession under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq. (1979 Supp.). In that proceeding Tigert sought to recover money on deposit in its savings account at Dallas National Bank (Dallas National) but claimed by the Comptroller (as intervenor in this action) under a written assignment of the account from Tigert.1 The bankruptcy court found that the security interest acquired by the Comptroller through the assignment had never been recorded in accordance with article 1.07(l)(c) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes, Tex. Tax.-Gen. Ann. art. 1.07(l)(c) (Vernon 1969); that the Comptroller’s security interest had therefore not been perfected; and that Tigert could consequently avoid the security interest through powers vested in a debtor in possession by the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 1107 (1979 Supp.). On appeal, the Comptroller argues that the notice requirement of article 1.07(l)(c) does not apply to the security interest created by the assignment, as that interest is a common law pledge and thus outside the reach of article 1.07(l)(c). Ti[365]*365gert agrees that the assignment is indeed a common law pledge, and we therefore assume without deciding that this is so. We agree with the Comptroller’s further contention that a common law pledge need not be recorded under article 1.07(l)(c), and we therefore reverse the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
I. THE PARTIES’ RESPECTIVE CLAIMS TO THE SAVINGS ACCOUNT
On August 1, 1977, Tigert executed and delivered to the Comptroller an agreement assigning a Dallas National savings account totalling $7,500 to the Comptroller as security for sales and use taxes which might thereafter accrue under state law.2 This assignment was intended to meet the requirement of article 20.021(N) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes, which requires each applicant for a sales tax permit to furnish the Comptroller with sufficient security for the payment of such taxes.3
The Comptroller argues that this assignment created a common law pledge under Texas law. Recourse to common law security interest concepts is necessary in this case because of the Uniform Commercial Code’s explicit exclusion of transactions which transfer an interest in deposit accounts.4 Under the common law of Texas, a pledge arises when a debtor transfers to a creditor possession of certain collateral as security for a debt owed by the debtor to the creditor, the transfer being subject of course to a right of redemption in the debt or. E. g., McAllen State Bank v. Texas Bank & Trust Co., 433 S.W.2d 167, 171 (Tex.1968). Although Tigert did not transfer physical possession of the savings account, the Comptroller argues that Tigert transferred constructive possession because of its notice to Dallas National of the assignment and its authorization to Dallas National to pay the amount in the account directly to the Comptroller on his demand. [366]*366See Central National Bank v. Latham & Co., 22 S.W.2d 765, 768 (Tex.Civ.App.— Waco 1929, writ ref’d); Davis & Goggin v. State National Bank, 156 S.W. 321, 327-28 (Tex.Civ.App. — El Paso 1913, writ ref’d).
The bankruptcy court characterized the assignment as an “equitable lien,” but Tigert now agrees with the Comptroller that the assignment is instead a common law pledge. Brief for Appellee at 6. Since the parties are in agreement on this point, we will assume without deciding that the assignment is indeed a common law pledge. We intimate no view on the validity of this assumption.
In order to avoid the Comptroller’s security interest in the account, Tigert points to the Comptroller’s failure to record its common law pledge in accordance with article 1.07(l)(c) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes.5 That article requires recordation for any “lien provided for by Title 122A [the Taxation-General statutes];” article 20.021(N), which requires applicants for sales tax permits to furnish security for their tax obligations to the Comptroller, is indeed contained in Title 122A. Tigert reads the phrase “lien provided for by Title 122A” to include all liens which, like the pledge now at issue, are granted to the state in order to comply with some article contained in Title 122A (in this case article 20.021(N)). The Comptroller argues, on the other hand, that article 1.07(l)(e) cannot reasonably be read to require recordation of a lien which, like the Comptroller’s common law pledge, could otherwise be perfected by possession rather than by filing; according to the Comptroller, the phrase “lien provided for by Title 122A” refers only to those liens which are actually created or authorized by Title 122A, i. e., statutory tax liens such as that prescribed by article 1.07(l)(b).6
The bankruptcy court adopted the broader interpretation urged by Tigert. As the court explained:
Thus, Article 1.07 provides that any lien taken to secure payment of sales taxes must be recorded ....
Opinion of the Bankruptcy Court at 3 (emphasis added). The question now before us is whether this expansive interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) is correct; for the reasons expressed below, we agree with the Comptroller that this article cannot reasonably be read so broadly and that the bankruptcy court’s construction of the article was therefore incorrect.
II. THE APPLICABILITY OF ARTICLE 1.07(l)(c) TO A COMMON LAW PLEDGE GRANTED TO THE COMPTROLLER IN COMPLIANCE WITH ARTICLE 20.021(N)
The interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) urged by Tigert and adopted by the bankruptcy court is based on an extremely broad reading of the term “provided for,” which is apparently assumed to include the term “required by,” since the common law pledge at issue here was at most required by Title 122A and certainly was not created or authorized by that title. While we cannot say that this interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) is precluded by its admittedly ambiguous coverage of all liens “provided for by Title 122A,” the interpretation is contrary both [367]*367to the nature of a pledge and to the apparent purpose of the recordation requirement.
The essential prerequisite for any common law pledge is possession, for it is the creditor’s actual or constructive possession of the collateral which provides notice to the world of the creditor’s security interest. Possession is in practice an alternative to public recordation of a security interest; a lien based on possession need not also be recorded. See 4B Collier on Bankruptcy 170.86 (1978).
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RANDALL, Circuit Judge:
The Comptroller of Public Accounts for the State of Texas (the Comptroller) brings this appeal from a judgment of the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas in a proceeding instituted by Tigert Printing Co., Inc. (Tigert), a debt- or in possession under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1101 et seq. (1979 Supp.). In that proceeding Tigert sought to recover money on deposit in its savings account at Dallas National Bank (Dallas National) but claimed by the Comptroller (as intervenor in this action) under a written assignment of the account from Tigert.1 The bankruptcy court found that the security interest acquired by the Comptroller through the assignment had never been recorded in accordance with article 1.07(l)(c) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes, Tex. Tax.-Gen. Ann. art. 1.07(l)(c) (Vernon 1969); that the Comptroller’s security interest had therefore not been perfected; and that Tigert could consequently avoid the security interest through powers vested in a debtor in possession by the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 1107 (1979 Supp.). On appeal, the Comptroller argues that the notice requirement of article 1.07(l)(c) does not apply to the security interest created by the assignment, as that interest is a common law pledge and thus outside the reach of article 1.07(l)(c). Ti[365]*365gert agrees that the assignment is indeed a common law pledge, and we therefore assume without deciding that this is so. We agree with the Comptroller’s further contention that a common law pledge need not be recorded under article 1.07(l)(c), and we therefore reverse the judgment of the bankruptcy court.
I. THE PARTIES’ RESPECTIVE CLAIMS TO THE SAVINGS ACCOUNT
On August 1, 1977, Tigert executed and delivered to the Comptroller an agreement assigning a Dallas National savings account totalling $7,500 to the Comptroller as security for sales and use taxes which might thereafter accrue under state law.2 This assignment was intended to meet the requirement of article 20.021(N) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes, which requires each applicant for a sales tax permit to furnish the Comptroller with sufficient security for the payment of such taxes.3
The Comptroller argues that this assignment created a common law pledge under Texas law. Recourse to common law security interest concepts is necessary in this case because of the Uniform Commercial Code’s explicit exclusion of transactions which transfer an interest in deposit accounts.4 Under the common law of Texas, a pledge arises when a debtor transfers to a creditor possession of certain collateral as security for a debt owed by the debtor to the creditor, the transfer being subject of course to a right of redemption in the debt or. E. g., McAllen State Bank v. Texas Bank & Trust Co., 433 S.W.2d 167, 171 (Tex.1968). Although Tigert did not transfer physical possession of the savings account, the Comptroller argues that Tigert transferred constructive possession because of its notice to Dallas National of the assignment and its authorization to Dallas National to pay the amount in the account directly to the Comptroller on his demand. [366]*366See Central National Bank v. Latham & Co., 22 S.W.2d 765, 768 (Tex.Civ.App.— Waco 1929, writ ref’d); Davis & Goggin v. State National Bank, 156 S.W. 321, 327-28 (Tex.Civ.App. — El Paso 1913, writ ref’d).
The bankruptcy court characterized the assignment as an “equitable lien,” but Tigert now agrees with the Comptroller that the assignment is instead a common law pledge. Brief for Appellee at 6. Since the parties are in agreement on this point, we will assume without deciding that the assignment is indeed a common law pledge. We intimate no view on the validity of this assumption.
In order to avoid the Comptroller’s security interest in the account, Tigert points to the Comptroller’s failure to record its common law pledge in accordance with article 1.07(l)(c) of the Texas Taxation-General statutes.5 That article requires recordation for any “lien provided for by Title 122A [the Taxation-General statutes];” article 20.021(N), which requires applicants for sales tax permits to furnish security for their tax obligations to the Comptroller, is indeed contained in Title 122A. Tigert reads the phrase “lien provided for by Title 122A” to include all liens which, like the pledge now at issue, are granted to the state in order to comply with some article contained in Title 122A (in this case article 20.021(N)). The Comptroller argues, on the other hand, that article 1.07(l)(e) cannot reasonably be read to require recordation of a lien which, like the Comptroller’s common law pledge, could otherwise be perfected by possession rather than by filing; according to the Comptroller, the phrase “lien provided for by Title 122A” refers only to those liens which are actually created or authorized by Title 122A, i. e., statutory tax liens such as that prescribed by article 1.07(l)(b).6
The bankruptcy court adopted the broader interpretation urged by Tigert. As the court explained:
Thus, Article 1.07 provides that any lien taken to secure payment of sales taxes must be recorded ....
Opinion of the Bankruptcy Court at 3 (emphasis added). The question now before us is whether this expansive interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) is correct; for the reasons expressed below, we agree with the Comptroller that this article cannot reasonably be read so broadly and that the bankruptcy court’s construction of the article was therefore incorrect.
II. THE APPLICABILITY OF ARTICLE 1.07(l)(c) TO A COMMON LAW PLEDGE GRANTED TO THE COMPTROLLER IN COMPLIANCE WITH ARTICLE 20.021(N)
The interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) urged by Tigert and adopted by the bankruptcy court is based on an extremely broad reading of the term “provided for,” which is apparently assumed to include the term “required by,” since the common law pledge at issue here was at most required by Title 122A and certainly was not created or authorized by that title. While we cannot say that this interpretation of article 1.07(l)(c) is precluded by its admittedly ambiguous coverage of all liens “provided for by Title 122A,” the interpretation is contrary both [367]*367to the nature of a pledge and to the apparent purpose of the recordation requirement.
The essential prerequisite for any common law pledge is possession, for it is the creditor’s actual or constructive possession of the collateral which provides notice to the world of the creditor’s security interest. Possession is in practice an alternative to public recordation of a security interest; a lien based on possession need not also be recorded. See 4B Collier on Bankruptcy 170.86 (1978). Thus, the Uniform Commercial Code explicitly excludes from its filing requirement any security interest perfected by the secured party’s possession of the collateral; as the Official Comments to the Code note, this rule follows the practice “at common law, [where] there is no requirement of filing when the secured party has possession of the collateral in a pledge transaction.” Tex.Bus. & Comm.Code Ann. § 9.302(aXl) and Comment 2 (Vernon 1968).
We do not think that the Texas legislature intended to change the ancient concept of the common law pledge by .its article 1.07(l)(c) requirement of recordation for all liens “provided for by Title 122A.” Prior to the addition of article 1.07(l)(c) to the Texas Taxation-General statutes in 1969, state tax liens on personal property were accorded priority over all other liens whether or not the state recorded the tax lien. This created a tremendous hardship for those creditors who in good faith relied on the public records as evidence of their priority. See State of Texas v. Wynne, 134 Tex. 455, 133 S.W.2d 951 (1939), appeal dismissed, 310 U.S. 610, 60 S.Ct. 980, 84 L.Ed. 1388 (1940); Allied Finance Co. v. State of Texas, 387 S.W.2d 435 (Tex.Civ.App. — Austin 1965, writ ref’d n. r. e.). Although neither party has cited any published legislative history of article 1.07(l)(c), we think it obvious that that article was intended to alleviate the hardship caused by unrecorded state tax liens. No such hardship would be caused where notice to the world follows from the state’s possession of the collateral, and therefore the purpose of article 1.07(l)(c) would not be furthered by the recordation of a common law pledge. Finally, we note that article 20.021(N) was enacted in 1973, several years after the passage of article 1.07(l)(c).
We conclude that article 1.07(l)(c) cannot reasonably be read to require recordation of a common law pledge granted to the state pursuant to the requirement of article 20.-021(N). We reverse the judgment of the bankruptcy court and remand this case to the bankruptcy court for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.