BILL NUMBER: AB 2111	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  APRIL 12, 2010
	AMENDED IN ASSEMBLY  MARCH 23, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Assembly Member Smyth

                        FEBRUARY 18, 2010

   An act to amend Sections 9855, 9855.2, and 9855.9 of, and to add
Sections 9855.15 and 9855.85 to, the Business and Professions Code,
to amend Section 1794.41 of the Civil Code, and to amend Section
12800 of  , and to repeal Section 116.5 of,  the
Insurance Code, relating to service contracts.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   AB 2111, as amended, Smyth. Service contracts.
   (1) Existing law, the Electronic and Appliance Repair Dealer
Registration Law, makes it unlawful for any person to act as a
service contract administrator or a service contract seller without
first registering with the Bureau of Electronic and Appliance Repair,
Home Furnishings, and Thermal Insulation.
   Existing law regulates service contracts, as defined, relating to
maintenance or repair of specified sets and appliances. A service
contract may include provisions for incidental payment of indemnity,
not exceeding the retail value of $250 per year. Existing law
prohibits a service contract administrator, as defined, from being an
obligor, as defined, on a service contract and existing law requires
these service contract administrators to maintain a service contract
reimbursement policy, as defined.
   This bill would change the definition of service contract by
expanding the items a contract may cover to include accessories of
electronic sets or appliances. The bill would delete the $250 per
year limit on incidental payments. The bill would also change the
definition of service contract administrator to no longer exclude
service contract sellers and insurers admitted to do business in the
state. The bill would authorize a service contract administrator to
be an obligor on a service contract where all service contracts under
which the service contract administrator is obligated are insured
under a service contract reimbursement insurance policy.
   Existing law defines a service contract seller as a person who
sells or offers to sell a service contract to a service
contractholder, including a person who is the obligor under a service
contract sold by the seller, manufacturer, or repairer of the
product covered by the service contract.
   This bill would specify that a service contract seller also means
a 3rd party, including an obligor who is not the seller,
manufacturer, or repairer of the product. The bill would require a
3rd party obligor to obtain a service contract reimbursement policy.
The bill would specify that a service contract administrator or a 3rd
party seller acting as an obligor without a service contract
reimbursement policy shall be deemed to be unlawfully transacting the
business of insurance and therefore subject to specified criminal
and monetary penalty provisions. Because willfully transacting the
business of insurance without a certificate of authority would
constitute a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local
program.
   Existing law prohibits a service contract seller from issuing a
service contract without complying with specific requirements.
   This bill would instead prohibit a service contract seller from
issuing a service contract unless the obligor under the contract has
complied with specific requirements.
   Existing law makes these provisions relating to service contracts
inoperative on January 1, 2013.
   This bill would extend the operation of these provisions to
January 1, 2018.
   The bill would make other technical and clarifying changes.
   (2) Existing law prohibits a service contract covering any motor
vehicle, home appliance, or home electronic product purchased for use
in this state from being offered for sale or sold unless several
elements exist, including that the contract is cancelable by the
purchaser under certain conditions.
   This bill would change the required conditions of a cancellation
in that the seller would no longer be required to indicate in the
contract which of specified bases for a pro rata refund the seller is
using. 
   (3) Existing law provides that an express warranty warranting a
motor vehicle lubricant, treatment, fluid, or additive that covers
incidental or consequential damage resulting from a failure of the
lubricant, treatment, fluid, or additive, is automobile insurance,
unless certain requirements are met.  
   This bill would delete those provisions.  
   (4) 
    (3)  Existing law defines vehicle service contract for
purposes of provisions relating to sellers of vehicles  , 
 and exempts a warranty provided by a vehicle glass manufacturer
from the requirements governing a vehicle service contract  .

   This bill would add to the definition of a vehicle service
contract an agreement, provided with or without separate
consideration, that promises to repair, replace, or maintain a motor
vehicle or watercraft, or to indemnify for the repair, replacement,
or maintenance of a motor vehicle or watercraft, conditioned upon the
use of a specific brand or brands of lubricant, treatment, fluid, or
additive.  
   This bill would add a warranty provided by a glass sealant
manufacturer to the exemption.  
   (5) 
    (4)  The California Constitution requires the state to
reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs
mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for
making that reimbursement.
   This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this
act for a specified reason.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: yes.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 9855 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   9855.  The definitions used in this section shall govern the
construction and terms as used in this chapter:
   (a) "Service contract" means a contract in writing to perform,
over a fixed period of time or for a specified duration, services
relating to the maintenance, replacement, or repair of an electronic
set or appliance, as defined by this chapter, and their accessories
or of furniture, jewelry, lawn and garden equipment, power tools,
fitness equipment, telephone equipment, small kitchen appliances and
tools, or home health care products, and may include provisions for
incidental payment of indemnity under limited circumstances,
including, but not limited to, power surges, food spoilage, or
accidental damage from handling.
   (b) "Service contract administrator" or "administrator" means a
person who performs or arranges, or has an affiliate who performs or
arranges, the collection, maintenance, or disbursement of moneys to
compensate any party for claims or repairs pursuant to a service
contract, and who also performs or arranges, or has an affiliate who
performs or arranges, any of the following activities on behalf of
service contract sellers:
   (1) Providing service contract sellers with service contract
forms.
   (2) Participating in the adjustment of claims arising from service
contracts.
   (3) Arranging on behalf of service contract sellers the insurance
required by Section 9855.2.
   A service contract administrator shall not be an obligor on a
service contract unless all service contracts under which the service
contract administrator is obligated to perform are insured under a
service contract reimbursement insurance policy.
   (c) (1) "Service contract seller" or "seller" means a person who
sells or offers to sell a service contract to a service
contractholder, including a person who is the obligor under a service
contract sold by the seller, manufacturer, or repairer of the
product covered by the service contract.
   (2) "Service contract seller" or "seller" also means a third
party, including an obligor, who is not the seller, manufacturer, or
repairer of the product. However, a third party shall not be an
obligor on a service contract unless the obligor obtains a service
contract reimbursement policy for all service contracts under which
the third party is obligated under the terms of a service contract.
   (d) "Service contractholder" means a person who purchases or
receives a service contract from a service contract seller.
   (e) "Service contractor" means a service contract administrator or
a service contract seller.
   (f) "Service contract reimbursement insurance policy" means a
policy of insurance issued by an insurer admitted to do business in
this state providing coverage for all obligations and liabilities
incurred by a service contract seller under the terms of the service
contracts sold in this state by the service contract seller to a
service contractholder. The service contract reimbursement insurance
policy shall either cover all service contracts sold or specifically
cover those contracts sold to residents of the State of California.
   (g) "Obligor" is the entity financially and legally obligated
under the terms of a service contract.
   (h) The terms "consumer goods," "manufacturer," "retail seller,"
"retailer," and "sale" shall have the same meanings ascribed to them
in Section 1791 of the Civil Code.
  SEC. 2.  Section 9855.15 is added to the Business and Professions
Code, to read:
   9855.15.  A service contract administrator who is an obligor on a
service contract and is registered as a service contract
administrator may perform all the functions permitted by a seller and
shall not be required to register separately as a seller.
  SEC. 3.  Section 9855.2 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   9855.2.  (a) A service contract seller shall not issue, sell, or
offer for sale a service contract unless the obligor under the
service contract has complied with one of the following requirements:

   (1) Files with the director one of the following:
   (A) The most recent annual report on Form 10-K required by the
Securities and Exchange Commission, reflecting a net worth greater
than the sum of the deferred revenues from service contracts in
force. If the service contractor is a foreign corporation that files
a comparable audited financial statement with its home government or
with the United States government, the director may deem that
statement an acceptable substitute for Form 10-K.
   (B) The most recent audited financial statement reflecting a net
worth of not less than one hundred million dollars ($100,000,000).
The financial statement shall be certified by a certified public
accountant who is licensed in the state where the service contract
seller maintains its principal place of business or the seller's
state of domestic incorporation.
   (2) Obtains a service contract reimbursement insurance policy.
   (3) Sells service contracts that are administered by a service
contract administrator who has obtained a service contract
reimbursement insurance policy covering the seller's service
contracts.
   (4) Maintains and annually verifies to the director a funded
account held in escrow equal to a minimum of 25 percent of the
deferred revenues from the service contracts in force.
   (b) A service contract administrator shall not administer service
contracts sold in this state unless a service contract reimbursement
insurance policy covering these service contracts has been obtained.
  SEC. 4.  Section 9855.85 is added to the Business and Professions
Code, to read:
   9855.85.  Unless otherwise lawfully transacting the business of
insurance pursuant to a certificate of authority issued pursuant to
Section 700 of the Insurance Code for the appropriate class, a
service contract administrator or third-party seller acting as an
obligor on a service contract without having a service contract
reimbursement insurance policy covering all service contracts under
which the service contract administrator or third-party seller is
obligated shall be deemed to be unlawfully transacting the business
of insurance and shall be subject to subdivision (b) of Section 700
and Section 12921.8 of the Insurance Code.
  SEC. 5.  Section 9855.9 of the Business and Professions Code is
amended to read:
   9855.9.  This article shall remain in effect only until January 1,
2018, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted
statute, that is enacted before January 1, 2018, deletes or extends
that date.
  SEC. 6.  Section 1794.41 of the Civil Code is amended to read:
   1794.41.  (a) No service contract covering any motor vehicle, home
appliance  ,  or home electronic product purchased for use
in this state may be offered for sale or sold unless all of the
following elements exist:
   (1) The contract shall contain the disclosures specified in
Section 1794.4 and shall disclose in the manner described in that
section the buyer's cancellation and refund rights provided by this
section.
   (2) The contract shall be available for inspection by the buyer
prior to purchase and either the contract, or a brochure which
specifically describes the terms, conditions, and exclusions of the
contract, and the provisions of this section relating to contract
delivery, cancellation, and refund, shall be delivered to the buyer
at or before the time of purchase of the contract. Within 60 days
after the date of purchase, the contract itself shall be delivered to
the buyer. If a service contract for a home appliance or a home
electronic product is sold by means of a telephone solicitation, the
seller may elect to satisfy the requirements of this paragraph by
mailing or delivering the contract to the buyer not later than 30
days after the date of the sale of the contract.
   (3) The contract is applicable only to items, costs, and time
periods not covered by the express warranty. However, a service
contract may run concurrently with or overlap an express warranty if
(A) the contract covers items or costs not covered by the express
warranty or (B) the contract provides relief to the purchaser not
available under the express warranty, such as automatic replacement
of a product where the express warranty only provides for repair.
   (4) The contract shall be cancelable by the purchaser under the
following conditions:
   (A) Unless the contract provides for a longer period, within the
first 60 days after receipt of the contract, or with respect to a
contract covering a used motor vehicle without manufacturer
warranties, a home appliance, or a home electronic product, within
the first 30 days after receipt of the contract, the full amount paid
shall be refunded by the seller to the purchaser if the purchaser
provides a written notice of cancellation to the person specified in
the contract, and if no claims have been made against the contract.
If a claim has been made against the contract either within the first
60 days after receipt of the contract, or with respect to a used
motor vehicle without manufacturer warranties, home appliance, or
home electronic product, within the first 30 days after receipt of
the contract, a pro rata refund, based on either elapsed time or an
objective measure of use, such as mileage or the retail value of any
service performed, at the seller's option, shall be made by the
seller to the purchaser if the purchaser provides a written notice of
cancellation to the person specified in the contract.
   (B) Unless the contract provides for a longer period for obtaining
a full refund, after the first 60 days after receipt of the
contract, or with respect to a contract covering a used motor vehicle
without manufacturer warranties, a home appliance, or a home
electronic product, after the first 30 days after the receipt of the
contract, a pro rata refund, based on either elapsed time or an
objective measure of use, such as mileage or the retail value of any
service performed, at the seller's option, shall be made by the
seller to the purchaser if the purchaser provides a written notice of
cancellation to the person specified in the contract. In addition,
the seller may assess a cancellation or administrative fee, not to
exceed 10 percent of the price of the service contract or twenty-five
dollars ($25), whichever is less.
   (C) If the purchase of the service contract was financed, the
seller may make the refund payable to the purchaser, the assignee, or
lender of record, or both.
   (b) Nothing in this section shall apply to a home protection plan
that is issued by a home protection company which is subject to Part
7 (commencing with Section 12740) of Division 2 of the Insurance
Code.
   (c) If any provision of this section conflicts with any provision
of Part 8 (commencing with Section 12800) of Division 2 of the
Insurance Code, the provision of the Insurance Code shall apply
instead of this section. 
  SEC. 7.    Section 116.5 of the Insurance Code is
repealed. 
   SEC. 8.   SEC. 7.   Section 12800 of the
Insurance Code is amended to read:
   12800.  The following definitions apply for purposes of this part:

   (a) "Motor vehicle" means a self-propelled device operated solely
or primarily upon land and may include both self-propelled motor
homes or recreational vehicles, non-self-propelled camping and
recreational trailers, off-road vehicles, and trailers designed to
transport off-road vehicles. However, "motor vehicle" shall not
include a self-propelled vehicle, or a component part of such a
vehicle, that has any of the following characteristics:
   (1) Has a gross vehicle weight rating of 30,000 pounds or more,
and is not a recreational vehicle as defined by Section 18010 of the
Health and Safety Code.
   (2) Is designed to transport more than 15 passengers, including
the driver.
   (3) Is used in the transportation of materials considered
hazardous pursuant to the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act (49
U.S.C. Sec. 5101 et seq.), as amended.
   (b) "Watercraft" means a vessel, as defined in Section 21 of the
Harbors and Navigation Code, and may include any non-self-propelled
trailer used to transport such watercraft upon land.
   (c) (1) "Vehicle service contract" means a contract or agreement
for a separately stated consideration and for a specific duration to
repair, replace, or maintain a motor vehicle or watercraft, or to
indemnify for the repair, replacement, or maintenance of a motor
vehicle or watercraft, necessitated by an operational or structural
failure due to a defect in materials or workmanship, or due to normal
wear and tear.
   (2) A vehicle service contract may also provide for the incidental
payment of indemnity under limited circumstances only in the form of
the following additional benefits: coverage for towing, substitute
transportation, emergency road service, rental car reimbursement,
reimbursement of deductible amounts under a manufacturer's warranty,
and reimbursement for travel, lodging, or meals.
   (3) "Vehicle service contract" also includes an agreement of a
term of at least one year, for separately stated consideration, that
promises routine maintenance. 
   (4) "Vehicle service contract" also includes an agreement,
provided with or without separate consideration, that promises to
repair, replace, or maintain a motor vehicle or watercraft, or to
indemnify for the repair, replacement, or maintenance of a motor
vehicle or watercraft, conditioned upon the use of a specific brand
or brands of lubricant, treatment, fluid, or additive. 

   (5) 
    (4)  Notwithstanding Section 116, and paragraphs (1) and
(2) of this subdivision, a vehicle service contract also includes
one or more of the following:
   (A) An agreement that promises the repair or replacement of a tire
or wheel necessitated by wear and tear, defect, or damage caused by
a road hazard. However, an agreement that promises the repair or
replacement of a tire necessitated by wear and tear, defect, or
damage caused by a road hazard, in which the obligor is the tire
manufacturer, is exempt from the requirements of this part. A
warranty provided by a tire or wheel distributor or retailer is
exempt from the requirements of this part as long as the warranty
covers only defects in the material or workmanship of the tire or
wheel.
   (B) An agreement that promises the repair or replacement of glass
on a vehicle necessitated by wear and tear, defect, or damage caused
by a road hazard. However, a warranty provided by a vehicle glass
 or glass sealant  manufacturer is exempt from the
requirements of this part. A warranty provided by a vehicle glass
distributor or retailer is exempt from the requirements of this part
as long as the warranty covers only defects in the material or
workmanship of the vehicle glass.
   (C) An agreement that promises the removal of a dent, ding, or
crease without affecting the existing paint finish using paintless
dent repair techniques, and which expressly excludes the replacement
of vehicle body panels, sanding, bonding, or painting.
   (d) "Service contract administrator" or "administrator" means any
person, other than an obligor, who performs or arranges, directly or
indirectly, the collection, maintenance, or disbursement of moneys to
compensate any party for claims or repairs pursuant to a vehicle
service contract, and who also performs or arranges, directly or
indirectly, any of the following activities with respect to vehicle
service contracts in which a seller located within this state is the
obligor:
   (1) Providing sellers with service contract forms.
   (2) Participating in the adjustment of claims arising from service
contracts.
   (e) "Purchaser" means any person who purchases a vehicle service
contract from a seller.
   (f) "Seller" means either of the following:
   (1) With respect to motor vehicles, a dealer or lessor-retailer
licensed in one of those capacities by the Department of Motor
Vehicles and who sells vehicle service contracts incidental to his or
her business of selling or leasing motor vehicles.
   (2) With respect to watercraft, a person who sells vehicle service
contracts incidental to that person's business of selling or leasing
watercraft vehicles.
   (g) "Obligor" means the entity legally obligated under the terms
of a service contract.
   SEC. 9.   SEC. 8.   No reimbursement is
required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIII B of the
California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred
by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this
act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or
infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within
the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the
definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIII
B of the California Constitution.