HBA-BSM, CCH H.B. 2182 77(R)    BILL ANALYSIS


Office of House Bill AnalysisH.B. 2182
By: Brimer
Business & Industry
3/26/2001
Introduced



BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 

In 1993, the legislature authorized merchants and consumers to agree to
sale-leaseback transactions in which a consumer sells a consumer good to a
merchant who then leases the consumer good back to the consumer.  In a
series of court cases, there have been disputes as to whether
sale/leaseback transactions are a type of loan or a type of lease.  House
Bill 2182 codifies sale-leaseback transactions and provides consumer
protections. 

RULEMAKING AUTHORITY

It is the opinion of the Office of House Bill Analysis that this bill does
not expressly delegate any additional rulemaking authority to a state
officer, department, agency, or institution. 

ANALYSIS

House Bill 2182 amends the Business & Commerce Code to define
"sale-leaseback transaction" and provides that a sale-leaseback transaction
is not a loan, credit sale, or other extension of credit (Sec. 35.202).  

The bill prohibits a merchant from buying, offering to buy, or arranging to
buy consumer goods under a sale-leaseback transaction unless the merchant
has registered with the secretary of state by filing a statement that
discloses outstanding ownership interests and a statement of any litigation
or unresolved complaints, or a notarized statement that there are no
unresolved legal proceedings or complaints.  The bill requires the merchant
to keep a copy of the registration statement, and prohibits the secretary
of state from requiring a merchant to provide any other information in the
registration statement.  The bill sets forth provisions regarding the
expiration, renewal, modification, and administration of the registration
statement. The bill requires a merchant to allow a consumer to inspect the
registration statement on request.  The bill sets forth penalties that the
secretary of state may assess a merchant for a failure to register or renew
a registration.  A merchant's failure to register or renew a registration
does not affect the validity of a saleleaseback transaction (Sec. 35.203). 

The bill requires a merchant to establish and maintain a surety bond and to
file with the secretary of state a copy of the bond, or the name of the
depository and the trustee, and the account number of the surety account.
The bill requires a separate surety bond or account of $10,000 to be
established and maintained for each office at which the merchant conducts
sale-leaseback transactions. The bill prohibits a depository from paying
money in a surety account to the merchant that established the account or a
representative of the merchant unless the merchant or representative
presents a statement issued by the secretary of state indicating that the
merchant has maintained the bond or account for the appropriate time
period.   A merchant's failure to establish or maintain a surety bond or
account does not affect the validity of a saleleaseback transaction (Sec.
35.204).   

The bill sets forth provisions that the purchase of consumer goods by a
merchant must be written clearly and printed conspicuously, and the bill
sets forth the content of the written bill of sale.  The consumer is
considered not to provide any express or implied warranties not set forth
in the bill of sale (Sec. 35.205). 
 
The bill authorizes a merchant and consumer to enter into a lease under
which the consumer leases from the merchant the consumer goods that the
consumer originally sold to the merchant, for the rental and on the terms
agreed on in writing between the consumer and merchant.  The bill sets
forth provisions for the content of the lease agreement including notice of
cancellation and termination issues, and provides that the lease agreement
must be clear and conspicuously printed.  The bill also sets forth
provisions regarding the consumer's financial and administrative
obligations related to a cancellation or termination; the return, repair,
or replacement of consumer goods; late fees; charges for insufficiently
funded checks; rights regarding the reinstatement of a lease; the renewal,
extension, or modification of a lease agreement; the repurchase of goods by
a consumer; and provisions for the content of the bill of sale (Secs.
35.206, 35.207, and 35.208). 

The bill prohibits a bill of sale or lease agreement associated with a
sale-leaseback agreement from containing a provision that requires a
confession of judgment, authorizes a merchant or anyone acting on the
merchant's behalf to commit a breach of the peace in the repossession of
the consumer goods, or waives any claim or defense the consumer may have
arising out of the transaction.  The bill also prohibits a merchant from
taking a security deposit without disclosing in writing the amount and
terms involving the security deposit.  A security deposit that is a check,
draft, share draft, or other instrument drawn by a consumer on a depository
account of the consumer must be made payable to the merchant and dated as
of the date of transaction.  The bill prohibits criminal proceedings from
being instituted if the security deposit instrument is returned or
dishonored due to insufficient funds, closed account, or stop payment
order, but the merchant may pursue all available civil process for
collection of the instrument (Sec. 35.211). 

The bill provides that an advertisement for a sale-leaseback transaction
must clearly state that the transaction is a sale-leaseback transaction and
that the business is registered with the secretary of state. The bill
provides that a consumer damaged by a violation of the provisions of this
bill may recover actual damages, reasonable attorney's fees and court
costs, but an action must be brought within two years of the date of a
violation.  The bill also provides that a violation of a provision
constitutes a deceptive trade practice.  The bill authorizes, as part of
the consumer's recovery, a consumer to proceed against a merchant's surety
bond or surety account (Sec. 35.212).  Merchants are also subject to civil
penalties (Sec. 35.204). 

The provisions of this bill do not apply to transactions involving real
property or a manufactured home. The bill provides that a sale-leaseback
transaction is  subject to other federal and state laws involving sales or
leases of personal property.  If the provisions of this bill conflict with
other state law, the provisions of this bill are controlling.  If, however,
the provisions of this bill conflict with federal law, federal law is
controlling (Sec. 35.202). 

  
EFFECTIVE DATE

September 1, 2001.