Chapter
291
2006 -- H 7577 SUBSTITUTE A AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/03/06
A N A C T
RELATING
TO FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Introduced
By: Representative Arthur J. Corvese
Date
Introduced: February 16, 2006
It is enacted by the General Assembly as
follows:
SECTION 1.
Sections 19-14-1, 19-14-2, 19-14-3, 19-14-4 and 19-14-6 of the General
Laws in Chapter 19-14 entitled "Licensed
Activities" are hereby amended to read as follows:
19-14-1.
Definitions. -- For purposes of this chapter and chapters 14.1, 14.2,
14.3, 14.4,
14.6 and 14.7 of this title:
(1)
"Check" means any check, draft, money order, personal money order, or
other
instrument for the transmission or payment of
money. For the purposes of check cashing,
travelers checks or foreign denomination
instruments shall not be considered checks. "Check
cashing" means providing currency for
checks;
(2)
"Deliver" means to deliver a check to the first person who in payment
for the check
makes or purports to make a remittance of or
against the face amount of the check, whether or not
the deliverer also charges a fee in addition to
the face amount, and whether or not the deliverer
signs the check;
(3)
"Electronic money transfer" means receiving money for transmission
within the
United States or to locations abroad by any
means including, but not limited to, wire, facsimile or
other electronic transfer system;
(4) (i)
"Lender" means any person who makes or funds a loan within this state
with the
person's own funds, regardless of whether the
person is the nominal mortgagee or creditor on the
instrument evidencing the loan;
(ii) A loan is
made or funded within this state if any of the following conditions exist:
(A) The loan is
secured by real property located in this state;
(B) An
application for a loan is taken by an employee, agent, or representative of the
lender within this state;
(C) The loan
closes within this state; or
(D) The loan
solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state.
(iii) The term
"lender" shall also include any person engaged in a transaction
whereby
the person makes or funds a loan within this
state using the proceeds of an advance under a line
of credit over which proceeds the person has
dominion and control and for the repayment of
which the person is unconditionally liable. This
transaction is not a table funding transaction. A
person is deemed to have dominion and control
over the proceeds of an advance under a line of
credit used to fund a loan regardless of
whether:
(A) The person
may, contemporaneously with or shortly following the funding of the
loan, assign or deliver to the line of credit
lender one or more loans funded by the proceeds of an
advance to the person under the line of credit;
(B) The proceeds
of an advance are delivered directly to the settlement agent by the line
of credit lender, unless the settlement agent is
the agent of the line of credit lender;
(C) One or more
loans funded by the proceeds of an advance under the line of credit is
purchased by the line of credit lender; or
(D) Under the
circumstances as set forth in regulations adopted by the director or the
director's designee pursuant to this chapter;
(5)
"Licensee" means an entity licensed under this chapter;
(6)
"Loan" means any advance of money or credit including, but not
limited to:
(i) Loans secured
by mortgages;
(ii) Insurance premium
finance agreements;
(iii) The
purchase or acquisition of retail installment contracts or advances to the
holders
of those contracts;
(iv) Educational
loans;
(v) Any other
advance of money; or
(vi) Any
transaction such as those commonly known as "pay day loans,"
"pay day
advances," or "deferred presentment
loans," in which a cash advance is made to a customer in
exchange for the customer's personal check, or
in exchange for the customer's authorization to
debit the customer's deposit account, and where
the parties agree either that the check will not be
cashed or deposited, or that customer's deposit
account will not be debited, until a designated
future date.
(7) "Loan
broker" means any person who, for compensation or gain, or in the
expectation
of compensation or gain, either directly or
indirectly, solicits, processes, negotiates, places or sells
a loan within this state for others in the
primary market, or offers to do so. A loan broker shall
also mean any person who is the nominal
mortgagee or creditor in a table funding transaction. A
loan is brokered within this state if any of the
following conditions exist:
(i) The loan is
secured by real property located in this state;
(ii) An
application for a loan is taken by an employee, agent or representative of the
loan
broker within this state;
(iii) The loan
closes within this state; or
(iv) The loan
solicitation is done by an individual with a physical presence in this state.
(8) "Personal
money order" means any instrument for the transmission or payment of
money in relation to which the purchaser or
remitter appoints or purports to appoint the seller as
his or her agent for the receipt, transmission,
or handling of money, whether the instrument is
signed by the seller or by the purchaser or
remitter or some other person;
(9) "Primary
market" means the market in which loans are made to borrowers by lenders,
whether or not through a loan broker or other
conduit;
(10) "Principal
owner" means any person who owns, controls, votes or has a beneficial
interest in, directly or indirectly, ten percent
(10%) or more of the outstanding capital stock of a
licensee;
(11)
"Sell" means to sell, to issue, or to deliver a check;
(12) "Small
loan" means a loan of less than five thousand dollars ($5,000), not
secured
by real estate, made pursuant to the provisions
of chapter 14.2 of this title;
(13) "Small
loan lender" means a lender engaged in the business of making small loans
within this state;
(14) "Table
funding transaction" means a transaction in which there is a
contemporaneous advance of funds by a lender and
an assignment by the mortgagee or creditor of
the loan to the lender;
(15) "Check
casher" means a person or entity that, for compensation, engages, in whole
or in part, in the business of cashing checks;
(16)
"Deferred deposit transaction" means any transaction such as those
commonly
known as "pay-day loans,"
"pay-day advances," or "deferred presentment loans" in
which a cash
advance is made to a customer in exchange for
the customer's personal check or in exchange for
the customer's authorization to debit the
customer's deposit account and where the parties agree
either that the check will not be cashed or
deposited, or that the customer's deposit account will
not be debited until a designated future date;
(17)
"Insurance premium finance agreement" means an agreement by which an
insured,
or prospective insured, promises to pay to an
insurance premium finance company the amount
advanced or to be advanced, under the agreement
to an insurer or to an insurance producer, in
payment of a premium or premiums on an insurance
contract or contracts, together with interest
and a service charge, as authorized and limited
by this title;
(18)
"Insurance premium finance company" means a person engaged in the
business of
making insurance premium finance agreements or
acquiring insurance premium finance
agreements from other insurance premium finance
companies;
(19) "Simple
interest" means interest computed on the principal balance outstanding
immediately prior to a payment for the actual
number of days between payments made on a loan
over the life of a loan;
(20)
"Credit counseling service" means a person or corporation that
provides DMP
service to consumers, usually for a fee,
contribution, or other consideration;
(21) "Debt
Management plan (DMP)" means a program whereby money is received from
a consumer by the credit counseling service for
the purpose of distributing that money to one or
more creditors of the consumer in full or
partial payment of the consumer's obligation;
(22) (20)
"Nonprofit organization" means a corporation qualifying as a 26
U.S.C. section
50 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, in the
operation of which no member, director, officer,
partner, employee, agent, or other affiliated
person profits financially other than receiving
reasonable salaries if applicable,.
and which provides debt counseling services for individuals at
no cost or a cost not exceeding that required to
defray bona fide expenses in order to provide the
services; and
(23)
"Joint control agent" means any person engaged in the business of
receiving money
or other property for disbursal or use in
payment of the cost of labor, material services, permits,
fees, or other items of expense incurred in the
construction of improvements upon real property.
19-14-2.
Licenses required. -- No person shall engage within this state in the
business
of: (1) making or funding loans or acting as a
lender or small loan lender; (2) brokering loans or
acting as a loan broker; (3) selling checks for
a fee or other consideration; (4) cashing checks for
a fee or other consideration which includes any
premium charged for the sale of goods in excess
of the cash price of the goods; (5) providing
electronic money transfers for a fee or other
consideration; or (6) providing debt
management plan(s) debt-management services without first
obtaining a license or registration from
the director or the director's designee. The licensing
requirement for any person providing debt
management plans shall apply to all persons, without
regard for state of incorporation or a physical
presence in this state, who initiate or service debt
management plans for residents of this state.
Special exemptions from licensing for each activity
are contained in other chapters in this title.
19-14-3.
Application for license. -- (a) Application for a license shall be made
in writing
under oath in a form to be provided by the
director or the director's designee. The applicant at the
time of making application shall pay to the director
or the director's designee the sum of one half
(1/2) of the annual license fee as a fee for
investigating the application. If the application for
license is approved, the applicant shall pay a
fee equal to the annual license fee as provided in this
chapter. The license shall be continuous and the
license fee shall cover the period through March
31 of each year. Any application approved after
January 1 of any given year shall pay one half
(1/2) of the annual license fee for the period
ending March 31 of that year.
(b) [RESERVED]
Only a nonprofit organization may apply for a license to provide debt
management plan(s) under this title. Any
nonprofit organization desiring to obtain a license shall
file with the department of business regulation
an application in writing under oath providing the
following information:
(1) Proof of
nonprofit status as determined by being designated under the United States
Internal Revenue Code as section 501(-c-)(-3-).
(2) Proof of a
separate trust account with a federally-insured financial institution for the
handling of client funds.
(3) Proof of
counselor certification through a bona fide third-party certification provider
that demonstrates the competence of counselors
providing consumer assistance.
(4) Proof of a
board of directors, a majority of which does not include individuals for
whom such a position could pose a conflict with
the mission of the organization, such as creditors
and creditors' representatives: bankruptcy
attorneys, and others who would have a direct stake in
the outcome of the counseling process. The board
must have a working majority that is not
comprised of officers of the company or their
relatives.
(5) Proof of
agency accreditation provided by a bona fide third-party accreditation body
such as the council on accreditation or as
approved by the director. Such accreditation shall
include sector certification that insures
compliance to industry standards and best practices and
corporate governance.
(6) A copy of
an annual audit by an independent certified public accountant, which such
audit taking place within six (6) months of the
close of the agency's fiscal year.
(c) [RESERVED]
The director shall require a background report prepared by an
independent licensed private investigation firm
for every applicant for a license to engage in the
business of providing debt management plan(s),
including said applicant's principal owners and
officers. The cost of such report shall be borne
by the applicant. The director may conduct an
additional inquiry or investigation to determine
the applicant's fitness to be licensed or continue
to be licensed.
(d) Any license
issued under the provisions of former section 5-66-2 shall remain in full
force and effect until its expiration and shall
be subject to the provisions of this chapter.
19-14-4.
Annual fee. -- (a) Each licensee shall pay an annual license fee as
follows:
(1) Each small
loan lender license and each branch certificate, the sum of five hundred
fifty dollars ($550);
(2) Each loan
broker license and each branch certificate, the sum of five hundred fifty
dollars ($550);
(3) Each lender
license and each branch certificate, the sum of one thousand one hundred
dollars ($1,100);
(4) Each sale of
checks license, the sum of three hundred dollars ($300);
(5) Each check
cashing license, the sum of three hundred dollars ($300);
(6) Each
electronic money transfer license, the sum of three hundred dollars ($300); and
(7) Each debt
management plan license registration to provide debt-management
services, the sum of two hundred dollars ($200).
(b) Any licensee
who shall not pay the annual fee by March 31 of each year shall be
subject to a daily penalty of twenty-five
dollars ($25) per day, subject to a maximum of seven
hundred fifty dollars ($750). The penalty shall
be paid to the director to and for the use of the
state. The penalty may be waived for good cause
by the director or the director's designee, upon
written request.
19-14-6.
Bond of applicant. -- (a) An applicant for any license shall file with
the director
or the director's designee a bond to be approved
by him or her in which the applicant shall be the
obligor.
(b) The amount of
the bond shall be as follows:
(1) Small loan
lenders, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
(2) Loan brokers,
the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
(3) Lenders, the
sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000);
(4) Sale of
checks and electronic money transfer licensees, the sum of fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000) subject to a maximum of one
hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000)
when aggregated with agent locations;
(5) Check cashing
licensees who accept checks for collection with deferred payment, the
sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) subject
to a maximum of one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars ($150,000) when aggregated with agent
locations;
(6) Foreign
exchange licensees, the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000);
(7) Each branch
or agent location of a licensee, the sum of five thousand dollars
($5,000); or
(8) Each debt
management plan licensee, the sum equal to the amount of moneys
received from debtors and on hand at any time,
but not less than twenty thousand dollars
($20,000) with one or more insurers, approved by
the director, which does not exceed the sum in
the aggregate debt-management services registrant,
the amount provided in section 19-14.8-13.
(c) The bond
shall run to the state for the use of the state and of any person who may
have cause of action against the obligor of the
bond under the provisions of this title. The bond
shall be conditioned upon the obligor faithfully
conforming to and abiding by the provisions of
this title and of all rules and regulations
lawfully made, and the obligor will pay to the state and to
any person any and all money that may become due
or owing to the state or to the person from
the obligor under and by virtue of the
provisions of this title.
(d) The
provisions of subsection (b)(6) of this section shall not apply to any foreign
exchange business holding a valid electronic
money transfer license issued pursuant to section
19-14-1 et seq., that has filed with the
division of banking the bond required by subsections (b)(4)
and (b)(7) of this section.
(e) The bond
shall remain in force and effect until the surety is released from liability by
the director or the director's designee or until
the bond is cancelled by the surety. The surety may
cancel the bond and be released from further
liability under the bond upon receipt by the director
or the director's designee of written notice of
the cancellation of the bond at least thirty (30) days
in advance of the cancellation of the bond. The
cancellation shall not affect any liability incurred
or accrued under the bond before the termination
of the thirty (30) day period. Upon receipt of
any notice of cancellation, the director shall
provide written notice to the licensee.
SECTION 2. Chapter
19-14.7 of the General Laws entitled "Nonprofit Credit
Counseling Services Act" is hereby repealed
in its entirety.
CHAPTER
19-14.7
Nonprofit Credit
Counseling Services Act
19-14.7-1.
Short title. -- This chapter shall be known as the
"Nonprofit Credit
Counseling Services Act."
19-14.7-2.
Special exemptions. -- No license to provide debt management
plans shall be
required of any:
(a) Regulated
institutions and banks or credit unions organized under the laws of the
United States, or banks or credit unions
organized under the laws of any state within the United
States if the laws of the state in which the
bank or credit union is organized authorizes under
conditions not substantially more restrictive
than those imposed by the laws of this state, as
determined by the director or the director's
designee, a financial institution or credit union to
engage in the business of originating or
brokering loans in the other state; no bank or credit union
duly organized under the laws of another state
within the United States may receive deposits, pay
checks or lend money from an established
location within this state without having obtained the
approval of the director or the director's
designee pursuant to chapter 7 of this title;
(b) Person
licensed to practice law in this state when services are rendered in the course
of his or her practice as an attorney and fees
for such services are not in excess of those stated in
this chapter;
(c)
Transaction in which money or other property is paid through a "joint
control agent";
(d) Merchant-owned
credit or creditors association;
(e) A
certified public accountant (CPA), when services are rendered in the course of
his
or her practice as a CPA and fees for such
services are not in excess of those stated in this
chapter.
19-14.7-3.
Licensee's duties. -- (a) All debt management plans must be
evidenced by a
written agreement between the credit counseling
agency and the consumer, clearly acknowledged
by both parties. A copy of the agreement must be
provided to the consumer.
(b) All debt
management plan agreements must contain the following:
(1) The name
and address of both the consumer and the credit counseling agency;
(2) A full
description of all services to be performed for the consumer;
(3) A clear indication
of the costs to the consumer, including contributions or fees,
highlighted in bold type;
(4) A
statement that the agreement may be terminated for any reason by the consumer
and that the consumer has no obligation to
continue the arrangement unless satisfied with the
services provided;
(5) An
indication of how to resolve disputes under the agreement, including the
telephone number of the department of business
regulation;
(6) A complete
list of the consumer's and agency's obligations that are subject to the
agreement; and
(7) A budget
analysis showing, as a minimum, sources of income, detailed monthly
expenses, and debt payments.
(c) Licensees
shall:
(1) Maintain complete
and adequate records during the term of the contract with the
consumer and for a period of seven (7) years
from the date of cancellation or completion of the
contract with each debtor. These records shall
contain complete information regarding the
contract, extensions of the contract, payments,
disbursements and charges, and shall be open to
inspection by the director and his or her
appointed agents during normal business hours;
(2) Make remittances
to creditors within a reasonable period of time after receipt of any
funds, less prorated fees and costs, unless the
reasonable payment of one or more of the debtor's
obligations requires that funds be held for a
longer period so as to accumulate a sum certain;
(3) Furnish
the consumer with a written statement of his or her account on a regular
basis, as established by the director and within
a reasonable time after the consumer requests it
and within ninety (90) days after the completion
of the credit counseling agreement, and furnish
the consumer a verbal accounting at any time the
consumer requests it during normal business
hours; and
(4) Keep the
cost to the consumer for the credit counseling services as low as possible. In
no event, shall the cost to the consumer,
including voluntary contributions, exceed those set by
regulation. All material contracts or fee for
service arrangements with any third-party out sources,
companies, or vendors must be disclosed to the
director. No one may be denied access to the debt
management plans because of an inability to pay
a fee.
19-14.7-4.
Prohibited acts. -- No licensee shall:
(a) Purchase
from a creditor any obligation of a consumer;
(b) Operate as
a collection agent and as a licensee for the same consumer's account;
(c) Execute
any contract or agreement to be signed by the consumer, unless the contract
or agreement is completed in full;
(d) Pay any
bonus or consideration to any person for the referral of a debtor to his or her
business or accept or receive any bonus,
commission, or consideration for referring any consumer
to any person for any reason;
(e) Advertise,
display, distribute, broadcast, or televise his or her services, rates, or
terms
in any manner where any false, misleading, or
deceptive statements or representations are made
with regard to the services to be performed by
the licensee or the charges to be made;
(f) Lend money
or provide credit to any consumer;
(g) Obtain a
mortgage or any other security interest in property of a consumer;
(h) Pay any
incentive to its employees for the executing of any debt management plan
contracts or receive any undisclosed
compensation, bonds, commissions, or compensation for
referring any consumer for any reason; or
(i) Enter into
any contract or fee for service arrangement with any company or vendor
owned, controlled, or affiliated with an officer
or director or relative of an officer or director that
materially personally benefits, enriches, or
inures benefit to an officer or director of the nonprofit
credit counseling agency.
SECTION 3. Title
19 of the General Laws entitled "FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS" is
hereby amended by adding thereto the following
chapter:
CHAPTER
14.8
UNIFORM DEBT-MANAGEMENT
SERVICES ACT
19-14.8-1.
Short title. – This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the
"Uniform
Debt-Management Services Act."
19-14.8-2.
Definitions. -- In this chapter:
(1)
"Director" means the director of the department of business
regulation.
(2)
"Affiliate":
(a) with
respect to an individual, means:
(i) the spouse
of the individual;
(ii) a sibling
of the individual or the spouse of a sibling;
(iii) an
individual or the spouse of an individual who is a lineal ancestor or lineal
descendant of the individual or the individual's
spouse;
(iv) an aunt,
uncle, great aunt, great uncle, first cousin, niece, nephew, grandniece, or
grandnephew, whether related by the whole or the
half blood or adoption, or the spouse of any of
them; or
(v) any other
individual occupying the residence of the individual; and
(b) with
respect to an entity, means:
(i) a person that
directly or indirectly controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the entity;
(ii) an officer
of, or an individual performing similar functions with respect to, the entity;
(iii) a
director of, or an individual performing similar functions with respect to, the
entity;
(iv) subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to this chapter, a person that
receives or received more than twenty-five
thousand dollars ($25,000) from the entity in either
the current year or the preceding year or a
person that owns more than ten percent (10%) of, or an
individual who is employed by or is a director
of, a person that receives or received more than
twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) from the
entity in either the current year or the preceding
year;
(v) an officer
or director of, or an individual performing similar functions with respect to,
a person described in subsection (b)(i) above;
(vi) the spouse
of, or an individual occupying the residence of, an individual described in
subsection (b)(i) through (v); or
(vii) an
individual who has the relationship specified in subsection (a)(iv) to an
individual or the spouse of an individual
described in subsection (b)(i) through (v).
(3)
"Agreement" means an agreement between a provider and an individual
for the
performance of debt-management services.
(4)
"Bank" means a financial institution, including a commercial bank,
savings bank,
savings and loan association, credit union, and
trust company, engaged in the business of
banking, chartered under federal or state law,
and regulated by a federal or state banking
regulatory authority.
(5)
"Business address" means the physical location of a business,
including the name and
number of a street.
(6)
"Certified counselor" means an individual certified by a training
program or certifying
organization, approved by the director, that
authenticates the competence of individuals providing
education and assistance to other individuals in
connection with debt-management services.
(7)
"Concessions" means assent to repayment of a debt on terms more
favorable to an
individual than the terms of the contract
between the individual and a creditor.
(8)
"Day" means calendar day.
(9) "Debt-management
services" means services as an intermediary between an
individual and one or more creditors of the
individual for the purpose of obtaining concessions,
but does not include:
(a) legal
services provided in an attorney-client relationship by an attorney licensed or
otherwise authorized to practice law in this
state;
(b) accounting
services provided in an accountant-client relationship by a certified public
accountant licensed to provide accounting
services in this state; or
(c)
financial-planning services provided in a financial planner-client relationship
by a
member of a financial-planning profession whose
members the director, by rule, determines are
(i) licensed by
this state;
(ii) subject to
a disciplinary mechanism;
(iii) subject
to a code of professional responsibility; and
(iv) subject to
a continuing-education requirement.
(10)
"Entity" means a person other than an individual.
(11) "Good
faith" means honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable standards of
fair dealing.
(12)
"Person" means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate,
trust, partnership,
limited liability company, association, joint
venture, or any other legal or commercial entity. The
term does not include a public corporation,
government, or governmental subdivision, agency, or
instrumentality.
(13)
"Plan" means a program or strategy in which a provider furnishes
debt-management
services to an individual and which includes a
schedule of payments to be made by or on behalf
of the individual and used to pay debts owed by
the individual.
(14)
"Principal amount of the debt" means the amount of a debt at the time
of an
agreement.
(15)
"Provider" means a person that provides, offers to provide, or agrees
to provide debt-
management services directly or through others.
(16)
"Record" means information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or
that is stored
in an electronic or other medium and is
retrievable in perceivable form.
(17)
"Settlement fee" means a charge imposed on or paid by an individual
in connection
with a creditor's assent to accept in full
satisfaction of a debt an amount less than the principal
amount of the debt.
(18)
"Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or adopt a record:
(a) to execute
or adopt a tangible symbol; or
(b) to attach
to or logically associate with the record an electronic sound, symbol, or
process.
(19)
"State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia,
Puerto Rico, the
United States Virgin Islands, or any territory
or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of
the United States.
(20)
"Trust account" means an account held by a provider that is:
(a) established
in an insured bank;
(b) separate
from other accounts of the provider or its designee;
(c) designated
as a trust account or other account designated to indicate that the money in
the account is not the money of the provider or
its designee; and
(d) used to
hold money of one or more individuals for disbursement to creditors of the
individuals.
19-14.8-3.
Exempt agreements and person. -- (a) This chapter does not apply to
an
agreement with an individual who the provider
has no reason to know resides in this state at the
time of the agreement.
(b) This
chapter does not apply to a provider to the extent that the provider:
(1) provides or
agrees to provide debt-management, educational, or counseling services
to an individual who the provider has no reason
to know resides in this state at the time the
provider agrees to provide the services; or
(2) receives no
compensation for debt-management services from or on behalf of the
individuals to whom it provides the services or
from their creditors.
(c) This
chapter does not apply to the following persons or their employees when the
person or the employee is engaged in the regular
course of the person's business or profession:
(1) a judicial
officer, a person acting under an order of a court or an administrative
agency, or an assignee for the benefit of
creditors;
(2) a bank
chartered under the laws of the United States or of this state;
(3) an
affiliate, as defined in subdivision 19-14.8-2(2)(b)(i), of a bank described in
subsection (2) if the affiliate is regulated by
a federal or state banking regulatory authority;
(4) a title
insurer, escrow company, or other person that provides bill-paying services if
the provision of debt-management services is
incidental to the bill-paying services; or
(5) a bank
chartered under the laws of another state, so long as the laws of such other
state expressly authorize such bank to operate
in such state, under conditions no more restrictive
than those imposed by the laws of this state, as
determined by the director or the director's
designee; or
(6) an
affiliate, as defined in subdivision 19-14.8-2(2)(b)(i), of a bank described in
subsection (5) above if the affiliate is
regulated by a federal or state banking regulatory authority.
19-14.8-4.
Registration required. -- (a) Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (b),
a provider may not provide debt-management
services to an individual who it reasonably should
know resides in this state at the time it agrees
to provide the services, unless the provider is
registered under this chapter.
(b) If a
provider is registered under this chapter, subsection (a) does not apply to an
employee or agent of the provider.
(c) The
director shall maintain and publicize a list of the names of all registered
providers.
19-14.8-5.
Application for registration – Form, fee and accompanying documents. --
(a) An application for registration as a provider
must be in a form prescribed by the director.
(b) Subject to
adjustment of dollar amounts pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), an
application for registration as a provider must
be accompanied by:
(1) the fee established
by chapter 19-14;
(2) the bond
required by section 19-14.8-13;
(3)
identification of all trust accounts required by section 19-14.8-22 and an
irrevocable
consent authorizing the director to review and
examine the trust accounts;
(4) evidence of
insurance in the amount of two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000):
(A) against the
risks of dishonesty, fraud, theft, and other misconduct on the part of the
applicant or a director, employee, or agent of
the applicant;
(B) issued by
an insurance company authorized to do business in this state and rated at
least "A" by a nationally recognized
rating organization;
(C) with no
deductible;
(D) payable to
the applicant, the individuals who have agreements with the applicant, and
this state, as their interests may appear; and
(E) not subject
to cancellation by the applicant without the approval of the director;
(5) if the
applicant is a foreign corporation, proof that the applicant holds a
certificate of
authority to conduct affairs in this state, as
required by chapter 7-6; and
(6) if the applicant is
organized as a not-for-profit entity or is exempt from taxation,
evidence of not-for-profit and
tax-exempt status applicable to the applicant under the Internal
Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. Section 501,
as amended.
19-14.8-6.
Application for registration – Required information. -- An
application for
registration must be signed under oath or
certified under the penalties of perjury and include:
(1) the
applicant's name, principal business address and telephone number, and all
other
business addresses in this state,
electronic-mail addresses, and Internet website addresses;
(2) all names
under which the applicant conducts business;
(3) the address
of each location in this state at which the applicant will provide debt-
management services or a statement that the
applicant will have no such location;
(4) the name
and home address of each officer and director of the applicant and each
person that owns at least ten percent (10%) of
the applicant;
(5)
identification of every jurisdiction in which, during the five (5) years
immediately
preceding the application:
(A) the
applicant or any of its officers or directors has been licensed or registered
to
provide debt-management services; or
(B) individuals
have resided when they received debt-management services from the
applicant;
(6) a statement
describing, to the extent it is known or should be known by the applicant,
any material civil or criminal judgment or
litigation and any material administrative or
enforcement action by a governmental agency in
any jurisdiction against the applicant, any of its
officers, directors, owners, or agents, or any
person who is authorized to have access to the trust
account required by section 19-14.8-22;
(7) the
applicant's financial statements, audited by an accountant licensed to conduct
audits, for each of the two (2) years
immediately preceding the application or, if it has not been in
operation for the two (2) years preceding the
application, for the period of its existence;
(8) evidence of
accreditation by an independent accrediting organization approved by the
director;
(9) evidence
that, within twelve (12) months after initial employment, each of the
applicant's counselors becomes certified as a
certified counselor;
(10) a
description of the three (3) most commonly used educational programs that the
applicant provides or intends to provide to
individuals who reside in this state and a copy of any
materials used or to be used in those programs;
(11) a
description of the applicant's financial analysis and initial budget plan,
including
any form or electronic model, used to evaluate
the financial condition of individuals;
(12) a copy of
each form of agreement that the applicant will use with individuals who
reside in this state;
(13) the
schedule of fees and charges that the applicant will use with individuals who
reside in this state;
(14) at the
applicant's expense, the results of a criminal-records check, including
fingerprints, conducted within the immediately
preceding twelve (12) months, covering every
officer of the applicant and every employee or
agent of the applicant who is authorized to have
access to the trust account required by section
19-14.8-22;
(15) the names
and addresses of all employers of each director during the ten (10) years
immediately preceding the application;
(16) a
description of any ownership interest of at least ten percent (10%) by a
director,
owner, or employee of the applicant in:
(A) any
affiliate of the applicant; or
(B) any entity
that provides products or services to the applicant or any individual
relating to the applicant's debt-management
services;
(17) a
statement of the amount of compensation of the applicant's five (5) most highly
compensated employees for each of the three (3)
years immediately preceding the application or,
if it has not been in operation for the three
(3) years preceding the application, for the period of its
existence;
(18) the
identity of each director who is an affiliate, as defined in subdivision
19-14.8-
2(2)(A) or (B)(i), (ii), (iv), (v), (vi), or
(vii), of the applicant; and
(19) any other
information that the director reasonably requires to perform the director's
duties hereunder.
19-14.8-7.
Application for registration – Obligation to update. -- An applicant
or
registered provider shall notify the director
within ten (10) days after a change in the information
specified in subdivision 19-14.8-5(b)(4) or (6)
or subsection 19-14.8-6(1), (3), (6), (12), or (13).
19-14.8-8. Application
for registration – Public information. -- Except for the
information required by subsections
19-14.8-6(7)(14) and (17) and the addresses required by
subsection 19-14.8-6(4), the director shall make
the information in an application for registration
as a provider available to the public.
19-14.8-9.
Certificate of registration – Issuance or denial. -- (a) Except as
otherwise
provided in subsections (b) and (c), the
director shall issue a certificate of registration as a
provider to a person that complies with section
19-14.8-5 and section 19-14.8-6.
(b) The
director may deny registration if:
(1) the
application contains information that is materially erroneous or incomplete;
(2) an officer,
director, or owner of the applicant has been convicted of a crime, or
suffered a civil judgment, involving dishonesty
or the violation of state or federal securities laws;
(3) the
applicant or any of its officers, directors, or owners has defaulted in the
payment
of money collected for others; or
(4) the
director finds that the financial responsibility, experience, character, or
general
fitness of the applicant or its owners,
directors, employees, or agents does not warrant belief that
the business will be operated in compliance with
this chapter.
(c) The
director shall deny registration if:
(1) the
application is not accompanied by the fee established by the director; or
(2) with
respect to an applicant that is organized as a not-for-profit entity or has
obtained
tax-exempt status under the Internal Revenue
Code, 26 U.S.C. Section 501 as amended, the
applicant's board of directors is not
independent of the applicant's employees and agents.
(d) Subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), a
board of directors is not independent for
purposes of subsection (c) if more than one-fourth (1/4)
of its members:
(1) are
affiliates of the applicant, as defined in this chapter; or
(2) after the
date ten (10) years before first becoming a director of the applicant, were
employed by or directors of a person that
received from the applicant more than twenty-five
thousand dollars ($25,000) in either the current
year or the preceding year.
19-14.8-10.
Certificate of registration -- Timing. -- (a) The director shall
approve or
deny an initial registration as a provider
within one hundred twenty (120) days after an
application is filed. In connection with a
request pursuant to this chapter for additional
information, the director may extend the one
hundred twenty (120) day period for not more than
sixty (60) days. Within seven (7) days after
denying an application, the director, in a record, shall
inform the applicant of the reasons for the
denial.
(b) If the
director denies an application for registration as a provider or does not act
on an
application within the time prescribed in
subsection (a), the applicant may appeal and request a
hearing pursuant to chapter 42-35.
(c) Subject to this
chapter subsection 19-14.8-11(d) and section 19-14.8-34, a registration
as a provider is valid for one year.
19-14.8-11.
Renewal of registration. -- (a) A provider must obtain a renewal of
its
registration annually.
(b) An
application for renewal of registration as a provider must be in a form
prescribed
by the director, signed under oath or certified
under the penalties of perjury, and:
(1) be filed in
accordance with section 19-14-22;
(2) be
accompanied by the fee established by chapter 19-14 and the bond required by
this
chapter;
(3) contain the
matter required for initial registration as a provider by this chapter and a
financial statement, audited by an accountant
licensed to conduct audits, for the applicant's fiscal
year immediately preceding the application;
(4) disclose
any changes in the information contained in the applicant's application for
registration or its immediately previous
application for renewal, as applicable;
(5) supply
evidence of insurance in an amount equal to the larger of two hundred fifty
thousand dollars ($250,000) or the highest daily
balance in the trust account required by this
chapter during the six (6) month period
immediately preceding the application:
(A) against
risks of dishonesty, fraud, theft, and other misconduct on the part of the
applicant or a director, employee, or agent of
the applicant;
(B) issued by
an insurance company authorized to do business in this state and rated at
least "A" by a nationally recognized
rating organization;
(C) with no
deductible;
(D) payable to
the applicant, the individuals who have agreements with the applicant, and
this state, as their interests may appear; and
(E) not subject
to cancellation by the applicant without the approval of the director;
(6) disclose
the total amount of money received by the applicant pursuant to plans during
the preceding twelve (12) months from or on
behalf of individuals who reside in this state and the
total amount of money distributed to creditors
of those individuals during that period;
(7) disclose,
to the best of the applicant's knowledge, the gross amount of money
accumulated during the preceding twelve (12)
months pursuant to plans by or on behalf of
individuals who reside in this state and with
whom the applicant has agreements; and
(8) provide any
other information that the director reasonably requires to perform the
director's duties under this section.
(c) Except for
the information required by subsections 19-14.8-6(7), (14), and (17) and
the addresses required by subsection
19-14.8-6(4), the director shall make the information in an
application for renewal of registration as a
provider available to the public.
(d) If a
registered provider files a timely and complete application for renewal of
registration, the registration remains effective
until the director, in a record, notifies the applicant
of a denial and states the reasons for the
denial.
(e) If the
director denies an application for renewal of registration as a provider, the
applicant, within ten (10) days after receiving
notice of the denial, may appeal and request a
hearing pursuant to chapter 42-35. Subject to section
19-14.8-34, while the appeal is pending the
applicant shall continue to provide
debt-management services to individuals with whom it has
agreements. If the denial is affirmed, subject
to the director's order and section 19-14.8-34, the
applicant shall continue to provide
debt-management services to individuals with whom it has
agreements until, with the approval of the
director, it transfers the agreements to another
registered provider or returns to the
individuals all unexpended money that is under the
applicant's control.
19-14.8-12.
Registration in another state. -- If a provider holds a license or
certificate
of registration in another state authorizing it
to provide debt-management services, the provider
may submit a copy of that license or certificate
and the application for it instead of an application
in the form prescribed by subsection
19-14.8-5(a), 6, or 11(b). The director shall accept the
application and the license or certificate from the
other state as an application for registration as a
provider or for renewal of registration as a
provider, as appropriate, in this state if:
(1) the
application in the other state contains information substantially similar to or
more
comprehensive than that required in an
application submitted in this state;
(2) the
applicant provides the information required by subsections 19-14.8-6(1), (3),
(10),
(12), and (13); and
(3) the
applicant, under oath or certified under the penalties of perjury, certifies
that the
information contained in the application is
current or, to the extent it is not current, supplements
the application to make the information current.
19-14.8-13.
Bond required. -- (a) Except as otherwise provided in section
19-14.8-14, a
provider that is required to be registered under
this chapter shall file a surety bond with the
director, which must:
(1) be in
effect during the period of registration and for two (2) years after the
provider
ceases providing debt-management services to
individuals in this state; and
(2) run to this
state for the benefit of this state and of individuals who reside in this state
when they agree to receive debt-management
services from the provider, as their interests may
appear.
(b) Subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), a
surety bond filed pursuant to subsection (a)
must:
(1) be in the
amount of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or other larger or smaller amount
that the director determines is warranted by the
financial condition and business experience of the
provider, the history of the provider in
performing debt-management services, the risk to
individuals, and any other factor the director
considers appropriate;
(2) be issued
by a bonding, surety, or insurance company authorized to do business in this
state and rated at least "A" by a
nationally recognized rating organization; and
(3) have
payment conditioned upon noncompliance of the provider or its agent with this
chapter.
(c) If the
principal amount of a surety bond is reduced by payment of a claim or a
judgment, the provider shall immediately notify
the director and, within thirty (30) days after
notice by the director, file a new or additional
surety bond in an amount set by the director. The
amount of the new or additional bond must be at
least the amount of the bond immediately before
payment of the claim or judgment. If for any
reason a surety terminates a bond, the provider shall
immediately file a new surety bond in the amount
of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) or other
amount determined pursuant to subsection (b).
(d) The
director or an individual may obtain satisfaction out of the surety bond
procured
pursuant to this section if:
(1) the
director assesses expenses under subdivision 19-14.8-32(b)(1), issues a final
order
under subdivision 19-14.8-33(a)(2), or recovers
a final judgment under subdivision 19-14.8-
33(a)(4) or (5) or (d); or
(2) an
individual recovers a final judgment pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-5(a), (b),
or
(c)(1), (2), or (4).
(e) If claims
against a surety bond exceed or are reasonably expected to exceed the
amount of the bond, the director, on the
initiative of the director or on petition of the surety, shall,
unless the proceeds are adequate to pay all
costs, judgments, and claims, distribute the proceeds
in the following order:
(1) to
satisfaction of a final order or judgment under subsection 19-14.8-33(a)(2),
(4), or
(5) or (d);
(2) to final
judgments recovered by individuals pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-35(a), (b),
or (c) (1), (2) or (4), pro rata;
(3) to claims
of individuals established to the satisfaction of the director, pro rata; and
(4) if a final
order or judgment is issued under subsection 19-14.8-33(a), to the expenses
charged pursuant to subdivision
19-14.8-32(b)(1).
19-14.8-14.
Bond required -- Substitute. -- (a) Instead of the surety bond
required by
section 19-14.8-13, a provider may deliver to the
director, in the amount required by subsection
19-14.8-13(b), and, except as otherwise provided
in subparagraph (2)(A) below, payable or
available to this state and to individuals who
reside in this state when they agree to receive debt-
management services from the provider, as their
interests may appear, if the provider or its agent
does not comply with this chapter:
(1) a
certificate of insurance issued by an insurance company authorized to do
business in
this state and rated at least "A" by a
nationally recognized rating organization, with no deductible;
or
(2) with the
approval of the director:
(A) an
irrevocable letter of credit, issued or confirmed by a bank approved by the
director, payable upon presentation of a certificate
by the director stating that the provider or its
agent has not complied with this chapter; or
(B) bonds or
other obligations of the United States or guaranteed by the United States or
bonds or other obligations of this state or a
political subdivision of this state, to be deposited and
maintained with a bank approved by the director
for this purpose.
(b) If a
provider furnishes a substitute pursuant to subsection (a), the provisions of
subsections 19-14.8-13(a), (c), (d), and (e) apply
to the substitute.
19-14.8-15.
Requirement of good faith. -- A provider shall act in good faith in
all
matters under this chapter.
19-14.8-16.
Customer service. -- A provider that is required to be registered
under this
chapter shall maintain a toll-free communication
system, staffed at a level that reasonably permits
an individual to speak to a certified counselor
or customer-service representative, as appropriate,
during ordinary business hours.
19-14.8-17.
Prerequisites for providing debt-management services. -- (a) Before
providing debt-management services, a registered
provider shall give the individual an itemized
list of goods and services and the charges for
each. The list must be clear and conspicuous, be in a
record the individual may keep whether or not
the individual assents to an agreement, and
describe the goods and services the provider
offers:
(1) free of
additional charge if the individual enters into an agreement;
(2) for a charge
if the individual does not enter into an agreement; and
(3) for a
charge if the individual enters into an agreement, using the following
terminology, as applicable, and format:
Set-up fee
___________________________________________
dollar amount
of fee
Monthly service
fee ___________________________________________
dollar amount
of fee or method of determining amount
Settlement fee
___________________________________________
dollar amount
of fee or method of determining amount
Goods and
services in addition to those provided in connection with a plan:
__________
___________________________________________
(item) dollar
amount or method of determining amount
__________
___________________________________________
(item) dollar
amount or method of determining amount.
(b) A provider
may not furnish debt-management services unless the provider, through
the services of a certified counselor:
(1) provides
the individual with reasonable education about the management of personal
finance;
(2) has
prepared a financial analysis; and
(3) if the
individual is to make regular, periodic payments:
(A) has
prepared a plan for the individual;
(B) has made a
determination, based on the provider's analysis of the information
provided by the individual and otherwise
available to it, that the plan is suitable for the individual
and the individual will be able to meet the
payment obligations under the plan; and
(C) believes
that each creditor of the individual listed as a participating creditor in the
plan will accept payment of the individual's
debts as provided in the plan.
(c) Before an
individual assents to an agreement to engage in a plan, a provider shall:
(1) provide the
individual with a copy of the analysis and plan required by subsection (b)
in a record that identifies the provider and
that the individual may keep whether or not the
individual assents to the agreement;
(2) inform the individual
of the availability, at the individual's option, of assistance by a
toll-free communication system or in person to
discuss the financial analysis and plan required by
subsection (b); and
(3) with
respect to all creditors identified by the individual or otherwise known by the
provider to be creditors of the individual,
provide the individual with a list of:
(A) creditors
that the provider expects to participate in the plan and grant concessions;
(B) creditors
that the provider expects to participate in the plan but not grant concessions;
(C) creditors
that the provider expects not to participate in the plan; and
(D) all other
creditors.
(d) Before an
individual assents to an agreement to engage in a plan, the provider shall
inform the individual, in a record that contains
nothing else, that is given separately, and that the
individual may keep whether or not the
individual assents to the agreement:
(1) of the name
and business address of the provider;
(2) that plans
are not suitable for all individuals and the individual may ask the provider
about other ways, including bankruptcy, to deal
with indebtedness;
(3) that
establishment of a plan may adversely affect the individual's credit rating or
credit scores;
(4) that
nonpayment of debt may lead creditors to increase finance and other charges or
undertake collection activity, including
litigation;
(5) unless it
is not true, that the provider may receive compensation from the creditors of
the individual; and
(6) that,
unless the individual is insolvent, if a creditor settles for less than the
full amount
of the debt, the plan may result in the creation
of taxable income to the individual, even though
the individual does not receive any money.
(e) If a
provider may receive payments from an individual's creditors and the plan
contemplates that the individual's creditors
will reduce finance charges or fees for late payment,
default, or delinquency, the provider may comply
with subsection (d) by providing the following
disclosure, surrounded by black lines:
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
FOR YOU TO CONSIDER
(1)
Debt-management plans are not right for all individuals, and you may ask us to
provide information about other ways, including
bankruptcy, to deal with your debts.
(2) Using a
debt-management plan may hurt your credit rating or credit scores.
(3) We may
receive compensation for our services from your creditors.
_______________________________________
Name and
business address of provider
(f) If a
provider will not receive payments from an individual's creditors and the plan
contemplates that the individual's creditors
will reduce finance charges or fees for late payment,
default, or delinquency, a provider may comply
with subsection (d) by providing the following
disclosure, surrounded by black lines:
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
FOR YOU TO CONSIDER
(1)
Debt-management plans are not right for all individuals, and you may ask us to
provide information about other ways, including
bankruptcy, to deal with your debts.
(2) Using a
debt-management plan may hurt your credit rating or credit scores.
______________________________________
Name and business
address of provider
(g) If a plan
contemplates that creditors will settle debts for less than the full principal
amount of debt owed, a provider may comply with
subsection (d) by providing the following
disclosure, surrounded by black lines:
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
FOR YOU TO CONSIDER
(1) Our program
is not right for all individuals, and you may ask us to provide
information about bankruptcy and other ways to
deal with your debts.
(2) Nonpayment
of your debts under our program may:
hurt your
credit rating or credit scores;
lead your
creditors to increase finance and other charges; and
lead your
creditors to undertake activity, including lawsuits, to collect the debts.
(3) Reduction
of debt under our program may result in taxable income to you, even
though you will not actually receive any money.
_________________________________________
Name and
business address of provider
19-14.8-18.
Communication by electronic or other means. – (a) In this section:
(1)
"Federal act" means the Electronic Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act,
15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et seq., as amended.
(2)
"Consumer" means an individual who seeks or obtains goods or services
that are used
primarily for personal, family, or household
purposes.
(b) A provider
may satisfy the requirements of section 19-14.8-17, 19-14.8-19, or 19-
14.8-27 by means of the Internet or other
electronic means if the provider obtains a consumer's
consent in the manner provided by section
101(c)(1) of the federal act.
(c) The
disclosures and materials required by sections 19-14.8-17, 19-14.8-19, and 19-
14.8-27 shall be presented in a form that is
capable of being accurately reproduced for later
reference.
(d) With
respect to disclosure by means of an Internet website, the disclosure of the
information required by subsection 19-14.8-17(d)
must appear on one or more screens that:
(1) contain no
other information; and
(2) the
individual must see before proceeding to assent to formation of a plan.
(e) At the time
of providing the materials and agreement required by subsections 19-14.8-
17(c) and (d), section 19-14.8-19, and section
19-14.8-27, a provider shall inform the individual
that upon electronic, telephonic, or written
request, it will send the individual a written copy of
the materials, and shall comply with a request
as provided in subsection (f).
(f) If a
provider is requested, before the expiration of ninety (90) days after a plan
is
completed or terminated, to send a written copy
of the materials required by subsections 19-14.8-
17(c) and (d), section 19-14.8-19, or section
19-14.8-27, the provider shall send them at no charge
within three (3) business days after the
request, but the provider need not comply with a request
more than once per calendar month or if it
reasonably believes the request is made for purposes of
harassment. If a request is made more than
ninety (90) days after a plan is completed or
terminated, the provider shall send within a
reasonable time a written copy of the materials
requested.
(g) A provider
that maintains an Internet website shall disclose on the home page of its
website or on a page that is clearly and conspicuously
connected to the home page by a link that
clearly reveals its contents:
(1) its name
and all names under which it does business;
(2) its
principal business address, telephone number, and electronic-mail address, if
any;
and
(3) the names
of its principal officers.
(h) Subject to
subsection (i), if a consumer who has consented to electronic
communication in the manner provided by section
101 of the federal act withdraws consent as
provided in the federal act, a provider may
terminate its agreement with the consumer.
(i) If a
provider wishes to terminate an agreement with a consumer pursuant to
subsection
(h), it shall notify the consumer that it will
terminate the agreement unless the consumer, within
thirty (30) days after receiving the
notification, consents to electronic communication in the
manner provided in section 101(c) of the federal
act. If the consumer consents, the provider may
terminate the agreement only as permitted by
subdivision 19-14.8-19(a)(6)(G).
19-14.8-19.
Form and content of agreement. -- (a) An agreement must:
(1) be in a
record;
(2) be dated
and signed by the provider and the individual;
(3) include the
name of the individual and the address where the individual resides;
(4) include the
name, business address, and telephone number of the provider;
(5) be
delivered to the individual immediately upon formation of the agreement; and
(6) disclose:
(A) the
services to be provided;
(B) the amount,
or method of determining the amount, of all fees, individually itemized,
to be paid by the individual;
(C) the
schedule of payments to be made by or on behalf of the individual, including
the
amount of each payment, the date on which each
payment is due, and an estimate of the date of
the final payment or, if such information is not
known to the provider at the time of the agreement
is made, and affirmative statement to that
effect;
(D) if a plan provides
for regular periodic payments to creditors:
(i) each creditor of the
individual to which payment will be made, the amount owed to
each creditor, and any concessions the
provider reasonably believes each creditor will offer or, if
the provider can not form a reasonable
belief as to such amounts and concessions at the time of
the agreement is made, an affirmative
statement to that effect; and
(ii) the
schedule of expected payments to each creditor, including the amount of each
payment and the date on which it will be made;
(E) each
creditor that the provider believes will not participate in the plan and to
which
the provider will not direct payment;
(F) how the
provider will comply with its obligations under subsection 19-14.8-27(a);
(G) that the
provider may terminate the agreement for good cause, upon return of
unexpended money of the individual;
(H) that the
individual may cancel the agreement as provided in section 19-14.8-20;
(I) that the
individual may contact the director with any questions or complaints
regarding the provider; and
(J) the
address, telephone number, and Internet address or website of the director.
(b) For
purposes of subsection (a)(5), delivery of an electronic record occurs when it
is
made available in a format in which the
individual may retrieve, save, and print it and the
individual is notified that it is available.
(c) If the
director supplies the provider with any information required under subsection
(a)(6)(J), the provider may comply with that
requirement only by disclosing the information
supplied by the director.
(d) An
agreement must provide that:
(1) the
individual has a right to terminate the agreement at any time, without penalty
or
obligation, by giving the provider written or
electronic notice, in which event:
(A) the
provider will refund all unexpended money that the provider or its agent has
received from or on behalf of the individual for
the reduction or satisfaction of the individual's
debt;
(B) with
respect to an agreement that contemplates that creditors will settle debts for
less
than the principal amount of debt, the provider
will refund sixty-five percent (65%) of any portion
of the set-up fee that has not been credited
against the settlement fee; and
(C) all powers
of attorney granted by the individual to the provider are revoked and
ineffective;
(2) the
individual authorizes any bank in which the provider or its agent has
established a
trust account to disclose to the director any
financial records relating to the trust account; and
(3) the
provider will notify the individual within five (5) days after learning of a
creditor's
decision to reject or withdraw from a plan and
that this notice will include:
(A) the
identity of the creditor; and
(B) the right
of the individual to modify or terminate the agreement.
(e) An
agreement may confer on a provider a power of attorney to settle the individual's
debt for no more than fifty percent (50%) of the
principal amount of the debt. An agreement may
not confer a power of attorney to settle a debt
for more than fifty percent (50%) of that amount,
but may confer a power of attorney to negotiate
with creditors of the individual on behalf of the
individual. An agreement must provide that the
provider will obtain the assent of the individual
after a creditor has assented to a settlement
for more than fifty percent (50%) of the principal
amount of the debt.
(f) An
agreement may not:
(1) provide for
application of the law of any jurisdiction other than the United States and
this state;
(2) except as
permitted by Section 2 of the Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. Section 2, as
amended, contain a provision that modifies or
limits otherwise available forums or procedural
rights, including the right to trial by jury,
that are generally available to the individual under law
other than this chapter;
(3) contain a
provision that restricts the individual's remedies under this chapter or law
other than this chapter; or
(4) contain a
provision that:
(A) limits or
releases the liability of any person for not performing the agreement or for
violating this chapter; or
(B) indemnifies
any person for liability arising under the agreement or this chapter.
(g) All rights
and obligations specified in subsection (d) and section 19-14.8-20 exist
even if not provided in the agreement. A
provision in an agreement which violates subsection (d),
(e), or (f) is void.
19-14.8-20.
Cancellation of agreement -- Waiver. -- (a) An individual may cancel
an
agreement before midnight of the third (3rd)
business day after the individual assents to it, unless
the agreement does not comply with subsection
(b) or section 19-14.8-19 or 19-14.8-28, in which
event the individual may cancel the agreement
within thirty (30) days after the individual assents
to it. To exercise the right to cancel, the
individual must give notice in a record to the provider.
Notice by mail is given when mailed.
(b) An
agreement must be accompanied by a form that contains in bold-face type,
surrounded by bold black lines:
Notice of Right
to Cancel
You may cancel
this agreement, without any penalty or obligation, at any time before
midnight of the third business day that begins
the day after you agree to it by electronic
communication or by signing it.
To cancel this
agreement during this period, send an e-mail to
____________________________
or mail or deliver a signed, dated copy of this
E-mail address
of provider
notice, or any
other written notice to ___________________________________
Name of
provider
at
_______________________________ before midnight on ____________________.
Address of
provider Date
If you cancel
this agreement within the 3-day period, we will refund all money you
already have paid us.
You also may
terminate this agreement at any later time, but we are not required to
refund fees you have paid us.
I cancel this
agreement,
__________________________________
Print your name
__________________________________
Signature
__________________________________
Date
(c) If a personal
financial emergency necessitates the disbursement of an individual's
money to one or more of the individual's
creditors before the expiration of three (3) days after an
agreement is signed, an individual may waive the
right to cancel. To waive the right, the
individual must send or deliver a signed, dated
statement in the individual's own words describing
the circumstances that necessitate a waiver. The
waiver must explicitly waive the right to cancel.
A waiver by means of a standard-form record is
void.
19-14.8-21.
Required language. -- Unless the director, by rule, provides
otherwise, the
disclosures and documents required by this
chapter must be in English. If a provider
communicates with an individual primarily in a
language other than English, the provider must
furnish a translation into the other language of
the disclosures and documents required by this
chapter.
19-14.8-22.
Trust account. -- (a) All money paid to a provider by or on behalf
of an
individual pursuant to a plan for distribution
to creditors is held in trust. Within two (2) business
days after receipt, the provider shall deposit
the money in a trust account established for the
benefit of individuals to whom the provider is
furnishing debt-management services.
(b) Money held
in trust by a provider is not property of the provider or its designee. The
money is not available to creditors of the
provider or designee, except an individual from whom
or on whose behalf the provider received money,
to the extent that the money has not been
disbursed to creditors of the individual.
(c) A provider
shall:
(1) maintain
separate records of account for each individual to whom the provider is
furnishing debt-management services;
(2) disburse money
paid by or on behalf of the individual to creditors of the individual as
disclosed in the agreement, except that:
(A) the
provider may delay payment to the extent that a payment by the individual is
not
final; and
(B) if a plan
provides for regular periodic payments to creditors, the disbursement must
comply with the due dates established by each
creditor; and
(3) promptly
correct any payments that are not made or that are misdirected as a result of
an error by the provider or other person in
control of the trust account and reimburse the
individual for any costs or fees imposed by a
creditor as a result of the failure to pay or
misdirection.
(d) A provider
may not commingle money in a trust account established for the benefit of
individuals to whom the provider is furnishing
debt-management services with money of other
persons.
(e) A trust
account must at all times have a cash balance equal to the sum of the balances
of each individual's account.
(f) If a provider
has established a trust account pursuant to subsection (a), the provider
shall reconcile the trust account at least once
a month. The reconciliation must compare the cash
balance in the trust account with the sum of the
balances in each individual's account. If the
provider or its designee has more than one trust
account, each trust account must be individually
reconciled.
(g) If a
provider discovers, or has a reasonable suspicion of, embezzlement or other
unlawful appropriation of money held in trust,
the provider immediately shall notify the director
by a method approved by the director. Unless the
director by rule provides otherwise, within five
(5) days thereafter, the provider shall give
notice to the director describing the remedial action
taken or to be taken.
(h) If an
individual terminates an agreement or it becomes reasonably apparent to a
provider that a plan has failed, the provider
shall promptly refund to the individual all money paid
by or on behalf of the individual which has not
been paid to creditors, less fees that are payable to
the provider under section 19-14.8-23.
(i) Before
relocating a trust account from one bank to another, a provider shall inform
the
director of the name, business address, and
telephone number of the new bank. As soon as
practicable, the provider shall inform the
director of the account number of the trust account at
the new bank.
19-14.8-23.
Fees and other charges. -- (a) A provider may not impose directly or
indirectly a fee or other charge on an
individual or receive money from or on behalf of an
individual for debt-management services except
as permitted by this section.
(b) A provider
may not impose charges or receive payment for debt-management services
until the provider and the individual have
signed an agreement that complies with sections 19-
14.8-19 and 19-14.8-28.
(c) If an
individual assents to an agreement, a provider may not impose a fee or other
charge for educational or counseling services,
or the like, except as otherwise provided in this
subsection and subsection 19-14.8-28(d). The
director may authorize a provider to charge a fee
based on the nature and extent of the
educational or counseling services furnished by the
provider.
(d) Subject to
adjustment of dollar amounts pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), the
following rules apply:
(1) If an
individual assents to a plan that contemplates that creditors will reduce
finance
charges or fees for late payment, default, or
delinquency, the provider may charge:
(A) a fee not
exceeding fifty dollars ($50.00) for consultation, obtaining a credit report,
setting up an account, and the like; and
(B) a monthly
service fee, not to exceed ten dollars ($10.00) times the number of
creditors remaining in a plan at the time the
fee is assessed, but not more than fifty dollars ($50)
in any month.
(2) If an
individual assents to a plan that contemplates that creditors will settle debts
for
less than the principal amount of the debt, a
provider may charge:
(A) subject to
subsection 19-14.8-19(d), a fee for consultation, obtaining a credit report,
setting up an account, and the like, in an
amount not exceeding the lesser of four hundred dollars
($400) and four percent (4%) of the debt in the
plan at the inception of the plan; and
(B) a monthly
service fee, not to exceed ten dollars ($10) times the number of creditors
remaining in a plan at the time the fee is
assessed, but not more than fifty dollars ($50) in any
month.
(3) A provider
may not impose or receive fees under both paragraphs (1) and (2).
(4) Except as
otherwise provided in subsection 19-14.8-28(d), if an individual does not
assent to an agreement, a provider may receive
for educational and counseling services it
provides to the individual a fee not exceeding
one hundred dollars ($100) or, with the approval of
the director, a larger fee. The director may
approve a fee larger than one hundred ($100) if the
nature and extent of the educational and
counseling services warrant the larger fee.
(e) If, before
the expiration of ninety (90) days after the completion or termination of
educational or counseling services, an
individual assents to an agreement, the provider shall
refund to the individual any fee paid pursuant
to subsection (d)(4).
(f) Except as
otherwise provided in subsections (c) and (d), if a plan contemplates that
creditors will settle an individual's debts for
less than the principal amount of the debt,
compensation for services in connection with
settling a debt may not exceed, with respect to each
debt:
(1) thirty
percent (30%) of the excess of the principal amount of the debt over the amount
paid the creditor pursuant to the plan less;
(2) to the
extent it has not been credited against an earlier settlement fee:
(A) the fee
charged pursuant to subdivision (d)(2)(A); and
(B) the
aggregate of fees charged pursuant to subdivision (d)(2)(B).
(g) Subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), if a
payment to a provider by an individual under
this chapter is dishonored, a provider may impose a
reasonable charge on the individual, not to
exceed the lesser of twenty-five dollars ($25) and the
amount permitted by law other than this chapter.
19-14.8-24.
Voluntary contributions. -- A provider may not solicit a voluntary
contribution from an individual or an affiliate
of the individual for any service provided to the
individual. A provider may accept voluntary
contributions from an individual but, until thirty (30)
days after completion or termination of a plan,
the aggregate amount of money received from or
on behalf of the individual may not exceed the
total amount the provider may charge the
individual under section 19-14.8-23.
19-14.8-25.
Voidable agreements. -- (a) If a provider imposes a fee or other
charge or
receives money or other payments not authorized
by section 19-14.8-23 or 19-14.8-24, the
individual may void the agreement and recover as
provided in section 19-14.8-35.
(b) If a
provider is not registered as required by this chapter when an individual
assents to
an agreement, the agreement is voidable by the
individual.
(c) If an individual
voids an agreement under subsection (b), the provider does not have a
claim against the individual for breach of
contract or for restitution.
19-14.8-26.
Termination of agreements. -- (a) If an individual who has entered
into an
agreement fails for sixty (60) days to make
payments required by the agreement, a provider may
terminate the agreement.
(b) If a
provider or an individual terminates an agreement, the provider shall
immediately
return to the individual:
(1) any money of
the individual held in trust for the benefit of the individual; and
(2) sixty-five
percent (65%) of any portion of the set-up fee received pursuant to
subdivision 19-14.8-23(d)(2) which has not been
credited against settlement fees.
19-14.8-27.
Periodic reports and retention of records. -- (a) A provider shall
provide
the accounting required by subsection (b):
(1) upon
cancellation or termination of an agreement; and
(2) before
cancellation or termination of any agreement:
(A) at least
once each month; and
(B) within five
(5) business days after a request by an individual, but the provider need
not comply with more than one request in any
calendar month.
(b) A provider,
in a record, shall provide each individual for whom it has established a
plan an accounting of the following information:
(1) the amount
of money received from the individual since the last report;
(2) the amounts
and dates of disbursement made on the individual's behalf, or by the
individual upon the direction of the provider,
since the last report to each creditor listed in the
plan;
(3) the amounts
deducted from the amount received from the individual;
(4) the amount
held in reserve; and
(5) if, since
the last report, a creditor has agreed to accept as payment in full an amount
less than the principal amount of the debt owed
by the individual:
(A) the total
amount and terms of the settlement;
(B) the amount
of the debt when the individual assented to the plan;
(C) the amount
of the debt when the creditor agreed to the settlement; and
(D) the
calculation of a settlement fee.
(c) A provider
shall maintain records for each individual for whom it provides debt-
management services for five (5) years after the
final payment made by the individual and
produce a copy of them to the individual within
a reasonable time after a request for them. The
provider may use electronic or other means of
storage of the records.
19-14.8-28.
Prohibited acts and practices. -- (a) A provider may not, directly
or
indirectly:
(1)
misappropriate or misapply money held in trust;
(2) settle a
debt on behalf of an individual for more than fifty percent (50%) of the
principal amount of the debt owed a creditor,
unless the individual assents to the settlement after
the creditor has assented;
(3) take a
power of attorney that authorizes it to settle a debt, unless the power of
attorney
expressly limits the providers authority to
settle debts for not more than fifty percent (50%) of the
principal amount of the debt owed a creditor;
(4) exercise or
attempt to exercise a power of attorney after an individual has terminated
an agreement;
(5) initiate a
transfer from an individuals account at a bank or with another person unless
the transfer is:
(A) a return of
money to the individual; or
(B) before
termination of an agreement, properly authorized by the agreement and this
chapter, and for:
(i) payment to
one or more creditors pursuant to a plan; or
(ii) payment of
a fee;
(6) offer a
gift or bonus, premium, reward, or other compensation to an individual for
executing an agreement;
(7) offer, pay,
or give a gift or bonus, premium, reward, or other compensation to a
person for referring a prospective customer, if
the person making the referral has a financial
interest in the outcome of debt-management
services provided to the customer, unless neither the
provider nor the person making the referral
communicates to the prospective customer the
identity of the source of the referral;
(8) receive a
bonus, commission, or other benefit for referring an individual to a person;
(9) structure a
plan in a manner that would result in a negative amortization of any of an
individual's debts, unless a creditor that is
owed a negatively amortizing debt agrees to refund or
waive the finance charge upon payment of the
principal amount of the debt;
(10) compensate
its employees on the basis of a formula that incorporates the number of
individuals the employee induces to enter into
agreements;
(11) settle a
debt or lead an individual to believe that a payment to a creditor is in
settlement of a debt to the creditor unless, at
the time of settlement, the individual receives a
certification by the creditor that the payment
is in full settlement of the debt;
(12) make a
representation that:
(A) the provider
will furnish money to pay bills or prevent attachments;
(B) payment of
a certain amount will permit satisfaction of a certain amount or range of
indebtedness; or
(C)
participation in a plan will or may prevent litigation, garnishment, attachment,
repossession, foreclosure, eviction, or loss of
employment;
(13)
misrepresent that it is authorized or competent to furnish legal advice or
perform
legal services;
(14) represent
that it is a not-for-profit entity unless it is organized and properly
operating
as a not-for-profit under the law of the state
in which it was formed or that it is a tax-exempt
entity unless it has received certification of
tax-exempt status from the Internal Revenue Service;
(15) take a
confession of judgment or power of attorney to confess judgment against an
individual; or
(16) employ an
unfair, unconscionable, or deceptive act or practice, including the
knowing omission of any material information.
(b) If a provider
furnishes debt-management services to an individual, the provider may
not, directly or indirectly:
(1) purchase a
debt or obligation of the individual;
(2) receive
from or on behalf of the individual:
(A) a
promissory note or other negotiable instrument other than a check or a demand
draft; or
(B) a
post-dated check or demand draft;
(3) lend money
or provide credit to the individual, except as a deferral of a settlement fee
at no additional expense to the individual;
(4) obtain a
mortgage or other security interest from any person in connection with the
services provided to the individual;
(5) except as
permitted by federal law, disclose the identity or identifying information of
the individual or the identity of the
individual's creditors, except to:
(A) the
director, upon proper demand;
(B) a creditor
of the individual, to the extent necessary to secure the cooperation of the
creditor in a plan; or
(C) the extent necessary
to administer the plan;
(6) except as
otherwise provided in subsection 19-14.8-23(f), provide the individual less
than the full benefit of a compromise of a debt
arranged by the provider;
(7) charge the
individual for or provide credit or other insurance, coupons for goods or
services, membership in a club, access to
computers or the Internet, or any other matter not
directly related to debt-management services or
educational services concerning personal finance;
or
(8) furnish legal
advice or perform legal services, unless the person furnishing that advice
to or performing those services for the
individual is licensed to practice law.
(c) This
chapter does not authorize any person to engage in the practice of law.
(d) A provider
may not receive a gift or bonus, premium, reward, or other compensation,
directly or indirectly, for advising, arranging,
or assisting an individual in connection with
obtaining, an extension of credit or other
service from a lender or service provider, except for
educational or counseling services required in
connection with a government-sponsored program.
(e) Unless a
person supplies goods, services, or facilities generally and supplies them to
the provider at a cost no greater than the cost
the person generally charges to others, a provider
may not purchase goods, services, or facilities
from the person if an employee or a person that the
provider should reasonably know is an affiliate
of the provider:
(1) owns more
than ten percent (10%) of the person; or
(2) is an
employee or affiliate of the person.
19-14.8-29.
Notice of litigation. -- No later than thirty (30) days after a
provider has been
served with notice of a civil action for
violation of this chapter by or on behalf of an individual
who resides in this state at either the time of
an agreement or the time the notice is served, the
provider shall notify the director in a record
that it has been sued.
19-14.8-30.
Advertising. -- A provider that advertises debt-management services
shall
disclose, in an easily comprehensible manner,
the information specified in subdivisions 19-14.8-
17(d)(3) and (4).
19-14.8-31.
Liability for the conduct of other persons. -- If a provider delegates
any of
its duties or obligations under an agreement or
this chapter to another person, including an
independent contractor, the provider is liable
for conduct of the person which, if done by the
provider, would violate the agreement or this chapter.
19-14.8-32.
Powers of director or director's designee. -- (a) The director may
act on
its own initiative or in response to complaints
and may receive complaints, take action to obtain
voluntary compliance with this chapter, refer
cases to the attorney general, and seek or provide
remedies as provided in this chapter.
(b) The
director may investigate and examine, in this state or elsewhere, by subpoena
or
otherwise, the activities, books, accounts, and
records of a person that provides or offers to
provide debt-management services, or a person to
which a provider has delegated its obligations
under an agreement or this chapter, to determine
compliance with this chapter. Information that
identifies individuals who have agreements with the
provider shall not be disclosed to the public.
In connection with the investigation, the
director may:
(1) charge the
person the reasonable expenses necessarily incurred to conduct the
examination;
(2) require or
permit a person to file a statement under oath as to all the facts and
circumstances of a matter to be investigated;
and
(3) seek a
court order authorizing seizure from a bank at which the person maintains a
trust account required by section 19-14.8-22,
any or all money, books, records, accounts, and
other property of the provider that is in the
control of the bank and relates to individuals who
reside in this state.
(c) The
director may adopt rules to implement the provisions of this chapter in
accordance with chapter 42-35.
(d) The
director may enter into cooperative arrangements with any other federal or
state
agency having authority over providers and may
exchange with any of those agencies information
about a provider, including information obtained
during an examination of the provider.
(e) [RESERVED].
(f) The
director, by rule, shall adopt dollar amounts instead of those specified in
sections
19-14.8-2, 19-14.8-5, 19-14.8-9, 19-14.8-13,
19-14.8-23, 19-14.8-33, and 19-14.8-35 to reflect
inflation, as measured by the United States
Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Price Index for
All Urban Consumers or, if that index is not
available, another index adopted by rule by the
director. The director shall adopt a base year
and adjust the dollar amounts, effective on July 1 of
each year, if the change in the index from the
base year, as of December 31 of the preceding year,
is at least ten percent (10%). The dollar amount
must be rounded to the nearest one hundred
dollars ($100), except that the amounts in
section 19-14.8-23 must be rounded to the nearest
dollar.
(g) The
director shall notify registered providers of any change in dollar amounts made
pursuant to subsection (f) and make that
information available to the public.
19-14.8-33.
Administrative remedies. -- (a) The director may enforce this
chapter and
rules adopted under this chapter by taking one
or more of the following actions:
(1) ordering a
provider or a director, employee, or other agent of a provider to cease and
desist from any violations;
(2) ordering a
provider or a person that has caused a violation to correct the violation,
including making restitution of money or
property to a person aggrieved by a violation;
(3) subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f),
imposing on a provider or a person that has
caused a violation a civil penalty not exceeding ten
thousand dollars ($10,000) for each violation;
(4) prosecuting
a civil action to:
(A) enforce an
order; or
(B) obtain
restitution or an injunction or other equitable relief, or both;
(5) intervening
in an action brought under section 19-14.8-35.
(b) Subject to
adjustment of the dollar amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f), if a
person violates or knowingly authorizes,
directs, or aids in the violation of a final order issued
under subsection (a)(1) or (2), the director may
impose a civil penalty not exceeding twenty
thousand dollars ($20,000) for each violation.
(c) The
director may maintain an action to enforce this chapter in any county.
(d) The
director may recover the reasonable costs of enforcing the chapter under
subsections (a) through (c), including
attorney's fees based on the hours reasonably expended and
the hourly rates for attorneys of comparable
experience in the community.
(e) In
determining the amount of a civil penalty to impose under subsection (a) or
(b), the
director shall consider the seriousness of the
violation, the good faith of the violator, any previous
violations by the violator, the deleterious
effect of the violation on the public, the net worth of the
violator, and any other factor the director
considers relevant to the determination of the civil
penalty.
19-14.8-34.
Suspension, revocation or nonrenewal of registration. -- (a) In this
section, "insolvent" means:
(1) having
generally ceased to pay debts in the ordinary course of business other than as
a
result of good-faith dispute;
(2) being
unable to pay debts as they become due; or
(3) being
insolvent within the meaning of the federal bankruptcy law, 11 U.S.C. Section
101 et seq., as amended.
(b) The
director may suspend, revoke, or deny renewal of a provider's registration if:
(1) a fact or
condition exists that, if it had existed when the registrant applied for
registration as a provider, would have been a
reason for denying registration;
(2) the
provider has committed a material violation of this chapter or a rule or order
of the
director under this chapter;
(3) the
provider is insolvent;
(4) the
provider or an employee or affiliate of the provider has refused to permit the
director to make an examination authorized by this
chapter, failed to comply with subdivision 19-
14.8-32(b)(2) within fifteen (15) days after
request, or made a material misrepresentation or
omission in complying with subdivision
19-14.8-32(b)(2); or
(5) the
provider has not responded within a reasonable time and in an appropriate
manner
to communications from the director.
(c) If a
provider does not comply with subsection 19-14.8-22(f) or if the director
otherwise finds that the public health or safety
or general welfare requires emergency action, the
director may order a summary suspension of the
provider's registration, effective on the date
specified in the order.
(d) If the
director suspends, revokes, or denies renewal of the registration of a provider,
the director may seek a court order authorizing
seizure of any or all of the money in a trust
account required by section 19-14.8-22, books,
records, accounts, and other property of the
provider which are located in this state.
(e) If the
director suspends or revokes a provider's registration, the provider may appeal
and request a hearing pursuant to chapter 42-35.
19-14.8-35.
Private enforcement. -- (a) If an individual voids an agreement
pursuant to
subsection 19-14.8-25(b), the individual may
recover in a civil action all money paid or deposited
by or on behalf of the individual pursuant to
the agreement, except amounts paid to creditors, in
addition to the recovery under subsection (c)(3)
and (4).
(b) If an
individual voids an agreement pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-25(a), the
individual may recover in a civil action three
(3) times the total amount of the fees, charges,
money, and payments made by the individual to
the provider, in addition to the recovery under
subsection (c)(4).
(c) Subject to
subsection (d), an individual with respect to whom a provider violates this
chapter may recover in a civil action from the
provider and any person that caused the violation:
(1)
compensatory damages for injury, including noneconomic injury, caused by the
violation;
(2) except as
otherwise provided in subsection (d) and subject to adjustment of the dollar
amount pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-32(f),
with respect to a violation of section 19-14.8-17,
19-14.8-19, 19-14.8-20, 19-14.8-21, 19-14.8-22,
19-14.8-23, 19-14.8-24, 19-14.8-27, or
subsection 19-14.8-28(a), (b), or (d), the
greater of the amount recoverable under paragraph (1) or
five thousand dollars ($5,000);
(3) punitive
damages; and
(4) reasonable attorney's
fees and costs.
(d) In a class
action, except for a violation of subdivision 19-14.8-28(a)(5), the minimum
damages provided in subsection (c)(2) do not
apply.
(e) In addition
to the remedy available under subsection (c), if a provider violates an
individual's rights under section 19-14.8-20,
the individual may recover in a civil action all
money paid or deposited by or on behalf of the
individual pursuant to the agreement, except for
amounts paid to creditors.
(f) A provider is
not liable under this section for a violation of this chapter if the provider
proves that the violation was not intentional
and resulted from a good-faith error notwithstanding
the maintenance of procedures reasonably adapted
to avoid the error. An error of legal judgment
with respect to a provider's obligations under
this chapter is not a good-faith error. If, in
connection with a violation, the provider has
received more money than authorized by an
agreement or this chapter, the defense provided
by this subsection is not available unless the
provider refunds the excess within two (2)
business days of learning of the violation.
(g) The
director shall assist an individual in enforcing a judgment against the surety
bond
or other security provided under section
19-14.8-13 or 19-14.8-14.
19-14.8-36.
Violation of unfair or deceptive practices statute. -- If an act or
practice of
a provider violates both this chapter and either
chapter 13.1 of title 6, an individual may not
recover under both for the same act or practice.
19-14.8-37.
Statute of limitations. -- (a) An action or proceeding brought
pursuant to
subsection 19-14.8-33(a), (b), or (c) must be
commenced within four (4) years after the conduct
that is the basis of the director's complaint.
(b) An action
brought pursuant to section 19-14.8-35 must be commenced within two (2)
years after the latest of:
(1) the
individual's last transmission of money to a provider;
(2) the individual's
last transmission of money to a creditor at the direction of the
provider;
(3) the
provider's last disbursement to a creditor of the individual;
(4) the
provider's last accounting to the individual pursuant to subsection 19-14.8-27(a);
(5) the date on
which the individual discovered or reasonably should have discovered the
facts giving rise to the individual's claim; or
(6) termination
of actions or proceedings by the director with respect to a violation of the
chapter.
(c) The period
prescribed in subsection (b)(5) is tolled during any period during which
the provider or, if different, the defendant has
materially and willfully misrepresented information
required by this chapter to be disclosed to the
individual, if the information so misrepresented is
material to the establishment of the liability
of the defendant under this chapter.
19-14.8-38.
Uniformity of application and construction. -- In applying and
construing
this chapter, consideration must be given to the
need to promote uniformity of the law with
respect to its subject matter among states that
enact it.
19-14.8-39.
Relation to electronic signatures in global and national commerce act. --
This chapter modifies, limits, and supersedes
the federal Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (15 U.S.C. Section 7001 et
seq.) but does not modify, limit, or supersede
Section 101(c) of that act (15 U.S.C. Section
7001(c)) or authorize electronic delivery of any of
the notices described in Section 103(b) of that
act (15 U.S.C. Section 7003(b)).
19-14.8-40.
Transitional provisions – Application to existing transactions. --
Transactions entered into before this chapter
takes effect and the rights, duties, and interests
resulting from them may be completed,
terminated, or enforced as required or permitted by a law
amended, repealed, or modified by this chapter
as though the amendment, repeal, or modification
had not occurred.
19-14.8-41.
Severability. -- If any provision of this chapter or its application
to any
person or circumstance is held invalid, the
invalidity does not affect other provisions or
applications of this chapter that can be given
effect without the invalid provision or application,
and to this end the provisions of this chapter
are severable.
19-14.8-42.
[Reserved]. – [Reserved]
19-14.8-43.
Official comments. -- It is the intention of the general assembly
that the
official comments to this chapter represent the
express legislative intent of the general assembly
and shall be used as a guide for interpretation
of this chapter.
SECTION 4. This
act shall take effect on March 31, 2007.
=======
LC02403/SUB
A
=======