Bill Text: NC S365 | 2011-2012 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Real Estate License Law Amendments.-AB
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 7-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2011-03-17 - Ref To Com On Commerce [S365 Detail]
Download: North_Carolina-2011-S365-Introduced.html
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2011
S D
SENATE DRS15085-RO-5A* (02/17)
Short Title: Real Estate License Law Amendments.-AB |
(Public) |
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Sponsors: |
Senator Brown. |
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Referred to: |
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A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT to modernize the north carolina real estate license law.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 93A‑2 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑2. Definitions and exceptions.
…
(a1) The term broker‑in‑charge within the
meaning of this Chapter means a real estate broker who has been designated as
the broker having responsibility for the supervision of real estate
salespersonsbrokers on provisional status engaged in real estate
brokerage at a particular real estate office and for other administrative and
supervisory duties as the Commission shall prescribe by rule.
…
(c) The provisions of this Chapter do not apply to and do not include:
(1) Any person, partnership, corporation,
limited liability company, association, or other business entity who,
that, as owner or lessor, shall perform any of the acts aforesaid with
reference to property owned or leased by them, where the acts are performed in
the regular course of or as incident to the management of that property and the
investment therein.
(2) Any person acting as an attorney‑in‑fact under a duly executed power of attorney from the owner authorizing the final consummation of performance of any contract for the sale, lease or exchange of real estate.
(3) The acts or services of an attorney‑at‑law.Acts
or services performed by an attorney who is an active member of the North
Carolina State Bar if the acts and services constitute the practice of law
under G.S. 84‑2.1, excluding, however, finding and introducing the
parties to a real estate transaction.
(4) Any person, while acting as a receiver, trustee in bankruptcy, guardian, administrator or executor or any person acting under order of any court.
(5) Any person, while acting as a trustee under a written trust agreement, deed of trust or will, or that person's regular salaried employees. The trust agreement, deed of trust, or will must specifically identify the trustee, the beneficiary, the corpus of trust, and the trustee's authority over the corpus.
(6) Any salaried person employed by a licensed real estate broker, for and on behalf of the owner of any real estate or the improvements thereon, which the licensed broker has contracted to manage for the owner, if the salaried employee's employment is limited to: exhibiting units on the real estate to prospective tenants; providing the prospective tenants with information about the lease of the units; accepting applications for lease of the units; completing and executing preprinted form leases; and accepting security deposits and rental payments for the units only when the deposits and rental payments are made payable to the owner or the broker employed by the owner. The salaried employee shall not negotiate the amount of security deposits or rental payments and shall not negotiate leases or any rental agreements on behalf of the owner or broker. However, in a vacation rental transaction as defined by G.S. 42A‑4(3), the employee may offer a prospective tenant a rental price and term from a schedule setting forth prices and terms and the conditions and limitations under which they may be offered. The schedule shall be written and provided by the employee's employing broker with the written authority of the landlord.
(7) Any individual owner who personally leases or sells the owner's own property.
(8) Any housing authority organized in accordance with
the provisions of Chapter 157 of the General Statutes and any regular salaried
employees of the housing authority when performing acts authorized in this
Chapter as to any property owned or leased by the housing authority.with
regard to the sale or lease of property owned by the housing authority or the
subletting of property which the housing authority holds as tenant. This
exception shall not apply to any person, partnership, corporation, limited
liability company, association, or other business entity that contracts with a
housing authority to sell or manage property owned or leased by the housing
authority."
SECTION 2. G.S. 93A‑3(e) reads as rewritten:
"(e) The Commission shall be entitled to the
services of the Attorney General of North Carolina, in connection with the
affairs of the Commission or may on approval of the Attorney General, employ
an attorney to assist or represent it in the enforcement of this Chapter, as to
specific matters, but the fee paid for such service shall be approved by the
Attorney General. and may, with the approval of the Attorney General,
employ attorneys to represent it or assist it in the enforcement of this
Chapter. The Commission may prefer a complaint for violation of this
Chapter before any court of competent jurisdiction, and it may take the
necessary legal steps through the proper legal offices of the State to enforce
the provisions of this Chapter and collect the penalties provided therein."
SECTION 3. G.S. 93A‑4 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑4. Applications for licenses; fees; qualifications; examinations; privilege licenses; renewal or reinstatement of license; power to enforce provisions.
…
(a1) Each person who is issued a real estate broker
license on or after April 1, 2006, shall initially be classified as a
provisional broker and shall, within three years following initial licensure,
satisfactorily complete, at a school approved by the Commission, a postlicensing
education program consisting of 90 hours of classroom instruction in subjects
determined by the Commission or shall possess real estate education or
experience in real estate transactions which the Commission shall find
equivalent to the education program. The Commission may, by rule, establish a
schedule for completion of the prescribed postlicensing education that requires
provisional brokers to complete portions of the 90‑hour postlicensing education
program in less than three years, and provisional brokers must comply with this
schedule in order to be entitled to actively engage in real estate brokerage.
Upon completion of the postlicensing education program, the provisional status
of the broker's license shall be terminated. When a provisional broker fails to
complete all 90 hours of required postlicensing education within
three years following initial licensure, the broker's license shall be cancelled,
and the Commission may, in its discretion, require the person whose license was
cancelled to satisfy the postlicensing education program and the requirements
for original licensure prescribed in this Chapter as a condition of license
reinstatement, including the examination requirements and the license
reinstatement fee prescribed by subsection (c) of this section.placed on
inactive status. The broker's license shall not be returned to active status
until he or she has satisfied such requirements as the Commission may by rule
require. Every license cancelled after April 1, 2009, because the licensee
failed to complete postlicensing education shall be reinstated on inactive
status until such time as the licensee satisfies the requirements for returning
to active status as the Commission may by rule require."
…
(b) Except as otherwise provided in this Chapter, any person who submits an application to the Commission in proper manner for a license as real estate broker shall be required to take an examination. The examination may be administered orally, by computer, or by any other method the Commission deems appropriate. The Commission may require the applicant to pay the Commission or a provider contracted by the Commission the actual cost of the examination and its administration. The cost of the examination and its administration shall be in addition to any other fees the applicant is required to pay under subsection (a) of this section. The examination shall determine the applicant's qualifications with due regard to the paramount interests of the public as to the applicant's competency. A person who fails the license examination shall be entitled to know the result and score. A person who passes the exam shall be notified only that the person passed the examination. Whether a person passed or failed the examination shall be a matter of public record; however, the scores for license examinations shall not be considered public records. Nothing in this subsection shall limit the rights granted to any person under G.S. 93B‑8.
An applicant for licensure under this Chapter shall satisfy
the Commission that he or she possesses the competency, honesty, truthfulness,
integrity, and general moral charactergood moral character, and
general fitness, including mental and emotional fitness, necessary to
protect the public interest and promote public confidence in the real estate
brokerage business. The Commission may investigate the moral character and
fitness, including the mental and emotional fitness, of each applicant for
licensure and as the applicant's character and fitness may generally
relate to the real estate brokerage business, the public interest, and the
public's confidence in the real estate brokerage business. The Commission may
also require an applicant to provide the Commission with a criminal record
report. All applicants shall obtain criminal record reports from one or more
reporting services designated by the Commission to provide criminal record
reports. Applicants are required to pay the designated reporting service for
the cost of these reports. Criminal record reports, credit reports, and
reports relating to an applicant's mental and emotional fitness obtained in
connection with the application process shall not be considered public records
under Chapter 132 of the General Statutes. If the results of any required
competency examination and investigation of the applicant's moral character and
fitness shall be satisfactory to the Commission, then the Commission shall
issue to the applicant a license, authorizing the applicant to act as a real
estate broker in the State of North Carolina, upon the payment of any privilege
taxes now required by law or that may hereafter be required by law.
Notwithstanding G.S. 150B‑38(c), in a contested case commenced upon the request of a party applying for licensure regarding the question of the moral character or fitness of the applicant, if notice has been reasonably attempted, but cannot be given to the applicant personally or by certified mail in accordance with G.S. 150B‑38(c), the notice of hearing shall be deemed given to the applicant when a copy of the notice is deposited in an official depository of the United States Postal Service addressed to the applicant at the latest mailing address provided by the applicant to the Commission or by any other means reasonably designed to achieve actual notice to the applicant."
SECTION 4. G.S. 93A‑4.1(c) reads as rewritten:
"(c) The Commission may adopt any reasonable rules
not inconsistent with this Chapter to give purpose and effect to the continuing
education requirement, including rules that govern:
(1) The content and subject matter of continuing education courses.
(2) The curriculum of courses required.
(3) The criteria, standards, and procedures for the approval of courses, course sponsors, and course instructors.
(4) The methods of instruction.
(5) The computation of course credit.
(6) The ability to carry forward course credit from one year to another.
(7) The deferral of continuing education for brokers and
salespersons not engaged in brokerage.
(8) The waiver of or variance from the continuing education requirement for hardship or other reasons.
(9) The procedures for compliance and sanctions for noncompliance."
SECTION 5. G.S. 93A‑5 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑5.
Register of applicants; roster of brokers; financial report to Secretary of
State. applicants and roster of brokers.
(a) The Executive Director of the Commission shall keep a register of all applicants for license, showing for each the date of application, name, place of residence, and whether the license was granted or refused. Said register shall be prima facie evidence of all matters recorded therein.
(b) The Executive Director of the Commission shall also keep a current roster showing the names and places of business of all licensed real estate brokers, which roster shall be kept on file in the office of the Commission and be open to public inspection.
(c) On or before the first day of September of each
year, the Commission shall file with the Secretary of State a copy of the
roster of real estate brokers holding certificates of license, and at the same
time shall also file with the Secretary of State a report containing a complete
statement of receipts and disbursements of the Commission for the preceding
fiscal year ending June 30 attested by the affidavit of the Executive Director
of the Commission.The Commission shall file reports annually as required
by G.S. 93B‑2."
SECTION 6. G.S. 93A‑6 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑6. Disciplinary action by Commission.
(a) The Commission has power to take disciplinary action. Upon its own initiative, or on the complaint of any person, the Commission may investigate the actions of any person or entity licensed under this Chapter, or any other person or entity who shall assume to act in such capacity. If the Commission finds probable cause that a licensee has violated any of the provisions of this Chapter, the Commission may hold a hearing on the allegations of misconduct.
The Commission has power to suspend or revoke at any time a license issued under the provisions of this Chapter, or to reprimand or censure any licensee, if, following a hearing, the Commission adjudges the licensee to be guilty of:
(1) Making any willful or negligent misrepresentation or any willful or negligent omission of material fact.
(2) Making any false promises of a character likely to influence, persuade, or induce.
(3) Pursuing a course of misrepresentation or making of false promises through agents, advertising or otherwise.
(4) Acting for more than one party in a transaction without the knowledge of all parties for whom he or she acts.
(5) Accepting a commission or valuable consideration as
a real estate salespersonbroker on provisional status for the
performance of any of the acts specified in this Article or Article 4 of this
Chapter, from any person except his or her broker‑in‑charge or
licensed broker by whom he or she is employed.
(6) Representing or attempting to represent a real estate broker other than the broker by whom he or she is engaged or associated, without the express knowledge and consent of the broker with whom he or she is associated.
(7) Failing, within a reasonable time, to account for or to remit any monies coming into his or her possession which belong to others.
(8) Being unworthy or incompetent to act as a real estate broker in a manner as to endanger the interest of the public.
(9) Paying a commission or valuable consideration to any person for acts or services performed in violation of this Chapter.
(10) Any other conduct which constitutes improper, fraudulent or dishonest dealing.
(11) Performing or undertaking to perform any legal service, as set forth in G.S. 84‑2.1, or any other acts constituting the practice of law.
(12) Commingling the money or other property of his or
her principals with his or her own or failure to maintain and deposit in a
trust or escrow account in an insured bank or savings and loan association
in North Carolinaa bank as provided by subsection (g) of this section
all money received by him or her as a real estate licensee acting in that
capacity, or an escrow agent, or the custodian or manager of the funds of
another person or entity which relate to or concern that person's or entity's
interest or investment in real property, provided, these accounts shall not
bear interest unless the principals authorize in writing the deposit be made in
an interest bearing account and also provide for the disbursement of the
interest accrued.
(13) Failing to deliver, within a reasonable time, a completed copy of any purchase agreement or offer to buy and sell real estate to the buyer and to the seller.
(14) Failing, at the time the a sales transaction
is consummated, to deliver to the seller in every real estate transaction, a
complete detailed closing statement showing all of the receipts and
disbursements handled by him or her for the seller or failing to deliver to the
buyer a complete statement showing all money received in the transaction from
the buyer and how and for what it was disbursed.the broker's client a
detailed and accurate closing statement showing the receipt and disbursement of
all monies relating to the transaction about which the broker knows or
reasonably should know. If a closing statement is prepared by an attorney or
lawful settlement agent, a broker may rely on the delivery of that statement,
but the broker must review the statement for accuracy and notify all parties to
the closing of any errors.
(15) Violating any rule or regulation promulgatedadopted
by the Commission.
The Executive Director shall transmit a certified copy of
all final orders of the Commission suspending or revoking licenses issued under
this Chapter to the clerk of superior court of the county in which the licensee
maintains his or her principal place of business. The clerk shall enter these
orders upon the judgment docket of the county.
(b) Following a hearing, theThe
Commission shall also have power tomay suspend or revoke any
license issued under the provisions of this Chapter or to reprimand or
censure any licensee when:
(1) The licensee has obtained a license by false or fraudulent representation;
(2) The licensee has been convicted or has entered a
plea of guilty or no contest upon which final judgment is entered by a court of
competent jurisdiction in this State, or any other state, of the criminal
offenses of: embezzlement, obtaining money under false pretense, fraud,
forgery, conspiracy to defraud,any misdemeanor or felony that involves
false swearing, misrepresentation, deceit, extortion, theft, bribery, embezzlement,
false pretenses, fraud, forgery, larceny, misappropriation of funds or
property, perjury, or any other offense showing professional unfitness
or involving moral turpitude which would reasonably affect the licensee's
performance in the real estate business;
(3) The licensee has violated any of the provisions of G.S. 93A‑6(a) when selling, leasing, or buying the licensee's own property;
(4) The broker's unlicensed employee, who is exempt from the provisions of this Chapter under G.S. 93A‑2(c)(6), has committed, in the regular course of business, any act which, if committed by the broker, would constitute a violation of G.S. 93A‑6(a) for which the broker could be disciplined; or
(5) The licensee, who is also a State‑licensed
or State‑certified real estate appraiser pursuant to Chapter 93E of the
General Statutes, has violated any provisions of Chapter 93E of the General
Statutes and has been reprimanded or has had an appraiser license or
certificate suspended or revoked by the Appraisal Board.The licensee,
who is also licensed as an appraiser, attorney, home inspector, mortgage
broker, general contractor, or member of another licensed profession or
occupation, has been disciplined for an offense under any law involving fraud,
theft, misrepresentation, breach of trust or fiduciary responsibility, or
willful or negligent malpractice.
(c) The Commission may appear in its own name in
superior court in actions for injunctive relief to prevent any person from
violating the provisions of this Chapter or rules promulgated adopted
by the Commission. The superior court shall have the power to grant these
injunctions even if criminal prosecution has been or may be instituted as a
result of the violations, or whether the person is a licensee of the
Commission.
(d) Each broker shall maintain complete records showing the deposit, maintenance, and withdrawal of money or other property owned by the broker's principals or held in escrow or in trust for the broker's principals. The Commission may inspect these records periodically, without prior notice and may also inspect these records whenever the Commission determines that they are pertinent to an investigation of any specific complaint against a licensee.
(e) When a person or entity licensed under this
Chapter is accused of any act, omission, or misconduct which would subject the
licensee to disciplinary action, the licensee, with the consent and approval of
the Commission, may surrender the license and all the rights and privileges
pertaining to it for a period of time established by the Commission. A person
or entity who surrenders a license shall not thereafter be eligible for or
submit any application for licensure as a real estate broker or salesperson during
the period of license surrender.
(f) In any contested case in which the Commission takes disciplinary action authorized by any provision of this Chapter, the Commission may also impose reasonable conditions, restrictions, and limitations upon the license, registration, or approval issued to the disciplined person or entity. In any contested case concerning an application for licensure, time share project registration, or school, sponsor, instructor, or course approval, the Commission may impose reasonable conditions, restrictions, and limitations on any license, registration, or approval it may issue as a part of its final decision.
(g) A broker's trust or escrow account shall be a demand deposit account in a federally insured depository institution lawfully doing business in this State which agrees to make its records of the broker's account available for inspection by the Commission's representatives.
(h) The Executive Director shall transmit a certified copy of all final orders of the Commission suspending or revoking licenses issued under this Chapter to the clerk of superior court of the county in which the licensee maintains his or her principal place of business. The clerk shall enter the order upon the judgment docket of the county."
SECTION 7. G.S. 93A‑6.1(b) reads as rewritten:
"(b) The Commission shall be exempt from the
requirements of Chapter 53B of the General Statutes with regard to subpoenas
issued to compel the production of a licensee's trust account records held by
any financial institution. Notwithstanding that exemption, the Commission
shall serve, pursuant to G.S. 1A‑1, Rule 4(j) of the N.C. Rules of
Civil Procedure or by certified mail to the licensee's last known address, a
copy of the subpoena and notice that the subpoena has been served upon the
financial institution. Service of the subpoena and notice on the licensee shall
be made within 10 days following service of the subpoena on the financial
institution holding the trust account records.Notwithstanding the
exemption, whenever the Commission issues a subpoena under this subsection, the
Commission shall send a copy to the licensee at his or her address of record by
regular mail."
SECTION 8. G.S. 93A‑9 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑9.
Licensing nonresidents.foreign brokers.
(a) An applicant from another state, which offers
licensing privileges to residents of North Carolina, may be licensed by
conforming to all the provisions of this Chapter and, in the discretion of the
Commission, such other terms and conditions as are required of North Carolina
residents applying for license in such other state; provided that the
Commission may exempt from the examination prescribed in G.S. 93A‑4
a broker or salesperson duly licensed in another state if a similar exemption
is extended to licensed brokers from North Carolina. A license applicant who
has been a resident of North Carolina for not more than 90 days may be
considered by the Commission as a nonresident for the purposes of this
subsection.The Commission may issue a broker license to an applicant
licensed in a foreign jurisdiction who has satisfied the requirements for
licensure set out in G.S. 93A‑4 or such other requirements as the
Commission in its discretion may by rule require.
…."
SECTION 9. G.S. 93A‑11(a) reads as rewritten:
"(a) Notwithstanding the provisions of G.S. 97‑21
or any other provision of law, a real estate broker may include in the
governing contract with a real estate salesperson broker on
provisional status whose nonemployee status is recognized pursuant to
section 3508 of the United States Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 3508, an
agreement for the salespersonbroker on provisional status to
reimburse the broker for the cost of covering that salesperson broker
on provisional status under the broker's workers' compensation coverage of
the broker's business."
SECTION 10. G.S. 93A‑16 reads as rewritten:
"Article 2.
"Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund.
"§ 93A‑16. Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund created; payment to fund; management.
(a) There is hereby created a special fund to be known
as the "Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund" which shall
be set aside and maintained by the North Carolina Real Estate Commission. The
fund shall be used in the manner provided under this Article for the payment of
unsatisfied judgments where the aggrieved person has suffered a direct monetary
loss by reason of certain acts committed by any real estate salesperson
licensed before April 1, 2006, or byany real estate broker. The Commission
may also expend money from the fund to create books and other publications,
courses, forms, seminars, and other programs and materials, to educate
licensees and the public in real estate subjects. However, the Commission shall
make no expenditures from the fund for educational purposes if the expenditure
will reduce the balance of the fund to an amount less than two hundred thousand
dollars ($200,000).
(b) On September 1, 1979, the Commission shall
transfer the sum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) from its expense
reserve fund to the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund. Thereafter,
the Commission may transfer to the Real Estate Education and Recovery
Fund additional sums of money from whatever funds the Commission may have,
provided that, if on December 31 of any year the amount remaining in the fund
is less than fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), the Commission may determine
that each person or entity licensed under this Chapter, when renewing a
license, shall pay in addition to the license renewal fee, a fee not to exceed
ten dollars ($10.00) per broker and five dollars ($5.00) per salesperson as
shall be determined by the Commission for the purpose of replenishing the fund.
(c) The Commission shall invest and reinvest the monies in the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund in the same manner as provided by law for the investment of funds by the clerk of superior court. The proceeds from such investments shall be deposited to the credit of the fund.
(d) The Commission shall have the authority to adopt reasonable
rules and procedures not inconsistent with the provisions of this Article,
to provide for the orderly, fair and efficient administration and payment of
monies held in the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund."
SECTION 11. G.S.93A‑17 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑17. Grounds for payment; notice and application to Commission.
(a) An aggrieved person who has suffered a direct
monetary loss by reason of the conversion of trust funds by a real estate
salesperson licensed before April 1, 2006, or by any licensed real estate
broker shall be eligible to recover, subject to the limitations of this
Article, the amount of trust funds converted and which is otherwise
unrecoverable provided that:
(1) The act or acts of conversion which form the basis of the claim for recovery occurred on or after September 1, 1979;
(2) The aggrieved person has sued the real estate
broker or salesperson in a court of competent jurisdiction and has filed
with the Commission written notice of such lawsuit within 60 days after its
commencement unless the claim against the Real Estate Education and Recovery
Fund is for an amount less than three thousand dollars ($3,000), excluding attorneys
attorney's fees, in which case the notice may be filed within 60
days after the termination of all judicial proceedings including appeals;
(3) The aggrieved person has obtained final judgment in
a court of competent jurisdiction against the real estate broker or
salesperson on grounds of conversion of trust funds arising out of a
transaction which occurred when such broker or salesperson was licensed
and acting in a capacity for which a license is required; and
(4) Execution of the judgment has been attempted and has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part.
Upon the termination of all judicial proceedings including
appeals, and for a period of one year thereafter, a person eligible for
recovery may file a verified application with the Commission for payment out of
the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund of the amount remaining
unpaid upon the judgment which represents the actual and direct loss sustained
by reason of conversion of trust funds. A copy of the judgment and return of
execution shall be attached to the application and filed with the Commission.
The applicant shall serve upon the judgment debtor a copy of the application
and shall file with the Commission an affidavit or certificate of such service.
(b) For the purposes of this Article, the term "trust
funds" shall include all earnest money deposits, down payments, sales
proceeds, tenant security deposits, undisbursed rents and other such monies
which belong to another or others and are held by a real estate broker or
salesperson acting in that capacity. Trust funds shall also include all
time share purchase monies which are required to be held in trust by G.S. 93A‑45(c)
during the time they are, in fact, so held. Trust funds shall not include,
however, any funds held by an independent escrow agent under G.S. 93A‑42
or any funds which the court may find to be subject to an implied, constructive
or resulting trust.
(c) For the purposes of this Article, the terms "licensee",
"broker", and "salesperson""licensee" and "broker"
shall include only individual persons licensed under this Chapter as brokers
or individual persons who were licensed under this Chapter as salespersons
prior to April 1, 2006.brokers. The terms "licensee", "broker",
and "salesperson""licensee" and "broker"
shall not include a time share developer, time share project, independent
escrow agent, corporation or other entity licensed under this Chapter."
SECTION 12. G.S. 93A‑18(8) reads as rewritten:
"(8) Knows of no assets of the judgment debtor and has attempted collection from all other persons who may be liable for the transaction for which the aggrieved person seeks payment from the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund if there be any such other persons."
SECTION 13. G.S. 93A‑20 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑20. Order directing payment out of fund; compromise of claims.
Applications for payment from the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund shall be heard and decided by a majority of the members of the Commission. If, after a hearing, the Commission finds the claim should be paid from the fund, the Commission shall enter an order requiring payment from the fund of whatever sum the Commission shall find to be payable upon the claim in accordance with the limitations contained in this Article.
Subject to Commission approval, a claim based upon the application of an aggrieved person may be compromised; however, the Commission shall not be bound in any way by any compromise or stipulation of the judgment debtor. If a claim appears to be otherwise meritorious, the Commission may waive procedural defects in the application for payment."
SECTION 14. G.S. 93A‑21 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑21. Limitations; pro rata distribution; attorney fees.
(a) Payments from the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund shall be subject to the following limitations:
(1) The right to recovery under this Article shall be
forever barred unless application is made within one year after termination of
all proceedings including appeals, in connection with the judgment;
judgment.
(2) The fund shall not be liable for more than twenty‑five
thousand dollars ($25,000)fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) per
transaction regardless of the number of persons aggrieved or parcels of real
estate involved in such transaction; and transaction.
(3) The liability of Payment from the
fund shall not exceed in the aggregate twenty‑five thousand dollars
($25,000) for any one licensee within a single calendar year, and in no event
shall it exceed in the aggregate fifty thousand dollars ($50,000)seventy‑five
thousand dollars ($75,000) for any one licensee.
(4) The fund shall not be liable for payment of any judgment awards of consequential damages, multiple or punitive damages, civil penalties, incidental damages, special damages, interest, costs of court or action or other similar awards.
(b) If the maximum liability of the fund is insufficient to pay in full the valid claims of all aggrieved persons whose claims relate to the same transaction or to the same licensee, the amount for which the fund is liable shall be distributed among the claimants in a ratio that their respective claims bear to the total of such valid claims or in such manner as the Commission, in its discretion, deems equitable. Upon petition of counsel for the Commission, the Commission may require all claimants and prospective claimants to be joined in one proceeding to the end that the respective rights of all such claimants to the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund may be equitably resolved. A person who files an application for payment after the maximum liability of the fund for the licensee or transaction has been exhausted shall not be entitled to payment and may not seek judicial review of the Commission's award of payment to any party except upon a showing that the Commission abused its discretion.
(c) In the event an aggrieved person is entitled to
payment from the fund in an amount of one thousand five hundred dollars
($1,500) or less,which is equal to or less than the maximum amount of
money which may be awarded in small claims court under G.S. 7A‑210,
the Commission may allow such person to recover from the fund reasonable attorney's
fees incurred in effecting such recovery. Reimbursement for attorney's fees
shall be limited to those fees incurred in effecting recovery from the fund and
shall not include any fee incurred in obtaining judgment against the licensee."
SECTION 15. G.S. 93A‑22 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑22. Repayment to fund; automatic suspension of license.
Should the Commission pay from the Real Estate Education
and Recovery Fund any amount in settlement of a claim or toward
satisfaction of a judgment against a licensed real estate broker or
salesperson,broker, any license issued to the broker or
salesperson shall be automatically suspended upon the effective date of the
order authorizing payment from the fund. No such broker or salesperson shall
be granted a reinstatement until the fund has been repaid in full, including
interest at the legal rate as provided for in G.S. 24‑1."
SECTION 16. G.S. 93A‑23 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑23. Subrogation of rights.
When the Commission has paid from the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund any sum to the judgment creditor, the Commission shall be subrogated to all of the rights of the judgment creditor to the extent of the amount so paid and the judgment creditor shall assign all right, title, and interest in the judgment to the extent of the amount so paid to the Commission and any amount and interest so recovered by the Commission on the judgment shall be deposited in the Real Estate Education and Recovery Fund."
SECTION 17. G.S. 93A‑25 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑25. Persons ineligible to recover from fund.
No real estate broker or real estate salesperson who
suffers the loss of any commission from any transaction in which he or she was
acting in the capacity of a real estate broker or real estate salesperson shall
be entitled to make application for payment from the Real Estate Education
and Recovery Fund for the loss."
SECTION 18. G.S. 93A‑35(b) reads as rewritten:
"(b) Licenses shall be renewable annually on July
1, provided that a renewal application accompanied by the appropriate renewal
fees has been filed not later than June 1 in the form and manner prescribed by
the Commission, and provided further that the applicant and school are found to
be in compliance with the standards established for issuance of an original
license. The Commission may by rule set nonrefundable renewal fees not to
exceed one hundred twenty‑five dollars ($125.00) for each school location
and twenty‑five dollars ($25.00) for each real estate salesperson or broker
prelicensing and postlicensing course."
SECTION 19. G.S. 93A‑41(9) reads as rewritten:
"(9) "Time share" means a right to occupy
a unit or any of several units during five or more separated time periods over
a period of at least five years, including renewal options, whether or not
coupled with a freehold estate or an estate for years in a time share project
or a specified portion thereof, including, but not limited to,of a
time share project. "Time share" shall also include a vacation
license, prepaid hotel reservation, club membership, limited partnership,
vacation bond, or a plan or system where the right to use a time share unit
or units for periods of time is awarded or apportioned on the basis of
points, vouchers, split, divided, or floating use;use, even if on a
competitive basis with other purchasers;".
SECTION 20. G.S. 93A‑42 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑42. Time shares deemed real estate.
(a) A time share which in whole or in part burdens or pertains to real property in this State is deemed to be an interest in real estate, and shall be governed by the law of this State relating to real estate.
(b) A purchaser of a time share which burdens or pertains to real property located in the State may in accordance with G.S. 47‑18 register the time share instrument by which the purchaser acquired the interest and upon such registration shall be entitled to the protection provided by Chapter 47 of the General Statutes for the recordation of other real property instruments. A time share instrument transferring or encumbering a time share shall not be rejected for recordation because of the nature or duration of that estate, provided all other requirements necessary to make an instrument recordable are complied with. An instrument concerning a time share which burdens or pertains to no real property located in this State shall not be recorded in the office of the register of deeds in any county in this State.
(c) The developer shall record or cause to be recorded a time share instrument:
(1) Not less than six days nor more than 45 days following the execution of the contract of sale by the purchaser; or
(2) Not later than 180 days following the execution of the contract of sale by the purchaser, provided that all payments made by the purchaser shall be placed by the developer with an independent escrow agent upon the expiration of the 10‑day escrow period provided by G.S. 93A‑45(c).
(d) The independent escrow agent provided by G.S. 93A‑42(c)(2) shall deposit and maintain the purchaser's payments in an insured trust or escrow account in a bank or savings and loan association located in this State. The trust or escrow account may be interest‑bearing and the interest earned shall belong to the developer, if agreed upon in writing by the purchaser; provided, however, if the time share instrument is not recorded within the time periods specified in this section, then the interest earned shall belong to the purchaser. The independent escrow agent shall return all payments to the purchaser at the expiration of 180 days following the execution of the contract of sale by the purchaser, unless prior to that time the time share instrument has been recorded. However, if prior to the expiration of 180 days following the execution of the contract of sale, the developer and the purchaser provide their written consent to the independent escrow agent, the developer's obligation to record the time share instrument and the escrow period may be extended for an additional period of 120 days. Upon recordation of the time share instrument, the independent escrow agent shall pay the purchaser's funds to the developer. Upon request by the Commission, the independent escrow agent shall promptly make available to the Commission inspection of records of money held by the independent escrow agent.
(e) In no event shall the developer be required to record a time share instrument if the purchaser is in default of the purchaser's obligations.
(f) Recordation under the provisions of this section of the time share instrument shall constitute delivery of that instrument from the developer to the purchaser."
SECTION 21. G.S. 93A‑53 reads as rewritten:
"§ 93A‑53. Register of applicants; roster of registrants; registered projects; financial report to Secretary of State.
(a) The Executive Director of the Commission shall keep a register of all applicants for certificates of registration, showing for each the date of application, name, business address, and whether the certificate was granted or refused.
(b) The Executive Director of the Commission shall also keep a current roster showing the name and address of all time share projects registered with the Commission. The roster shall be kept on file in the office of the Commission and be open to public inspection.
(c) On or before the first day of September of each
year, the Commission shall file with the Secretary of State a copy of the
roster of time share projects registered with the Commission and a report
containing a complete statement of income received by the Commission in
connection with the registration of time share projects for the preceding
fiscal year ending June 30th attested by the affidavit of the Executive
Director of the Commission. The report shall be made a part of those annual
reports required under the provisions of G.S. 93A‑5.The
Commission shall include a copy of the roster of time share projects current on
the preceding June 30 and a statement of the income received by the Commission
in connection with the registration of time share projects during the fiscal
year ending on June 30 with the report required by G.S. 93B‑2."
SECTION 22. G.S. 93A‑54(a) reads as rewritten:
"(a) The Commission has power to take disciplinary action. Upon its own motion, or on the verified complaint of any person, the Commission may investigate the actions of any time share salesperson, developer, or project broker of a time share project registered under this Article, or any other person or entity who shall assume to act in such capacity. If the Commission finds probable cause that a time share salesperson, developer, or project broker has violated any of the provisions of this Article, the Commission may hold a hearing on the allegations of misconduct.
The Commission has the power to suspend or revoke at any time a real estate license issued to a time share salesperson or project broker, or a certificate of registration of a time share project issued to a developer; or to reprimand or censure such salesperson, developer, or project broker; or to fine such developer in the amount of five hundred dollars ($500.00) for each violation of this Article, if, after a hearing, the Commission adjudges either the salesperson, developer, or project broker to be guilty of:
…
(9) Failing to deposit and maintain in a trust or
escrow account in an insured bank or savings and loan association in North
Carolinabroker's trust or escrow account as defined by G.S. 93A‑6(g)
all money received from others in a time share transaction as may be required
in G.S. 93A‑45 of this Article or failing to place with an
independent escrow agent the funds of a time share purchaser when required by G.S. 93A‑42(c);
…."
SECTION 23. The Real Estate Commission shall adopt any rules necessary to implement the provisions of Sections 3 and 8 of this act when the act becomes law.
SECTION 24. Section 22 of this act is effective when the act becomes law. The remainder of this act becomes effective January 1, 2012.