Texas 2011 82nd Regular

Texas House Bill HB8 Comm Sub / Bill

                    82R17394 PMO-D
 By: Darby, Geren, Anderson of Dallas, Pitts, H.B. No. 8
 Menendez, et al.
 Substitute the following for H.B. No. 8:
 By:  Quintanilla C.S.H.B. No. 8


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to prohibiting certain private transfer fees and the
 preservation of private real property rights; providing penalties.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Chapter 5, Property Code, is amended by adding
 Subchapter G to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER G. CERTAIN PRIVATE TRANSFER FEES PROHIBITED;
 PRESERVATION OF PRIVATE REAL PROPERTY RIGHTS
 Sec. 5.201.  DEFINITIONS. In this subchapter:
 (1)  "Encumbered property" means all property,
 including the property of a subsequent purchaser, subject to the
 same private transfer fee obligation.
 (2)  "Lender" means a lending institution, including a
 bank, trust company, banking association, savings and loan
 association, mortgage company, investment bank, credit union, life
 insurance company, and governmental agency, that customarily
 provides financing or an affiliate of a lending institution.
 (3)  "Payee" means a person who claims the right to
 receive or collect a private transfer fee payable under a private
 transfer fee obligation and who may or may not have a pecuniary
 interest in the obligation.
 (4)  "Private transfer fee" means an amount of money,
 regardless of the method of determining the amount, that is payable
 on the transfer of an interest in real property or payable for a
 right to make or accept a transfer.
 (5)  "Private transfer fee obligation" means an
 obligation to pay a private transfer fee created under:
 (A)  a declaration or other covenant recorded in
 the real property records in the county in which the property
 subject to the private transfer fee obligation is located;
 (B)  a contractual agreement or promise; or
 (C)  an unrecorded contractual agreement or
 promise.
 (6)  "Subsequent owner" means a person who acquires
 real property by transfer from a person other than the person who is
 the seller of the property on the date the private transfer fee
 obligation is created.
 (7)  "Subsequent purchaser" means a person who
 purchases real property from a person other than the person who is
 the seller on the date the private transfer fee obligation is
 created. The term includes a lender who provides a mortgage loan to
 a subsequent purchaser to purchase the property.
 (8)  "Transfer" means the sale, gift, conveyance,
 assignment, inheritance, or other transfer of an ownership interest
 in real property.
 Sec. 5.202.  CERTAIN PRIVATE TRANSFER FEE OBLIGATIONS VOID.
 (a)  Except as provided by this subchapter, a private transfer fee
 obligation is not binding or enforceable against a subsequent owner
 or subsequent purchaser of an interest in real property and is void.
 (b)  For purposes of this subchapter, the following payments
 are not considered private transfer fee obligations:
 (1)  consideration paid by a purchaser to a seller for
 an interest in real property transferred, including, as applicable,
 a mineral interest transferred, including additional consideration
 paid to a seller for the property's appreciation, development, or
 sale after the interest in the property has been transferred to the
 purchaser, if the additional consideration is paid only once and
 that payment does not bind successors in interest to the property to
 any private transfer fee obligation;
 (2)  a commission paid to a licensed real estate broker
 under a written agreement between a seller or purchaser and the
 broker, including an additional commission for the property's
 appreciation, development, or sale after the interest in property
 is transferred to the purchaser;
 (3)  interest, a fee, a charge, or another type of
 payment to a lender under a loan secured by a mortgage on the
 property, including:
 (A)  a fee payable for the lender's consent to an
 assumption of the loan or transfer of the property subject to the
 mortgage;
 (B)  a fee or charge payable for an estoppel
 letter or certificate;
 (C)  a shared appreciation interest or profit
 participation; or
 (D)  other consideration payable in connection
 with the loan;
 (4)  rent, reimbursement, a fee, a charge, or another
 type of payment to a lessor under a lease, including a fee for
 consent to an assignment, sublease, encumbrance, or transfer of a
 lease;
 (5)  consideration paid to the holder of an option to
 purchase an interest in property, or to the holder of a right of
 first refusal or first offer to purchase an interest in property,
 for waiving, releasing, or not exercising the option or right when
 the property is transferred to another person;
 (6)  a fee payable to or imposed by a governmental
 entity in connection with recording the transfer of the property;
 (7)  dues, a fee, a charge, an assessment, a fine, a
 contribution, or another type of payment under a declaration or
 other covenant or under law, including a fee or charge payable for a
 change of ownership entered in the records of an association to
 which this subdivision applies or an estoppel letter or certificate
 issued under Section 209.004 by an association to which this
 subdivision applies or the person identified under Section
 209.004(a)(6), provided that no portion of the fee or charge is
 required to be passed through to a third party designated or
 identifiable in the declaration or other covenant or law or in a
 document referenced in the declaration or other covenant or law,
 paid to:
 (A)  an association as defined by Section 82.003
 or 221.002;
 (B)  a property owners' association as defined by
 Section 202.001 or 209.002; or
 (C)  a property owners' association as defined by
 Section 202.001 that does not require an owner of property governed
 by the association to be a member of the association;
 (8)  dues, a fee, a charge, an assessment, a fine, a
 contribution, or another type of payment for the transfer of a club
 membership related to the property; or
 (9)  dues, a fee, a charge, an assessment, a fine, a
 contribution, or another type of payment paid to an organization
 exempt from federal taxation under Section 501(c)(3) or 501(c)(4),
 Internal Revenue Code of 1986, only if the organization uses the
 payments to directly benefit the encumbered property by:
 (A)  supporting or maintaining only the
 encumbered property;
 (B)  constructing or repairing improvements only
 to the encumbered property; or
 (C)  providing activities or infrastructure to
 support quality of life, including cultural, educational,
 charitable, recreational, environmental, and conservation
 activities and infrastructure, that benefit only the encumbered
 property.
 (c)  The benefit described by Subsection (b)(9)(C) may
 collaterally benefit a community composed of:
 (1)  property that is adjacent to the encumbered
 property; or
 (2)  property a boundary of which is not more than 1,000
 yards from a boundary of the encumbered property.
 (d)  An organization may provide a direct benefit under
 Subsection (b)(9) if the organization provides activities or
 infrastructure as described by Subsection (b)(9)(C) to the general
 public for a fee. The organization may provide activities and
 infrastructure as described by Subsection (b)(9)(C) to another
 organization exempt from federal taxation under Section 501(c)(3)
 or 501(c)(4), Internal Revenue Code of 1986, at no charge for de
 minimis usage without violating the requirements of this section.
 Sec. 5.203.  NOTICE REQUIREMENTS FOR CONTINUATION OF
 EXISTING PRIVATE TRANSFER FEE OBLIGATIONS. (a) A person who
 receives a private transfer fee under a private transfer fee
 obligation created before the effective date of this subchapter
 must, on or before January 31, 2012, file for record a "Notice of
 Private Transfer Fee Obligation" as provided by this section in the
 real property records of each county in which the property is
 located.
 (b)  Multiple payees of a single private transfer fee under a
 private transfer fee obligation must designate one payee as the
 payee of record for the fee.
 (c)  A notice under Subsection (a) must:
 (1)  be printed in at least 14-point boldface type;
 (2)  state the amount of the private transfer fee and
 the method of determination, if applicable;
 (3)  state the date or any circumstance under which the
 private transfer fee obligation expires, if any;
 (4)  state the purpose for which the money from the
 private transfer fee obligation will be used;
 (5)  notwithstanding Subsection (b), state the name of
 each payee and each payee's contact information;
 (6)  state the name and address of the payee of record
 to whom the payment of the fee must be sent;
 (7)  include the acknowledged signature of each payee
 or authorized representative of each payee; and
 (8)  state the legal description of the property
 subject to the private transfer fee obligation.
 (d)  A person required to file a notice under this section
 shall:
 (1)  refile the notice described by this section on or
 before January 31 of each year in which a private transfer fee may
 be collected or received; and
 (2)  amend the notice to reflect any change in the name
 or address of any payee included in the notice not later than the
 30th day after the date the change occurs.
 (e)  A person who amends a notice under Subsection (d)(2)
 must include:
 (1)  the recording information of the original notice
 filed as required by this section; and
 (2)  the legal description of the property subject to
 the private transfer fee obligation.
 (f)  If a person required to file a notice under this section
 fails to comply with this section:
 (1)  payment of the private transfer fee may not be a
 requirement for the conveyance of an interest in the property to a
 purchaser;
 (2)  the property is not subject to further obligation
 under the private transfer fee obligation; and
 (3)  the private transfer fee obligation is void.
 Sec. 5.204.  ADDITIONAL COMPLIANCE REQUIREMENT:  TIMELY
 ACCEPTANCE OF FEES PAID UNDER EXISTING PRIVATE TRANSFER FEE
 OBLIGATIONS. (a) The payee of record on the date a private
 transfer fee is paid under a private transfer fee obligation
 subject to Section 5.203 must accept the payment on or before the
 30th day after the date the payment is made.
 (b)  If the payee of record fails to comply with Subsection
 (a):
 (1)  the payment must be returned to the purchaser;
 (2)  payment of the private transfer fee may not be a
 requirement for the conveyance of an interest in the property to a
 purchaser;
 (3)  the property is not subject to further obligation
 under the private transfer fee obligation; and
 (4)  the private transfer fee obligation is void.
 Sec. 5.205.  DISCLOSURE OF EXISTING TRANSFER FEE OBLIGATION
 REQUIRED IN CONTRACT FOR SALE. A seller of real property that may
 be subject to a private transfer fee obligation shall provide
 written notice to a potential purchaser stating that the obligation
 may be governed by this subchapter.
 Sec. 5.206.  WAIVER VOID. A provision that purports to waive
 a purchaser's rights under this subchapter is void.
 Sec. 5.207.  LIABILITY FOR IMPOSING PRIVATE TRANSFER FEE
 OBLIGATION. A person who imposes or enters into an agreement
 imposing a private transfer fee obligation in the person's favor in
 violation of this subchapter is liable for:
 (1)  damages resulting from the imposition of the
 private transfer fee obligation, including the amount of any
 private transfer fee paid; and
 (2)  attorney's fees, expenses, and costs incurred in
 an action to recover the private transfer fee paid or to quiet title
 to the real property.
 Sec. 5.208.  INJUNCTIVE OR DECLARATORY RELIEF; PROVIDING
 PENALTIES. (a)  The attorney general may institute an action for
 injunctive or declaratory relief to restrain a violation of this
 subchapter.
 (b)  In addition to instituting an action for injunctive or
 declaratory relief under Subsection (a), the attorney general may
 institute an action for civil penalties against a payee for a
 violation of this chapter. Except as provided by Subsection (c), a
 civil penalty assessed under this section may not exceed an amount
 equal to two times the amount of the private transfer fee charged or
 collected by the payee in violation of this subchapter.
 (c)  If the court in which an action under Subsection (b) is
 pending finds that a payee violated this subchapter with a
 frequency that constitutes a pattern or practice, the court may
 assess a civil penalty not to exceed $250,000.
 (d)  The comptroller shall deposit to the credit of the
 general revenue fund all money collected under this section.
 Sec. 5.209.  DECEPTIVE TRADE PRACTICE. A person commits a
 false, misleading, or deceptive act or practice within the meaning
 of Section 17.46, Business & Commerce Code, by violating this
 subchapter.
 SECTION 2.  Section 17.46(b), Business & Commerce Code, is
 amended to read as follows:
 (b)  Except as provided in Subsection (d) [of this section],
 the term "false, misleading, or deceptive acts or practices"
 includes, but is not limited to, the following acts:
 (1)  passing off goods or services as those of another;
 (2)  causing confusion or misunderstanding as to the
 source, sponsorship, approval, or certification of goods or
 services;
 (3)  causing confusion or misunderstanding as to
 affiliation, connection, or association with, or certification by,
 another;
 (4)  using deceptive representations or designations
 of geographic origin in connection with goods or services;
 (5)  representing that goods or services have
 sponsorship, approval, characteristics, ingredients, uses,
 benefits, or quantities which they do not have or that a person has
 a sponsorship, approval, status, affiliation, or connection which
 he does not;
 (6)  representing that goods are original or new if
 they are deteriorated, reconditioned, reclaimed, used, or
 secondhand;
 (7)  representing that goods or services are of a
 particular standard, quality, or grade, or that goods are of a
 particular style or model, if they are of another;
 (8)  disparaging the goods, services, or business of
 another by false or misleading representation of facts;
 (9)  advertising goods or services with intent not to
 sell them as advertised;
 (10)  advertising goods or services with intent not to
 supply a reasonable expectable public demand, unless the
 advertisements disclosed a limitation of quantity;
 (11)  making false or misleading statements of fact
 concerning the reasons for, existence of, or amount of price
 reductions;
 (12)  representing that an agreement confers or
 involves rights, remedies, or obligations which it does not have or
 involve, or which are prohibited by law;
 (13)  knowingly making false or misleading statements
 of fact concerning the need for parts, replacement, or repair
 service;
 (14)  misrepresenting the authority of a salesman,
 representative or agent to negotiate the final terms of a consumer
 transaction;
 (15)  basing a charge for the repair of any item in
 whole or in part on a guaranty or warranty instead of on the value of
 the actual repairs made or work to be performed on the item without
 stating separately the charges for the work and the charge for the
 warranty or guaranty, if any;
 (16)  disconnecting, turning back, or resetting the
 odometer of any motor vehicle so as to reduce the number of miles
 indicated on the odometer gauge;
 (17)  advertising of any sale by fraudulently
 representing that a person is going out of business;
 (18)  advertising, selling, or distributing a card
 which purports to be a prescription drug identification card issued
 under Section 4151.152, Insurance Code, in accordance with rules
 adopted by the commissioner of insurance, which offers a discount
 on the purchase of health care goods or services from a third party
 provider, and which is not evidence of insurance coverage, unless:
 (A)  the discount is authorized under an agreement
 between the seller of the card and the provider of those goods and
 services or the discount or card is offered to members of the
 seller;
 (B)  the seller does not represent that the card
 provides insurance coverage of any kind; and
 (C)  the discount is not false, misleading, or
 deceptive;
 (19)  using or employing a chain referral sales plan in
 connection with the sale or offer to sell of goods, merchandise, or
 anything of value, which uses the sales technique, plan,
 arrangement, or agreement in which the buyer or prospective buyer
 is offered the opportunity to purchase merchandise or goods and in
 connection with the purchase receives the seller's promise or
 representation that the buyer shall have the right to receive
 compensation or consideration in any form for furnishing to the
 seller the names of other  prospective buyers if receipt of the
 compensation or consideration is contingent upon the occurrence of
 an event subsequent to the time the buyer purchases the merchandise
 or goods;
 (20)  representing that a guarantee or warranty confers
 or involves rights or remedies which it does not have or involve,
 provided, however, that nothing in this subchapter shall be
 construed to expand the implied warranty of  merchantability as
 defined in Sections 2.314 through 2.318 and Sections 2A.212 through
 2A.216 to involve obligations in excess of those which are
 appropriate to the goods;
 (21)  promoting a pyramid promotional scheme, as
 defined by Section 17.461;
 (22)  representing that work or services have been
 performed on, or parts replaced in, goods when the work or services
 were not performed or the parts replaced;
 (23)  filing suit founded upon a written contractual
 obligation of and signed by the defendant to pay money arising out
 of or based on a consumer transaction for goods, services, loans, or
 extensions of credit intended primarily for personal, family,
 household, or agricultural use in any county other than in the
 county in which the defendant resides at the time of the
 commencement of the action or in the county in which the defendant
 in fact signed the contract; provided, however, that a violation of
 this subsection shall not occur where it is shown by the person
 filing such suit he neither knew or had reason to know that the
 county in which such suit was filed was neither the county in which
 the defendant resides at the commencement of the suit nor the county
 in which the defendant in fact signed the contract;
 (24)  failing to disclose information concerning goods
 or services which was known at the time of the transaction if such
 failure to disclose such information was intended to induce the
 consumer into a transaction into which the consumer would not have
 entered had the information been disclosed;
 (25)  using the term "corporation," "incorporated," or
 an abbreviation of either of those terms in the name of a business
 entity that is not incorporated under the laws of this state or
 another jurisdiction;
 (26)  selling, offering to sell, or illegally promoting
 an annuity contract under Chapter 22 (S.B. 17), Acts of the 57th
 Legislature, 3rd Called Session, 1962 (Article 6228a-5, Vernon's
 Texas Civil Statutes), with the intent that the annuity contract
 will be the subject of a salary reduction agreement, as defined by
 that Act, if the annuity contract is not an eligible qualified
 investment under that Act or is not registered with the Teacher
 Retirement System of Texas as required by Section 8A of that Act;
 [or]
 (27)  taking advantage of a disaster declared by the
 governor under Chapter 418, Government Code, by:
 (A)  selling or leasing fuel, food, medicine, or
 another necessity at an exorbitant or excessive price; or
 (B)  demanding an exorbitant or excessive price in
 connection with the sale or lease of fuel, food, medicine, or
 another necessity; or
 (28)  receiving a private transfer fee in violation of
 Subchapter G, Chapter 5, Property Code.
 SECTION 3.  Section 5.017, Property Code, is repealed.
 SECTION 4.  This Act takes effect immediately if it receives
 a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house, as
 provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution.  If this
 Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate effect, this
 Act takes effect September 1, 2011.