Amended in Senate August 19, 2014

Amended in Senate August 5, 2014

Amended in Senate July 1, 2014

Amended in Senate June 12, 2014

Amended in Assembly May 14, 2014

Amended in Assembly May 5, 2014

Amended in Assembly April 22, 2014

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly BillNo. 2747


Introduced by Committee on Judiciary (Assembly Members Wieckowski (Chair), Alejo, Chau, Dickinson, Garcia, Muratsuchi, and Stone)

March 4, 2014


An act to amend Sections 56.06, 1633.3, 1936, and 1942.2 of the Civil Code, to amend Sections 415.46, 1174.25, 1174.3, 1501.5, 1571, and 2025.510 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to amend Sections 912, 917, and 1038.2 of the Evidence Code, to amend Section 504 of the Family Code, to amend Sections 831.7, 6103, 8214.15, 60371, 68085.1, 68631, and 68632 of, to add Section 68631.5 to, and to repeal Section 1456 of, the Government Code, to amend Section 1569.698 of the Health and Safety Code, to amend Section 11163.3 of the Penal Code, to amend Sections 1513.1, 1811, 1812, 1813, 1851.5, 2356.5, 6401, and 6402 of the Probate Code, to amend Section 21189.2 of the Public Resources Code, and to repeal Chapter 4.2 (commencing with Section 10830) of Part 2 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code, relating to civil law.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

AB 2747, as amended, Committee on Judiciary. Civil law: omnibus bill.

(1) Existing law, the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, generally allows parties to contract to conduct transactions by electronic means and imposes specified requirements on electronic transactions. That act does not apply to specific transactions, including a transaction regarding security for a rental agreement for residential property that is used as the dwelling of the tenant.

This bill would remove those security transactions from the list of transactions to which the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act does not apply.

(2) Existing law governs contracts between vehicle rental companies and their customers. Existing law, until January 1, 2015, requires a rental company or its registered agent to accept service of a summons and complaint and any other required documents against a renter who resides out of this country for an accident or collision resulting from the operation of the rental vehicle in this state, if the rental company provides liability insurance coverage as part of, or associated with, the rental agreement. Existing law requires any plaintiff who elects to serve the foreign renter by delivering the summons and complaint and any other required documents to the rental company pursuant to these provisions to agree to limit his or her recovery against the foreign renter and rental company to the limits of the protection of the liability insurance.

This bill would extend these requirements until January 1, 2020.

(3) Existing law governs the obligations of tenants and landlords under a lease or tenancy. Existing law authorizes a tenant who has made a payment to a public utility or publicly owned utility to deduct the amount of the payment from the rent when due, as specified.

This bill would additionally authorize a tenant who has made a payment to a district for public utility service to deduct the amount of the payment from the rent when due, as specified.

Existing law provides that whenever a district, as defined, furnishes residential light, heat, water, or power through a master meter, or furnishes individually metered service in a multiunit residential structure, mobilehome park, or farm labor camp where the owner, manager, or farm labor employer is listed by the district as the customer of record, the district is required to make every good faith effort to inform the actual users of the services, by means of a specified notice, when the account is in arrears, that service will be terminated at least 10 days prior to termination and further provides for the district to make service available to actual users who are willing and able to assume responsibility for the entire account.

This bill would additionally require a district to provide that notice to actual users in a single-family dwelling. The bill would require that the notice be written in English, Spanish, Chinese, Tagalog, Vietnamese, and Korean. The bill would instead provide for the district to make service available to actual users who are willing and able to assume responsibility for subsequent charges to the account. By imposing on special districts additional requirements regarding termination of residential utility service, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program.

(4) Existing law generally provides, in an unlawful detainer action, that if an owner or owner’s agent has obtained service of a prejudgment claim of right to possession, as specified, no occupant of the premises, whether or not that occupant is named in the judgment for possession, may object to the enforcement of the judgment against that occupant by filing a claim of right to possession as prescribed. Existing law provides, in any action for unlawful detainer resulting from a foreclosure sale of a rental housing unit pursuant to specified provisions, that the above provisions regarding objection to the enforcement of a judgment do not limit the right of a tenant or subtenant to file a prejudgment claim of right of possession or to object to enforcement of a judgment for possession by filing a claim of right to possession, regardless of whether the tenant or subtenant was served with a prejudgment claim of right to possession, as specified. Existing law includes the forms for claim of right to possession and for service of a prejudgment claim of right to possession.

This bill, with regard to the foreclosure sale provision in existing law, would make conforming changes to statutory provisions and statutory forms regarding claim of right to possession and prejudgment claim of right to possession.

(5) Existing law, known as the Unclaimed Property Law, provides for the escheat to the state of, among other property, certain personal property held or owing in the ordinary course of the holder’s business. Existing law declares the intent of the Legislature to adopt a more expansive notification component as part of the unclaimed property program that has a waiting period of not less than 18 months from delivery of property to the state prior to disposal of any unclaimed property deemed to have no commercial value. The Unclaimed Property Law also vests the Commissioner of Financial Institutions with full authority to examine the records of any banking organization and any savings association doing business within this state for the purposes of determining compliance pursuant to its provisions.

This bill would modify the declaration of legislative intent to provide for a 7-year waiting period from delivery of property to the state prior to the disposal of unclaimed property. The bill would also update an obsolete reference.

(6) Existing law requires the party noticing a deposition to bear the cost of stenographically transcribing the deposition, unless the court, on motion and for good cause shown, orders that the cost be borne or shared by another party. Existing law provides that any other party or the deponent is authorized to obtain a copy of the transcript at the expense of that party or deponent. Existing law requires the requesting attorney or party appearing in propria persona to timely pay the deposition officer or the entity providing the services of the deposition officer for the transcription or copy of the transcription and any other requested deposition product or service, as defined.

This bill would prohibit a specified court ruling from being construed to alter the standards by which a court acquires personal jurisdiction over a nonparty to an action.

(7) Existing law governs the admissibility of evidence in court proceedings and permits a person to claim an evidentiary privilege for confidential communications between that person and a specified individual, including, but not limited to, a lawyer, physician, clergy member, sexual assault counselor, and domestic violence counselor, among others, and the communication is presumed to have been made in confidence with the burden lying with the opponent of the claim of privilege to rebut the presumption. Existing law also recognizes a lawyer referral service-client privilege and a human trafficking caseworker-victim privilege, but does not extend the presumption of confidentiality to communications between those parties. Existing law provides that the right to claim the evidentiary privilege for confidential communications is waived if any holder of the privilege has, without coercion, disclosed a significant part of the communication or consented to disclosure of the communication, as specified.

This bill would provide that the communications made between a client and a lawyer referral service, and between a victim and a human trafficking counselor, are also presumed to be confidential, such that the opponent of the privilege would have the burden to rebut the presumption. The bill would also provide that the evidentiary privilege for confidential communications made between a victim, as defined, and a human trafficking counselor are presumed to have been made in confidence, and would apply the above-described waiver provision to the disclosure of those communications. The bill would also make technical, nonsubstantive changes to these provisions.

(8) Existing law authorizes the county clerk to issue a confidential marriage license upon the personal appearance together of the parties to be married, except as specified, and their payment of certain fees. Existing law provides that a confidential marriage license is valid only for a period of 90 days after its issuance by the county clerk and requires that it be used only in the county in which it was issued.

This bill would delete the requirement that a confidential marriage license only be used in the county in which it was issued.

(9) Existing law governs the tort liability and immunity of, and claims and actions against, a public entity. Existing law provides that neither a public entity nor a public employee is liable to a person who participates in a hazardous recreational activity, defined to include, among other things, bicycle racing or jumping and mountain bicycling.

This bill would include bicycle motocross within the definition of a hazardous recreational activity.

(10) Existing law requires the official bond of the Secretary of State to be filed in the office of the Treasurer after it is recorded.

This bill would repeal that provision.

(11) Existing law exempts the state, any county, city, district, or other political subdivision, any public officer or body, acting in his or her official capacity on behalf of the state, county, city, district, or other district or other political subdivision, from paying or depositing any fee for the filing of any document or paper, for the performance of any official service, or for the filing of any stipulation or agreement which may constitute an appearance in any court by any other party to the stipulation or agreement, except as specified.

Existing law requires the property of a decedent’s estate to be appraised by a probate referee, the personal representative of the estate, or an independent expert, as specified. Existing law provides that, upon designation by the court, a probate referee has all the powers of a referee of the superior court.

This bill would specify that a probate referee is included within the exemption described above.

(12) Existing law authorizes the Secretary of State to appoint and commission notaries public in such number as the secretary deems necessary for the public convenience. Existing law authorizes the secretary to refuse to appoint any person as notary public or to revoke or suspend the commission of any notary public upon specified grounds. Existing law also makes specified violations by a notary public punishable by a civil penalty not to exceed $750 or $1,500.

This bill would make a willful failure by a notary public to discharge fully and faithfully any of the duties or responsibilities of a notary public punishable by a civil fine not to exceed $1,500.

(13) Existing law requires the court to grant a fee waiver to an applicant at any stage of the proceedings at both the appellate and trial court levels if the applicant meets specified standards of eligibility and application requirements, including a person who is receiving certain public benefits, such as Supplemental Security Income. An initial fee waiver excuses the applicant from paying fees for the first pleading or other paper, and other court fees and costs, unless the court orders the applicant to make partial payments, as specified.

This bill would authorize the court, upon the establishment of a conservatorship or guardianship, to collect all or part of any fees waived from the estate of the conservatee or ward if the court finds that the estate has the ability to pay the fees, or a portion thereof, immediately, over a period of time, or under an equitable agreement, without using moneys that normally would pay for the common necessaries of life for the applicant and the applicant’s family. This bill would provide, for the purposes of these provisions for fee waivers, that an “applicant” is deemed to be a conservatee, ward, or person for whom a conservatorship or guardianship is sought, and “petitioner” is deemed to be the conservator, guardian, or person or persons seeking to establish the conservatorship or guardianship. This bill would permit a person who files a petition for appointment of a fiduciary in a guardianship or conservatorship, or files pleadings as the appointed fiduciary of a conservatee or ward, when the financial condition of the conservatee or ward meets the standards for a fee waiver, to proceed without paying court fees and costs. This bill would also clarify that assessments for specified court investigations for the establishment of a conservatorship or guardianship are included as court fees and costs to be excused under an initial fee waiver.

(14) Existing law authorizes a county to establish an interagency domestic violence death review team to assist local agencies in identifying and reviewing domestic violence deaths, and authorizes the confidential disclosure by an individual or agency of written or oral information, including those that are subject to the evidentiary privilege for confidential communications, as specified.

This bill would authorize the confidential disclosure of communications protected by the human trafficking caseworker-victim privilege. The bill would also revise a cross-reference in this provision.

(15) Existing law governs the disposal of a decedent’s estate by intestate succession and declares that the surviving spouse or surviving domestic partner is entitled to a specified share of the decedent’s separate property that is not effectively disposed of by will.

This bill would delete the reference to a surviving domestic partner from this provision.

(16) The California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) requires a lead agency, as defined, to prepare, or cause to be prepared, and certify the completion of, an environmental impact report (EIR) on a project that it proposes to carry out or approve that may have a significant effect on the environment or to adopt a negative declaration if it finds that the project will not have that effect. CEQA also requires a lead agency to prepare a mitigated negative declaration for a project that may have a significant effect on the environment if revisions in the project would avoid or mitigate that effect and there is no substantial evidence that the project, as revised, would have a significant effect on the environment.

CEQA establishes procedures for creating the administrative record and judicial review procedure for any action or proceeding brought to challenge the lead agency’s decision to certify the EIR or to grant project approvals.

The Jobs and Economic Improvement Through Environmental Leadership Act of 2011 establishes, until January 1, 2017, alternative procedures for creating the administrative record and specified judicial review procedures for the judicial review of the EIR and approvals granted for a leadership project related to the development of a residential, retail, commercial, sports, cultural, entertainment, or recreational use project, or clean renewable energy or clean energy manufacturing project. The act authorizes the Governor, upon application, to certify a leadership project for streamlining pursuant to the act if certain conditions are met. The act requires the Judicial Council to report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2015, on the effects of the act, including specific information on benefits, costs, and detriments.

The bill would require instead that the Judicial Council report to the Legislature on or before January 1, 2017, on the effects of the act on the administration of justice.

(17) Existing law requires each county to provide cash assistance and other social services to needy families through the California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids (CalWORKs) program using federal Temporary Assistance to Needy Families block grant program, state, and county funds. Under the CalWORKs program, a county may make a restricted payment directly to a vendor when a recipient of homeless assistance benefits has mismanaged funds or has requested the restricted payment.

Existing law authorizes a county, or 2 or more counties, to implement 3-year CalWORKs demonstration projects to test alternative methods of service delivery, if the county receives approval from the Director of Social Services. Existing law also specifically authorizes the director to conduct a demonstration project in Kern County pertaining to restricted payments under the CalWORKs program. Existing law limits the duration of this demonstration project to a period of not more than 3 years.

This bill would repeal the provisions authorizing that demonstration project in Kern County.

(18) The bill would also make technical, nonsubstantive changes to provisions relating to the courts, health facilities, and conservatorships.

begin insert

(19) This bill would incorporate additional changes to Section 1936 of the Civil Code proposed by AB 1981 that would become operative if this bill and AB 1981 are both enacted and this bill is enacted last.

end insert
begin delete

(19)

end delete

begin insert(20)end insert 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:

P9    1

SECTION 1.  

It is the intent of the Legislature in amending
2Sections 415.46, 1174.25, and 1174.3 of the Code of Civil
3Procedure to appropriately update statutory language and statutory
4forms to properly reflect the changes to law enacted by Assembly
5Bill 2610, Chapter 562 of the Statutes of 2012.

6

SEC. 2.  

Section 56.06 of the Civil Code is amended to read:

7

56.06.  

(a) Any business organized for the purpose of
8maintaining medical information, as defined in subdivision (g) of
9Section 56.05, in order to make the information available to an
10individual or to a provider of health care at the request of the
11individual or a provider of health care, for purposes of allowing
12the individual to manage his or her information, or for the diagnosis
13and treatment of the individual, shall be deemed to be a provider
14of health care subject to the requirements of this part. However,
15nothing in this section shall be construed to make a business
16specified in this subdivision a provider of health care for purposes
17of any law other than this part, including laws that specifically
18incorporate by reference the definitions of this part.

19(b) Any business that offers software or hardware to consumers,
20including a mobile application or other related device that is
21designed to maintain medical information, as defined in subdivision
22(j) of Section 56.05, in order to make the information available to
23an individual or a provider of health care at the request of the
24individual or a provider of health care, for purposes of allowing
25the individual to manage his or her information, or for the
26diagnosis, treatment, or management of a medical condition of the
27individual, shall be deemed to be a provider of health care subject
28to the requirements of this part. However, nothing in this section
29shall be construed to make a business specified in this subdivision
30a provider of health care for purposes of any law other than this
31part, including laws that specifically incorporate by reference the
32definitions of this part.

33(c) Any business described in subdivision (a) or (b) shall
34maintain the same standards of confidentiality required of a
35provider of health care with respect to medical information
36disclosed to the business.

P10   1(d) Any business described in subdivision (a) or (b) shall be
2subject to the penalties for improper use and disclosure of medical
3information prescribed in this part.

4

SEC. 3.  

Section 1633.3 of the Civil Code, as amended by
5Section 16.5 of Chapter 605 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended
6to read:

7

1633.3.  

(a) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (b)
8and (c), this title applies to electronic records and electronic
9signatures relating to a transaction.

10(b) This title does not apply to transactions subject to the
11following laws:

12(1) A law governing the creation and execution of wills, codicils,
13or testamentary trusts.

14(2) Division 1 (commencing with Section 1101) of the Uniform
15Commercial Code, except Sections 1206 and 1306.

16(3) Divisions 3 (commencing with Section 3101), 4
17(commencing with Section 4101), 5 (commencing with Section
185101), 8 (commencing with Section 8101), 9 (commencing with
19Section 9101), and 11 (commencing with Section 11101) of the
20Uniform Commercial Code.

21(4) A law that requires that specifically identifiable text or
22disclosures in a record or a portion of a record be separately signed,
23including initialed, from the record. However, this paragraph does
24not apply to Section 1677 or 1678 of this code or Section 1298 of
25the Code of Civil Procedure.

26(c) This title does not apply to any specific transaction described
27in Section 17511.5 of the Business and Professions Code, Section
2856.11, 56.17, 798.14, 1133, or 1134 of, Section 1689.6, 1689.7,
29or 1689.13 of, Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 1695) of
30Title 5 of Part 2 of Division 3 of, Section 1720, 1785.15, 1789.14,
311789.16, or 1793.23 of, Chapter 1 (commencing with Section
321801) of Title 2 of Part 4 of Division 3 of, Section 1861.24, 1862.5,
331917.712, 1917.713, 1950.6, 1983, 2924b, 2924c, 2924f, 2924i,
342924j, 2924.3, or 2937 of, Article 1.5 (commencing with Section
352945) of Chapter 2 of Title 14 of Part 4 of Division 3 of, Section
362954.5 or 2963 of, Chapter 2b (commencing with Section 2981)
37or 2d (commencing with Section 2985.7) of Title 14 of Part 4 of
38Division 3 of, Section 3071.5 of, Part 5 (commencing with Section
394000) of Division 4 of, or Part 5.3 (commencing with Section
406500) of Division 4 of this code, subdivision (b) of Section 18608
P11   1or Section 22328 of the Financial Code, Section 1358.15, 1365,
21368.01, 1368.1, 1371, or 18035.5 of the Health and Safety Code,
3Section 662, paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 663, 664,
4667.5, 673, 677, paragraph (2) of subdivision (a) of Section 678,
5subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 678.1, Section 786, 10113.7,
610127.7, 10127.9, 10127.10, 10192.18, 10199.44, 10199.46,
710235.16, 10235.40, 10509.4, 10509.7, 11624.09, or 11624.1 of
8the Insurance Code, Section 779.1, 10010.1, or 16482 of the Public
9Utilities Code, or Section 9975 or 11738 of the Vehicle Code. An
10electronic record may not be substituted for any notice that is
11required to be sent pursuant to Section 1162 of the Code of Civil
12Procedure. Nothing in this subdivision shall be construed to
13prohibit the recordation of any document with a county recorder
14by electronic means.

15(d) This title applies to an electronic record or electronic
16signature otherwise excluded from the application of this title under
17subdivision (b) when used for a transaction subject to a law other
18than those specified in subdivision (b).

19(e) A transaction subject to this title is also subject to other
20applicable substantive law.

21(f) The exclusion of a transaction from the application of this
22title under subdivision (b) or (c) shall be construed only to exclude
23the transaction from the application of this title, but shall not be
24construed to prohibit the transaction from being conducted by
25electronic means if the transaction may be conducted by electronic
26means under any other applicable law.

27(g) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2019,
28and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute, that
29is enacted before January 1, 2019, deletes or extends that date.

30

SEC. 4.  

Section 1633.3 of the Civil Code, as added by Section
313 of Chapter 369 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended to read:

32

1633.3.  

(a) Except as otherwise provided in subdivisions (b)
33and (c), this title applies to electronic records and electronic
34signatures relating to a transaction.

35(b) This title does not apply to transactions subject to the
36following laws:

37(1) A law governing the creation and execution of wills, codicils,
38or testamentary trusts.

39(2) Division 1 (commencing with Section 1101) of the Uniform
40Commercial Code, except Sections 1206 and 1306.

P12   1(3) Divisions 3 (commencing with Section 3101), 4
2(commencing with Section 4101), 5 (commencing with Section
35101), 8 (commencing with Section 8101), 9 (commencing with
4Section 9101), and 11 (commencing with Section 11101) of the
5Uniform Commercial Code.

6(4) A law that requires that specifically identifiable text or
7 disclosures in a record or a portion of a record be separately signed,
8including initialed, from the record. However, this paragraph does
9not apply to Section 1677 or 1678 of this code or Section 1298 of
10the Code of Civil Procedure.

11(c) This title does not apply to any specific transaction described
12in Section 17511.5 of the Business and Professions Code, Section
1356.11, 56.17, 798.14, 1133, or 1134 of, Section 1689.6, 1689.7,
14or 1689.13 of, Chapter 2.5 (commencing with Section 1695) of
15Title 5 of Part 2 of Division 3 of, Section 1720, 1785.15, 1789.14,
161789.16, or 1793.23 of, Chapter 1 (commencing with Section
171801) of Title 2 of Part 4 of Division 3 of, Section 1861.24, 1862.5,
181917.712, 1917.713, 1950.6, 1983, 2924b, 2924c, 2924f, 2924i,
192924j, 2924.3, or 2937 of, Article 1.5 (commencing with Section
202945) of Chapter 2 of Title 14 of Part 4 of Division 3 of, Section
212954.5 or 2963 of, Chapter 2b (commencing with Section 2981)
22or 2d (commencing with Section 2985.7) of Title 14 of Part 4 of
23Division 3 of, Section 3071.5 of Part 5 (commencing with Section
244000) of Division 4 of, or Part 5.3 (commencing with Section
256500) of Division 4 of this code, subdivision (b) of Section 18608
26or Section 22328 of the Financial Code, Section 1358.15, 1365,
271368.01, 1368.1, 1371, or 18035.5 of the Health and Safety Code,
28Section 662, 663, 664, 667.5, 673, 677, 678, 678.1, 786, 10086,
2910113.7, 10127.7, 10127.9, 10127.10, 10192.18, 10199.44,
3010199.46, 10235.16, 10235.40, 10509.4, 10509.7, 11624.09, or
3111624.1 of the Insurance Code, Section 779.1, 10010.1, or 16482
32of the Public Utilities Code, or Section 9975 or 11738 of the
33Vehicle Code. An electronic record may not be substituted for any
34notice that is required to be sent pursuant to Section 1162 of the
35Code of Civil Procedure. Nothing in this subdivision shall be
36construed to prohibit the recordation of any document with a county
37recorder by electronic means.

38(d) This title applies to an electronic record or electronic
39signature otherwise excluded from the application of this title under
P13   1subdivision (b) when used for a transaction subject to a law other
2than those specified in subdivision (b).

3(e) A transaction subject to this title is also subject to other
4applicable substantive law.

5(f) The exclusion of a transaction from the application of this
6title under subdivision (b) or (c) shall be construed only to exclude
7the transaction from the application of this title, but shall not be
8construed to prohibit the transaction from being conducted by
9electronic means if the transaction may be conducted by electronic
10means under any other applicable law.

11(g) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2019.

12

SEC. 5.  

Section 1936 of the Civil Code, as amended by Section
131 of Chapter 549 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended to read:

14

1936.  

(a) For the purpose of this section, the following
15definitions shall apply:

16(1) “Rental company” means a person or entity in the business
17of renting passenger vehicles to the public.

18(2) “Renter” means any person in a manner obligated under a
19contract for the lease or hire of a passenger vehicle from a rental
20company for a period of less than 30 days.

21(3) “Authorized driver” means (A) the renter, (B) the renter’s
22spouse if that person is a licensed driver and satisfies the rental
23company’s minimum age requirement, (C) the renter’s employer
24or coworker if he or she is engaged in business activity with the
25renter, is a licensed driver, and satisfies the rental company’s
26minimum age requirement, and (D) a person expressly listed by
27the rental company on the renter’s contract as an authorized driver.

28(4) (A) “Customer facility charge” means any fee, including
29an alternative fee, required by an airport to be collected by a rental
30company from a renter for any of the following purposes:

31(i) To finance, design, and construct consolidated airport car
32rental facilities.

33(ii) To finance, design, construct, and operate common-use
34transportation systems that move passengers between airport
35terminals and those consolidated car rental facilities, and acquire
36vehicles for use in that system.

37(iii) To finance, design, and construct terminal modifications
38solely to accommodate and provide customer access to
39common-use transportation systems.

P14   1(B) The aggregate amount to be collected shall not exceed the
2reasonable costs, as determined by an audit, by an independent
3auditor, paid for by the airport, to finance, design, and construct
4those facilities. The auditor shall independently examine and
5substantiate the necessity for and the amount of the customer
6facility charge, including whether the airport’s actual or projected
7costs are supported and justified, any steps the airport may take to
8limit costs, potential alternatives for meeting the airport’s revenue
9needs other than the collection of the fee, and whether and to what
10extent car rental companies or other businesses or individuals using
11the facility or common-use transportation system may pay for the
12costs associated with these facilities and systems other than the
13fee from rental customers, or whether the airport did not comply
14with any provision of this subparagraph. Copies of the audit shall
15be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
16the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
17Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
18the airport’s Internet Web site. In the case of a customer facility
19charge for a common-use transportation system, the audit also
20shall consider the reasonable costs of providing the transit system
21or busing network pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A). Any
22audit required by this subparagraph may be included as a part of
23an audit of an airport’s finances. Notwithstanding clause (iii) of
24subparagraph (A), the fees designated as a customer facility charge
25shall not be used to pay for terminal expansion, gate expansion,
26runway expansion, changes in hours of operation, or changes in
27the number of flights arriving or departing from the airport.

28(C) Except as provided in subparagraph (D), the authorization
29given pursuant to this section for an airport to impose a customer
30facility charge shall become inoperative when the bonds used for
31financing are paid.

32(D) If a bond or other form of indebtedness is not used for
33financing, or the bond or other form of indebtedness used for
34financing has been paid, the Oakland International Airport may
35require the collection of a customer facility charge for a period of
36up to 10 years from the imposition of the charge for the purposes
37allowed by, and subject to the conditions imposed by, this section.

38(5) “Damage waiver” means a rental company’s agreement not
39to hold a renter liable for all or any portion of any damage or loss
P15   1related to the rented vehicle, any loss of use of the rented vehicle,
2or any storage, impound, towing, or administrative charges.

3(6) “Electronic surveillance technology” means a technological
4method or system used to observe, monitor, or collect information,
5including telematics, Global Positioning System (GPS), wireless
6technology, or location-based technologies. “Electronic
7surveillance technology” does not include event data recorders
8(EDR), sensing and diagnostic modules (SDM), or other systems
9that are used either:

10(A) For the purpose of identifying, diagnosing, or monitoring
11functions related to the potential need to repair, service, or perform
12maintenance on the rental vehicle.

13(B) As part of the vehicle’s airbag sensing and diagnostic system
14in order to capture safety systems-related data for retrieval after a
15crash has occurred or in the event that the collision sensors are
16activated to prepare the decisionmaking computer to make the
17determination to deploy or not to deploy the airbag.

18(7) “Estimated time for replacement” means the number of hours
19of labor, or fraction thereof, needed to replace damaged vehicle
20parts as set forth in collision damage estimating guides generally
21used in the vehicle repair business and commonly known as “crash
22books.”

23(8) “Estimated time for repair” means a good faith estimate of
24the reasonable number of hours of labor, or fraction thereof, needed
25to repair damaged vehicle parts.

26(9) “Membership program” means a service offered by a rental
27company that permits customers to bypass the rental counter and
28go directly to the car previously reserved. A membership program
29shall meet all of the following requirements:

30(A) The renter initiates enrollment by completing an application
31on which the renter can specify a preference for type of vehicle
32and acceptance or declination of optional services.

33(B) The rental company fully discloses, prior to the enrollee’s
34first rental as a participant in the program, all terms and conditions
35of the rental agreement as well as all required disclosures.

36(C) The renter may terminate enrollment at any time.

37(D) The rental company fully explains to the renter that
38designated preferences, as well as acceptance or declination of
39optional services, may be changed by the renter at any time for
40the next and future rentals.

P16   1(E) An employee designated to receive the form specified in
2subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (t) is present at
3the lot where the renter takes possession of the car, to receive any
4change in the rental agreement from the renter.

5(10) “Passenger vehicle” means a passenger vehicle as defined
6in Section 465 of the Vehicle Code.

7(b) Except as limited by subdivision (c), a rental company and
8a renter may agree that the renter will be responsible for no more
9than all of the following:

10(1) Physical or mechanical damage to the rented vehicle up to
11its fair market value, as determined in the customary market for
12the sale of that vehicle, resulting from collision regardless of the
13cause of the damage.

14(2) Loss due to theft of the rented vehicle up to its fair market
15value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
16vehicle, provided that the rental company establishes by clear and
17convincing evidence that the renter or the authorized driver failed
18to exercise ordinary care while in possession of the vehicle. In
19addition, the renter shall be presumed to have no liability for any
20loss due to theft if (A) an authorized driver has possession of the
21ignition key furnished by the rental company or an authorized
22driver establishes that the ignition key furnished by the rental
23company was not in the vehicle at the time of the theft, and (B) an
24authorized driver files an official report of the theft with the police
25or other law enforcement agency within 24 hours of learning of
26the theft and reasonably cooperates with the rental company and
27the police or other law enforcement agency in providing
28information concerning the theft. The presumption set forth in this
29paragraph is a presumption affecting the burden of proof which
30the rental company may rebut by establishing that an authorized
31driver committed, or aided and abetted the commission of, the
32theft.

33(3) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to its fair market
34value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
35vehicle, resulting from vandalism occurring after, or in connection
36with, the theft of the rented vehicle. However, the renter shall have
37no liability for any damage due to vandalism if the renter would
38have no liability for theft pursuant to paragraph (2).

P17   1(4) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to a total of five
2hundred dollars ($500) resulting from vandalism unrelated to the
3theft of the rented vehicle.

4(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
5by the rental company if the renter is liable for damage or loss.

6(6) An administrative charge, which shall include the cost of
7appraisal and all other costs and expenses incident to the damage,
8loss, repair, or replacement of the rented vehicle.

9(c) The total amount of the renter’s liability to the rental
10company resulting from damage to the rented vehicle shall not
11exceed the sum of the following:

12(1) The estimated cost of parts which the rental company would
13have to pay to replace damaged vehicle parts. All discounts and
14price reductions or adjustments that are or will be received by the
15rental company shall be subtracted from the estimate to the extent
16not already incorporated in the estimate, or otherwise promptly
17credited or refunded to the renter.

18(2) The estimated cost of labor to replace damaged vehicle parts,
19which shall not exceed the product of (A) the rate for labor usually
20paid by the rental company to replace vehicle parts of the type that
21were damaged and (B) the estimated time for replacement. All
22discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are or will be
23received by the rental company shall be subtracted from the
24estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate, or
25otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

26(3) (A) The estimated cost of labor to repair damaged vehicle
27parts, which shall not exceed the lesser of the following:

28(i) The product of the rate for labor usually paid by the rental
29company to repair vehicle parts of the type that were damaged and
30the estimated time for repair.

31(ii) The sum of the estimated labor and parts costs determined
32under paragraphs (1) and (2) to replace the same vehicle parts.

33(B) All discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are
34or will be received by the rental company shall be subtracted from
35the estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate,
36or otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

37(4) For the purpose of converting the estimated time for repair
38into the same units of time in which the rental rate is expressed, a
39day shall be deemed to consist of eight hours.

P18   1(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
2by the rental company.

3(6) The administrative charge described in paragraph (6) of
4subdivision (b) shall not exceed (A) fifty dollars ($50) if the total
5estimated cost for parts and labor is more than one hundred dollars
6($100) up to and including five hundred dollars ($500), (B) one
7hundred dollars ($100) if the total estimated cost for parts and
8labor exceeds five hundred dollars ($500) up to and including one
9thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500), and (C) one hundred fifty
10dollars ($150) if the total estimated cost for parts and labor exceeds
11one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500). An administrative
12charge shall not be imposed if the total estimated cost of parts and
13labor is one hundred dollars ($100) or less.

14(d) (1) The total amount of an authorized driver’s liability to
15the rental company, if any, for damage occurring during the
16authorized driver’s operation of the rented vehicle shall not exceed
17the amount of the renter’s liability under subdivision (c).

18(2) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
19authorized driver an amount exceeding the renter’s liability under
20subdivision (c).

21(3) A claim against a renter resulting from damage or loss,
22excluding loss of use, to a rental vehicle shall be reasonably and
23rationally related to the actual loss incurred. A rental company
24shall mitigate damages where possible and shall not assert or collect
25a claim for physical damage which exceeds the actual costs of the
26repairs performed or the estimated cost of repairs, if the rental
27company chooses not to repair the vehicle, including all discounts
28and price reductions. However, if the vehicle is a total loss vehicle,
29the claim shall not exceed the total loss vehicle value established
30in accordance with procedures that are customarily used by
31insurance companies when paying claims on total loss vehicles,
32less the proceeds from salvaging the vehicle, if those proceeds are
33retained by the rental company.

34(4) If insurance coverage exists under the renter’s applicable
35personal or business insurance policy and the coverage is confirmed
36during regular business hours, the renter may require that the rental
37company submit any claims to the renter’s applicable personal or
38business insurance carrier. The rental company shall not make any
39written or oral representations that it will not present claims or
40negotiate with the renter’s insurance carrier. For purposes of this
P19   1paragraph, confirmation of coverage includes telephone
2confirmation from insurance company representatives during
3regular business hours. Upon request of the renter and after
4confirmation of coverage, the amount of claim shall be resolved
5between the insurance carrier and the rental company. The renter
6shall remain responsible for payment to the rental car company
7for any loss sustained that the renter’s applicable personal or
8business insurance policy does not cover.

9(5) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
10authorized driver for an item described in subdivision (b) to the
11extent the rental company obtains recovery from another person.

12(6) This section applies only to the maximum liability of a renter
13or other authorized driver to the rental company resulting from
14damage to the rented vehicle and not to the liability of another
15person.

16(e) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (f), a damage waiver
17shall provide or, if not expressly stated in writing, shall be deemed
18to provide that the renter has no liability for a damage, loss, loss
19of use, or a cost or expense incident thereto.

20(2) Except as provided in subdivision (f), every limitation,
21exception, or exclusion to a damage waiver is void and
22unenforceable.

23(f) A rental company may provide in the rental contract that a
24damage waiver does not apply under any of the following
25circumstances:

26(1) Damage or loss results from an authorized driver’s (A)
27intentional, willful, wanton, or reckless conduct, (B) operation of
28the vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol in violation of
29Section 23152 of the Vehicle Code, (C) towing or pushing
30anything, or (D) operation of the vehicle on an unpaved road if
31the damage or loss is a direct result of the road or driving
32conditions.

33(2) Damage or loss occurs while the vehicle is (A) used for
34commercial hire, (B) used in connection with conduct that could
35be properly charged as a felony, (C) involved in a speed test or
36contest or in driver training activity, (D) operated by a person other
37than an authorized driver, or (E) operated outside the United States.

38(3) An authorized driver who has (A) provided fraudulent
39information to the rental company, or (B) provided false
P20   1information and the rental company would not have rented the
2vehicle if it had instead received true information.

3(g) (1) A rental company that offers or provides a damage
4waiver for any consideration in addition to the rental rate shall
5clearly and conspicuously disclose the following information in
6the rental contract or holder in which the contract is placed and,
7also, in signs posted at the place, such as the counter, where the
8renter signs the rental contract, and, for renters who are enrolled
9in the rental company’s membership program, in a sign that shall
10be posted in a location clearly visible to those renters as they enter
11the location where their reserved rental cars are parked or near the
12exit of the bus or other conveyance that transports the enrollee to
13a reserved car: (A) the nature of the renter’s liability, such as
14liability for all collision damage regardless of cause, (B) the extent
15of the renter’s liability, such as liability for damage or loss up to
16a specified amount, (C) the renter’s personal insurance policy or
17the credit card used to pay for the car rental transaction may
18provide coverage for all or a portion of the renter’s potential
19liability, (D) the renter should consult with his or her insurer to
20determine the scope of insurance coverage, including the amount
21of the deductible, if any, for which the renter is obligated, (E) the
22renter may purchase an optional damage waiver to cover all
23liability, subject to whatever exceptions the rental company
24expressly lists that are permitted under subdivision (f), and (F) the
25range of charges for the damage waiver.

26(2) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (1), a rental
27company that offers or provides a damage waiver shall orally
28disclose to all renters, except those who are participants in the
29rental company’s membership program, that the damage waiver
30may be duplicative of coverage that the customer maintains under
31his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance. The renter’s
32receipt of the oral disclosure shall be demonstrated through the
33renter’s acknowledging receipt of the oral disclosure near that part
34of the contract where the renter indicates, by the renter’s own
35initials, his or her acceptance or declination of the damage waiver.
36Adjacent to that same part, the contract also shall state that the
37damage waiver is optional. Further, the contract for these renters
38shall include a clear and conspicuous written disclosure that the
39damage waiver may be duplicative of coverage that the customer
40maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance.

P21   1(3) The following is an example, for purposes of illustration
2and not limitation, of a notice fulfilling the requirements of
3paragraph (1) for a rental company that imposes liability on the
4renter for collision damage to the full value of the vehicle:
5

6“NOTICE ABOUT YOUR FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
7AND OPTIONAL DAMAGE WAIVER
8

9You are responsible for all collision damage to the rented vehicle
10even if someone else caused it or the cause is unknown. You are
11responsible for the cost of repair up to the value of the vehicle,
12and towing, storage, and impound fees.

13Your own insurance, or the issuer of the credit card you use to
14pay for the car rental transaction, may cover all or part of your
15financial responsibility for the rented vehicle. You should check
16with your insurance company, or credit card issuer, to find out
17about your coverage and the amount of the deductible, if any, for
18which you may be liable.

19Further, if you use a credit card that provides coverage for your
20potential liability, you should check with the issuer to determine
21if you must first exhaust the coverage limits of your own insurance
22before the credit card coverage applies.

23The rental company will not hold you responsible if you buy a
24damage waiver. But a damage waiver will not protect you if (list
25exceptions).”


27(A) When the above notice is printed in the rental contract or
28holder in which the contract is placed, the following shall be printed
29immediately following the notice:


31“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ for every (day
32or week).”


34(B) When the above notice appears on a sign, the following
35shall appear immediately adjacent to the notice:


37“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ to $____ for
38every (day or week), depending upon the vehicle rented.”


P22   1(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a rental
2company may sell a damage waiver subject to the following rate
3limitations for each full or partial 24-hour rental day for the damage
4waiver.

5(1) For rental vehicles that the rental company designates as an
6“economy car,” “subcompact car,” “compact car,” or another term
7having similar meaning when offered for rental, or another vehicle
8having a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of nineteen thousand
9dollars ($19,000) or less, the rate shall not exceed nine dollars
10($9).

11(2) For rental vehicles that have a manufacturer’s suggested
12retail price from nineteen thousand one dollars ($19,001) to
13thirty-four thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($34,999),
14inclusive, and that are also either vehicles of next year’s model,
15or not older than the previous year’s model, the rate shall not
16exceed fifteen dollars ($15). For those rental vehicles older than
17the previous year’s model-year, the rate shall not exceed nine
18dollars ($9).

19(i) The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices described in
20subdivision (h) shall be adjusted annually to reflect changes from
21the previous year in the Consumer Price Index. For the purposes
22of this section, “Consumer Price Index” means the United States
23Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, for all items.

24(j) A rental company that disseminates in this state an
25advertisement containing a rental rate shall include in that
26advertisement a clearly readable statement of the charge for a
27damage waiver and a statement that a damage waiver is optional.

28(k) (1) A rental company shall not require the purchase of a
29damage waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or
30service.

31(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
32or coercive conduct to induce a renter to purchase the damage
33waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or service,
34including conduct such as, but not limited to, refusing to honor
35the renter’s reservation, limiting the availability of vehicles,
36requiring a deposit, or debiting or blocking the renter’s credit card
37account for a sum equivalent to a deposit if the renter declines to
38purchase the damage waiver, optional insurance, or another
39optional good or service.

P23   1(l) (1) In the absence of express permission granted by the
2renter subsequent to damage to, or loss of, the vehicle, a rental
3company shall not seek to recover any portion of a claim arising
4out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle by processing a
5credit card charge or causing a debit or block to be placed on the
6renter’s credit card account.

7(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
8or coercive tactics in attempting to recover or in recovering on any
9claim arising out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle.

10(m)


11(1) A customer facility charge may be collected by a rental
12company under the following circumstances:

13(A) Collection of the fee by the rental company is required by
14an airport operated by a city, a county, a city and county, a joint
15powers authority, a special district, or the San Diego County
16Regional Airport Authority formed pursuant to Division 17
17(commencing with Section 170000) of the Public Utilities Code.

18(B) The fee is calculated on a per contract basis or as provided
19in paragraph (2).

20(C) The fee is a user fee, not a tax imposed upon real property
21or an incidence of property ownership under Article XIII D of the
22California Constitution.

23(D) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (E), the fee
24shall be ten dollars ($10) per contract or the amount provided in
25paragraph (2).

26(E) The fee for a consolidated rental car facility shall be
27collected only from customers of on-airport rental car companies.
28If the fee imposed by the airport is for both a consolidated rental
29car facility and a common-use transportation system, the fee
30collected from customers of on-airport rental car companies shall
31be ten dollars ($10) or the amount provided in paragraph (2), but
32the fee imposed on customers of off-airport rental car companies
33who are transported on the common-use transportation system is
34proportionate to the costs of the common-use transportation system
35only. The fee is uniformly applied to each class of on-airport or
36off-airport customers, provided that the airport requires off-airport
37customers to use the common-use transportation system. For
38purposes of this subparagraph, “on-airport rental car company”
39means a rental company operating under an airport property lease
40or an airport concession or license agreement whose customers
P24   1use or will use the consolidated rental car facility and the collection
2of the fee as to those customers is consistent with subparagraph
3(C).

4(F) Revenues collected from the fee do not exceed the reasonable
5costs of financing, designing, and constructing the facility and
6financing, designing, constructing, and operating any common-use
7 transportation system, or acquiring vehicles for use in that system,
8and shall not be used for any other purpose.

9(G) The fee is separately identified on the rental agreement.

10(H) This paragraph does not apply to fees which are governed
11by Section 50474.1 of the Government Code or Section 57.5 of
12the San Diego Unified Port District Act.

13(I) For any airport seeking to require rental car companies to
14collect an alternative customer facility charge pursuant to paragraph
15(2), the following provisions apply:

16(i) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
17the airport shall provide reports on an annual basis to the Senate
18and Assembly Committees on Judiciary detailing all of the
19following:

20(I) The total amount of the customer facility charge collected.

21(II) How the funds are being spent.

22(III) The amount of and reason for any changes in the airport’s
23budget or financial needs for the facility or common-use
24transportation system.

25(IV) Whether airport concession fees authorized by Section
261936.01 have increased since the prior report, if any.

27(ii) (I) The airport shall complete the audit required by
28subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) prior to initial
29collection of the customer facility charge. Notwithstanding Section
3010231.5 of the Government Code, copies of the audit shall be
31provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
32the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
33Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
34the airport’s Internet Web site.

35(II) Prior to any increase pursuant to paragraph (2), the airport
36shall update the information provided in the initial collection audit
37pursuant to subclause (I). Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the
38Government Code, copies of the updated audit shall be provided
39to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary, the
40Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate Committee
P25   1on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s
2Internet Web site.

3(III) An audit shall be completed every three years after initial
4collection only if the customer facility charge is collected for the
5purpose of operating a common-use transportation system or to
6acquire vehicles for use in such a system pursuant to clause (ii) of
7subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a). A regularly
8conducted audit of airport finances that includes the customer
9facility charge information, that satisfies the requirements of
10subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), and is
11produced in accordance with the generally accepted accounting
12principles of the Government Accounting Standards Board, shall
13satisfy the requirements of this subclause. This obligation shall
14continue until the fee authorization becomes inoperative pursuant
15to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
16Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the
17information reported pursuant to this subclause shall be compiled
18into one document, shall be provided to the Assembly and Senate
19Committees on Judiciary, the Assembly Committee on
20Transportation, and the Senate Committee on Transportation and
21Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s Internet Web site
22accessible to the public. The information reported shall be
23contained within one easily accessible page contained within the
24airport’s Internet Web site.

25(IV) This section shall not be construed to require an airport to
26audit a common-use transportation system not financed by a
27customer facility charge and used for the purposes permitted
28pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of
29subdivision (a).

30(V) The airport shall post on the airport’s Internet Web site
31copies of the completed audits required by this clause for a period
32of six years following the audit’s completion.

33(iii) Use of the bonds shall be limited to construction and design
34of the consolidated rental car facility, terminal modifications, and
35operating costs of the common-use transportation system, as
36specified in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).

37(2) Any airport may require rental car companies to collect an
38alternative customer facility charge under the following conditions:

39(A) The airport first conducts a publicly noticed hearing pursuant
40to the Ralph M. Brown Act (Chapter 9 (commencing with Section
P26   154950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government Code)
2to review the costs of financing the design and construction of a
3consolidated rental car facility and the design, construction, and
4operation of any common-use transportation system in which all
5of the following occur:

6(i) The airport establishes the amount of revenue necessary to
7finance the reasonable cost to design and construct a consolidated
8rental car facility and to design, construct, and operate any
9common-use transportation system, or acquire vehicles for use in
10that system, based on evidence presented during the hearing.

11(ii) The airport finds, based on evidence presented during the
12hearing, that the fee authorized in paragraph (1) will not generate
13sufficient revenue to finance the reasonable costs to design and
14construct a consolidated rental car facility and to design, construct,
15and operate any common-use transportation system, or acquire
16vehicles for use in that system.

17(iii) The airport finds that the reasonable cost of the project
18requires the additional amount of revenue that would be generated
19by the proposed daily rate, including any rate increase, authorized
20pursuant to this paragraph.

21(iv) The airport outlines each of the following:

22(I) Steps it has taken to limit costs.

23(II) Other potential alternatives for meeting its revenue needs
24other than the collection of the fee.

25(III) The extent to which rental car companies or other
26businesses or individuals using the facility or common-use
27transportation system will pay for the costs associated with these
28facilities and systems other than the fee from rental customers.

29(B) The airport may not require the fee authorized in this
30paragraph to be collected at any time that the fee authorized in
31paragraph (1) of this subdivision is being collected.

32(C) Pursuant to the procedure set forth in this subdivision, the
33fee may be collected at a rate charged on a per-day basis subject
34to the following conditions:

35(i) Commencing January 1, 2011, the amount of the fee may
36not exceed six dollars ($6) per day.

37(ii) Commencing January 1, 2014, the amount of the fee may
38not exceed seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per day.

39(iii) Commencing January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the amount
40of the fee may not exceed nine dollars ($9) per day.

P27   1(iv) At no time shall the fee authorized in this paragraph be
2collected from any customer for more than five days for each
3individual rental car contract.

4(v) An airport subject to this paragraph shall initiate the process
5for obtaining the authority to require or increase the alternative
6fee no later than January 1, 2018. Any airport that obtains the
7authority to require or increase an alternative fee shall be authorized
8to continue collecting that fee until the fee authorization becomes
9inoperative pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of
10subdivision (a).

11(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including, but
12not limited to, Part 1 (commencing with Section 6001) to Part 1.7
13(commencing with Section 7280), inclusive, of Division 2 of the
14Revenue and Taxation Code, the fees collected pursuant to this
15section, or another law whereby a local agency operating an airport
16requires a rental car company to collect a facility financing fee
17from its customers, are not subject to sales, use, or transaction
18taxes.

19(n) (1) A rental company shall only advertise, quote, and charge
20a rental rate that includes the entire amount except taxes, a
21customer facility charge, if any, and a mileage charge, if any, that
22a renter must pay to hire or lease the vehicle for the period of time
23to which the rental rate applies. A rental company shall not charge
24in addition to the rental rate, taxes, a customer facility charge, if
25any, and a mileage charge, if any, any fee that is required to be
26paid by the renter as a condition of hiring or leasing the vehicle,
27including, but not limited to, required fuel or airport surcharges
28other than customer facility charges, nor a fee for transporting the
29renter to the location where the rented vehicle will be delivered to
30the renter.

31(2) In addition to the rental rate, taxes, customer facility charges,
32if any, and mileage charges, if any, a rental company may charge
33for an item or service provided in connection with a particular
34rental transaction if the renter could have avoided incurring the
35charge by choosing not to obtain or utilize the optional item or
36service. Items and services for which the rental company may
37impose an additional charge include, but are not limited to, optional
38insurance and accessories requested by the renter, service charges
39incident to the renter’s optional return of the vehicle to a location
40other than the location where the vehicle was hired or leased, and
P28   1charges for refueling the vehicle at the conclusion of the rental
2transaction in the event the renter did not return the vehicle with
3as much fuel as was in the fuel tank at the beginning of the rental.
4A rental company also may impose an additional charge based on
5reasonable age criteria established by the rental company.

6(3) A rental company shall not charge a fee for authorized
7drivers in addition to the rental charge for an individual renter.

8(4) If a rental company states a rental rate in print advertisement
9or in a telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation,
10the rental company shall disclose clearly in that advertisement or
11quotation the terms of mileage conditions relating to the advertised
12or quoted rental rate, including, but not limited to, to the extent
13applicable, the amount of mileage and gas charges, the number of
14miles for which no charges will be imposed, and a description of
15geographic driving limitations within the United States and Canada.

16(5) (A) When a rental rate is stated in an advertisement,
17quotation, or reservation in connection with a car rental at an airport
18where a customer facility charge is imposed, the rental company
19shall disclose clearly the existence and amount of the customer
20facility charge. For purposes of this subparagraph, advertisements
21include radio, television, other electronic media, and print
22advertisements. For purposes of this subparagraph, quotations and
23reservations include those that are telephonic, in-person, and
24computer-transmitted. If the rate advertisement is intended to
25include transactions at more than one airport imposing a customer
26facility charge, a range of fees may be stated in the advertisement.
27However, all rate advertisements that include car rentals at airport
28 destinations shall clearly and conspicuously include a toll-free
29telephone number whereby a customer can be told the specific
30amount of the customer facility charge to which the customer will
31be obligated.

32(B) If a person or entity other than a rental car company,
33including a passenger carrier or a seller of travel services, advertises
34or quotes a rate for a car rental at an airport where a customer
35facility charge is imposed, that person or entity shall, provided
36that he, she, or it is provided with information about the existence
37and amount of the fee, to the extent not specifically prohibited by
38federal law, clearly disclose the existence and amount of the fee
39in any telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation at
40the time of making an initial quotation of a rental rate and at the
P29   1time of making a reservation of a rental car. If a rental car company
2provides the person or entity with rate and customer facility charge
3information, the rental car company is not responsible for the
4failure of that person or entity to comply with this subparagraph
5when quoting or confirming a rate to a third person or entity.

6(6) If a rental company delivers a vehicle to a renter at a location
7other than the location where the rental company normally carries
8on its business, the rental company shall not charge the renter an
9amount for the rental for the period before the delivery of the
10vehicle. If a rental company picks up a rented vehicle from a renter
11at a location other than the location where the rental company
12normally carries on its business, the rental company shall not
13charge the renter an amount for the rental for the period after the
14renter notifies the rental company to pick up the vehicle.

15(o) A rental company shall not use, access, or obtain any
16information relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that
17 was obtained using electronic surveillance technology, except in
18the following circumstances:

19(1) (A) When the equipment is used by the rental company
20only for the purpose of locating a stolen, abandoned, or missing
21rental vehicle after one of the following:

22(i) The renter or law enforcement has informed the rental
23company that the vehicle is missing or has been stolen or
24abandoned.

25(ii) The rental vehicle has not been returned following one week
26after the contracted return date, or by one week following the end
27of an extension of that return date.

28(iii) The rental company discovers the rental vehicle has been
29stolen or abandoned, and, if stolen, it shall report the vehicle stolen
30to law enforcement by filing a stolen vehicle report, unless law
31enforcement has already informed the rental company that the
32vehicle is missing or has been stolen or abandoned.

33(B) If electronic surveillance technology is activated pursuant
34to subparagraph (A), a rental company shall maintain a record, in
35either electronic or written form, of information relevant to the
36activation of that technology. That information shall include the
37rental agreement, including the return date, and the date and time
38the electronic surveillance technology was activated. The record
39shall also include, if relevant, a record of written or other
40communication with the renter, including communications
P30   1regarding extensions of the rental, police reports, or other written
2communication with law enforcement officials. The record shall
3be maintained for a period of at least 12 months from the time the
4record is created and shall be made available upon the renter’s
5request. The rental company shall maintain and furnish explanatory
6codes necessary to read the record. A rental company shall not be
7required to maintain a record if electronic surveillance technology
8is activated to recover a rental vehicle that is stolen or missing at
9a time other than during a rental period.

10(2) In response to a specific request from law enforcement
11pursuant to a subpoena or search warrant.

12(3) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
13equipping rental vehicles with GPS-based technology that provides
14navigation assistance to the occupants of the rental vehicle, if the
15rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
16to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
17that technology, except for the purposes of discovering or repairing
18a defect in the technology and the information may then be used
19only for that purpose.

20(4) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
21equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
22that allows for the remote locking or unlocking of the vehicle at
23the request of the renter, if the rental company does not use, access,
24or obtain information relating to the renter’s use of the rental
25vehicle that was obtained using that technology, except as
26necessary to lock or unlock the vehicle.

27(5) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
28equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
29that allows the company to provide roadside assistance, such as
30towing, flat tire, or fuel services, at the request of the renter, if the
31rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
32to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
33that technology except as necessary to provide the requested
34 roadside assistance.

35(6) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
36obtaining, accessing, or using information from electronic
37surveillance technology for the sole purpose of determining the
38date and time the vehicle is returned to the rental company, and
39the total mileage driven and the vehicle fuel level of the returned
40vehicle. This paragraph, however, shall apply only after the renter
P31   1has returned the vehicle to the rental company, and the information
2shall only be used for the purpose described in this paragraph.

3(p) A rental company shall not use electronic surveillance
4technology to track a renter in order to impose fines or surcharges
5relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle.

6(q) A renter may bring an action against a rental company for
7the recovery of damages and appropriate equitable relief for a
8violation of this section. The prevailing party shall be entitled to
9recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.

10(r) A rental company that brings an action against a renter for
11loss due to theft of the vehicle shall bring the action in the county
12in which the renter resides or, if the renter is not a resident of this
13state, in the jurisdiction in which the renter resides.

14(s) A waiver of any of the provisions of this section shall be
15void and unenforceable as contrary to public policy.

16(t) (1) A rental company’s disclosure requirements shall be
17satisfied for renters who are enrolled in the rental company’s
18membership program if all of the following conditions are met:

19(A) Prior to the enrollee’s first rental as a participant in the
20program, the renter receives, in writing, the following:

21(i) All of the disclosures required by paragraph (1) of subdivision
22(g), including the terms and conditions of the rental agreement
23then in effect.

24(ii) An Internet Web site address, as well as a contact number
25or address, where the enrollee can learn of changes to the rental
26agreement or to the laws of this state governing rental agreements
27since the effective date of the rental company’s most recent
28restatement of the rental agreement and distribution of that
29restatement to its members.

30(B) At the commencement of each rental period, the renter is
31provided, on the rental record or the folder in which it is inserted,
32with a printed notice stating that he or she had either previously
33selected or declined an optional damage waiver and that the renter
34has the right to change preferences.

35(C) At the commencement of each rental period, the rental
36company provides, on the rearview mirror, a hanger on which a
37statement is printed, in a box, in at least 12-point boldface type,
38notifying the renter that the collision damage waiver offered by
39the rental company may be duplicative of coverage that the
40customer maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle
P32   1insurance. If it is not feasible to hang the statement from the
2rearview mirror, it shall be hung from the steering wheel.

3The hanger shall provide the renter a box to initial if he or she
4(not his or her employer) has previously accepted or declined the
5collision damage waiver and that he or she now wishes to change
6his or her decision to accept or decline the collision damage waiver,
7as follows:


8
9“â—» If I previously accepted the collision damage waiver, I
10now decline it.


11  
12â—» If I previously declined the collision damage waiver, I now
13accept it.”


15The hanger shall also provide a box for the enrollee to indicate
16whether this change applies to this rental transaction only or to all
17future rental transactions. The hanger shall also notify the renter
18that he or she may make that change, prior to leaving the lot, by
19returning the form to an employee designated to receive the form
20who is present at the lot where the renter takes possession of the
21car, to receive any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

22(2) (A) This subdivision is not effective unless the employee
23designated pursuant to subparagraph (E) of paragraph (8) of
24subdivision (a) is actually present at the required location.

25(B) This subdivision does not relieve the rental company from
26the disclosures required to be made within the text of a contract
27or holder in which the contract is placed; in or on an advertisement
28containing a rental rate; or in a telephonic, in-person, or
29computer-transmitted quotation or reservation.

30(u) The amendments made to this section during the 2001-02
31Regular Session of the Legislature do not affect litigation pending
32on or before January 1, 2003, alleging a violation of Section 22325
33of the Business and Professions Code as it read at the time the
34action was commenced.

35(v) (1) When a rental company enters into a rental agreement
36in the state for the rental of a vehicle to any renter who is not a
37resident of this country and, as part of, or associated with, the rental
38agreement, the renter purchases liability insurance, as defined in
39subdivision (b) of Section 1758.85 of the Insurance Code, from
40the rental company in its capacity as a rental car agent for an
P33   1authorized insurer, the rental company shall be authorized to accept,
2and, if served as set forth in this subdivision, shall accept, service
3of a summons and complaint and any other required documents
4against the foreign renter for any accident or collision resulting
5from the operation of the rental vehicle within the state during the
6rental period. If the rental company has a registered agent for
7service of process on file with the Secretary of State, process shall
8be served on the rental company’s registered agent, either by
9first-class mail, return receipt requested, or by personal service.

10(2) Within 30 days of acceptance of service of process, the rental
11company shall provide a copy of the summons and complaint and
12any other required documents served in accordance with this
13subdivision to the foreign renter by first-class mail, return receipt
14requested.

15(3) Any plaintiff, or his or her representative, who elects to serve
16the foreign renter by delivering a copy of the summons and
17complaint and any other required documents to the rental company
18pursuant to paragraph (1) shall agree to limit his or her recovery
19against the foreign renter and the rental company to the limits of
20the protection extended by the liability insurance.

21(4) Notwithstanding the requirements of Sections 17450 to
2217456, inclusive, of the Vehicle Code, service of process in
23compliance with paragraph (1) shall be deemed valid and effective
24 service.

25(5) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the requirement
26that the rental company accept service of process pursuant to
27paragraph (1) shall not create any duty, obligation, or agency
28relationship other than that provided in paragraph (1).

29(w) This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,
302020, and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
31that is enacted before January 1, 2020, deletes or extends that date.

32begin insert

begin insertSEC. 5.2.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1936 of the end insertbegin insertCivil Codeend insertbegin insert, as amended by
33Section 1 of Chapter 549 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended to
34read:end insert

35

1936.  

(a) For the purpose of this section, the following
36definitions shall apply:

37(1) “Rental company” means a person or entity in the business
38of renting passenger vehicles to the public.

P34   1(2) “Renter” means any person in a manner obligated under a
2contract for the lease or hire of a passenger vehicle from a rental
3company for a period of less than 30 days.

begin insert

4(3) “Authorized driver” means all of the following:

end insert
begin insert

5(A) The renter.

end insert
begin insert

6(B) The renter’s spouse if that person is a licensed driver and
7satisfies the rental company’s minimum age requirement.

end insert
begin delete

8(3) “Authorized driver” means (A) the renter, (B) the renter’s
9spouse if that person is a licensed driver and satisfies the rental
10company’s minimum age requirement, (C) the

end delete

11begin insert (C)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertTheend insert renter’s employer or coworker if he or she is engaged
12in business activity with the renter, is a licensed driver, and satisfies
13the rental company’s minimum agebegin delete requirement, and (D) a person
14expressly listed by the rental company on the renter’s contract as
15an authorized driver.end delete
begin insert requirement.end insert

begin insert

16(D) A person expressly listed by the rental company on that
17renter’s contract as an authorized driver.

end insert

18(4) (A) “Customer facility charge” means any fee, including
19an alternative fee, required by an airport to be collected by a rental
20company from a renter for any of the following purposes:

21(i) To finance, design, and construct consolidated airport car
22rental facilities.

23(ii) To finance, design, construct, and operate common-use
24transportation systems that move passengers between airport
25terminals and those consolidated car rental facilities, and acquire
26vehicles for use in that system.

27(iii) To finance, design, and construct terminal modifications
28solely to accommodate and provide customer access to
29common-use transportation systems.

30(B) The aggregate amount to be collected shall not exceed the
31reasonable costs, as determined by an audit, by an independent
32auditor, paid for by the airport, to finance, design, and construct
33those facilities. The auditor shall independently examine and
34substantiate the necessity for and the amount of the customer
35facility charge, including whether the airport’s actual or projected
36costs are supported and justified, any steps the airport may take to
37limit costs, potential alternatives for meeting the airport’s revenue
38needs other than the collection of the fee, and whether and to what
39extent car rental companies or other businesses or individuals using
40the facility or common-use transportation system may pay for the
P35   1costs associated with these facilities and systems other than the
2fee from rental customers, or whether the airport did not comply
3with any provision of this subparagraph. Copies of the audit shall
4be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
5the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
6Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
7the airport’s Internet Web site. In the case of a customer facility
8charge for a common-use transportation system, the audit also
9shall consider the reasonable costs of providing the transit system
10or busing network pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A). Any
11audit required by this subparagraph may be included as a part of
12an audit of an airport’s finances. Notwithstanding clause (iii) of
13subparagraph (A), the fees designated as a customer facility charge
14shall not be used to pay for terminal expansion, gate expansion,
15runway expansion, changes in hours of operation, or changes in
16the number of flights arriving or departing from the airport.

17(C) Except as provided in subparagraph (D), the authorization
18given pursuant to this section for an airport to impose a customer
19facility charge shall become inoperative when the bonds used for
20financing are paid.

21(D) If a bond or other form of indebtedness is not used for
22financing, or the bond or other form of indebtedness used for
23financing has been paid, the Oakland International Airport may
24require the collection of a customer facility charge for a period of
25up to 10 years from the imposition of the charge for the purposes
26allowed by, and subject to the conditions imposed by, this section.

27(5) “Damage waiver” means a rental company’s agreement not
28to hold a renter liable for all or any portion of any damage or loss
29related to the rented vehicle, any loss of use of the rented vehicle,
30or any storage, impound, towing, or administrative charges.

31(6) “Electronic surveillance technology” means a technological
32method or system used to observe, monitor, or collect information,
33including telematics, Global Positioning System (GPS), wireless
34technology, or location-based technologies. “Electronic
35surveillance technology” does not include event data recorders
36(EDR), sensing and diagnostic modules (SDM), or other systems
37that are used either:

38(A) For the purpose of identifying, diagnosing, or monitoring
39functions related to the potential need to repair, service, or perform
40maintenance on the rental vehicle.

P36   1(B) As part of the vehicle’s airbag sensing and diagnostic system
2in order to capture safety systems-related data for retrieval after a
3crash has occurred or in the event that the collision sensors are
4activated to prepare the decisionmaking computer to make the
5determination to deploy or not to deploy the airbag.

6(7) “Estimated time for replacement” means the number of hours
7of labor, or fraction thereof, needed to replace damaged vehicle
8parts as set forth in collision damage estimating guides generally
9used in the vehicle repair business and commonly known as “crash
10books.”

11(8) “Estimated time for repair” means a good faith estimate of
12the reasonable number of hours of labor, or fraction thereof, needed
13to repair damaged vehicle parts.

14(9) “Membership program” means a service offered by a rental
15company that permits customers to bypass the rental counter and
16go directly to the car previously reserved. A membership program
17shall meet all of the following requirements:

18(A) The renter initiates enrollment by completing an application
19on which the renter can specify a preference for type of vehicle
20and acceptance or declination of optional services.

21(B) The rental company fully discloses, prior to the enrollee’s
22first rental as a participant in the program, all terms and conditions
23of the rental agreement as well as all required disclosures.

24(C) The renter may terminate enrollment at any time.

25(D) The rental company fully explains to the renter that
26designated preferences, as well as acceptance or declination of
27optional services, may be changed by the renter at any time for
28the next and future rentals.

29(E) An employee designated to receive the form specified in
30subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivisionbegin delete (t)end deletebegin insert (s)end insert is present
31at the lot where the renter takes possession of the car, to receive
32any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

33(10) “Passenger vehicle” means a passenger vehicle as defined
34in Section 465 of the Vehicle Code.

35(b) Except as limited by subdivision (c), a rental company and
36a renter may agree that the renter will be responsible for no more
37than all of the following:

38(1) Physical or mechanical damage to the rented vehicle up to
39its fair market value, as determined in the customary market for
P37   1the sale of that vehicle, resulting from collision regardless of the
2cause of the damage.

3(2) Loss due to theft of the rented vehicle up to its fair market
4value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
5vehicle, provided that the rental company establishes by clear and
6convincing evidence that the renter or the authorized driver failed
7to exercise ordinary care while in possession of the vehicle. In
8addition, the renter shall be presumed to have no liability for any
9loss due to theft if (A) an authorized driver has possession of the
10ignition key furnished by the rental company or an authorized
11driver establishes that the ignition key furnished by the rental
12company was not in the vehicle at the time of the theft, and (B) an
13authorized driver files an official report of the theft with the police
14or other law enforcement agency within 24 hours of learning of
15the theft and reasonably cooperates with the rental company and
16the police or other law enforcement agency in providing
17information concerning the theft. The presumption set forth in this
18paragraph is a presumption affecting the burden of proof which
19the rental company may rebut by establishing that an authorized
20driver committed, or aided and abetted the commission of, the
21theft.

22(3) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to its fair market
23value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
24vehicle, resulting from vandalism occurring after, or in connection
25with, the theft of the rented vehicle. However, the renter shall have
26no liability for any damage due to vandalism if the renter would
27have no liability for theft pursuant to paragraph (2).

28(4) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to a total of five
29hundred dollars ($500) resulting from vandalism unrelated to the
30theft of the rented vehicle.

31(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
32by the rental company if the renter is liable for damage or loss.

33(6) An administrative charge, which shall include the cost of
34appraisal and all other costs and expenses incident to the damage,
35loss, repair, or replacement of the rented vehicle.

36(c) The total amount of the renter’s liability to the rental
37company resulting from damage to the rented vehicle shall not
38exceed the sum of the following:

39(1) The estimated cost of parts which the rental company would
40have to pay to replace damaged vehicle parts. All discounts and
P38   1price reductions or adjustments that are or will be received by the
2rental company shall be subtracted from the estimate to the extent
3not already incorporated in the estimate, or otherwise promptly
4credited or refunded to the renter.

5(2) The estimated cost of labor to replace damaged vehicle parts,
6which shall not exceed the product of (A) the rate for labor usually
7paid by the rental company to replace vehicle parts of the type that
8were damaged and (B) the estimated time for replacement. All
9discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are or will be
10received by the rental company shall be subtracted from the
11estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate, or
12otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

13(3) (A) The estimated cost of labor to repair damaged vehicle
14parts, which shall not exceed the lesser of the following:

15(i) The product of the rate for labor usually paid by the rental
16company to repair vehicle parts of the type that were damaged and
17the estimated time for repair.

18(ii) The sum of the estimated labor and parts costs determined
19under paragraphs (1) and (2) to replace the same vehicle parts.

20(B) All discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are
21or will be received by the rental company shall be subtracted from
22the estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate,
23or otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

24(4) For the purpose of converting the estimated time for repair
25into the same units of time in which the rental rate is expressed, a
26day shall be deemed to consist of eight hours.

27(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
28by the rental company.

29(6) The administrative charge described in paragraph (6) of
30subdivision (b) shall not exceed (A) fifty dollars ($50) if the total
31estimated cost for parts and labor is more than one hundred dollars
32($100) up to and including five hundred dollars ($500), (B) one
33hundred dollars ($100) if the total estimated cost for parts and
34labor exceeds five hundred dollars ($500) up to and including one
35thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500), and (C) one hundred fifty
36dollars ($150) if the total estimated cost for parts and labor exceeds
37one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500). An administrative
38charge shall not be imposed if the total estimated cost of parts and
39labor is one hundred dollars ($100) or less.

P39   1(d) (1) The total amount of an authorized driver’s liability to
2the rental company, if any, for damage occurring during the
3authorized driver’s operation of the rented vehicle shall not exceed
4the amount of the renter’s liability under subdivision (c).

5(2) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
6authorized driver an amount exceeding the renter’s liability under
7subdivision (c).

8(3) A claim against a renter resulting from damage or loss,
9excluding loss of use, to a rental vehicle shall be reasonably and
10rationally related to the actual loss incurred. A rental company
11shall mitigate damages where possible and shall not assert or collect
12a claim for physical damage which exceeds the actual costs of the
13repairs performed or the estimated cost of repairs, if the rental
14company chooses not to repair the vehicle, including all discounts
15and price reductions. However, if the vehicle is a total loss vehicle,
16the claim shall not exceed the total loss vehicle value established
17in accordance with procedures that are customarily used by
18insurance companies when paying claims on total loss vehicles,
19less the proceeds from salvaging the vehicle, if those proceeds are
20retained by the rental company.

21(4) If insurance coverage exists under the renter’s applicable
22personal or business insurance policy and the coverage is confirmed
23during regular business hours, the renter may require that the rental
24company submit any claims to the renter’s applicable personal or
25business insurance carrier. The rental company shall not make any
26written or oral representations that it will not present claims or
27negotiate with the renter’s insurance carrier. For purposes of this
28paragraph, confirmation of coverage includes telephone
29confirmation from insurance company representatives during
30regular business hours. Upon request of the renter and after
31confirmation of coverage, the amount of claim shall be resolved
32between the insurance carrier and the rental company. The renter
33shall remain responsible for payment to the rental car company
34for any loss sustained that the renter’s applicable personal or
35business insurance policy does not cover.

36(5) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
37authorized driver for an item described in subdivision (b) to the
38extent the rental company obtains recovery from another person.

39(6) This section applies only to the maximum liability of a renter
40or other authorized driver to the rental company resulting from
P40   1damage to the rented vehicle and not to the liability of another
2 person.

3(e) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (f), a damage waiver
4shall provide or, if not expressly stated in writing, shall be deemed
5to provide that the renter has no liability forbegin delete aend delete damage, loss, loss
6of use, or a cost or expense incident thereto.

7(2) Except as provided in subdivision (f), every limitation,
8exception, or exclusion to a damage waiver is void and
9unenforceable.

10(f) A rental company may provide in the rental contract that a
11damage waiver does not apply under any of the following
12circumstances:

13(1) Damage or loss results from an authorized driver’s (A)
14intentional, willful, wanton, or reckless conduct, (B) operation of
15the vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol in violation of
16Section 23152 of the Vehicle Code, (C) towing or pushing
17anything, or (D) operation of the vehicle on an unpaved road if
18the damage or loss is a direct result of the road or driving
19conditions.

20(2) Damage or loss occurs while the vehicle is (A) used for
21commercial hire, (B) used in connection with conduct that could
22be properly charged as a felony, (C) involved in a speed test or
23contest or in driver training activity, (D) operated by a person other
24than an authorized driver, or (E) operated outside the United States.

25(3) An authorized driver who has (A) provided fraudulent
26information to the rental company, or (B) provided false
27information and the rental company would not have rented the
28vehicle if it had instead received true information.

29(g) (1) A rental company that offers or provides a damage
30waiver for any consideration in addition to the rental rate shall
31clearly and conspicuously disclose the following information in
32the rental contract or holder in which the contract is placed and,
33also, in signs posted at the place, such as the counter, where the
34renter signs the rental contract, and, for renters who are enrolled
35in the rental company’s membership program, in a sign that shall
36be posted in a location clearly visible to those renters as they enter
37the location where their reserved rental cars are parked or near the
38exit of the bus or other conveyance that transports the enrollee to
39a reserved car: (A) the nature of the renter’s liability, such as
40liability for all collision damage regardless of cause, (B) the extent
P41   1of the renter’s liability, such as liability for damage or loss up to
2a specified amount, (C) the renter’s personal insurance policy or
3the credit card used to pay for the car rental transaction may
4provide coverage for all or a portion of the renter’s potential
5liability, (D) the renter should consult with his or her insurer to
6determine the scope of insurance coverage, including the amount
7of the deductible, if any, for which the renter is obligated, (E) the
8renter may purchase an optional damage waiver to cover all
9liability, subject to whatever exceptions the rental company
10expressly lists that are permitted under subdivision (f), and (F) the
11range of charges for the damage waiver.

12(2) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (1), a rental
13company that offers or provides a damage waiver shall orally
14disclose to all renters, except those who are participants in the
15rental company’s membership program, that the damage waiver
16may be duplicative of coverage that the customer maintains under
17his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance. The renter’s
18receipt of the oral disclosure shall be demonstrated through the
19renter’s acknowledging receipt of the oral disclosure near that part
20of the contract where the renter indicates, by the renter’s own
21initials, his or her acceptance or declination of the damage waiver.
22Adjacent to that same part, the contract also shall state that the
23damage waiver is optional. Further, the contract for these renters
24shall include a clear and conspicuous written disclosure that the
25damage waiver may be duplicative of coverage that the customer
26maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance.

27(3) The following is an example, for purposes of illustration
28and not limitation, of a notice fulfilling the requirements of
29paragraph (1) for a rental company that imposes liability on the
30renter for collision damage to the full value of the vehicle:
31

32“NOTICE ABOUT YOUR FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
33AND OPTIONAL DAMAGE WAIVER
34

35You are responsible for all collision damage to the rented vehicle
36even if someone else caused it or the cause is unknown. You are
37responsible for the cost of repair up to the value of the vehicle,
38and towing, storage, and impound fees.

39Your own insurance, or the issuer of the credit card you use to
40pay for the car rental transaction, may cover all or part of your
P42   1financial responsibility for the rented vehicle. You should check
2with your insurance company, or credit card issuer, to find out
3about your coverage and the amount of the deductible, if any, for
4which you may be liable.

5Further, if you use a credit card that provides coverage for your
6potential liability, you should check with the issuer to determine
7if you must first exhaust the coverage limits of your own insurance
8before the credit card coverage applies.

9The rental company will not hold you responsible if you buy a
10damage waiver. But a damage waiver will not protect you if (list
11exceptions).”


13(A) When the above notice is printed in the rental contract or
14holder in which the contract is placed, the following shall be printed
15immediately following the notice:


17“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ for every (day
18or week).”


20(B) When the above notice appears on a sign, the following
21shall appear immediately adjacent to the notice:


23“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ to $____ for
24every (day or week), depending upon the vehicle rented.”


26(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a rental
27company may sell a damage waiver subject to the following rate
28limitations for each full or partial 24-hour rental day for the damage
29begin delete waiver.end deletebegin insert waiver:end insert

30(1) For rental vehicles that the rental company designates as an
31“economy car,”begin delete “subcompact car,”end delete “compact car,” or another term
32having similar meaningbegin delete when offered for rental, or another vehicle
33having a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of nineteen thousand
34dollars ($19,000) or less,end delete
begin insert to the two smallest body-size categories
35of vehicles established by the Association of Car Rental Industry
36Systems Standards for North America, as of January 1, 2014, when
37offered for rental,end insert
the rate shall not exceedbegin delete nine dollars ($9).end deletebegin insert eleven
38dollars ($11).end insert

39(2) For rentalbegin delete vehicles that have a manufacturer’s suggested
40retail price from nineteen thousand one dollars ($19,001) to
P43   1thirty-four thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($34,999),
2inclusive,end delete
begin insert vehicles that the rental company designates as an
3“intermediate car,” “standard car,” or “full-size car,” or another
4term having similar meaning to the next three body-size categories
5of vehicles established by the Association of Car Rental Industry
6Systems Standards for North America, as of January 1, 2014,end insert
and
7that are also either vehicles ofbegin insert theend insert nextbegin delete year’s model,end deletebegin insert model year,end insert
8 or not older than the previous year’s model,begin insert when offered for rental,end insert
9 the rate shall not exceedbegin delete fifteen dollars ($15).end deletebegin insert seventeen dollars
10($17).end insert
Forbegin delete thoseend delete rental vehiclesbegin insert that areend insert older than the previous
11year’s model-year, the rate shall not exceedbegin delete nine dollars ($9).end delete
12begin insert eleven dollars ($11).end insert

begin delete

13(i) The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices described in
14subdivision (h) shall be adjusted annually to reflect changes from
15the previous year in the Consumer Price Index. For the purposes
16of this section, “Consumer Price Index” means the United States
17Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, for all items.

end delete
begin delete

18(j)

end delete

19begin insert(i)end insert A rental company that disseminates in this state an
20advertisement containing a rental rate shall include in that
21advertisement a clearly readable statement of the charge for a
22damage waiver and a statement that a damage waiver is optional.

begin delete

23(k)

end delete

24begin insert(j)end insert (1) A rental company shall not require the purchase of a
25damage waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or
26service.

27(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
28or coercive conduct to induce a renter to purchase the damage
29waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or service,
30including conduct such as, but not limited to, refusing to honor
31the renter’s reservation, limiting the availability of vehicles,
32requiring a deposit, or debiting or blocking the renter’s credit card
33account for a sum equivalent to a deposit if the renter declines to
34purchase the damage waiver, optional insurance, or another
35optional good or service.

begin delete

36(l)

end delete

37begin insert(k)end insert (1) In the absence of express permission granted by the
38renter subsequent to damage to, or loss of, the vehicle, a rental
39company shall not seek to recover any portion of a claim arising
40out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle by processing a
P44   1credit card charge or causing a debit or block to be placed on the
2renter’s credit card account.

3(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
4or coercive tactics in attempting to recover or in recovering on any
5claim arising out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle.

begin delete

6(m)

end delete

7begin insert(l)end insert (1) A customer facility charge may be collected by a rental
8company under the following circumstances:

9(A) Collection of the fee by the rental company is required by
10an airport operated by a city, a county, a city and county, a joint
11powers authority, a special district, or the San Diego County
12Regional Airport Authority formed pursuant to Division 17
13(commencing with Section 170000) of the Public Utilities Code.

14(B) The fee is calculated on a per contract basis or as provided
15in paragraph (2).

16(C) The fee is a user fee, not a tax imposed upon real property
17or anbegin delete incidenceend deletebegin insert incidentend insert of property ownership under Article XIII D
18of the California Constitution.

19(D) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (E), the fee
20shall be ten dollars ($10) per contract or the amount provided in
21paragraph (2).

22(E) The fee for a consolidated rental car facility shall be
23collected only from customers of on-airport rental car companies.
24If the fee imposed by the airport is for both a consolidated rental
25car facility and a common-use transportation system, the fee
26collected from customers of on-airport rental car companies shall
27be ten dollars ($10) or the amount provided in paragraph (2), but
28the fee imposed on customers of off-airport rental car companies
29who are transported on the common-use transportation system is
30proportionate to the costs of the common-use transportation system
31only. The fee is uniformly applied to each class of on-airport or
32off-airport customers, provided that the airport requires off-airport
33customers to use the common-use transportation system. For
34purposes of this subparagraph, “on-airport rental car company”
35means a rental company operating under an airport property lease
36or an airport concession or license agreement whose customers
37use or will use the consolidated rental car facility and the collection
38of the fee as to those customers is consistent with subparagraph
39(C).

P45   1(F) Revenues collected from the fee do not exceed the reasonable
2costs of financing, designing, and constructing the facility and
3financing, designing, constructing, and operating any common-use
4transportation system, or acquiring vehicles for use in that system,
5and shall not be used for any other purpose.

6(G) The fee is separately identified on the rental agreement.

7(H) This paragraph does not apply to fees which are governed
8by Section 50474.1 of the Government Code or Section 57.5 of
9the San Diego Unified Port Districtbegin delete Act.end deletebegin insert Act (Chapter 67 of the
10First Extraordinary Session of the Statutes of 1962).end insert

11(I) For any airport seeking to require rental car companies to
12collect an alternative customer facility charge pursuant to paragraph
13(2), the following provisions apply:

14(i) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
15the airport shall provide reports on an annual basis to the Senate
16and Assembly Committees on Judiciary detailing all of the
17following:

18(I) The total amount of the customer facility charge collected.

19(II) How the funds are being spent.

20(III) The amount of and reason for any changes in the airport’s
21budget or financial needs for the facility or common-use
22transportation system.

23(IV) Whether airport concession fees authorized by Section
241936.01 have increased since the prior report, if any.

25(ii) (I) The airport shall complete the audit required by
26subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) prior tobegin insert theend insert
27 initial collection of the customer facility charge. Notwithstanding
28Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, copies of the audit shall
29be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
30the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
31Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
32the airport’s Internet Web site.

33(II) Prior to any increase pursuant to paragraph (2), the airport
34shall update the information provided in the initial collection audit
35pursuant to subclause (I). Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the
36Government Code, copies of the updated audit shall be provided
37to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary, the
38Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate Committee
39on Transportation andbegin delete Housingend deletebegin insert Housing,end insert and shall be posted on
40the airport’s Internet Web site.

P46   1(III) An audit shall be completed every three years after initial
2collection only if the customer facility charge is collected for the
3purpose of operating a common-use transportation system or to
4acquire vehicles for use inbegin delete such aend deletebegin insert theend insert system pursuant to clause
5(ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a). A
6regularly conducted audit of airport finances that includes the
7customer facility charge information, that satisfies the requirements
8of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), and is
9produced in accordance with the generally accepted accounting
10principles of the Government Accounting Standards Board, shall
11satisfy the requirements of this subclause. This obligation shall
12continue until the fee authorization becomes inoperative pursuant
13to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
14Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the
15information reported pursuant to this subclause shall be compiled
16into one document, shall be provided to the Assembly and Senate
17Committees on Judiciary, the Assembly Committee on
18Transportation, and the Senate Committee on Transportation and
19Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s Internet Web site
20accessible to the public. The information reported shall be
21contained within one easily accessible page contained within the
22airport’s Internet Web site.

23(IV) This section shall not be construed to require an airport to
24audit a common-use transportation system not financed by a
25customer facility charge and used for the purposes permitted
26pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of
27subdivision (a).

28(V) The airport shall post on the airport’s Internet Web site
29copies of the completed audits required by this clause for a period
30of six years following the audit’s completion.

31(iii) Use of the bonds shall be limited to construction and design
32of the consolidated rental car facility, terminal modifications, and
33operating costs of the common-use transportation system, as
34specified in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).

35(2) Any airport may require rental car companies to collect an
36alternative customer facility charge under the following conditions:

37(A) The airport first conducts a publicly noticed hearing pursuant
38to the Ralph M. Brown Act (Chapter 9 (commencing with Section
3954950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government Code)
40to review the costs of financing the design and construction of a
P47   1consolidated rental car facility and the design, construction, and
2operation of any common-use transportation system in which all
3of the following occur:

4(i) The airport establishes the amount of revenue necessary to
5finance the reasonable cost to design and construct a consolidated
6rental car facility and to design, construct, and operate any
7common-use transportation system, or acquire vehicles for use in
8that system, based on evidence presented during the hearing.

9(ii) The airport finds, based on evidence presented during the
10hearing, that the fee authorized in paragraph (1) will not generate
11sufficient revenue to finance the reasonable costs to design and
12construct a consolidated rental car facility and to design, construct,
13and operate any common-use transportation system, or acquire
14vehicles for use in that system.

15(iii) The airport finds that the reasonable cost of the project
16requires the additional amount of revenue that would be generated
17by the proposed daily rate, including any rate increase, authorized
18pursuant to this paragraph.

19(iv) The airport outlines each of the following:

20(I) Steps it has taken to limit costs.

21(II) Other potential alternatives for meeting its revenue needs
22other than the collection of the fee.

23(III) The extent to which rental car companies or other
24businesses or individuals using the facility or common-use
25transportation system will pay for the costs associated with these
26facilities and systems other than the fee from rental customers.

27(B) The airport may not require the fee authorized in this
28paragraph to be collected at any time that the fee authorized in
29paragraph (1) of this subdivision is being collected.

30(C) Pursuant to the procedure set forth in this subdivision, the
31fee may be collected at a rate charged on a per-day basis subject
32to the following conditions:

33(i) Commencing January 1, 2011, the amount of the fee may
34not exceed six dollars ($6) per day.

35(ii) Commencing January 1, 2014, the amount of the fee may
36not exceed seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per day.

37(iii) Commencing January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the amount
38of the fee may not exceed nine dollars ($9) per day.

P48   1(iv) At no time shall the fee authorized in this paragraph be
2collected from any customer for more than five days for each
3individual rental car contract.

4(v) An airport subject to this paragraph shall initiate the process
5for obtaining the authority to require or increase the alternative
6fee no later than January 1, 2018. Any airport that obtains the
7authority to require or increase an alternative fee shall be authorized
8to continue collecting that fee until the fee authorization becomes
9inoperative pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of
10subdivision (a).

11(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including, but
12not limited to, Part 1 (commencing with Section 6001) to Part 1.7
13(commencing with Section 7280), inclusive, of Division 2 of the
14Revenue and Taxation Code, the fees collected pursuant to this
15section, or another law whereby a local agency operating an airport
16requires a rental car company to collect a facility financing fee
17from its customers, are not subject to sales, use, or transaction
18taxes.

begin delete

19(n)

end delete

20begin insert(m)end insert (1) A rental company shall only advertise, quote, and charge
21a rental rate that includes the entire amount except taxes, a
22customer facility charge, if any, and a mileage charge, if any, that
23a renter must pay to hire or lease the vehicle for the period of time
24to which the rental rate applies. A rental company shall not charge
25in addition to the rental rate, taxes, a customer facility charge, if
26any, and a mileage charge, if any, any fee that is required to be
27paid by the renter as a condition of hiring or leasing the vehicle,
28including, but not limited to, required fuel or airport surcharges
29other than customer facility charges, nor a fee for transporting the
30renter to the location where the rented vehicle will be delivered to
31the renter.

32(2) In addition to the rental rate, taxes, customer facility charges,
33if any, and mileage charges, if any, a rental company may charge
34for an item or service provided in connection with a particular
35rental transaction if the renter could have avoided incurring the
36charge by choosing not to obtain or utilize the optional item or
37service. Items and services for which the rental company may
38impose an additional charge include, but are not limited to, optional
39insurance and accessories requested by the renter, service charges
40incident to the renter’s optional return of the vehicle to a location
P49   1other than the location where the vehicle was hired or leased, and
2charges for refueling the vehicle at the conclusion of the rental
3transaction in the event the renter did not return the vehicle with
4as much fuel as was in the fuel tank at the beginning of the rental.
5A rental company also may impose an additional charge based on
6reasonable age criteria established by the rental company.

7(3) A rental company shall not charge a fee for authorized
8drivers in addition to the rental charge for an individual renter.

9(4) If a rental company states a rental rate in print advertisement
10or in a telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation,
11the rental company shall disclose clearly in that advertisement or
12quotation the terms of mileage conditions relating to the advertised
13or quoted rental rate, including, but not limited to, to the extent
14applicable, the amount of mileage and gas charges, the number of
15miles for which no charges will be imposed, and a description of
16geographic driving limitations within the United States and Canada.

17(5) (A) When a rental rate is stated in an advertisement,
18quotation, or reservation in connection with a car rental at an airport
19where a customer facility charge is imposed, the rental company
20shall disclose clearly the existence and amount of the customer
21facility charge. For purposes of this subparagraph, advertisements
22include radio, television, other electronic media, and print
23advertisements. For purposes of this subparagraph, quotations and
24reservations include those that are telephonic, in-person, and
25computer-transmitted. If the rate advertisement is intended to
26include transactions at more than one airport imposing a customer
27facility charge, a range of fees may be stated in the advertisement.
28However, all rate advertisements that include car rentals at airport
29destinations shall clearly and conspicuously include a toll-free
30telephone number whereby a customer can be told the specific
31amount of the customer facility charge to which the customer will
32be obligated.

33(B) If a person or entity other than a rental car company,
34including a passenger carrier or a seller of travel services, advertises
35or quotes a rate for a car rental at an airport where a customer
36facility charge is imposed, that person or entity shall, provided
37that he, she, or it is provided with information about the existence
38and amount of the fee, to the extent not specifically prohibited by
39federal law, clearly disclose the existence and amount of the fee
40in any telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation at
P50   1the time of making an initial quotation of a rental rate and at the
2time of making a reservation of a rental car. If a rental car company
3provides the person or entity with rate and customer facility charge
4information, the rental car company is not responsible for the
5failure of that person or entity to comply with this subparagraph
6when quoting or confirming a rate to a third person or entity.

7(6) If a rental company delivers a vehicle to a renter at a location
8other than the location where the rental company normally carries
9on its business, the rental company shall not charge the renter an
10amount for the rental for the period before the delivery of the
11vehicle. If a rental company picks up a rented vehicle from a renter
12at a location other than the location where the rental company
13normally carries on its business, the rental company shall not
14charge the renter an amount for the rental for the period after the
15renter notifies the rental company to pick up the vehicle.

begin delete

16(o)

end delete

17begin insert(n)end insert A rental company shall not use, access, or obtain any
18information relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that
19was obtained using electronic surveillance technology, except in
20the following circumstances:

21(1) (A) When the equipment is used by the rental company
22only for the purpose of locating a stolen, abandoned, or missing
23rental vehicle after one of the following:

24(i) The renter or law enforcement has informed the rental
25company that the vehicle is missing or has been stolen or
26abandoned.

27(ii) The rental vehicle has not been returned following one week
28after the contracted return date, or by one week following the end
29of an extension of that return date.

30(iii) The rental company discovers the rental vehicle has been
31stolen or abandoned, and, if stolen, it shall report the vehicle stolen
32to law enforcement by filing a stolen vehicle report, unless law
33enforcement has already informed the rental company that the
34vehicle is missing or has been stolen or abandoned.

35(B) If electronic surveillance technology is activated pursuant
36to subparagraph (A), a rental company shall maintain a record, in
37either electronic or written form, of information relevant to the
38activation of that technology. That information shall include the
39rental agreement, including the return date, and the date and time
40the electronic surveillance technology was activated. The record
P51   1shall also include, if relevant, a record of written or other
2communication with the renter, including communications
3regarding extensions of the rental, police reports, or other written
4communication with law enforcement officials. The record shall
5be maintained for a period of at least 12 months from the time the
6record is created and shall be made available upon the renter’s
7request. The rental company shall maintain and furnish explanatory
8codes necessary to read the record. A rental company shall not be
9required to maintain a record if electronic surveillance technology
10is activated to recover a rental vehicle that is stolen or missing at
11a time other than during a rental period.

12(2) In response to a specific request from law enforcement
13pursuant to a subpoena or search warrant.

14(3) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
15equipping rental vehicles with GPS-based technology that provides
16navigation assistance to the occupants of the rental vehicle, if the
17rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
18to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
19that technology, except for the purposes of discovering or repairing
20a defect in the technology and the information may then be used
21only for that purpose.

22(4) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
23equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
24that allows for the remote locking or unlocking of the vehicle at
25the request of the renter, if the rental company does not use, access,
26or obtain information relating to the renter’s use of the rental
27vehicle that was obtained using that technology, except as
28necessary to lock or unlock the vehicle.

29(5) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
30equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
31that allows the company to provide roadside assistance, such as
32towing, flat tire, or fuel services, at the request of the renter, if the
33rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
34to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
35that technology except as necessary to provide the requested
36roadside assistance.

37(6) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
38obtaining, accessing, or using information from electronic
39surveillance technology for the sole purpose of determining the
40date and time the vehicle is returned to the rental company, and
P52   1the total mileage driven and the vehicle fuel level of the returned
2vehicle. This paragraph, however, shall apply only after the renter
3has returned the vehicle to the rental company, and the information
4shall only be used for the purpose described in this paragraph.

begin delete

5(p)

end delete

6begin insert(o)end insert A rental company shall not use electronic surveillance
7technology to track a renter in order to impose fines or surcharges
8relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle.

begin delete

9(q)

end delete

10begin insert(p)end insert A renter may bring an action against a rental company for
11the recovery of damages and appropriate equitable relief for a
12violation of this section. The prevailing party shall be entitled to
13recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.

begin delete

14(r)

end delete

15begin insert(q)end insert A rental company that brings an action against a renter for
16loss due to theft of the vehicle shall bring the action in the county
17in which the renter resides or, if the renter is not a resident of this
18state, in the jurisdiction in which the renter resides.

begin delete

19(s)

end delete

20begin insert(r)end insert A waiver of any of the provisions of this section shall be
21void and unenforceable as contrary to public policy.

begin delete

22(t)

end delete

23begin insert(s)end insert (1) A rental company’s disclosure requirements shall be
24satisfied for renters who are enrolled in the rental company’s
25membership program if all of the following conditions are met:

26(A) Prior to the enrollee’s first rental as a participant in the
27program, the renter receives, in writing, the following:

28(i) All of the disclosures required by paragraph (1) of subdivision
29(g), including the terms and conditions of the rental agreement
30then in effect.

31(ii) An Internet Web site address, as well as a contact number
32or address, where the enrollee can learn of changes to the rental
33agreement or to the laws of this state governing rental agreements
34since the effective date of the rental company’s most recent
35restatement of the rental agreement and distribution of that
36restatement to its members.

37(B) At the commencement of each rental period, the renter is
38provided, on the rental record or the folder in which it is inserted,
39with a printed notice stating that he or she had either previously
P53   1selected or declined an optional damage waiver and that the renter
2has the right to change preferences.

3(C) At the commencement of each rental period, the rental
4company provides, on the rearview mirror, a hanger on which a
5statement is printed, in a box, in at least 12-point boldface type,
6notifying the renter that the collision damage waiver offered by
7the rental company may be duplicative of coverage that the
8customer maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle
9insurance. If it is not feasible to hang the statement from the
10rearview mirror, it shall be hung from the steering wheel.

11The hanger shall provide the renter a box to initial if he or she
12(not his or her employer) has previously accepted or declined the
13collision damage waiver and that he or she now wishes to change
14his or her decision to accept or decline the collision damage waiver,
15as follows:


begin delete

17“â—» If

end delete

18begin insert“Ifend insert I previously accepted the collision damage waiver, I now
19decline it.


begin delete

22â—» If

end delete

23begin insertIfend insert I previously declined the collision damage waiver, I now accept
24it.”


26The hanger shall also provide a box for the enrollee to indicate
27whether this change applies to this rental transaction only or to all
28future rental transactions. The hanger shall also notify the renter
29that he or she may make that change, prior to leaving the lot, by
30returning the form to an employee designated to receive the form
31who is present at the lot where the renter takes possession of the
32car, to receive any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

33(2) (A) This subdivision is not effective unless the employee
34designated pursuant to subparagraph (E) of paragraph (8) of
35subdivision (a) is actually present at the required location.

36(B) This subdivision does not relieve the rental company from
37the disclosures required to be made within the text of a contract
38or holder in which the contract is placed; in or on an advertisement
39containing a rental rate; or in a telephonic, in-person, or
40computer-transmitted quotation or reservation.

begin delete

P54   1(u)

end delete

2begin insert(t)end insert The amendments made to this section during the 2001-02
3Regular Session of the Legislature do not affect litigation pending
4on or before January 1, 2003, alleging a violation of Section 22325
5of the Business and Professions Code as it read at the time the
6action was commenced.

begin delete

7(v)

end delete

8begin insert(u)end insert (1) When a rental company enters into a rental agreement
9in the state for the rental of a vehicle to any renter who is not a
10resident of this country and, as part of, or associated with, the rental
11 agreement, the renter purchases liability insurance, as defined in
12subdivision (b) of Section 1758.85 of the Insurance Code, from
13the rental company in its capacity as a rental car agent for an
14authorized insurer, the rental company shall be authorized to accept,
15and, if served as set forth in this subdivision, shall accept, service
16of a summons and complaint and any other required documents
17against the foreign renter for any accident or collision resulting
18from the operation of the rental vehicle within the state during the
19rental period. If the rental company has a registered agent for
20service of process on file with the Secretary of State, process shall
21be served on the rental company’s registered agent, either by
22first-class mail, return receipt requested, or by personal service.

23(2) Within 30 days of acceptance of service of process, the rental
24company shall provide a copy of the summons and complaint and
25any other required documents served in accordance with this
26subdivision to the foreign renter by first-class mail, return receipt
27requested.

28(3) Any plaintiff, or his or her representative, who elects to serve
29the foreign renter by delivering a copy of the summons and
30complaint and any other required documents to the rental company
31pursuant to paragraph (1) shall agree to limit his or her recovery
32against the foreign renter and the rental company to the limits of
33the protection extended by the liability insurance.

34(4) Notwithstanding the requirements of Sections 17450 to
3517456, inclusive, of the Vehicle Code, service of process in
36compliance with paragraph (1) shall be deemed valid and effective
37service.

38(5) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the requirement
39that the rental company accept service of process pursuant to
P55   1paragraph (1) shall not create any duty, obligation, or agency
2relationship other than that provided in paragraph (1).

begin delete

3(w)

end delete

4begin insert(v)end insert This section shall remain in effect only until January 1,begin delete 2015,end delete
5begin insert 2020,end insert and as of that date is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
6that is enacted before January 1,begin delete 2015end deletebegin insert 2020end insert, deletes or extends
7that date.

8

SEC. 5.5.  

Section 1936 of the Civil Code, as amended by
9Section 2 of Chapter 549 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended to
10read:

11

1936.  

(a) For the purpose of this section, the following
12definitions shall apply:

13(1) “Rental company” means a person or entity in the business
14of renting passenger vehicles to the public.

15(2) “Renter” means any person in a manner obligated under a
16contract for the lease or hire of a passenger vehicle from a rental
17company for a period of less than 30 days.

18(3) “Authorized driver” means (A) the renter, (B) the renter’s
19spouse if that person is a licensed driver and satisfies the rental
20company’s minimum age requirement, (C) the renter’s employer
21or coworker if he or she is engaged in business activity with the
22renter, is a licensed driver, and satisfies the rental company’s
23minimum age requirement, and (D) a person expressly listed by
24the rental company on the renter’s contract as an authorized driver.

25(4) (A) “Customer facility charge” means any fee, including
26an alternative fee, required by an airport to be collected by a rental
27company from a renter for any of the following purposes:

28(i) To finance, design, and construct consolidated airport car
29rental facilities.

30(ii) To finance, design, construct, and operate common-use
31transportation systems that move passengers between airport
32terminals and those consolidated car rental facilities, and acquire
33vehicles for use in that system.

34(iii) To finance, design, and construct terminal modifications
35solely to accommodate and provide customer access to
36common-use transportation systems.

37(B) The aggregate amount to be collected shall not exceed the
38reasonable costs, as determined by an audit, by an independent
39auditor, paid for by the airport, to finance, design, and construct
40those facilities. The auditor shall independently examine and
P56   1substantiate the necessity for and the amount of the customer
2facility charge, including whether the airport’s actual or projected
3costs are supported and justified, any steps the airport may take to
4limit costs, potential alternatives for meeting the airport’s revenue
5needs other than the collection of the fee, and whether and to what
6extent car rental companies or other businesses or individuals using
7the facility or common-use transportation system may pay for the
8costs associated with these facilities and systems other than the
9fee from rental customers, or whether the airport did not comply
10with any provision of this subparagraph. Copies of the audit shall
11be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
12the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
13Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
14the airport’s Internet Web site. In the case of a customer facility
15charge for a common-use transportation system, the audit also
16shall consider the reasonable costs of providing the transit system
17or busing network pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A). Any
18audit required by this subparagraph may be included as a part of
19an audit of an airport’s finances. Notwithstanding clause (iii) of
20subparagraph (A), the fees designated as a customer facility charge
21shall not be used to pay for terminal expansion, gate expansion,
22runway expansion, changes in hours of operation, or changes in
23the number of flights arriving or departing from the airport.

24(C) Except as provided in subparagraph (D), the authorization
25given pursuant to this section for an airport to impose a customer
26facility charge shall become inoperative when the bonds used for
27financing are paid.

28(D) If a bond or other form of indebtedness is not used for
29financing, or the bond or other form of indebtedness used for
30financing has been paid, the Oakland International Airport may
31require the collection of a customer facility charge for a period of
32up to 10 years from the imposition of the charge for the purposes
33allowed by, and subject to the conditions imposed by, this section.

34(5) “Damage waiver” means a rental company’s agreement not
35to hold a renter liable for all or any portion of any damage or loss
36related to the rented vehicle, any loss of use of the rented vehicle,
37or any storage, impound, towing, or administrative charges.

38(6) “Electronic surveillance technology” means a technological
39method or system used to observe, monitor, or collect information,
40including telematics, Global Positioning System (GPS), wireless
P57   1technology, or location-based technologies. “Electronic
2surveillance technology” does not include event data recorders
3(EDR), sensing and diagnostic modules (SDM), or other systems
4that are used either:

5(A) For the purpose of identifying, diagnosing, or monitoring
6functions related to the potential need to repair, service, or perform
7maintenance on the rental vehicle.

8(B) As part of the vehicle’s airbag sensing and diagnostic system
9in order to capture safety systems-related data for retrieval after a
10crash has occurred or in the event that the collision sensors are
11activated to prepare the decisionmaking computer to make the
12determination to deploy or not to deploy the airbag.

13(7) “Estimated time for replacement” means the number of hours
14of labor, or fraction thereof, needed to replace damaged vehicle
15parts as set forth in collision damage estimating guides generally
16used in the vehicle repair business and commonly known as “crash
17books.”

18(8) “Estimated time for repair” means a good faith estimate of
19the reasonable number of hours of labor, or fraction thereof, needed
20to repair damaged vehicle parts.

21(9) “Membership program” means a service offered by a rental
22company that permits customers to bypass the rental counter and
23go directly to the car previously reserved. A membership program
24shall meet all of the following requirements:

25(A) The renter initiates enrollment by completing an application
26on which the renter can specify a preference for type of vehicle
27and acceptance or declination of optional services.

28(B) The rental company fully discloses, prior to the enrollee’s
29first rental as a participant in the program, all terms and conditions
30of the rental agreement as well as all required disclosures.

31(C) The renter may terminate enrollment at any time.

32(D) The rental company fully explains to the renter that
33designated preferences, as well as acceptance or declination of
34optional services, may be changed by the renter at any time for
35the next and future rentals.

36(E) An employee designated to receive the form specified in
37subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (t) is present at
38the lot where the renter takes possession of the car, to receive any
39change in the rental agreement from the renter.

P58   1(10) “Passenger vehicle” means a passenger vehicle as defined
2in Section 465 of the Vehicle Code.

3(b) Except as limited by subdivision (c), a rental company and
4a renter may agree that the renter will be responsible for no more
5than all of the following:

6(1) Physical or mechanical damage to the rented vehicle up to
7its fair market value, as determined in the customary market for
8the sale of that vehicle, resulting from collision regardless of the
9cause of the damage.

10(2) Loss due to theft of the rented vehicle up to its fair market
11value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
12vehicle, provided that the rental company establishes by clear and
13convincing evidence that the renter or the authorized driver failed
14to exercise ordinary care while in possession of the vehicle. In
15addition, the renter shall be presumed to have no liability for any
16loss due to theft if (A) an authorized driver has possession of the
17ignition key furnished by the rental company or an authorized
18driver establishes that the ignition key furnished by the rental
19company was not in the vehicle at the time of the theft, and (B) an
20authorized driver files an official report of the theft with the police
21or other law enforcement agency within 24 hours of learning of
22the theft and reasonably cooperates with the rental company and
23the police or other law enforcement agency in providing
24information concerning the theft. The presumption set forth in this
25paragraph is a presumption affecting the burden of proof which
26the rental company may rebut by establishing that an authorized
27driver committed, or aided and abetted the commission of, the
28theft.

29(3) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to its fair market
30 value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
31vehicle, resulting from vandalism occurring after, or in connection
32with, the theft of the rented vehicle. However, the renter shall have
33no liability for any damage due to vandalism if the renter would
34have no liability for theft pursuant to paragraph (2).

35(4) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to a total of five
36hundred dollars ($500) resulting from vandalism unrelated to the
37theft of the rented vehicle.

38(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
39by the rental company if the renter is liable for damage or loss.

P59   1(6) An administrative charge, which shall include the cost of
2appraisal and all other costs and expenses incident to the damage,
3loss, repair, or replacement of the rented vehicle.

4(c) The total amount of the renter’s liability to the rental
5company resulting from damage to the rented vehicle shall not
6exceed the sum of the following:

7(1) The estimated cost of parts which the rental company would
8have to pay to replace damaged vehicle parts. All discounts and
9price reductions or adjustments that are or will be received by the
10rental company shall be subtracted from the estimate to the extent
11not already incorporated in the estimate, or otherwise promptly
12credited or refunded to the renter.

13(2) The estimated cost of labor to replace damaged vehicle parts,
14which shall not exceed the product of (A) the rate for labor usually
15paid by the rental company to replace vehicle parts of the type that
16were damaged and (B) the estimated time for replacement. All
17discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are or will be
18received by the rental company shall be subtracted from the
19estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate, or
20otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

21(3) (A) The estimated cost of labor to repair damaged vehicle
22parts, which shall not exceed the lesser of the following:

23(i) The product of the rate for labor usually paid by the rental
24company to repair vehicle parts of the type that were damaged and
25the estimated time for repair.

26(ii) The sum of the estimated labor and parts costs determined
27under paragraphs (1) and (2) to replace the same vehicle parts.

28(B) All discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are
29or will be received by the rental company shall be subtracted from
30the estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate,
31or otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

32(4) For the purpose of converting the estimated time for repair
33into the same units of time in which the rental rate is expressed, a
34day shall be deemed to consist of eight hours.

35(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
36by the rental company.

37(6) The administrative charge described in paragraph (6) of
38subdivision (b) shall not exceed (A) fifty dollars ($50) if the total
39estimated cost for parts and labor is more than one hundred dollars
40($100) up to and including five hundred dollars ($500), (B) one
P60   1hundred dollars ($100) if the total estimated cost for parts and
2labor exceeds five hundred dollars ($500) up to and including one
3thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500), and (C) one hundred fifty
4dollars ($150) if the total estimated cost for parts and labor exceeds
5one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500). An administrative
6charge shall not be imposed if the total estimated cost of parts and
7labor is one hundred dollars ($100) or less.

8(d) (1) The total amount of an authorized driver’s liability to
9the rental company, if any, for damage occurring during the
10authorized driver’s operation of the rented vehicle shall not exceed
11the amount of the renter’s liability under subdivision (c).

12(2) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
13authorized driver an amount exceeding the renter’s liability under
14subdivision (c).

15(3) A claim against a renter resulting from damage or loss,
16excluding loss of use, to a rental vehicle shall be reasonably and
17rationally related to the actual loss incurred. A rental company
18shall mitigate damages where possible and shall not assert or collect
19a claim for physical damage which exceeds the actual costs of the
20repairs performed or the estimated cost of repairs, if the rental
21company chooses not to repair the vehicle, including all discounts
22and price reductions. However, if the vehicle is a total loss vehicle,
23the claim shall not exceed the total loss vehicle value established
24in accordance with procedures that are customarily used by
25insurance companies when paying claims on total loss vehicles,
26less the proceeds from salvaging the vehicle, if those proceeds are
27retained by the rental company.

28(4) If insurance coverage exists under the renter’s applicable
29personal or business insurance policy and the coverage is confirmed
30during regular business hours, the renter may require that the rental
31company submit any claims to the renter’s applicable personal or
32business insurance carrier. The rental company shall not make any
33written or oral representations that it will not present claims or
34negotiate with the renter’s insurance carrier. For purposes of this
35paragraph, confirmation of coverage includes telephone
36confirmation from insurance company representatives during
37regular business hours. Upon request of the renter and after
38confirmation of coverage, the amount of claim shall be resolved
39between the insurance carrier and the rental company. The renter
40shall remain responsible for payment to the rental car company
P61   1for any loss sustained that the renter’s applicable personal or
2business insurance policy does not cover.

3(5) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
4authorized driver for an item described in subdivision (b) to the
5extent the rental company obtains recovery from another person.

6(6) This section applies only to the maximum liability of a renter
7or other authorized driver to the rental company resulting from
8damage to the rented vehicle and not to the liability of another
9person.

10(e) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (f), a damage waiver
11shall provide or, if not expressly stated in writing, shall be deemed
12to provide that the renter has no liability for a damage, loss, loss
13of use, or a cost or expense incident thereto.

14(2) Except as provided in subdivision (f), every limitation,
15exception, or exclusion to a damage waiver is void and
16unenforceable.

17(f) A rental company may provide in the rental contract that a
18damage waiver does not apply under any of the following
19circumstances:

20(1) Damage or loss results from an authorized driver’s (A)
21intentional, willful, wanton, or reckless conduct, (B) operation of
22the vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol in violation of
23Section 23152 of the Vehicle Code, (C) towing or pushing
24anything, or (D) operation of the vehicle on an unpaved road if
25the damage or loss is a direct result of the road or driving
26conditions.

27(2) Damage or loss occurs while the vehicle is (A) used for
28commercial hire, (B) used in connection with conduct that could
29be properly charged as a felony, (C) involved in a speed test or
30contest or in driver training activity, (D) operated by a person other
31than an authorized driver, or (E) operated outside the United States.

32(3) An authorized driver who has (A) provided fraudulent
33information to the rental company, or (B) provided false
34information and the rental company would not have rented the
35vehicle if it had instead received true information.

36(g) (1) A rental company that offers or provides a damage
37waiver for any consideration in addition to the rental rate shall
38clearly and conspicuously disclose the following information in
39the rental contract or holder in which the contract is placed and,
40also, in signs posted at the place, such as the counter, where the
P62   1renter signs the rental contract, and, for renters who are enrolled
2in the rental company’s membership program, in a sign that shall
3be posted in a location clearly visible to those renters as they enter
4the location where their reserved rental cars are parked or near the
5exit of the bus or other conveyance that transports the enrollee to
6a reserved car: (A) the nature of the renter’s liability, such as
7liability for all collision damage regardless of cause, (B) the extent
8of the renter’s liability, such as liability for damage or loss up to
9a specified amount, (C) the renter’s personal insurance policy or
10the credit card used to pay for the car rental transaction may
11provide coverage for all or a portion of the renter’s potential
12liability, (D) the renter should consult with his or her insurer to
13determine the scope of insurance coverage, including the amount
14of the deductible, if any, for which the renter is obligated, (E) the
15renter may purchase an optional damage waiver to cover all
16liability, subject to whatever exceptions the rental company
17expressly lists that are permitted under subdivision (f), and (F) the
18range of charges for the damage waiver.

19(2) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (1), a rental
20company that offers or provides a damage waiver shall orally
21disclose to all renters, except those who are participants in the
22rental company’s membership program, that the damage waiver
23may be duplicative of coverage that the customer maintains under
24his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance. The renter’s
25receipt of the oral disclosure shall be demonstrated through the
26renter’s acknowledging receipt of the oral disclosure near that part
27of the contract where the renter indicates, by the renter’s own
28initials, his or her acceptance or declination of the damage waiver.
29Adjacent to that same part, the contract also shall state that the
30damage waiver is optional. Further, the contract for these renters
31shall include a clear and conspicuous written disclosure that the
32damage waiver may be duplicative of coverage that the customer
33maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance.

34(3) The following is an example, for purposes of illustration
35and not limitation, of a notice fulfilling the requirements of
36paragraph (1) for a rental company that imposes liability on the
37renter for collision damage to the full value of the vehicle:

P63   1“NOTICE ABOUT YOUR FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
2AND OPTIONAL DAMAGE WAIVER
3

4You are responsible for all collision damage to the rented vehicle
5even if someone else caused it or the cause is unknown. You are
6responsible for the cost of repair up to the value of the vehicle,
7and towing, storage, and impound fees.

8Your own insurance, or the issuer of the credit card you use to
9pay for the car rental transaction, may cover all or part of your
10financial responsibility for the rented vehicle. You should check
11with your insurance company, or credit card issuer, to find out
12about your coverage and the amount of the deductible, if any, for
13which you may be liable.

14Further, if you use a credit card that provides coverage for your
15potential liability, you should check with the issuer to determine
16if you must first exhaust the coverage limits of your own insurance
17before the credit card coverage applies.

18The rental company will not hold you responsible if you buy a
19damage waiver. But a damage waiver will not protect you if (list
20exceptions).”


22(A) When the above notice is printed in the rental contract or
23holder in which the contract is placed, the following shall be printed
24immediately following the notice:


26“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ for every (day
27or week).”


29(B) When the above notice appears on a sign, the following
30shall appear immediately adjacent to the notice:


32“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ to $____ for
33every (day or week), depending upon the vehicle rented.”


35(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a rental
36company may sell a damage waiver subject to the following rate
37limitations for each full or partial 24-hour rental day for the damage
38waiver.

39(1) For rental vehicles that the rental company designates as an
40“economy car,” “subcompact car,” “compact car,” or another term
P64   1having similar meaning when offered for rental, or another vehicle
2having a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of nineteen thousand
3dollars ($19,000) or less, the rate shall not exceed nine dollars
4($9).

5(2) For rental vehicles that have a manufacturer’s suggested
6retail price from nineteen thousand one dollars ($19,001) to
7thirty-four thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($34,999),
8inclusive, and that are also either vehicles of next year’s model,
9or not older than the previous year’s model, the rate shall not
10exceed fifteen dollars ($15). For those rental vehicles older than
11the previous year’s model-year, the rate shall not exceed nine
12dollars ($9).

13(i) The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices described in
14subdivision (h) shall be adjusted annually to reflect changes from
15the previous year in the Consumer Price Index. For the purposes
16of this section, “Consumer Price Index” means the United States
17Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, for all items.

18(j) A rental company that disseminates in this state an
19advertisement containing a rental rate shall include in that
20advertisement a clearly readable statement of the charge for a
21damage waiver and a statement that a damage waiver is optional.

22(k) (1) A rental company shall not require the purchase of a
23damage waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or
24service.

25(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
26or coercive conduct to induce a renter to purchase the damage
27waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or service,
28including conduct such as, but not limited to, refusing to honor
29the renter’s reservation, limiting the availability of vehicles,
30requiring a deposit, or debiting or blocking the renter’s credit card
31account for a sum equivalent to a deposit if the renter declines to
32purchase the damage waiver, optional insurance, or another
33optional good or service.

34(l) (1) In the absence of express permission granted by the
35renter subsequent to damage to, or loss of, the vehicle, a rental
36company shall not seek to recover any portion of a claim arising
37out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle by processing a
38credit card charge or causing a debit or block to be placed on the
39renter’s credit card account.

P65   1(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
2or coercive tactics in attempting to recover or in recovering on any
3claim arising out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle.

4(m) (1) A customer facility charge may be collected by a rental
5company under the following circumstances:

6(A) Collection of the fee by the rental company is required by
7an airport operated by a city, a county, a city and county, a joint
8powers authority, a special district, or the San Diego County
9Regional Airport Authority formed pursuant to Division 17
10(commencing with Section 170000) of the Public Utilities Code.

11(B) The fee is calculated on a per contract basis or as provided
12in paragraph (2).

13(C) The fee is a user fee, not a tax imposed upon real property
14or an incidence of property ownership under Article XIII D of the
15California Constitution.

16(D) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (E), the fee
17shall be ten dollars ($10) per contract or the amount provided in
18paragraph (2).

19(E) The fee for a consolidated rental car facility shall be
20collected only from customers of on-airport rental car companies.
21If the fee imposed by the airport is for both a consolidated rental
22car facility and a common-use transportation system, the fee
23collected from customers of on-airport rental car companies shall
24be ten dollars ($10) or the amount provided in paragraph (2), but
25the fee imposed on customers of off-airport rental car companies
26who are transported on the common-use transportation system is
27proportionate to the costs of the common-use transportation system
28only. The fee is uniformly applied to each class of on-airport or
29off-airport customers, provided that the airport requires off-airport
30customers to use the common-use transportation system. For
31purposes of this subparagraph, “on-airport rental car company”
32means a rental company operating under an airport property lease
33or an airport concession or license agreement whose customers
34use or will use the consolidated rental car facility and the collection
35of the fee as to those customers is consistent with subparagraph
36(C).

37(F) Revenues collected from the fee do not exceed the reasonable
38costs of financing, designing, and constructing the facility and
39financing, designing, constructing, and operating any common-use
P66   1transportation system, or acquiring vehicles for use in that system,
2and shall not be used for any other purpose.

3(G) The fee is separately identified on the rental agreement.

4(H) This paragraph does not apply to fees which are governed
5by Section 50474.1 of the Government Code or Section 57.5 of
6the San Diego Unified Port District Act.

7(I) For any airport seeking to require rental car companies to
8collect an alternative customer facility charge pursuant to paragraph
9(2), the following provisions apply:

10(i) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
11the airport shall provide reports on an annual basis to the Senate
12and Assembly Committees on Judiciary detailing all of the
13following:

14(I) The total amount of the customer facility charge collected.

15(II) How the funds are being spent.

16(III) The amount of and reason for any changes in the airport’s
17budget or financial needs for the facility or common-use
18transportation system.

19(IV) Whether airport concession fees authorized by Section
201936.01 have increased since the prior report, if any.

21(ii) (I) The airport shall complete the audit required by
22subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) prior to initial
23collection of the customer facility charge. Notwithstanding Section
2410231.5 of the Government Code, copies of the audit shall be
25provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
26the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
27Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
28the airport’s Internet Web site.

29(II) Prior to any increase pursuant to paragraph (2), the airport
30shall update the information provided in the initial collection audit
31pursuant to subclause (I). Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the
32Government Code, copies of the updated audit shall be provided
33to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary, the
34Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate Committee
35on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s
36Internet Web site.

37(III) An audit shall be completed every three years after initial
38collection only if the customer facility charge is collected for the
39purpose of operating a common-use transportation system or to
40acquire vehicles for use in such a system pursuant to clause (ii) of
P67   1subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a). A regularly
2 conducted audit of airport finances that includes the customer
3facility charge information, that satisfies the requirements of
4subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), and is
5produced in accordance with the generally accepted accounting
6principles of the Government Accounting Standards Board, shall
7satisfy the requirements of this subclause. This obligation shall
8continue until the fee authorization becomes inoperative pursuant
9to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
10Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the
11information reported pursuant to this subclause shall be compiled
12into one document, shall be provided to the Assembly and Senate
13Committees on Judiciary, the Assembly Committee on
14Transportation, and the Senate Committee on Transportation and
15Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s Internet Web site
16accessible to the public. The information reported shall be
17contained within one easily accessible page contained within the
18airport’s Internet Web site.

19(IV) This section shall not be construed to require an airport to
20audit a common-use transportation system not financed by a
21customer facility charge and used for the purposes permitted
22pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of
23subdivision (a).

24(V) The airport shall post on the airport’s Internet Web site
25copies of the completed audits required by this clause for a period
26of six years following the audit’s completion.

27(iii) Use of the bonds shall be limited to construction and design
28of the consolidated rental car facility, terminal modifications, and
29operating costs of the common-use transportation system, as
30specified in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).

31(2) Any airport may require rental car companies to collect an
32 alternative customer facility charge under the following conditions:

33(A) The airport first conducts a publicly noticed hearing pursuant
34to the Ralph M. Brown Act (Chapter 9 (commencing with Section
3554950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government Code)
36to review the costs of financing the design and construction of a
37consolidated rental car facility and the design, construction, and
38operation of any common-use transportation system in which all
39of the following occur:

P68   1(i) The airport establishes the amount of revenue necessary to
2finance the reasonable cost to design and construct a consolidated
3rental car facility and to design, construct, and operate any
4common-use transportation system, or acquire vehicles for use in
5that system, based on evidence presented during the hearing.

6(ii) The airport finds, based on evidence presented during the
7hearing, that the fee authorized in paragraph (1) will not generate
8sufficient revenue to finance the reasonable costs to design and
9construct a consolidated rental car facility and to design, construct,
10and operate any common-use transportation system, or acquire
11vehicles for use in that system.

12(iii) The airport finds that the reasonable cost of the project
13requires the additional amount of revenue that would be generated
14by the proposed daily rate, including any rate increase, authorized
15pursuant to this paragraph.

16(iv) The airport outlines each of the following:

17(I) Steps it has taken to limit costs.

18(II) Other potential alternatives for meeting its revenue needs
19other than the collection of the fee.

20(III) The extent to which rental car companies or other
21businesses or individuals using the facility or common-use
22transportation system will pay for the costs associated with these
23facilities and systems other than the fee from rental customers.

24(B) The airport may not require the fee authorized in this
25paragraph to be collected at any time that the fee authorized in
26paragraph (1) of this subdivision is being collected.

27(C) Pursuant to the procedure set forth in this subdivision, the
28fee may be collected at a rate charged on a per-day basis subject
29to the following conditions:

30(i) Commencing January 1, 2011, the amount of the fee may
31not exceed six dollars ($6) per day.

32(ii) Commencing January 1, 2014, the amount of the fee may
33not exceed seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per day.

34(iii) Commencing January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the amount
35of the fee may not exceed nine dollars ($9) per day.

36(iv) At no time shall the fee authorized in this paragraph be
37collected from any customer for more than five days for each
38individual rental car contract.

39(v) An airport subject to this paragraph shall initiate the process
40for obtaining the authority to require or increase the alternative
P69   1fee no later than January 1, 2018. Any airport that obtains the
2authority to require or increase an alternative fee shall be authorized
3to continue collecting that fee until the fee authorization becomes
4inoperative pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of
5subdivision (a).

6(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including, but
7not limited to, Part 1 (commencing with Section 6001) to Part 1.7
8(commencing with Section 7280), inclusive, of Division 2 of the
9Revenue and Taxation Code, the fees collected pursuant to this
10section, or another law whereby a local agency operating an airport
11requires a rental car company to collect a facility financing fee
12from its customers, are not subject to sales, use, or transaction
13taxes.

14(n) (1) A rental company shall only advertise, quote, and charge
15a rental rate that includes the entire amount except taxes, a
16customer facility charge, if any, and a mileage charge, if any, that
17a renter must pay to hire or lease the vehicle for the period of time
18to which the rental rate applies. A rental company shall not charge
19in addition to the rental rate, taxes, a customer facility charge, if
20any, and a mileage charge, if any, any fee that is required to be
21paid by the renter as a condition of hiring or leasing the vehicle,
22including, but not limited to, required fuel or airport surcharges
23other than customer facility charges, nor a fee for transporting the
24renter to the location where the rented vehicle will be delivered to
25the renter.

26(2) In addition to the rental rate, taxes, customer facility charges,
27if any, and mileage charges, if any, a rental company may charge
28for an item or service provided in connection with a particular
29rental transaction if the renter could have avoided incurring the
30charge by choosing not to obtain or utilize the optional item or
31service. Items and services for which the rental company may
32impose an additional charge include, but are not limited to, optional
33insurance and accessories requested by the renter, service charges
34incident to the renter’s optional return of the vehicle to a location
35other than the location where the vehicle was hired or leased, and
36charges for refueling the vehicle at the conclusion of the rental
37transaction in the event the renter did not return the vehicle with
38as much fuel as was in the fuel tank at the beginning of the rental.
39A rental company also may impose an additional charge based on
40reasonable age criteria established by the rental company.

P70   1(3) A rental company shall not charge a fee for authorized
2drivers in addition to the rental charge for an individual renter.

3(4) If a rental company states a rental rate in print advertisement
4or in a telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation,
5the rental company shall disclose clearly in that advertisement or
6quotation the terms of mileage conditions relating to the advertised
7or quoted rental rate, including, but not limited to, to the extent
8applicable, the amount of mileage and gas charges, the number of
9miles for which no charges will be imposed, and a description of
10geographic driving limitations within the United States and Canada.

11(5) (A) When a rental rate is stated in an advertisement,
12quotation, or reservation in connection with a car rental at an airport
13where a customer facility charge is imposed, the rental company
14shall disclose clearly the existence and amount of the customer
15facility charge. For purposes of this subparagraph, advertisements
16include radio, television, other electronic media, and print
17advertisements. For purposes of this subparagraph, quotations and
18reservations include those that are telephonic, in-person, and
19computer-transmitted. If the rate advertisement is intended to
20include transactions at more than one airport imposing a customer
21facility charge, a range of fees may be stated in the advertisement.
22However, all rate advertisements that include car rentals at airport
23 destinations shall clearly and conspicuously include a toll-free
24telephone number whereby a customer can be told the specific
25amount of the customer facility charge to which the customer will
26be obligated.

27(B) If a person or entity other than a rental car company,
28including a passenger carrier or a seller of travel services, advertises
29or quotes a rate for a car rental at an airport where a customer
30facility charge is imposed, that person or entity shall, provided
31that he, she, or it is provided with information about the existence
32and amount of the fee, to the extent not specifically prohibited by
33federal law, clearly disclose the existence and amount of the fee
34in any telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation at
35the time of making an initial quotation of a rental rate and at the
36time of making a reservation of a rental car. If a rental car company
37provides the person or entity with rate and customer facility charge
38information, the rental car company is not responsible for the
39failure of that person or entity to comply with this subparagraph
40when quoting or confirming a rate to a third person or entity.

P71   1(6) If a rental company delivers a vehicle to a renter at a location
2other than the location where the rental company normally carries
3on its business, the rental company shall not charge the renter an
4amount for the rental for the period before the delivery of the
5vehicle. If a rental company picks up a rented vehicle from a renter
6at a location other than the location where the rental company
7normally carries on its business, the rental company shall not
8charge the renter an amount for the rental for the period after the
9renter notifies the rental company to pick up the vehicle.

10(o) A rental company shall not use, access, or obtain any
11information relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that
12 was obtained using electronic surveillance technology, except in
13the following circumstances:

14(1) (A) When the equipment is used by the rental company
15only for the purpose of locating a stolen, abandoned, or missing
16rental vehicle after one of the following:

17(i) The renter or law enforcement has informed the rental
18company that the vehicle is missing or has been stolen or
19abandoned.

20(ii) The rental vehicle has not been returned following one week
21after the contracted return date, or by one week following the end
22of an extension of that return date.

23(iii) The rental company discovers the rental vehicle has been
24stolen or abandoned, and, if stolen, it shall report the vehicle stolen
25to law enforcement by filing a stolen vehicle report, unless law
26enforcement has already informed the rental company that the
27vehicle is missing or has been stolen or abandoned.

28(B) If electronic surveillance technology is activated pursuant
29to subparagraph (A), a rental company shall maintain a record, in
30either electronic or written form, of information relevant to the
31activation of that technology. That information shall include the
32rental agreement, including the return date, and the date and time
33the electronic surveillance technology was activated. The record
34shall also include, if relevant, a record of written or other
35communication with the renter, including communications
36regarding extensions of the rental, police reports, or other written
37communication with law enforcement officials. The record shall
38be maintained for a period of at least 12 months from the time the
39record is created and shall be made available upon the renter’s
40request. The rental company shall maintain and furnish explanatory
P72   1codes necessary to read the record. A rental company shall not be
2required to maintain a record if electronic surveillance technology
3is activated to recover a rental vehicle that is stolen or missing at
4a time other than during a rental period.

5(2) In response to a specific request from law enforcement
6pursuant to a subpoena or search warrant.

7(3) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
8equipping rental vehicles with GPS-based technology that provides
9navigation assistance to the occupants of the rental vehicle, if the
10rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
11to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
12that technology, except for the purposes of discovering or repairing
13a defect in the technology and the information may then be used
14only for that purpose.

15(4) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
16equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
17that allows for the remote locking or unlocking of the vehicle at
18the request of the renter, if the rental company does not use, access,
19or obtain information relating to the renter’s use of the rental
20vehicle that was obtained using that technology, except as
21necessary to lock or unlock the vehicle.

22(5) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
23equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
24that allows the company to provide roadside assistance, such as
25towing, flat tire, or fuel services, at the request of the renter, if the
26rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
27to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
28that technology except as necessary to provide the requested
29 roadside assistance.

30(6) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
31obtaining, accessing, or using information from electronic
32surveillance technology for the sole purpose of determining the
33date and time the vehicle is returned to the rental company, and
34the total mileage driven and the vehicle fuel level of the returned
35vehicle. This paragraph, however, shall apply only after the renter
36has returned the vehicle to the rental company, and the information
37shall only be used for the purpose described in this paragraph.

38(p) A rental company shall not use electronic surveillance
39technology to track a renter in order to impose fines or surcharges
40relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle.

P73   1(q) A renter may bring an action against a rental company for
2the recovery of damages and appropriate equitable relief for a
3violation of this section. The prevailing party shall be entitled to
4recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.

5(r) A rental company that brings an action against a renter for
6loss due to theft of the vehicle shall bring the action in the county
7in which the renter resides or, if the renter is not a resident of this
8state, in the jurisdiction in which the renter resides.

9(s) A waiver of any of the provisions of this section shall be
10void and unenforceable as contrary to public policy.

11(t) (1) A rental company’s disclosure requirements shall be
12satisfied for renters who are enrolled in the rental company’s
13membership program if all of the following conditions are met:

14(A) Prior to the enrollee’s first rental as a participant in the
15program, the renter receives, in writing, the following:

16(i) All of the disclosures required by paragraph (1) of subdivision
17(g), including the terms and conditions of the rental agreement
18then in effect.

19(ii) An Internet Web site address, as well as a contact number
20or address, where the enrollee can learn of changes to the rental
21agreement or to the laws of this state governing rental agreements
22since the effective date of the rental company’s most recent
23restatement of the rental agreement and distribution of that
24restatement to its members.

25(B) At the commencement of each rental period, the renter is
26provided, on the rental record or the folder in which it is inserted,
27with a printed notice stating that he or she had either previously
28selected or declined an optional damage waiver and that the renter
29has the right to change preferences.

30(C) At the commencement of each rental period, the rental
31company provides, on the rearview mirror, a hanger on which a
32statement is printed, in a box, in at least 12-point boldface type,
33notifying the renter that the collision damage waiver offered by
34the rental company may be duplicative of coverage that the
35customer maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle
36insurance. If it is not feasible to hang the statement from the
37rearview mirror, it shall be hung from the steering wheel.

38The hanger shall provide the renter a box to initial if he or she
39(not his or her employer) has previously accepted or declined the
40collision damage waiver and that he or she now wishes to change
P74   1his or her decision to accept or decline the collision damage waiver,
2as follows:


4“â—» If I previously accepted the collision damage waiver, I now
5decline it.


6â—» If I previously declined the collision damage waiver, I now
7accept it.”


9The hanger shall also provide a box for the enrollee to indicate
10whether this change applies to this rental transaction only or to all
11future rental transactions. The hanger shall also notify the renter
12that he or she may make that change, prior to leaving the lot, by
13returning the form to an employee designated to receive the form
14who is present at the lot where the renter takes possession of the
15car, to receive any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

16(2) (A) This subdivision is not effective unless the employee
17designated pursuant to subparagraph (E) of paragraph (8) of
18 subdivision (a) is actually present at the required location.

19(B) This subdivision does not relieve the rental company from
20the disclosures required to be made within the text of a contract
21or holder in which the contract is placed; in or on an advertisement
22containing a rental rate; or in a telephonic, in-person, or
23computer-transmitted quotation or reservation.

24(u) The amendments made to this section during the 2001-02
25Regular Session of the Legislature do not affect litigation pending
26on or before January 1, 2003, alleging a violation of Section 22325
27of the Business and Professions Code as it read at the time the
28action was commenced.

29(v) This section shall become operative on January 1, 2020.

30begin insert

begin insertSEC. 5.7.end insert  

end insert

begin insertSection 1936 of the end insertbegin insertCivil Codeend insertbegin insert, as amended by
31Section 2 of Chapter 549 of the Statutes of 2013, is amended to
32read:end insert

33

1936.  

(a) For the purpose of this section, the following
34definitions shall apply:

35(1) “Rental company” means a person or entity in the business
36of renting passenger vehicles to the public.

37(2) “Renter” means any person in a manner obligated under a
38contract for the lease or hire of a passenger vehicle from a rental
39company for a period of less than 30 days.

begin insert

40(3) “Authorized driver” means all of the following:

end insert
begin insert

P75   1(A) The renter.

end insert
begin insert

2(B) The renter’s spouse if that person is a licensed driver and
3satisfies the rental company’s minimum age requirement.

end insert
begin delete

4(3) “Authorized driver” means (A) the renter, (B) the renter’s
5spouse if that person is a licensed driver and satisfies the rental
6company’s minimum age requirement, (C) the

end delete

7begin insert(C)end insertbegin insertend insertbegin insertTheend insert renter’s employer or coworker if he or she is engaged
8in business activity with the renter, is a licensed driver, and satisfies
9the rental company’s minimum age begin delete requirement, and (D) a person
10expressly listed by the rental company on the renter’s contract as
11an authorized driver.end delete
begin insert requirement.end insert

begin insert

12(D) A person expressly listed by the rental company on that
13renter’s contract as an authorized driver.

end insert

14(4) (A) “Customer facility charge” means any fee, including
15an alternative fee, required by an airport to be collected by a rental
16company from a renter for any of the following purposes:

17(i) To finance, design, and construct consolidated airport car
18rental facilities.

19(ii) To finance, design, construct, and operate common-use
20transportation systems that move passengers between airport
21terminals and those consolidated car rental facilities, and acquire
22vehicles for use in that system.

23(iii) To finance, design, and construct terminal modifications
24solely to accommodate and provide customer access to
25common-use transportation systems.

26(B) The aggregate amount to be collected shall not exceed the
27reasonable costs, as determined by an audit, by an independent
28auditor, paid for by the airport, to finance, design, and construct
29those facilities. The auditor shall independently examine and
30substantiate the necessity for and the amount of the customer
31facility charge, including whether the airport’s actual or projected
32costs are supported and justified, any steps the airport may take to
33limit costs, potential alternatives for meeting the airport’s revenue
34needs other than the collection of the fee, and whether and to what
35extent car rental companies or other businesses or individuals using
36the facility or common-use transportation system may pay for the
37costs associated with these facilities and systems other than the
38fee from rental customers, or whether the airport did not comply
39with any provision of this subparagraph. Copies of the audit shall
40be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
P76   1the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
2Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
3the airport’s Internet Web site. In the case of a customer facility
4charge for a common-use transportation system, the audit also
5shall consider the reasonable costs of providing the transit system
6or busing network pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A). Any
7audit required by this subparagraph may be included as a part of
8an audit of an airport’s finances. Notwithstanding clause (iii) of
9subparagraph (A), the fees designated as a customer facility charge
10shall not be used to pay for terminal expansion, gate expansion,
11runway expansion, changes in hours of operation, or changes in
12the number of flights arriving or departing from the airport.

13(C) Except as provided in subparagraph (D), the authorization
14given pursuant to this section for an airport to impose a customer
15facility charge shall become inoperative when the bonds used for
16financing are paid.

17(D) If a bond or other form of indebtedness is not used for
18financing, or the bond or other form of indebtedness used for
19financing has been paid, the Oakland International Airport may
20require the collection of a customer facility charge for a period of
21up to 10 years from the imposition of the charge for the purposes
22allowed by, and subject to the conditions imposed by, this section.

23(5) “Damage waiver” means a rental company’s agreement not
24to hold a renter liable for all or any portion of any damage or loss
25related to the rented vehicle, any loss of use of the rented vehicle,
26or any storage, impound, towing, or administrative charges.

27(6) “Electronic surveillance technology” means a technological
28method or system used to observe, monitor, or collect information,
29including telematics, Global Positioning System (GPS), wireless
30technology, or location-based technologies. “Electronic
31surveillance technology” does not include event data recorders
32(EDR), sensing and diagnostic modules (SDM), or other systems
33that are used either:

34(A) For the purpose of identifying, diagnosing, or monitoring
35functions related to the potential need to repair, service, or perform
36maintenance on the rental vehicle.

37(B) As part of the vehicle’s airbag sensing and diagnostic system
38in order to capture safety systems-related data for retrieval after a
39crash has occurred or in the event that the collision sensors are
P77   1activated to prepare the decisionmaking computer to make the
2determination to deploy or not to deploy the airbag.

3(7) “Estimated time for replacement” means the number of hours
4of labor, or fraction thereof, needed to replace damaged vehicle
5parts as set forth in collision damage estimating guides generally
6used in the vehicle repair business and commonly known as “crash
7books.”

8(8) “Estimated time for repair” means a good faith estimate of
9the reasonable number of hours of labor, or fraction thereof, needed
10to repair damaged vehicle parts.

11(9) “Membership program” means a service offered by a rental
12company that permits customers to bypass the rental counter and
13go directly to the car previously reserved. A membership program
14shall meet all of the following requirements:

15(A) The renter initiates enrollment by completing an application
16on which the renter can specify a preference for type of vehicle
17and acceptance or declination of optional services.

18(B) The rental company fully discloses, prior to the enrollee’s
19first rental as a participant in the program, all terms and conditions
20of the rental agreement as well as all required disclosures.

21(C) The renter may terminate enrollment at any time.

22(D) The rental company fully explains to the renter that
23designated preferences, as well as acceptance or declination of
24optional services, may be changed by the renter at any time for
25the next and future rentals.

26(E) An employee designated to receive the form specified in
27subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subdivisionbegin delete (t)end deletebegin insert (s)end insert is present
28at the lot where the renter takes possession of the car, to receive
29any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

30(10) “Passenger vehicle” means a passenger vehicle as defined
31in Section 465 of the Vehicle Code.

32(b) Except as limited by subdivision (c), a rental company and
33a renter may agree that the renter will be responsible for no more
34than all of the following:

35(1) Physical or mechanical damage to the rented vehicle up to
36its fair market value, as determined in the customary market for
37the sale of that vehicle, resulting from collision regardless of the
38cause of the damage.

39(2) Loss due to theft of the rented vehicle up to its fair market
40value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
P78   1vehicle, provided that the rental company establishes by clear and
2convincing evidence that the renter or the authorized driver failed
3to exercise ordinary care while in possession of the vehicle. In
4addition, the renter shall be presumed to have no liability for any
5loss due to theft if (A) an authorized driver has possession of the
6ignition key furnished by the rental company or an authorized
7driver establishes that the ignition key furnished by the rental
8company was not in the vehicle at the time of the theft, and (B) an
9authorized driver files an official report of the theft with the police
10or other law enforcement agency within 24 hours of learning of
11the theft and reasonably cooperates with the rental company and
12the police or other law enforcement agency in providing
13information concerning the theft. The presumption set forth in this
14paragraph is a presumption affecting the burden of proof which
15the rental company may rebut by establishing that an authorized
16driver committed, or aided and abetted the commission of, the
17theft.

18(3) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to its fair market
19value, as determined in the customary market for the sale of that
20vehicle, resulting from vandalism occurring after, or in connection
21with, the theft of the rented vehicle. However, the renter shall have
22no liability for any damage due to vandalism if the renter would
23have no liability for theft pursuant to paragraph (2).

24(4) Physical damage to the rented vehicle up to a total of five
25hundred dollars ($500) resulting from vandalism unrelated to the
26theft of the rented vehicle.

27(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
28by the rental company if the renter is liable for damage or loss.

29(6) An administrative charge, which shall include the cost of
30appraisal and all other costs and expenses incident to the damage,
31loss, repair, or replacement of the rented vehicle.

32(c) The total amount of the renter’s liability to the rental
33company resulting from damage to the rented vehicle shall not
34exceed the sum of the following:

35(1) The estimated cost of parts which the rental company would
36have to pay to replace damaged vehicle parts. All discounts and
37price reductions or adjustments that are or will be received by the
38rental company shall be subtracted from the estimate to the extent
39not already incorporated in the estimate, or otherwise promptly
40credited or refunded to the renter.

P79   1(2) The estimated cost of labor to replace damaged vehicle parts,
2which shall not exceed the product of (A) the rate for labor usually
3paid by the rental company to replace vehicle parts of the type that
4were damaged and (B) the estimated time for replacement. All
5discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are or will be
6received by the rental company shall be subtracted from the
7estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate, or
8otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

9(3) (A) The estimated cost of labor to repair damaged vehicle
10parts, which shall not exceed the lesser of the following:

11(i) The product of the rate for labor usually paid by the rental
12company to repair vehicle parts of the type that were damaged and
13the estimated time for repair.

14(ii) The sum of the estimated labor and parts costs determined
15under paragraphs (1) and (2) to replace the same vehicle parts.

16(B) All discounts and price reductions or adjustments that are
17or will be received by the rental company shall be subtracted from
18the estimate to the extent not already incorporated in the estimate,
19or otherwise promptly credited or refunded to the renter.

20(4) For the purpose of converting the estimated time for repair
21into the same units of time in which the rental rate is expressed, a
22day shall be deemed to consist of eight hours.

23(5) Actual charges for towing, storage, and impound fees paid
24by the rental company.

25(6) The administrative charge described in paragraph (6) of
26subdivision (b) shall not exceed (A) fifty dollars ($50) if the total
27estimated cost for parts and labor is more than one hundred dollars
28($100) up to and including five hundred dollars ($500), (B) one
29hundred dollars ($100) if the total estimated cost for parts and
30labor exceeds five hundred dollars ($500) up to and including one
31thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500), and (C) one hundred fifty
32dollars ($150) if the total estimated cost for parts and labor exceeds
33one thousand five hundred dollars ($1,500). An administrative
34charge shall not be imposed if the total estimated cost of parts and
35labor is one hundred dollars ($100) or less.

36(d) (1) The total amount of an authorized driver’s liability to
37the rental company, if any, for damage occurring during the
38authorized driver’s operation of the rented vehicle shall not exceed
39the amount of the renter’s liability under subdivision (c).

P80   1(2) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
2authorized driver an amount exceeding the renter’s liability under
3subdivision (c).

4(3) A claim against a renter resulting from damage or loss,
5excluding loss of use, to a rental vehicle shall be reasonably and
6rationally related to the actual loss incurred. A rental company
7shall mitigate damages where possible and shall not assert or collect
8a claim for physical damage which exceeds the actual costs of the
9repairs performed or the estimated cost of repairs, if the rental
10company chooses not to repair the vehicle, including all discounts
11and price reductions. However, if the vehicle is a total loss vehicle,
12the claim shall not exceed the total loss vehicle value established
13in accordance with procedures that are customarily used by
14insurance companies when paying claims on total loss vehicles,
15less the proceeds from salvaging the vehicle, if those proceeds are
16retained by the rental company.

17(4) If insurance coverage exists under the renter’s applicable
18personal or business insurance policy and the coverage is confirmed
19during regular business hours, the renter may require that the rental
20company submit any claims to the renter’s applicable personal or
21business insurance carrier. The rental company shall not make any
22written or oral representations that it will not present claims or
23negotiate with the renter’s insurance carrier. For purposes of this
24paragraph, confirmation of coverage includes telephone
25confirmation from insurance company representatives during
26regular business hours. Upon request of the renter and after
27confirmation of coverage, the amount of claim shall be resolved
28between the insurance carrier and the rental company. The renter
29shall remain responsible for payment to the rental car company
30for any loss sustained that the renter’s applicable personal or
31business insurance policy does not cover.

32(5) A rental company shall not recover from the renter or other
33authorized driver for an item described in subdivision (b) to the
34extent the rental company obtains recovery from another person.

35(6) This section applies only to the maximum liability of a renter
36or other authorized driver to the rental company resulting from
37damage to the rented vehicle and not to the liability of another
38person.

39(e) (1) Except as provided in subdivision (f), a damage waiver
40shall provide or, if not expressly stated in writing, shall be deemed
P81   1to provide that the renter has no liability forbegin delete aend delete damage, loss, loss
2of use, or a cost or expense incident thereto.

3(2) Except as provided in subdivision (f), every limitation,
4exception, or exclusion to a damage waiver is void and
5unenforceable.

6(f) A rental company may provide in the rental contract that a
7damage waiver does not apply under any of the following
8circumstances:

9(1) Damage or loss results from an authorized driver’s (A)
10intentional, willful, wanton, or reckless conduct, (B) operation of
11the vehicle under the influence of drugs or alcohol in violation of
12Section 23152 of the Vehicle Code, (C) towing or pushing
13anything, or (D) operation of the vehicle on an unpaved road if
14the damage or loss is a direct result of the road or driving
15conditions.

16(2) Damage or loss occurs while the vehicle is (A) used for
17commercial hire, (B) used in connection with conduct that could
18be properly charged as a felony, (C) involved in a speed test or
19contest or in driver training activity, (D) operated by a person other
20than an authorized driver, or (E) operated outside the United States.

21(3) An authorized driver who has (A) provided fraudulent
22information to the rental company, or (B) provided false
23information and the rental company would not have rented the
24vehicle if it had instead received true information.

25(g) (1) A rental company that offers or provides a damage
26waiver for any consideration in addition to the rental rate shall
27clearly and conspicuously disclose the following information in
28the rental contract or holder in which the contract is placed and,
29also, in signs posted at the place, such as the counter, where the
30renter signs the rental contract, and, for renters who are enrolled
31in the rental company’s membership program, in a sign that shall
32be posted in a location clearly visible to those renters as they enter
33the location where their reserved rental cars are parked or near the
34exit of the bus or other conveyance that transports the enrollee to
35a reserved car: (A) the nature of the renter’s liability, such as
36liability for all collision damage regardless of cause, (B) the extent
37of the renter’s liability, such as liability for damage or loss up to
38a specified amount, (C) the renter’s personal insurance policy or
39the credit card used to pay for the car rental transaction may
40provide coverage for all or a portion of the renter’s potential
P82   1liability, (D) the renter should consult with his or her insurer to
2determine the scope of insurance coverage, including the amount
3of the deductible, if any, for which the renter is obligated, (E) the
4renter may purchase an optional damage waiver to cover all
5liability, subject to whatever exceptions the rental company
6expressly lists that are permitted under subdivision (f), and (F) the
7range of charges for the damage waiver.

8(2) In addition to the requirements of paragraph (1), a rental
9company that offers or provides a damage waiver shall orally
10disclose to all renters, except those who are participants in the
11rental company’s membership program, that the damage waiver
12may be duplicative of coverage that the customer maintains under
13his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance. The renter’s
14receipt of the oral disclosure shall be demonstrated through the
15renter’s acknowledging receipt of the oral disclosure near that part
16of the contract where the renter indicates, by the renter’s own
17initials, his or her acceptance or declination of the damage waiver.
18Adjacent to that same part, the contract also shall state that the
19damage waiver is optional. Further, the contract for these renters
20shall include a clear and conspicuous written disclosure that the
21damage waiver may be duplicative of coverage that the customer
22maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle insurance.

23(3) The following is an example, for purposes of illustration
24and not limitation, of a notice fulfilling the requirements of
25paragraph (1) for a rental company that imposes liability on the
26renter for collision damage to the full value of the vehicle:

2728“NOTICE ABOUT YOUR FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
29AND OPTIONAL DAMAGE WAIVER
30

31You are responsible for all collision damage to the rented vehicle
32even if someone else caused it or the cause is unknown. You are
33responsible for the cost of repair up to the value of the vehicle,
34and towing, storage, and impound fees.

35Your own insurance, or the issuer of the credit card you use to
36pay for the car rental transaction, may cover all or part of your
37financial responsibility for the rented vehicle. You should check
38with your insurance company, or credit card issuer, to find out
39about your coverage and the amount of the deductible, if any, for
40which you may be liable.

P83   1Further, if you use a credit card that provides coverage for your
2potential liability, you should check with the issuer to determine
3if you must first exhaust the coverage limits of your own insurance
4before the credit card coverage applies.

5The rental company will not hold you responsible if you buy a
6damage waiver. But a damage waiver will not protect you if (list
7exceptions).”


9(A) When the above notice is printed in the rental contract or
10holder in which the contract is placed, the following shall be printed
11immediately following the notice:


13“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ for every (day
14or week).”


16(B) When the above notice appears on a sign, the following
17shall appear immediately adjacent to the notice:


19“The cost of an optional damage waiver is $____ to $____ for
20every (day or week), depending upon the vehicle rented.”


22(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a rental
23company may sell a damage waiver subject to the following rate
24limitations for each full or partial 24-hour rental day for the damage
25begin delete waiver.end deletebegin insert waiver:end insert

26(1) For rental vehicles that the rental company designates as an
27“economy car,”begin delete “subcompact car,”end delete “compact car,” or another term
28having similar meaningbegin delete when offered for rental, or another vehicle
29having a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of nineteen thousand
30dollars ($19,000) or less, the rate shall not exceed nine dollars
31($9).end delete
begin insert to the two smallest body-size categories of vehicles
32established by the Association of Car Rental Industry Systems
33Standards for North America, as of January 1, 2014, when offered
34for rental, the rate shall not exceed eleven dollars ($11).end insert

35(2) For rental vehicles thatbegin delete have a manufacturer’s suggested
36retail price from nineteen thousand one dollars ($19,001) to
37thirty-four thousand nine hundred ninety-nine dollars ($34,999),
38inclusive,end delete
begin insert the rental company designates as an “intermediate car,”
39“standard car,” or “full-size car,” or another term having similar
40meaning to the next three body-size categories of vehicles
P84   1established by the Association of Car Rental Industry Systems
2Standards for North America, as of January 1, 2014,end insert
and that are
3also either vehicles ofbegin delete next year’s model,end deletebegin insert the next model year,end insert or
4not older than the previous year’s model,begin insert when offered for rental,end insert
5 the rate shall not exceedbegin delete fifteen dollars ($15).end deletebegin insert seventeen dollars
6($17).end insert
Forbegin delete thoseend delete rental vehiclesbegin insert that areend insert older than the previous
7year’sbegin delete model-year,end deletebegin insert model year,end insert the rate shall not exceedbegin delete nine
8dollars ($9).end delete
begin insert eleven dollars ($11).end insert

begin delete

9(i) The manufacturer’s suggested retail prices described in
10subdivision (h) shall be adjusted annually to reflect changes from
11the previous year in the Consumer Price Index. For the purposes
12of this section, “Consumer Price Index” means the United States
13Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers, for all items.

14(j)

end delete

15begin insert(i)end insert A rental company that disseminates in this state an
16advertisement containing a rental rate shall include in that
17advertisement a clearly readable statement of the charge for a
18damage waiver and a statement that a damage waiver is optional.

begin delete

19(k)

end delete

20begin insert(j)end insert (1) A rental company shall not require the purchase of a
21damage waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or
22service.

23(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
24or coercive conduct to induce a renter to purchase the damage
25waiver, optional insurance, or another optional good or service,
26including conduct such as, but not limited to, refusing to honor
27the renter’s reservation, limiting the availability of vehicles,
28requiring a deposit, or debiting or blocking the renter’s credit card
29account for a sum equivalent to a deposit if the renter declines to
30purchase the damage waiver, optional insurance, or another
31optional good or service.

begin delete

32(l)

end delete

33begin insert(k)end insert (1) In the absence of express permission granted by the
34renter subsequent to damage to, or loss of, the vehicle, a rental
35company shall not seek to recover any portion of a claim arising
36out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle by processing a
37credit card charge or causing a debit or block to be placed on the
38renter’s credit card account.

P85   1(2) A rental company shall not engage in any unfair, deceptive,
2or coercive tactics in attempting to recover or in recovering on any
3claim arising out of damage to, or loss of, the rented vehicle.

begin delete

4(m)

end delete

5begin insert(l)end insert (1) A customer facility charge may be collected by a rental
6company under the following circumstances:

7(A) Collection of the fee by the rental company is required by
8an airport operated by a city, a county, a city and county, a joint
9powers authority, a special district, or the San Diego County
10Regional Airport Authority formed pursuant to Division 17
11(commencing with Section 170000) of the Public Utilities Code.

12(B) The fee is calculated on a per contract basis or as provided
13in paragraph (2).

14(C) The fee is a user fee, not a tax imposed upon real property
15or anbegin delete incidenceend deletebegin insert incidentend insert of property ownership under Article XIII D
16of the California Constitution.

17(D) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph (E), the fee
18shall be ten dollars ($10) per contract or the amount provided in
19paragraph (2).

20(E) The fee for a consolidated rental car facility shall be
21collected only from customers of on-airport rental car companies.
22If the fee imposed by the airport is for both a consolidated rental
23car facility and a common-use transportation system, the fee
24collected from customers of on-airport rental car companies shall
25be ten dollars ($10) or the amount provided in paragraph (2), but
26the fee imposed on customers of off-airport rental car companies
27who are transported on the common-use transportation system is
28proportionate to the costs of the common-use transportation system
29only. The fee is uniformly applied to each class of on-airport or
30off-airport customers, provided that the airport requires off-airport
31customers to use the common-use transportation system. For
32purposes of this subparagraph, “on-airport rental car company”
33means a rental company operating under an airport property lease
34or an airport concession or license agreement whose customers
35use or will use the consolidated rental car facility and the collection
36of the fee as to those customers is consistent with subparagraph
37(C).

38(F) Revenues collected from the fee do not exceed the reasonable
39costs of financing, designing, and constructing the facility and
40financing, designing, constructing, and operating any common-use
P86   1transportation system, or acquiring vehicles for use in that system,
2and shall not be used for any other purpose.

3(G) The fee is separately identified on the rental agreement.

4(H) This paragraph does not apply to fees which are governed
5by Section 50474.1 of the Government Code or Section 57.5 of
6the San Diego Unified Port Districtbegin delete Act.end deletebegin insert Act (Chapter 67 of the
7First Extraordinary Session of the Statutes of 1962).end insert

8(I) For any airport seeking to require rental car companies to
9collect an alternative customer facility charge pursuant to paragraph
10(2), the following provisions apply:

11(i) Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code,
12the airport shall provide reports on an annual basis to the Senate
13and Assembly Committees on Judiciary detailing all of the
14following:

15(I) The total amount of the customer facility charge collected.

16(II) How the funds are being spent.

17(III) The amount of and reason for any changes in the airport’s
18budget or financial needs for the facility or common-use
19transportation system.

20(IV) Whether airport concession fees authorized by Section
211936.01 have increased since the prior report, if any.

22(ii) (I) The airport shall complete the audit required by
23subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a) prior tobegin insert theend insert
24 initial collection of the customer facility charge. Notwithstanding
25Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, copies of the audit shall
26be provided to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary,
27the Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate
28Committee on Transportation and Housing and shall be posted on
29the airport’s Internet Web site.

30(II) Prior to any increase pursuant to paragraph (2), the airport
31shall update the information provided in the initial collection audit
32pursuant to subclause (I). Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the
33Government Code, copies of the updated audit shall be provided
34to the Assembly and Senate Committees on Judiciary, the
35Assembly Committee on Transportation, and the Senate Committee
36on Transportation andbegin delete Housingend deletebegin insert Housing,end insert and shall be posted on
37the airport’s Internet Web site.

38(III) An audit shall be completed every three years after initial
39collection only if the customer facility charge is collected for the
40purpose of operating a common-use transportation system or to
P87   1acquire vehicles for use inbegin delete such aend deletebegin insert theend insert system pursuant to clause
2(ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a). A
3regularly conducted audit of airport finances that includes the
4customer facility charge information, that satisfies the requirements
5of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a), and is
6produced in accordance with the generally accepted accounting
7principles of the Government Accounting Standards Board, shall
8satisfy the requirements of this subclause. This obligation shall
9continue until the fee authorization becomes inoperative pursuant
10to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).
11Notwithstanding Section 10231.5 of the Government Code, the
12information reported pursuant to this subclause shall be compiled
13into one document, shall be provided to the Assembly and Senate
14Committees on Judiciary, the Assembly Committee on
15Transportation, and the Senate Committee on Transportation and
16Housing and shall be posted on the airport’s Internet Web site
17accessible to the public. The information reported shall be
18contained within one easily accessible page contained within the
19airport’s Internet Web site.

20(IV) This section shall not be construed to require an airport to
21audit a common-use transportation system not financed by a
22customer facility charge and used for the purposes permitted
23pursuant to clause (ii) of subparagraph (A) of paragraph (4) of
24subdivision (a).

25(V) The airport shall post on the airport’s Internet Web site
26copies of the completed audits required by this clause for a period
27of six years following the audit’s completion.

28(iii) Use of the bonds shall be limited to construction and design
29of the consolidated rental car facility, terminal modifications, and
30operating costs of the common-use transportation system, as
31specified in paragraph (4) of subdivision (a).

32(2) Any airport may require rental car companies to collect an
33alternative customer facility charge under the following conditions:

34(A) The airport first conducts a publicly noticed hearing pursuant
35to the Ralph M. Brown Act (Chapter 9 (commencing with Section
3654950) of Part 1 of Division 2 of Title 5 of the Government Code)
37to review the costs of financing the design and construction of a
38consolidated rental car facility and the design, construction, and
39operation of any common-use transportation system in which all
40of the following occur:

P88   1(i) The airport establishes the amount of revenue necessary to
2finance the reasonable cost to design and construct a consolidated
3rental car facility and to design, construct, and operate any
4common-use transportation system, or acquire vehicles for use in
5that system, based on evidence presented during the hearing.

6(ii) The airport finds, based on evidence presented during the
7hearing, that the fee authorized in paragraph (1) will not generate
8sufficient revenue to finance the reasonable costs to design and
9construct a consolidated rental car facility and to design, construct,
10and operate any common-use transportation system, or acquire
11vehicles for use in that system.

12(iii) The airport finds that the reasonable cost of the project
13requires the additional amount of revenue that would be generated
14by the proposed daily rate, including any rate increase, authorized
15pursuant to this paragraph.

16(iv) The airport outlines each of the following:

17(I) Steps it has taken to limit costs.

18(II) Other potential alternatives for meeting its revenue needs
19other than the collection of the fee.

20(III) The extent to which rental car companies or other
21businesses or individuals using the facility or common-use
22transportation system will pay for the costs associated with these
23facilities and systems other than the fee from rental customers.

24(B) The airport may not require the fee authorized in this
25paragraph to be collected at any time that the fee authorized in
26paragraph (1) of this subdivision is being collected.

27(C) Pursuant to the procedure set forth in this subdivision, the
28fee may be collected at a rate charged on a per-day basis subject
29to the following conditions:

30(i) Commencing January 1, 2011, the amount of the fee may
31not exceed six dollars ($6) per day.

32(ii) Commencing January 1, 2014, the amount of the fee may
33not exceed seven dollars and fifty cents ($7.50) per day.

34(iii) Commencing January 1, 2017, and thereafter, the amount
35of the fee may not exceed nine dollars ($9) per day.

36(iv) At no time shall the fee authorized in this paragraph be
37collected from any customer for more than five days for each
38individual rental car contract.

39(v) An airport subject to this paragraph shall initiate the process
40for obtaining the authority to require or increase the alternative
P89   1fee no later than January 1, 2018. Any airport that obtains the
2authority to require or increase an alternative fee shall be authorized
3to continue collecting that fee until the fee authorization becomes
4inoperative pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph (4) of
5subdivision (a).

6(3) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, including, but
7not limited to, Part 1 (commencing with Section 6001) to Part 1.7
8(commencing with Section 7280), inclusive, of Division 2 of the
9Revenue and Taxation Code, the fees collected pursuant to this
10section, or another law whereby a local agency operating an airport
11requires a rental car company to collect a facility financing fee
12from its customers, are not subject to sales, use, or transaction
13taxes.

begin delete

14(n)

end delete

15begin insert(m)end insert (1) A rental company shall only advertise, quote, and charge
16a rental rate that includes the entire amount except taxes, a
17customer facility charge, if any, and a mileage charge, if any, that
18a renter must pay to hire or lease the vehicle for the period of time
19to which the rental rate applies. A rental company shall not charge
20in addition to the rental rate, taxes, a customer facility charge, if
21any, and a mileage charge, if any, any fee that is required to be
22paid by the renter as a condition of hiring or leasing the vehicle,
23including, but not limited to, required fuel or airport surcharges
24other than customer facility charges, nor a fee for transporting the
25renter to the location where the rented vehicle will be delivered to
26the renter.

27(2) In addition to the rental rate, taxes, customer facility charges,
28if any, and mileage charges, if any, a rental company may charge
29for an item or service provided in connection with a particular
30rental transaction if the renter could have avoided incurring the
31charge by choosing not to obtain or utilize the optional item or
32service. Items and services for which the rental company may
33impose an additional charge include, but are not limited to, optional
34insurance and accessories requested by the renter, service charges
35incident to the renter’s optional return of the vehicle to a location
36other than the location where the vehicle was hired or leased, and
37charges for refueling the vehicle at the conclusion of the rental
38transaction in the event the renter did not return the vehicle with
39as much fuel as was in the fuel tank at the beginning of the rental.
P90   1A rental company also may impose an additional charge based on
2reasonable age criteria established by the rental company.

3(3) A rental company shall not charge a fee for authorized
4drivers in addition to the rental charge for an individual renter.

5(4) If a rental company states a rental rate in print advertisement
6or in a telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation,
7the rental company shall disclose clearly in that advertisement or
8quotation the terms of mileage conditions relating to the advertised
9or quoted rental rate, including, but not limited to, to the extent
10applicable, the amount of mileage and gas charges, the number of
11miles for which no charges will be imposed, and a description of
12geographic driving limitations within the United States and Canada.

13(5) (A) When a rental rate is stated in an advertisement,
14quotation, or reservation in connection with a car rental at an airport
15where a customer facility charge is imposed, the rental company
16shall disclose clearly the existence and amount of the customer
17facility charge. For purposes of this subparagraph, advertisements
18include radio, television, other electronic media, and print
19advertisements. For purposes of this subparagraph, quotations and
20reservations include those that are telephonic, in-person, and
21computer-transmitted. If the rate advertisement is intended to
22include transactions at more than one airport imposing a customer
23facility charge, a range of fees may be stated in the advertisement.
24However, all rate advertisements that include car rentals at airport
25destinations shall clearly and conspicuously include a toll-free
26telephone number whereby a customer can be told the specific
27amount of the customer facility charge to which the customer will
28be obligated.

29(B) If a person or entity other than a rental car company,
30including a passenger carrier or a seller of travel services, advertises
31or quotes a rate for a car rental at an airport where a customer
32facility charge is imposed, that person or entity shall, provided
33that he, she, or it is provided with information about the existence
34and amount of the fee, to the extent not specifically prohibited by
35federal law, clearly disclose the existence and amount of the fee
36in any telephonic, in-person, or computer-transmitted quotation at
37the time of making an initial quotation of a rental rate and at the
38time of making a reservation of a rental car. If a rental car company
39provides the person or entity with rate and customer facility charge
40information, the rental car company is not responsible for the
P91   1failure of that person or entity to comply with this subparagraph
2when quoting or confirming a rate to a third person or entity.

3(6) If a rental company delivers a vehicle to a renter at a location
4other than the location where the rental company normally carries
5on its business, the rental company shall not charge the renter an
6amount for the rental for the period before the delivery of the
7vehicle. If a rental company picks up a rented vehicle from a renter
8at a location other than the location where the rental company
9normally carries on its business, the rental company shall not
10charge the renter an amount for the rental for the period after the
11renter notifies the rental company to pick up the vehicle.

begin delete

12(o)

end delete

13begin insert(n)end insert A rental company shall not use, access, or obtain any
14information relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that
15was obtained using electronic surveillance technology, except in
16the following circumstances:

17(1) (A) When the equipment is used by the rental company
18only for the purpose of locating a stolen, abandoned, or missing
19rental vehicle after one of the following:

20(i) The renter or law enforcement has informed the rental
21company that the vehicle is missing or has been stolen or
22abandoned.

23(ii) The rental vehicle has not been returned following one week
24after the contracted return date, or by one week following the end
25of an extension of that return date.

26(iii) The rental company discovers the rental vehicle has been
27stolen or abandoned, and, if stolen, it shall report the vehicle stolen
28to law enforcement by filing a stolen vehicle report, unless law
29enforcement has already informed the rental company that the
30vehicle is missing or has been stolen or abandoned.

31(B) If electronic surveillance technology is activated pursuant
32to subparagraph (A), a rental company shall maintain a record, in
33either electronic or written form, of information relevant to the
34activation of that technology. That information shall include the
35rental agreement, including the return date, and the date and time
36the electronic surveillance technology was activated. The record
37shall also include, if relevant, a record of written or other
38communication with the renter, including communications
39regarding extensions of the rental, police reports, or other written
40communication with law enforcement officials. The record shall
P92   1be maintained for a period of at least 12 months from the time the
2record is created and shall be made available upon the renter’s
3request. The rental company shall maintain and furnish explanatory
4codes necessary to read the record. A rental company shall not be
5required to maintain a record if electronic surveillance technology
6is activated to recover a rental vehicle that is stolen or missing at
7a time other than during a rental period.

8(2) In response to a specific request from law enforcement
9pursuant to a subpoena or search warrant.

10(3) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
11equipping rental vehicles with GPS-based technology that provides
12navigation assistance to the occupants of the rental vehicle, if the
13rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
14to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
15that technology, except for the purposes of discovering or repairing
16a defect in the technology and the information may then be used
17only for that purpose.

18(4) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
19equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
20that allows for the remote locking or unlocking of the vehicle at
21the request of the renter, if the rental company does not use, access,
22or obtain information relating to the renter’s use of the rental
23vehicle that was obtained using that technology, except as
24necessary to lock or unlock the vehicle.

25(5) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
26equipping rental vehicles with electronic surveillance technology
27that allows the company to provide roadside assistance, such as
28towing, flat tire, or fuel services, at the request of the renter, if the
29rental company does not use, access, or obtain information relating
30to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle that was obtained using
31that technology except as necessary to provide the requested
32roadside assistance.

33(6) This subdivision does not prohibit a rental company from
34obtaining, accessing, or using information from electronic
35surveillance technology for the sole purpose of determining the
36date and time the vehicle is returned to the rental company, and
37the total mileage driven and the vehicle fuel level of the returned
38vehicle. This paragraph, however, shall apply only after the renter
39has returned the vehicle to the rental company, and the information
40shall only be used for the purpose described in this paragraph.

begin delete

P93   1(p)

end delete

2begin insert(o)end insert A rental company shall not use electronic surveillance
3technology to track a renter in order to impose fines or surcharges
4relating to the renter’s use of the rental vehicle.

begin delete

5(q)

end delete

6begin insert(p)end insert A renter may bring an action against a rental company for
7the recovery of damages and appropriate equitable relief for a
8violation of this section. The prevailing party shall be entitled to
9recover reasonable attorney’s fees and costs.

begin delete

10(r)

end delete

11begin insert(q)end insert A rental company that brings an action against a renter for
12loss due to theft of the vehicle shall bring the action in the county
13in which the renter resides or, if the renter is not a resident of this
14state, in the jurisdiction in which the renter resides.

begin delete

15(s)

end delete

16begin insert(r)end insert A waiver of any of the provisions of this section shall be
17void and unenforceable as contrary to public policy.

begin delete

18(t)

end delete

19begin insert(s)end insert (1) A rental company’s disclosure requirements shall be
20satisfied for renters who are enrolled in the rental company’s
21membership program if all of the following conditions are met:

22(A) Prior to the enrollee’s first rental as a participant in the
23program, the renter receives, in writing, the following:

24(i) All of the disclosures required by paragraph (1) of subdivision
25(g), including the terms and conditions of the rental agreement
26then in effect.

27(ii) An Internet Web site address, as well as a contact number
28or address, where the enrollee can learn of changes to the rental
29agreement or to the laws of this state governing rental agreements
30since the effective date of the rental company’s most recent
31restatement of the rental agreement and distribution of that
32restatement to its members.

33(B) At the commencement of each rental period, the renter is
34provided, on the rental record or the folder in which it is inserted,
35with a printed notice stating that he or she had either previously
36selected or declined an optional damage waiver and that the renter
37has the right to change preferences.

38(C) At the commencement of each rental period, the rental
39company provides, on the rearview mirror, a hanger on which a
40statement is printed, in a box, in at least 12-point boldface type,
P94   1notifying the renter that the collision damage waiver offered by
2the rental company may be duplicative of coverage that the
3customer maintains under his or her own policy of motor vehicle
4insurance. If it is not feasible to hang the statement from the
5rearview mirror, it shall be hung from the steering wheel.

6The hanger shall provide the renter a box to initial if he or she
7(not his or her employer) has previously accepted or declined the
8collision damage waiver and that he or she now wishes to change
9his or her decision to accept or decline the collision damage waiver,
10as follows:


begin delete

12“â—» If

end delete

13begin insert“Ifend insert I previously accepted the collision damage waiver, I now
14decline it.

begin delete

15â—» If

end delete

16begin insertIfend insert I previously declined the collision damage waiver, I now accept
17it.”


19The hanger shall also provide a box for the enrollee to indicate
20whether this change applies to this rental transaction only or to all
21future rental transactions. The hanger shall also notify the renter
22 that he or she may make that change, prior to leaving the lot, by
23returning the form to an employee designated to receive the form
24who is present at the lot where the renter takes possession of the
25car, to receive any change in the rental agreement from the renter.

26(2) (A) This subdivision is not effective unless the employee
27designated pursuant to subparagraph (E) of paragraph (8) of
28subdivision (a) is actually present at the required location.

29(B) This subdivision does not relieve the rental company from
30the disclosures required to be made within the text of a contract
31or holder in which the contract is placed; in or on an advertisement
32containing a rental rate; or in a telephonic, in-person, or
33computer-transmitted quotation or reservation.

begin delete

34(u)

end delete

35begin insert(t)end insert The amendments made to this section during the 2001-02
36Regular Session of the Legislature do not affect litigation pending
37on or before January 1, 2003, alleging a violation of Section 22325
38of the Business and Professions Code as it read at the time the
39action was commenced.

begin delete

40(v)

end delete

P95   1begin insert(u)end insert This section shall become operative on January 1,begin delete 2015end delete
2begin insert 2020end insert.

3

SEC. 6.  

Section 1942.2 of the Civil Code is amended to read:

4

1942.2.  

A tenant who has made a payment to a utility pursuant
5to Section 777, 777.1, 10009, 10009.1, 12822, 12822.1, 16481, or
616481.1 of the Public Utilities Code, or to a district pursuant to
7Section 60371 of the Government Code, may deduct the payment
8from the rent as provided in that section.

9

SEC. 7.  

Section 415.46 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
10amended to read:

11

415.46.  

(a) In addition to the service of a summons and
12complaint in an action for unlawful detainer upon a tenant and
13subtenant, if any, as prescribed by this article, a prejudgment claim
14of right to possession may also be served on any person who
15appears to be or who may claim to have occupied the premises at
16the time of the filing of the action. Service upon occupants shall
17be made pursuant to subdivision (c) by serving a copy of a
18prejudgment claim of right to possession, as specified in
19subdivision (f), attached to a copy of the summons and complaint
20at the same time service is made upon the tenant and subtenant, if
21any.

22(b) Service of the prejudgment claim of right to possession in
23this manner shall be effected by a marshal, sheriff, or registered
24process server.

25(c) (1) When serving the summons and complaint upon a tenant
26and subtenant, if any, the marshal, sheriff, or registered process
27server shall make a reasonably diligent effort to ascertain whether
28there are other adult occupants of the premises who are not named
29in the summons and complaint by inquiring of the person or
30persons who are being personally served, or any person of suitable
31age and discretion who appears to reside upon the premises,
32whether there are other occupants of the premises.

33(2) If the identity of such an occupant is disclosed to the officer
34or process server and the occupant is present at the premises, the
35officer or process server shall serve that occupant with a copy of
36the prejudgment claim of right to possession attached to a copy of
37the summons and complaint. If personal service cannot be made
38upon that occupant at that time, service may be effected by leaving
39a copy of a prejudgment claim of right to possession attached to
40a copy of the summons and complaint addressed to that occupant
P96   1with a person of suitable age and discretion at the premises, affixing
2the same so that it is not readily removable in a conspicuous place
3on the premises in a manner most likely to give actual notice to
4that occupant, and sending the same addressed to that occupant
5by first-class mail.

6(3) In addition to the service on an identified occupant, or if no
7occupant is disclosed to the officer or process server, or if
8substituted service is made upon the tenant and subtenant, if any,
9the officer or process server shall serve a prejudgment claim of
10right to possession for all other persons who may claim to occupy
11the premises at the time of the filing of the action by leaving a
12copy of a prejudgment claim of right to possession attached to a
13copy of the summons and complaint at the premises at the same
14 time service is made upon the tenant and subtenant, if any, affixing
15the same so that it is not readily removable in a conspicuous place
16on the premises so that it is likely to give actual notice to an
17occupant, and sending the same addressed to “all occupants in care
18of the named tenant” to the premises by first-class mail.

19(4) The person serving process shall state the date of service on
20the prejudgment claim of right to possession form. However, the
21absence of the date of service on the prejudgment claim of right
22to possession does not invalidate the claim.

23(d) Proof of service under this section shall be filed with the
24court and shall include a statement that service was made pursuant
25to this section. Service on occupants in accordance with this section
26shall not alter or affect service upon the tenant or subtenant, if any.

27(e) (1) If an owner or his or her agent has directed and obtained
28service of a prejudgment claim of right to possession in accordance
29with this section, no occupant of the premises, whether or not that
30occupant is named in the judgment for possession, may object to
31the enforcement of that judgment as prescribed in Section 1174.3.

32(2) In any action for unlawful detainer resulting from a
33foreclosure sale of a rental housing unit pursuant to Section 1161a,
34paragraph (1) shall not limit the right of any tenant or subtenant
35of the property to file a prejudgment claim of right of possession
36pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 1174.25 at any time before
37judgment, or to object to enforcement of a judgment for possession
38as prescribed in Section 1174.3, regardless of whether the tenant
39or subtenant was served with a prejudgment claim of right to
40possession.

P97   1(f) The prejudgment claim of right to possession shall be made
2on the following form:

P98   1PRINTER PLEASE NOTE: TIP-IN MATERIAL TO BE
2INSERTED

[5 pages]

P103  1

SEC. 8.  

Section 1174.25 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
2amended to read:

3

1174.25.  

(a) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), an
4occupant who is served with a prejudgment claim of right to
5possession in accordance with Section 415.46 may file a claim as
6prescribed in Section 415.46, with the court within 10 days of the
7date of service of the prejudgment claim of right to possession as
8shown on the return of service, which period shall include Saturday
9and Sunday but exclude all other judicial holidays. If the last day
10for filing the claim falls on a Saturday or Sunday, the filing period
11shall be extended to and including the next court day. Filing the
12prejudgment claim of right to possession shall constitute a general
13appearance for which a fee shall be collected as provided in Section
1470614 of the Government Code. Section 68511.3 of the
15 Government Code applies to the prejudgment claim of right to
16possession.

17(2) In an action as described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e)
18of Section 415.46, an occupant may file a prejudgment claim of
19right to possession at any time before judgment is entered.

20(b) At the time of filing, the claimant shall be added as a
21defendant in the action for unlawful detainer and the clerk shall
22notify the plaintiff that the claimant has been added as a defendant
23in the action by mailing a copy of the claim filed with the court to
24the plaintiff with a notation so indicating. The claimant shall
25answer or otherwise respond to the summons and complaint within
26five days, including Saturdays and Sundays, but excluding all other
27judicial holidays, after filing the prejudgment claim of possession.
28Thereafter, the name of the claimant shall be added to any pleading,
29filing or form filed in the action for unlawful detainer.

30

SEC. 9.  

Section 1174.3 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
31amended to read:

32

1174.3.  

(a) (1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), unless a
33prejudgment claim of right to possession has been served upon
34occupants in accordance with Section 415.46, any occupant not
35named in the judgment for possession who occupied the premises
36on the date of the filing of the action may object to enforcement
37of the judgment against that occupant by filing a claim of right to
38possession as prescribed in this section. A claim of right to
39possession may be filed at any time after service or posting of the
40writ of possession pursuant to subdivision (a) or (b) of Section
P104  1715.020, up to and including the time at which the levying officer
2returns to effect the eviction of those named in the judgment of
3possession. Filing the claim of right to possession shall constitute
4a general appearance for which a fee shall be collected as provided
5in Section 70614 of the Government Code. Section 68511.3 of the
6Government Code applies to the claim of right to possession. An
7occupant or tenant who is named in the action shall not be required
8to file a claim of right to possession to protect that occupant’s right
9to possession of the premises.

10(2) In an action as described in paragraph (2) of subdivision (e)
11of Section 415.46, an occupant may file a claim of right to
12possession at any time up to and including the time at which the
13levying officer returns to effect the eviction of those named in the
14judgment of possession, without regard to whether a prejudgment
15claim of right to possession has been served upon the occupant.

16(b) The court issuing the writ of possession of real property
17shall set a date or dates when the court will hold a hearing to
18determine the validity of objections to enforcement of the judgment
19specified in subdivision (a). An occupant of the real property for
20which the writ is issued may make an objection to eviction to the
21levying officer at the office of the levying officer or at the premises
22at the time of the eviction.

23If a claim of right to possession is completed and presented to
24the sheriff, marshal, or other levying officer, the officer shall
25forthwith (1) stop the eviction of occupants at the premises, and
26(2) provide a receipt or copy of the completed claim of right of
27possession to the claimant indicating the date and time the
28completed form was received, and (3) deliver the original
29completed claim of right to possession to the court issuing the writ
30of possession of real property.

31(c) A claim of right to possession is effected by any of the
32following:

33(1) Presenting a completed claim form in person with
34identification to the sheriff, marshal, or other levying officer as
35prescribed in this section, and delivering to the court within two
36court days after its presentation, an amount equal to 15 days’ rent
37together with the appropriate fee or form for proceeding in forma
38pauperis. Upon receipt of a claim of right to possession, the sheriff,
39marshal, or other levying officer shall indicate thereon the date
40and time of its receipt and forthwith deliver the original to the
P105  1issuing court and a receipt or copy of the claim to the claimant and
2notify the plaintiff of that fact. Immediately upon receipt of an
3amount equal to 15 days’ rent and the appropriate fee or form for
4proceeding in forma pauperis, the court shall file the claim of right
5to possession and serve an endorsed copy with the notice of the
6hearing date on the plaintiff and the claimant by first-class mail.
7The court issuing the writ of possession shall set and hold a hearing
8on the claim not less than five nor more than 15 days after the
9claim is filed with the court.

10(2) Presenting a completed claim form in person with
11identification to the sheriff, marshal, or other levying officer as
12prescribed in this section, and delivering to the court within two
13court days after its presentation, the appropriate fee or form for
14proceeding in forma pauperis without delivering the amount
15equivalent to 15 days’ rent. In this case, the court shall immediately
16set a hearing on the claim to be held on the fifth day after the filing
17is completed. The court shall notify the claimant of the hearing
18date at the time the claimant completes the filing by delivering to
19the court the appropriate fee or form for proceeding in forma
20pauperis, and shall notify the plaintiff of the hearing date by
21first-class mail. Upon receipt of a claim of right to possession, the
22sheriff, marshal, or other levying officer shall indicate thereon the
23date and time of its receipt and forthwith deliver the original to
24the issuing court and a receipt or copy of the claim to the claimant
25and notify the plaintiff of that fact.

26(d) At the hearing, the court shall determine whether there is a
27valid claim of possession by the claimant who filed the claim, and
28the court shall consider all evidence produced at the hearing,
29including, but not limited to, the information set forth in the claim.
30The court may determine the claim to be valid or invalid based
31upon the evidence presented at the hearing. The court shall
32determine the claim to be invalid if the court determines that the
33claimant is an invitee, licensee, guest, or trespasser. If the court
34determines the claim is invalid, the court shall order the return to
35the claimant of the amount of the 15 days’ rent paid by the
36claimant, if that amount was paid pursuant to paragraph (1) or (3)
37of subdivision (c), less a pro rata amount for each day that
38enforcement of the judgment was delayed by reason of making
39the claim of right to possession, which pro rata amount shall be
40paid to the landlord. If the court determines the claim is valid, the
P106  1amount equal to 15 days’ rent paid by the claimant shall be returned
2immediately to the claimant.

3(e) If, upon hearing, the court determines that the claim is valid,
4then the court shall order further proceedings as follows:

5(1) If the unlawful detainer is based upon a curable breach, and
6the claimant was not previously served with a proper notice, if any
7notice is required, then the required notice may at the plaintiff’s
8discretion be served on the claimant at the hearing or thereafter.
9If the claimant does not cure the breach within the required time,
10then a supplemental complaint may be filed and served on the
11claimant as defendant if the plaintiff proceeds against the claimant
12in the same action. For the purposes of this section only, service
13of the required notice, if any notice is required, and of the
14supplemental complaint may be made by first-class mail addressed
15to the claimant at the subject premises or upon his or her attorney
16of record and, in either case, Section 1013 shall otherwise apply.
17Further proceedings on the merits of the claimant’s continued right
18to possession after service of the Summons and Supplemental
19Complaint as prescribed by this subdivision shall be conducted
20pursuant to this chapter.

21(2) In all other cases, the court shall deem the unlawful detainer
22Summons and Complaint to be amended on their faces to include
23the claimant as defendant, service of the Summons and Complaint,
24as thus amended, may at the plaintiff’s discretion be made at the
25hearing or thereafter, and the claimant thus named and served as
26a defendant in the action shall answer or otherwise respond within
27five days thereafter.

28(f) If a claim is made without delivery to the court of the
29appropriate filing fee or a form for proceeding in forma pauperis,
30as prescribed in this section, the claim shall be immediately deemed
31denied and the court shall so order. Upon the denial of the claim,
32the court shall immediately deliver an endorsed copy of the order
33to the levying officer and shall serve an endorsed copy of the order
34on the plaintiff and claimant by first-class mail.

35(g) If the claim of right to possession is denied pursuant to
36subdivision (f), or if the claimant fails to appear at the hearing or,
37upon hearing, if the court determines that there are no valid claims,
38or if the claimant does not prevail at a trial on the merits of the
39unlawful detainer action, the court shall order the levying officer
40to proceed with enforcement of the original writ of possession of
P107  1real property as deemed amended to include the claimant, which
2shall be effected within a reasonable time not to exceed five days.
3Upon receipt of the court’s order, the levying officer shall enforce
4the writ of possession of real property against any occupant or
5occupants.

6(h) The claim of right to possession shall be made on the
7following form:

P108  1PRINTER PLEASE NOTE: TIP-IN MATERIAL TO BE
2INSERTED

[3 pages]

P111  1

SEC. 10.  

Section 1501.5 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
2amended to read:

3

1501.5.  

(a) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the
4contrary, property received by the state under this chapter shall
5not permanently escheat to the state.

6(b) The Legislature finds and declares that this section is
7declaratory of the existing law and sets forth the intent of the
8Legislature regarding the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed
9Property Act (Chapter 1809, Statutes of 1959) and all amendments
10thereto and revisions thereof. Any opinions, rulings, orders,
11judgments, or other statements to the contrary by any court are
12erroneous and inconsistent with the intent of the Legislature.

13(c) It is the intent of the Legislature that property owners be
14reunited with their property. In making changes to the unclaimed
15property program, the Legislature intends to adopt a more
16expansive notification program that will provide all of the
17following:

18(1) Notification by the state to all owners of unclaimed property
19prior to escheatment.

20(2) A more expansive postescheatment policy that takes action
21to identify those owners of unclaimed property.

22(3) A waiting period of not less than seven years from delivery
23of property to the state prior to disposal of any unclaimed property
24deemed to have no commercial value.

25

SEC. 11.  

Section 1571 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
26amended to read:

27

1571.  

(a) The Controller may at reasonable times and upon
28reasonable notice examine the records of any person if the
29Controller has reason to believe that the person is a holder who
30has failed to report property that should have been reported
31pursuant to this chapter.

32(b) When requested by the Controller, the examination shall be
33conducted by any licensing or regulating agency otherwise
34empowered by the laws of this state to examine the records of the
35holder. For the purpose of determining compliance with this
36chapter, the Commissioner of Business Oversight is vested with
37full authority to examine the records of any banking organization
38and any savings association doing business within this state but
39not organized under the laws of or created in this state.

P112  1(c) Following a public hearing, the Controller shall adopt
2guidelines as to the policies and procedures governing the activity
3of third-party auditors who are hired by the Controller.

4(d) Following a public hearing, the Controller shall adopt
5guidelines, on or before July 1, 1999, establishing forms, policies,
6and procedures to enable a person to dispute or appeal the results
7of any record examination conducted pursuant to this section.

8

SEC. 12.  

Section 2025.510 of the Code of Civil Procedure is
9amended to read:

10

2025.510.  

(a) Unless the parties agree otherwise, the testimony
11at a deposition recorded by stenographic means shall be transcribed.

12(b)  The party noticing the deposition shall bear the cost of the
13transcription, unless the court, on motion and for good cause
14shown, orders that the cost be borne or shared by another party.

15(c) Notwithstanding subdivision (b) of Section 2025.320, any
16other party or the deponent, at the expense of that party or
17deponent, may obtain a copy of the transcript.

18(d) If the deposition officer receives a request from a party for
19an original or a copy of the deposition transcript, or any portion
20thereof, and the full or partial transcript will be available to that
21party prior to the time the original or copy would be available to
22any other party, the deposition officer shall immediately notify all
23other parties attending the deposition of the request, and shall,
24upon request by any party other than the party making the original
25request, make that copy of the full or partial deposition transcript
26available to all parties at the same time.

27(e) Stenographic notes of depositions shall be retained by the
28reporter for a period of not less than eight years from the date of
29the deposition, where no transcript is produced, and not less than
30one year from the date on which the transcript is produced. The
31notes may be either on paper or electronic media, as long as it
32allows for satisfactory production of a transcript at any time during
33the periods specified.

34(f) At the request of any other party to the action, including a
35party who did not attend the taking of the deposition testimony,
36any party who records or causes the recording of that testimony
37by means of audio or video technology shall promptly do both of
38the following:

39(1) Permit that other party to hear the audio recording or to view
40the video recording.

P113  1(2) Furnish a copy of the audio or video recording to that other
2party on receipt of payment of the reasonable cost of making that
3copy of the recording.

4(g) If the testimony at the deposition is recorded both
5stenographically and by audio or video technology, the
6stenographic transcript shall be the official record of that testimony
7for the purpose of the trial and any subsequent hearing or appeal.

8(h) (1) The requesting attorney or party appearing in propria
9persona shall timely pay the deposition officer or the entity
10providing the services of the deposition officer for the transcription
11or copy of the transcription described in subdivision (b) or (c), and
12any other deposition product or service that is requested either
13orally or in writing.

14(2) This subdivision shall apply unless responsibility for the
15payment is otherwise provided by law or unless the deposition
16officer or entity is notified in writing at the time the services or
17products are requested that the party or another identified person
18will be responsible for payment.

19(3) This subdivision does not prohibit or supersede an agreement
20between an attorney and a party allocating responsibility for the
21payment of deposition costs to the party.

22(4) Nothing in the case of Serrano v. Stefan Merli Plastering
23Co., Inc. (2008) 162 Cal.App.4th 1014 shall be construed to alter
24the standards by which a court acquires personal jurisdiction over
25a nonparty to an action.

26(5) The requesting attorney or party appearing in propria
27persona, upon the written request of a deposition officer who has
28obtained a final judgment for payment of services provided
29pursuant to this subdivision, shall provide to the deposition officer
30an address that can be used to effectuate service for the purpose
31of Section 708.110 in the manner specified in Section 415.10.

32(i) For purposes of this section, “deposition product or service”
33means any product or service provided in connection with a
34deposition that qualifies as shorthand reporting, as described in
35Section 8017 of the Business and Professions Code, and any
36product or service derived from that shorthand reporting.

37

SEC. 13.  

Section 912 of the Evidence Code is amended to read:

38

912.  

(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the right
39of any person to claim a privilege provided by Section 954
40(lawyer-client privilege), 966 (lawyer referral service-client
P114  1privilege), 980 (privilege for confidential marital communications),
2994 (physician-patient privilege), 1014 (psychotherapist-patient
3privilege), 1033 (privilege of penitent), 1034 (privilege of clergy
4member), 1035.8 (sexual assault counselor-victim privilege),
51037.5 (domestic violence counselor-victim privilege), or 1038
6(human trafficking caseworker-victim privilege) is waived with
7respect to a communication protected by the privilege if any holder
8of the privilege, without coercion, has disclosed a significant part
9of the communication or has consented to disclosure made by
10anyone. Consent to disclosure is manifested by any statement or
11other conduct of the holder of the privilege indicating consent to
12the disclosure, including failure to claim the privilege in any
13proceeding in which the holder has legal standing and the
14opportunity to claim the privilege.

15(b) Where two or more persons are joint holders of a privilege
16provided by Section 954 (lawyer-client privilege), 966 (lawyer
17referral service-client privilege), 994 (physician-patient privilege),
181014 (psychotherapist-patient privilege), 1035.8 (sexual assault
19counselor-victim privilege), 1037.5 (domestic violence
20counselor-victim privilege), or 1038 (human trafficking
21caseworker-victim privilege), a waiver of the right of a particular
22joint holder of the privilege to claim the privilege does not affect
23the right of another joint holder to claim the privilege. In the case
24of the privilege provided by Section 980 (privilege for confidential
25marital communications), a waiver of the right of one spouse to
26claim the privilege does not affect the right of the other spouse to
27claim the privilege.

28(c) A disclosure that is itself privileged is not a waiver of any
29privilege.

30(d) A disclosure in confidence of a communication that is
31protected by a privilege provided by Section 954 (lawyer-client
32privilege), 966 (lawyer referral service-client privilege), 994
33(physician-patient privilege), 1014 (psychotherapist-patient
34privilege), 1035.8 (sexual assault counselor-victim privilege),
351037.5 (domestic violence counselor-victim privilege), or 1038
36(human trafficking caseworker-victim privilege), when disclosure
37is reasonably necessary for the accomplishment of the purpose for
38which the lawyer, lawyer referral service, physician,
39psychotherapist, sexual assault counselor, domestic violence
P115  1counselor, or human trafficking caseworker was consulted, is not
2a waiver of the privilege.

3

SEC. 14.  

Section 917 of the Evidence Code is amended to read:

4

917.  

(a) If a privilege is claimed on the ground that the matter
5sought to be disclosed is a communication made in confidence in
6the course of the lawyer-client, lawyer referral service-client,
7physician-patient, psychotherapist-patient, clergy-penitent,
8husband-wife, sexual assault counselor-victim, domestic violence
9counselor-victim, or human trafficking caseworker-victim
10relationship, the communication is presumed to have been made
11in confidence and the opponent of the claim of privilege has the
12burden of proof to establish that the communication was not
13confidential.

14(b) A communication between persons in a relationship listed
15in subdivision (a) does not lose its privileged character for the sole
16reason that it is communicated by electronic means or because
17persons involved in the delivery, facilitation, or storage of
18electronic communication may have access to the content of the
19communication.

20(c) For purposes of this section, “electronic” has the same
21meaning provided in Section 1633.2 of the Civil Code.

22

SEC. 15.  

Section 1038.2 of the Evidence Code is amended to
23read:

24

1038.2.  

(a)  As used in this article, “victim” means any person
25who is a “trafficking victim” as defined in Section 236.1 of the
26Penal Code.

27(b) As used in this article, “human trafficking caseworker”
28means any of the following:

29(1) A person who is employed by any organization providing
30the programs specified in Section 18294 of the Welfare and
31Institutions Code, whether financially compensated or not, for the
32purpose of rendering advice or assistance to victims of human
33trafficking, who has received specialized training in the counseling
34of human trafficking victims, and who meets one of the following
35requirements:

36(A) Has a master’s degree in counseling or a related field; or
37has one year of counseling experience, at least six months of which
38is in the counseling of human trafficking victims.

39(B) Has at least 40 hours of training as specified in this
40paragraph and is supervised by an individual who qualifies as a
P116  1counselor under subparagraph (A), or is a psychotherapist, as
2defined in Section 1010. The training, supervised by a person
3qualified under subparagraph (A), shall include, but need not be
4limited to, the following areas: history of human trafficking, civil
5and criminal law as it relates to human trafficking, societal attitudes
6toward human trafficking, peer counseling techniques, housing,
7public assistance, and other financial resources available to meet
8the financial needs of human trafficking victims, and referral
9services available to human trafficking victims. A portion of this
10training must include an explanation of privileged communication.

11(2) A person who is employed by any organization providing
12the programs specified in Section 13835.2 of the Penal Code,
13whether financially compensated or not, for the purpose of
14counseling and assisting human trafficking victims, and who meets
15one of the following requirements:

16(A) Is a psychotherapist as defined in Section 1010, has a
17master’s degree in counseling or a related field, or has one year of
18counseling experience, at least six months of which is in rape
19assault counseling.

20(B) Has the minimum training for human trafficking counseling
21required by guidelines established by the employing agency
22pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 13835.10 of the Penal Code,
23and is supervised by an individual who qualifies as a counselor
24under subparagraph (A). The training, supervised by a person
25qualified under subparagraph (A), shall include, but not be limited
26to, law, victimology, counseling techniques, client and system
27advocacy, and referral services. A portion of this training must
28include an explanation of privileged communication.

29(c) As used in this article, “confidential communication” means
30information transmitted between the victim and the caseworker in
31the course of their relationship and in confidence by a means which,
32so far as the victim is aware, discloses the information to no third
33persons other than those who are present to further the interests of
34the victim in the consultation or those to whom disclosures are
35reasonably necessary for the transmission of the information or an
36accomplishment of the purposes for which the human trafficking
37counselor is consulted. It includes all information regarding the
38facts and circumstances involving all incidences of human
39trafficking.

P117  1(d) As used in this article, “holder of the privilege” means the
2victim when he or she has no guardian or conservator, or a guardian
3or conservator of the victim when the victim has a guardian or
4conservator.

5

SEC. 16.  

Section 504 of the Family Code is amended to read:

6

504.  

A confidential marriage license is valid only for a period
7of 90 days after its issuance by the county clerk.

8

SEC. 17.  

Section 831.7 of the Government Code is amended
9to read:

10

831.7.  

(a) Neither a public entity nor a public employee is
11liable to any person who participates in a hazardous recreational
12activity, including any person who assists the participant, or to any
13spectator who knew or reasonably should have known that the
14hazardous recreational activity created a substantial risk of injury
15to himself or herself and was voluntarily in the place of risk, or
16having the ability to do so failed to leave, for any damage or injury
17to property or persons arising out of that hazardous recreational
18activity.

19(b) As used in this section, “hazardous recreational activity”
20means a recreational activity conducted on property of a public
21entity that creates a substantial, as distinguished from a minor,
22trivial, or insignificant, risk of injury to a participant or a spectator.

23“Hazardous recreational activity” also means:

24(1) Water contact activities, except diving, in places where, or
25at a time when, lifeguards are not provided and reasonable warning
26thereof has been given, or the injured party should reasonably have
27known that there was no lifeguard provided at the time.

28(2) Any form of diving into water from other than a diving board
29or diving platform, or at any place or from any structure where
30diving is prohibited and reasonable warning thereof has been given.

31(3) Animal riding, including equestrian competition, archery,
32bicycle racing or jumping, bicycle motocross, mountain bicycling,
33boating, cross-country and downhill skiing, hang gliding, kayaking,
34motorized vehicle racing, off-road motorcycling or four-wheel
35 driving of any kind, orienteering, pistol and rifle shooting, rock
36climbing, rocketeering, rodeo, self-contained underwater breathing
37apparatus (SCUBA) diving, spelunking, skydiving, sport
38parachuting, paragliding, body contact sports, surfing,
39trampolining, tree climbing, tree rope swinging, waterskiing, white
40water rafting, and windsurfing. For the purposes of this subdivision,
P118  1“mountain bicycling” does not include riding a bicycle on paved
2pathways, roadways, or sidewalks. For the purpose of this
3paragraph, “body contact sports” means sports in which it is
4reasonably foreseeable that there will be rough bodily contact with
5one or more participants.

6(c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), this section does not
7limit liability that would otherwise exist for any of the following:

8(A) Failure of the public entity or employee to guard or warn
9of a known dangerous condition or of another hazardous
10recreational activity known to the public entity or employee that
11is not reasonably assumed by the participant as inherently a part
12of the hazardous recreational activity out of which the damage or
13injury arose.

14(B) Damage or injury suffered in any case where permission to
15participate in the hazardous recreational activity was granted for
16a specific fee. For the purpose of this subparagraph, “specific fee”
17does not include a fee or consideration charged for a general
18purpose such as a general park admission charge, a vehicle entry
19or parking fee, or an administrative or group use application or
20permit fee, as distinguished from a specific fee charged for
21participation in the specific hazardous recreational activity out of
22which the damage or injury arose.

23(C) Injury suffered to the extent proximately caused by the
24negligent failure of the public entity or public employee to properly
25construct or maintain in good repair any structure, recreational
26equipment or machinery, or substantial work of improvement
27utilized in the hazardous recreational activity out of which the
28damage or injury arose.

29(D) Damage or injury suffered in any case where the public
30entity or employee recklessly or with gross negligence promoted
31the participation in or observance of a hazardous recreational
32activity. For purposes of this subparagraph, promotional literature
33or a public announcement or advertisement that merely describes
34the available facilities and services on the property does not in
35itself constitute a reckless or grossly negligent promotion.

36(E) An act of gross negligence by a public entity or a public
37employee that is the proximate cause of the injury.

38(2) Nothing in this subdivision creates a duty of care or basis
39of liability for personal injury or damage to personal property.

P119  1(d) Nothing in this section limits the liability of an independent
2concessionaire, or any person or organization other than the public
3entity, whether or not the person or organization has a contractual
4relationship with the public entity to use the public property, for
5injuries or damages suffered in any case as a result of the operation
6of a hazardous recreational activity on public property by the
7concessionaire, person, or organization.

8

SEC. 18.  

Section 1456 of the Government Code is repealed.

9

SEC. 19.  

Section 6103 of the Government Code is amended
10to read:

11

6103.  

(a) Neither the state nor any county, city, district, or
12other political subdivision, nor any public officer or body, acting
13in his or her official capacity on behalf of the state, or any county,
14city, district, or other political subdivision, shall pay or deposit
15any fee for the filing of any document or paper, for the performance
16of any official service, or for the filing of any stipulation or
17agreement that may constitute an appearance in any court by any
18other party to the stipulation or agreement. This section does not
19apply to civil jury fees or civil jury deposits. This section does not
20apply to the State Compensation Insurance Fund or where a public
21officer is acting with reference to private assets or obligations that
22have come under that officer’s jurisdiction by virtue of his or her
23office, or where it is specifically provided otherwise. No fee shall
24be charged for the filing of a confession of judgment in favor of
25any of the public agencies named in this section.

26 (b) No fee shall be charged any of the public agencies named
27in this section to defray the costs of reporting services by court
28reporters. Such fees shall be recoverable as costs as provided in
29Section 6103.5.

30(c) This section shall apply to probate referees, as described in
31Part 12 (commencing with Section 400) of Division 2 of the
32Probate Code.

33

SEC. 20.  

Section 8214.15 of the Government Code is amended
34to read:

35

8214.15.  

(a) In addition to any commissioning or disciplinary
36sanction, a violation of subdivision (f), (i), (l), (m), or (p) of Section
378214.1, or a willful violation of subdivision (d) of Section 8214.1,
38is punishable by a civil penalty not to exceed one thousand five
39hundred dollars ($1,500).

P120  1(b) In addition to any commissioning or disciplinary sanction,
2a violation of subdivision (h), (j), or (k) of Section 8214.1, or a
3negligent violation of subdivision (d) of Section 8214.1 is
4punishable by a civil penalty not to exceed seven hundred fifty
5dollars ($750).

6(c) The civil penalty may be imposed by the Secretary of State
7if a hearing is not requested pursuant to Section 8214.3. If a hearing
8is requested, the hearing officer shall make the determination.

9(d) Any civil penalties collected pursuant to this section shall
10be transferred to the General Fund. It is the intent of the Legislature
11that to the extent General Fund moneys are raised by penalties
12collected pursuant to this section, that money shall be made
13available to the Secretary of State’s office to defray its costs of
14investigating and pursuing commissioning and monetary remedies
15for violations of the notary public law.

16

SEC. 21.  

Section 60371 of the Government Code is amended
17to read:

18

60371.  

(a) If a district furnishes residential light, heat, water,
19or power through a master meter, or furnishes individually metered
20service in a single-family dwelling, multiunit residential structure,
21mobilehome park, or farm labor camp and the owner, manager, or
22farm labor employer is the customer of record, the district shall
23make every good faith effort to inform the actual users of the
24services, by means of written notice, when the account is in arrears,
25that service will be terminated in 10 days. The written notice shall
26further inform the actual users that they have the right to become
27customers of the district without being required to pay the amount
28due on the delinquent account. The notice shall be in English and
29in the languages listed in Section 1632 of the Civil Code.

30(b) The district is not required to make service available to the
31actual users unless each actual user agrees to the terms and
32conditions of service, and meets the requirements of the district’s
33rules and tariffs. However, if one or more actual users are willing
34and able to assume responsibility for the subsequent charges to
35the account to the satisfaction of the district, or if there is a physical
36means, legally available to the district, of selectively terminating
37service to those actual users who have not met the requirements
38of the district’s rules and tariffs, the district shall make service
39available to the actual users who have met those requirements.

P121  1(c)  If prior service for a period of time is a condition for
2establishing credit with the district, residence and proof of prompt
3payment of rent for that period of time is a satisfactory equivalent.

4(d) Any actual user who becomes a customer of the district
5pursuant to this section whose periodic payments, such as rental
6payments, include charges for residential light, heat, water, or
7power, where these charges are not separately stated, may deduct
8from the periodic payment each payment period all reasonable
9charges paid to the district for those services during the preceding
10payment period.

11

SEC. 22.  

Section 68085.1 of the Government Code, as amended
12by Section 18 of Chapter 41 of the Statutes of 2012, is amended
13to read:

14

68085.1.  

(a) This section applies to all fees and fines that are
15collected on or after January 1, 2006, under all of the following:

16(1) Sections 177.5, 209, 403.060, 491.150, 631.3, 683.150,
17704.750, 708.160, 724.100, 1134, 1161.2, 1218, and 1993.2 of,
18subdivision (g) of Section 411.20 and subdivisions (c) and (g) of
19Section 411.21 of, subdivision (b) of Section 631 of, and Chapter
205.5 (commencing with Section 116.110) of Title 1 of Part 1 of, the
21Code of Civil Procedure.

22(2) Section 3112 of the Family Code.

23(3) Section 31622 of the Food and Agricultural Code.

24(4) Subdivision (d) of Section 6103.5, Sections 68086 and
2568086.1, subdivision (d) of Section 68511.3, Sections 68926.1 and
2669953.5, and Chapter 5.8 (commencing with Section 70600).

27(5) Section 103470 of the Health and Safety Code.

28(6) Subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 166 and Section 1214.1
29of the Penal Code.

30(7) Sections 1835, 1851.5, 2343, 7660, and 13201 of the Probate
31Code.

32(8) Sections 14607.6 and 16373 of the Vehicle Code.

33(9) Section 71386 of this code, Sections 304, 7851.5, and 9002
34of the Family Code, and Section 1513.1 of the Probate Code, if
35the reimbursement is for expenses incurred by the court.

36(10) Section 3153 of the Family Code, if the amount is paid to
37the court for the cost of counsel appointed by the court to represent
38a child.

39(b) On and after January 1, 2006, each superior court shall
40deposit all fees and fines listed in subdivision (a), as soon as
P122  1practicable after collection and on a regular basis, into a bank
2account established for this purpose by the Administrative Office
3of the Courts. Upon direction of the Administrative Office of the
4Courts, the county shall deposit civil assessments under Section
51214.1 of the Penal Code and any other money it collects under
6the sections listed in subdivision (a) as soon as practicable after
7collection and on a regular basis into the bank account established
8for this purpose and specified by the Administrative Office of the
9Courts. The deposits shall be made as required by rules adopted
10by, and financial policies and procedures authorized by, the Judicial
11Council under subdivision (a) of Section 77206. Within 15 days
12after the end of the month in which the fees and fines are collected,
13each court, and each county that collects any fines or fees under
14subdivision (a), shall provide the Administrative Office of the
15Courts with a report of the fees by categories as specified by the
16Administrative Office of the Courts. The Administrative Office
17of the Courts and any court may agree upon a time period greater
18than 15 days, but in no case more than 30 days after the end of the
19month in which the fees and fines are collected. The fees and fines
20listed in subdivision (a) shall be distributed as provided in this
21section.

22(c) (1) Within 45 calendar days after the end of the month in
23which the fees and fines listed in subdivision (a) are collected, the
24Administrative Office of the Courts shall make the following
25distributions:

26(A) To the small claims advisory services, as described in
27subdivision (f) of Section 116.230 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

28(B) To dispute resolution programs, as described in subdivision
29(b) of Section 68085.3 and subdivision (b) of Section 68085.4.

30(C) To the county law library funds, as described in Sections
31116.230 and 116.760 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision
32(b) of Section 68085.3, subdivision (b) of Section 68085.4, and
33Section 70621 of this code, and Section 14607.6 of the Vehicle
34Code.

35(D) To the courthouse construction funds in the Counties of
36Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Francisco, as described in
37Sections 70622, 70624, and 70625.

38(E) Commencing July 1, 2011, to the Trial Court Trust Fund,
39as described in subdivision (e) of Section 70626, to be used by the
P123  1Judicial Council to implement and administer the civil
2representation pilot program under Section 68651.

3(2) If any distribution under this subdivision is delinquent, the
4Administrative Office of the Courts shall add a penalty to the
5distribution as specified in subdivision (i).

6(d) Within 45 calendar days after the end of the month in which
7the fees and fines listed in subdivision (a) are collected, the
8amounts remaining after the distributions in subdivision (c) shall
9be transmitted to the State Treasury for deposit in the Trial Court
10Trust Fund and other funds as required by law. This remittance
11shall be accompanied by a remittance advice identifying the
12collection month and the appropriate account in the Trial Court
13Trust Fund or other fund to which it is to be deposited. Upon the
14receipt of any delinquent payment required under this subdivision,
15the Controller shall calculate a penalty as provided under
16subdivision (i).

17(e) From the money transmitted to the State Treasury under
18subdivision (d), the Controller shall make deposits as follows:

19(1) Into the State Court Facilities Construction Fund, the Judges’
20Retirement Fund, and the Equal Access Fund, as described in
21subdivision (c) of Section 68085.3 and subdivision (c) of Section
2268085.4.

23(2) Into the Health Statistics Special Fund, as described in
24subdivision (b) of Section 70670 of this code and Section 103730
25of the Health and Safety Code.

26(3) Into the Family Law Trust Fund, as described in Section
2770674.

28(4) Into the Immediate and Critical Needs Account of the State
29Court Facilities Construction Fund, established in Section 70371.5,
30as described in Sections 68085.3, 68085.4, and 70657.5, and
31subdivision (e) of Section 70617.

32(5) The remainder of the money shall be deposited into the Trial
33Court Trust Fund.

34(f) The amounts collected by each superior court under Section
35116.232, subdivision (g) of Section 411.20, and subdivision (g) of
36Section 411.21 of the Code of Civil Procedure, Sections 304, 3112,
373153, 7851.5, and 9002 of the Family Code, subdivision (d) of
38Section 6103.5, subdivision (d) of Section 68511.3 and Sections
3968926.1, 69953.5, 70627, 70631, 70640, 70661, 70678, and 71386
40of this code, and Sections 1513.1, 1835, 1851.5, and 2343 of the
P124  1Probate Code shall be added to the monthly apportionment for that
2court under subdivision (a) of Section 68085.

3(g) If any of the fees provided in subdivision (a) are partially
4waived by court order or otherwise reduced, and the fee is to be
5divided between the Trial Court Trust Fund and any other fund or
6account, the amount of the reduction shall be deducted from the
7amount to be distributed to each fund in the same proportion as
8the amount of each distribution bears to the total amount of the
9fee. If the fee is paid by installment payments, the amount
10distributed to each fund or account from each installment shall
11bear the same proportion to the installment payment as the full
12distribution to that fund or account does to the full fee. If a court
13collects a fee that was incurred before January 1, 2006, under a
14provision that was the predecessor to one of the paragraphs
15contained in subdivision (a), the fee may be deposited as if it were
16collected under the paragraph of subdivision (a) that corresponds
17to the predecessor of that paragraph and distributed in prorated
18amounts to each fund or account to which the fee in subdivision
19(a) must be distributed.

20(h) Except as provided in Sections 470.5 and 6322.1 of the
21Business and Professions Code, and Sections 70622, 70624, and
2270625 of this code, an agency shall not take action to change the
23amounts allocated to any of the funds described in subdivision (c),
24(d), or (e).

25(i) The amount of the penalty on any delinquent payment under
26subdivision (c) or (d) shall be calculated by multiplying the amount
27of the delinquent payment at a daily rate equivalent to 112 percent
28per month for the number of days the payment is delinquent. The
29penalty shall be paid from the Trial Court Trust Fund. Penalties
30on delinquent payments under subdivision (d) shall be calculated
31only on the amounts to be distributed to the Trial Court Trust Fund
32and the State Court Facilities Construction Fund, and each penalty
33 shall be distributed proportionately to the funds to which the
34delinquent payment was to be distributed.

35(j) If a delinquent payment under subdivision (c) or (d) results
36from a delinquency by a superior court under subdivision (b), the
37court shall reimburse the Trial Court Trust Fund for the amount
38of the penalty. Notwithstanding Section 77009, any penalty on a
39delinquent payment that a court is required to reimburse pursuant
40to this section shall be paid from the court operations fund for that
P125  1court. The penalty shall be paid by the court to the Trial Court
2Trust Fund no later than 45 days after the end of the month in
3which the penalty was calculated. If the penalty is not paid within
4the specified time, the Administrative Office of the Courts may
5reduce the amount of a subsequent monthly allocation to the court
6by the amount of the penalty on the delinquent payment.

7(k) If a delinquent payment under subdivision (c) or (d) results
8from a delinquency by a county in transmitting fees and fines listed
9in subdivision (a) to the bank account established for this purpose,
10as described in subdivision (b), the county shall reimburse the Trial
11Court Trust Fund for the amount of the penalty. The penalty shall
12be paid by the county to the Trial Court Trust Fund no later than
1345 days after the end of the month in which the penalty was
14calculated.

15(l) This section shall become inoperative on July 1, 2017, and,
16as of January 1, 2018, is repealed, unless a later enacted statute,
17that becomes operative on or before January 1, 2018, deletes or
18extends the dates on which it becomes inoperative and is repealed.

19

SEC. 23.  

Section 68631 of the Government Code is amended
20to read:

21

68631.  

An initial fee waiver shall be granted by the court at
22any stage of the proceedings at both the appellate and trial court
23levels if an applicant meets the standards of eligibility and
24application requirements under Sections 68632 and 68633. An
25initial fee waiver excuses the applicant from paying fees for the
26first pleading or other paper, and other court fees and costs,
27including assessments for court investigations under Section 1513,
281826, or 1851 of the Probate Code, as specified in rules adopted
29by the Judicial Council, unless the court orders the applicant to
30make partial payments under subdivision (c) of Section 68632,
31subdivision (d) of Section 68636, or subdivision (e) of Section
3268637. Under circumstances set forth in Section 68636, the court
33may reconsider the initial fee waiver and order the fee waiver
34withdrawn for future fees and costs or deny the fee waiver
35retroactively. At the end of the case, the court may recover fees
36and costs that were initially waived under circumstances set forth
37in Section 68637. Upon establishment of a conservatorship or
38guardianship, the court may collect all or part of any fees waived
39pursuant to this section and Section 68632 from the estate of the
40conservatee or ward, if the court finds that the estate has the ability
P126  1to pay the fees, or a portion thereof, immediately, over a period of
2time, or under some other equitable agreement, without using
3moneys that normally would pay for the common necessaries of
4life for the applicant and the applicant’s family.

5

SEC. 24.  

Section 68631.5 is added to the Government Code,
6to read:

7

68631.5.  

For purposes of this article, a conservatee, ward, or
8person for whom a conservatorship or guardianship is sought, shall
9be deemed the “applicant,” and the conservator, guardian, or person
10or persons seeking to establish the conservatorship or guardianship
11shall be deemed the “petitioner.” In those cases, the petitioner is
12responsible for completing all forms and providing all information
13required under this article.

14

SEC. 25.  

Section 68632 of the Government Code is amended
15to read:

16

68632.  

Permission to proceed without paying court fees and
17costs because of an applicant’s financial condition shall be granted
18initially to all of the following persons:

19(a) An applicant who is receiving public benefits under one or
20more of the following programs:

21(1) Supplemental Security Income (SSI) and State
22Supplementary Payment (SSP) (Article 5 (commencing with
23Section 12200) of Chapter 3 of Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare
24and Institutions Code).

25(2) California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids
26Act (CalWORKs) (Chapter 2 (commencing with Section 11200)
27of Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code) or a
28federal Tribal Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (Tribal
29TANF) grant program (Section 10553.25 of the Welfare and
30Institutions Code).

31(3) Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Chapter 51
32(commencing with Section 2011) of Title 7 of the United States
33Code) or the California Food Assistance Program (Chapter 10.1
34(commencing with Section 18930) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the
35Welfare and Institutions Code).

36(4) County Relief, General Relief (GR), or General Assistance
37(GA) (Part 5 (commencing with Section 17000) of Division 9 of
38the Welfare and Institutions Code).

39(5) Cash Assistance Program for Aged, Blind, and Disabled
40Legal Immigrants (CAPI) (Chapter 10.3 (commencing with Section
P127  118937) of Part 6 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions
2Code).

3(6) In-Home Supportive Services (IHSS) (Article 7
4(commencing with Section 12300) of Chapter 3 of Part 3 of
5Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code).

6(7) Medi-Cal (Chapter 7 (commencing with Section 14000) of
7Part 3 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code).

8(b) An applicant whose monthly income is 125 percent or less
9of the current poverty guidelines updated periodically in the Federal
10Register by the United States Department of Health and Human
11Services under the authority of paragraph (2) of Section 9902 of
12Title 42 of the United States Code.

13(c) An applicant who, as individually determined by the court,
14cannot pay court fees without using moneys that normally would
15pay for the common necessaries of life for the applicant and the
16applicant’s family. Only if a trial court finds that an applicant under
17this subdivision can pay a portion of court fees, or can pay court
18fees over a period of time, or under some other equitable
19arrangement, without using moneys that normally would pay for
20the common necessaries of life for the applicant and the applicant’s
21family, the court may grant a partial initial fee waiver using the
22notice and hearing procedures set forth in paragraph (5) of
23subdivision (e) of Section 68634. “Common necessaries of life,”
24as used in this article, shall be interpreted consistently with the use
25of that term in paragraph (1) of subdivision (c) of Section 706.051
26of the Code of Civil Procedure, as that paragraph read prior to
27January 1, 2012.

28(d) A person who files a petition for appointment of a fiduciary
29in a guardianship or conservatorship, or files pleadings as the
30appointed fiduciary of a conservatee or ward, when the financial
31condition of the conservatee or ward meets the standards for a fee
32waiver pursuant to subdivision (a), (b), or (c).

33

SEC. 26.  

Section 1569.698 of the Health and Safety Code is
34amended to read:

35

1569.698.  

(a) The State Fire Marshal has proposed that the
36State Building Standards Commission adopt building standards to
37provide for locked and secured perimeters in residential care
38facilities for the elderly that care for persons with dementia:

39(1) It is acknowledged that these building standards will not
40become effective until October 1, 1996.

P128  1(2) It is the policy of the State Building Standards Commission
2that building standards be adopted exclusively into the California
3Building Standards Code and not into state statute.

4(3) However, in recognition of the immediate need of residential
5care facilities for the elderly caring for persons with dementia to
6provide a secured environment, it is the intent of the Legislature
7that the building standards for locked and secured perimeters
8proposed by the State Fire Marshal for adoption in the 1994
9California Building Standards Code, as set forth in Section
101569.699, be effective upon the date this article becomes operative.

11(b) (1) Upon the filing of emergency regulations with the
12Secretary of State pursuant to subdivision (c), a residential care
13facility for the elderly that cares for people with dementia may
14utilize secured perimeter fences or locked exit doors, if it meets
15the requirements for additional safeguards required by those
16regulations.

17(2) For the purposes of this article, dementia includes
18Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders, diagnosed by a
19physician, that increase the tendency to wander and that decrease
20hazard awareness and the ability to communicate.

21(3) It is the intent of the Legislature in enacting this article that
22residential care facilities for the elderly have options for the
23security of persons with dementia who are residents of those
24facilities that are in addition to existing security exceptions made
25for individual residents. It is the further intent of the Legislature
26that these additional options shall include the use of waivers of
27certain building standards relating to fire safety, to be issued by
28the state department with the approval of the State Fire Marshal,
29to permit the care of a target group of persons with dementia by
30means of secured perimeter fences, or the use of locked exterior
31doors. Each waiver request shall include a facility plan of operation
32that addresses elements of care to be identified by the department
33in regulations and demonstrates the facility’s ability to meet the
34safety needs of persons with dementia.

35(4) The department shall adopt regulations that ensure that staff
36for secured perimeter facilities receive appropriate and adequate
37training in the care of residents with dementia.

38(5) Nothing in this section is intended to prohibit residential
39care facilities for the elderly from accepting or retaining persons
P129  1with dementia whose needs can be fully met using care options
2permitted by existing law and regulations.

3(6) It is not the intent of the Legislature to authorize an increase
4in the level of care provided in a residential care facility for the
5elderly or to establish a supplemental rate structure based on the
6services provided in the facility.

7(7) All admissions to residential care facilities for the elderly
8shall continue to be voluntary on the part of the resident or with
9the lawful consent of the resident’s legal conservator.

10(c) The department shall adopt regulations to implement
11subdivision (b) in accordance with those provisions of the
12Administrative Procedure Act contained in Chapter 3.5
13(commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of Division 3 of Title
142 of the Government Code. The initial adoption of any emergency
15regulations following the effective date of the act amending this
16section during the 1995-96 Regular Legislative Session shall be
17deemed to be an emergency and necessary for the immediate
18preservation of the public peace, health and safety, or general
19welfare. Emergency regulations adopted pursuant to this
20subdivision shall remain in effect for no more than 180 days.

21(d) In addition to the security options authorized by subdivision
22(b), residential care facilities for the elderly that accept or retain
23as residents persons with dementia, and that choose to utilize the
24security options of egress-control devices of the time-delay type
25in addition to secured perimeter fences or locked exit doors, shall
26comply with Section 1569.699, or regulations adopted by the State
27Building Standards Commission, whichever is operative.

28(e) A residential care facility for the elderly shall not utilize
29special egress-control devices of the time-delay type, secured
30perimeter fences, or locked exit doors unless the facility meets the
31requirements of Section 1569.699 or the Building Standards
32Commission adopts building standards to implement this section.

33(f) Any person who is not a conservatee and is entering a locked
34or secured perimeter facility pursuant to this section, shall sign a
35statement of voluntary entry. The facility shall retain the original
36statement and shall send a copy of the statement to the department.

37

SEC. 27.  

Section 11163.3 of the Penal Code is amended to
38read:

39

11163.3.  

(a) A county may establish an interagency domestic
40violence death review team to assist local agencies in identifying
P130  1and reviewing domestic violence deaths, including homicides and
2suicides, and facilitating communication among the various
3agencies involved in domestic violence cases. Interagency domestic
4violence death review teams have been used successfully to ensure
5that incidents of domestic violence and abuse are recognized and
6that agency involvement is reviewed to develop recommendations
7for policies and protocols for community prevention and
8intervention initiatives to reduce and eradicate the incidence of
9domestic violence.

10(b) For purposes of this section, “abuse” has the meaning set
11forth in Section 6203 of the Family Code and “domestic violence”
12has the meaning set forth in Section 6211 of the Family Code.

13(c) A county may develop a protocol that may be used as a
14guideline to assist coroners and other persons who perform
15autopsies on domestic violence victims in the identification of
16domestic violence, in the determination of whether domestic
17violence contributed to death or whether domestic violence had
18occurred prior to death, but was not the actual cause of death, and
19in the proper written reporting procedures for domestic violence,
20including the designation of the cause and mode of death.

21(d) County domestic violence death review teams shall be
22comprised of, but not limited to, the following:

23(1) Experts in the field of forensic pathology.

24(2) Medical personnel with expertise in domestic violence abuse.

25(3) Coroners and medical examiners.

26(4) Criminologists.

27(5) District attorneys and city attorneys.

28(6) Domestic violence shelter service staff and battered women’s
29advocates.

30(7) Law enforcement personnel.

31(8) Representatives of local agencies that are involved with
32domestic violence abuse reporting.

33(9) County health department staff who deal with domestic
34violence victims’ health issues.

35(10) Representatives of local child abuse agencies.

36(11) Local professional associations of persons described in
37paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive.

38(e) An oral or written communication or a document shared
39within or produced by a domestic violence death review team
40related to a domestic violence death review is confidential and not
P131  1subject to disclosure or discoverable by a third party. An oral or
2written communication or a document provided by a third party
3to a domestic violence death review team, or between a third party
4and a domestic violence death review team, is confidential and not
5subject to disclosure or discoverable by a third party.
6Notwithstanding the foregoing, recommendations of a domestic
7violence death review team upon the completion of a review may
8be disclosed at the discretion of a majority of the members of the
9domestic violence death review team.

10(f) Each organization represented on a domestic violence death
11review team may share with other members of the team information
12in its possession concerning the victim who is the subject of the
13review or any person who was in contact with the victim and any
14other information deemed by the organization to be pertinent to
15the review. Any information shared by an organization with other
16members of a team is confidential. This provision shall permit the
17disclosure to members of the team of any information deemed
18confidential, privileged, or prohibited from disclosure by any other
19statute.

20(g) Written and oral information may be disclosed to a domestic
21violence death review team established pursuant to this section.
22The team may make a request in writing for the information sought
23and any person with information of the kind described in paragraph
24(2) may rely on the request in determining whether information
25may be disclosed to the team.

26(1) An individual or agency that has information governed by
27this subdivision shall not be required to disclose information. The
28intent of this subdivision is to allow the voluntary disclosure of
29information by the individual or agency that has the information.

30(2) The following information may be disclosed pursuant to this
31subdivision:

32(A) Notwithstanding Section 56.10 of the Civil Code, medical
33information.

34(B) Notwithstanding Section 5328 of the Welfare and
35Institutions Code, mental health information.

36(C) Notwithstanding Section 15633.5 of the Welfare and
37Institutions Code, information from elder abuse reports and
38investigations, except the identity of persons who have made
39 reports, which shall not be disclosed.

P132  1(D) Notwithstanding Section 11167.5 of the Penal Code,
2information from child abuse reports and investigations, except
3the identity of persons who have made reports, which shall not be
4disclosed.

5(E) State summary criminal history information, criminal
6offender record information, and local summary criminal history
7information, as defined in Sections 11075, 11105, and 13300 of
8the Penal Code.

9(F) Notwithstanding Section 11163.2 of the Penal Code,
10information pertaining to reports by health practitioners of persons
11suffering from physical injuries inflicted by means of a firearm or
12of persons suffering physical injury where the injury is a result of
13assaultive or abusive conduct, and information relating to whether
14a physician referred the person to local domestic violence services
15as recommended by Section 11161 of the Penal Code.

16(G) Notwithstanding Section 827 of the Welfare and Institutions
17Code, information in any juvenile court proceeding.

18(H) Information maintained by the Family Court, including
19information relating to the Family Conciliation Court Law pursuant
20to Section 1818 of the Family Code, and Mediation of Custody
21and Visitation Issues pursuant to Section 3177 of the Family Code.

22(I) Information provided to probation officers in the course of
23the performance of their duties, including, but not limited to, the
24duty to prepare reports pursuant to Section 1203.10 of the Penal
25Code, as well as the information on which these reports are based.

26(J) Notwithstanding Section 10850 of the Welfare and
27Institutions Code, records of in-home supportive services, unless
28disclosure is prohibited by federal law.

29(3) The disclosure of written and oral information authorized
30under this subdivision shall apply notwithstanding Sections 2263,
312918, 4982, and 6068 of the Business and Professions Code, or
32the lawyer-client privilege protected by Article 3 (commencing
33with Section 950) of Chapter 4 of Division 8 of the Evidence Code,
34the physician-patient privilege protected by Article 6 (commencing
35with Section 990) of Chapter 4 of Division 8 of the Evidence Code,
36the psychotherapist-patient privilege protected by Article 7
37(commencing with Section 1010) of Chapter 4 of Division 8 of
38the Evidence Code, the sexual assault counselor-victim privilege
39protected by Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 1035) of
40Chapter 4 of Division 8 of the Evidence Code, the domestic
P133  1violence counselor-victim privilege protected by Article 8.7
2(commencing with Section 1037) of Chapter 4 of Division 8 of
3the Evidence Code, and the human trafficking caseworker-victim
4privilege protected by Article 8.8 (commencing with Section 1038)
5of Chapter 4 of Division 8 of the Evidence Code.

6

SEC. 27.5.  

Section 1513.1 of the Probate Code is amended to
7read:

8

1513.1.  

(a) Each court or county shall assess (1) the parent,
9parents, or other person charged with the support and maintenance
10of the ward or proposed ward, and (2) the guardian, proposed
11guardian, or the estate of the ward or proposed ward, for court or
12county expenses incurred for any investigation or review conducted
13by the court investigator, probation officer, or domestic relations
14investigator. Subject to Section 68631 of the Government Code,
15the court may order reimbursement to the court or to the county
16in the amount of the assessment, unless the court finds that all or
17any part of the assessment would impose a hardship on the ward
18or the ward’s estate. A county may waive any or all of an
19assessment against the guardianship on the basis of hardship. There
20shall be a rebuttable presumption that the assessment would impose
21a hardship if the ward is receiving Medi-Cal benefits.

22(b) Any amount chargeable as state-mandated local costs
23incurred by a county for the cost of the investigation or review
24shall be reduced by any assessments actually collected by the
25county pursuant to subdivision (a) during that fiscal year.

26

SEC. 28.  

Section 1811 of the Probate Code is amended to read:

27

1811.  

(a) Subject to Sections 1813 and 1813.1, the spouse,
28domestic partner, or an adult child, parent, brother, or sister of the
29proposed conservatee may nominate a conservator in the petition
30or at the hearing on the petition.

31(b) Subject to Sections 1813 and 1813.1, the spouse, domestic
32partner, or a parent of the proposed conservatee may nominate a
33conservator in a writing signed either before or after the petition
34is filed and that nomination remains effective notwithstanding the
35subsequent legal incapacity or death of the spouse, domestic
36partner, or parent.

37

SEC. 29.  

Section 1812 of the Probate Code is amended to read:

38

1812.  

(a) Subject to Sections 1810, 1813, and 1813.1, the
39selection of a conservator of the person or estate, or both, is solely
40in the discretion of the court and, in making the selection, the court
P134  1is to be guided by what appears to be for the best interests of the
2proposed conservatee.

3(b) Subject to Sections 1810, 1813, and 1813.1, of persons
4equally qualified in the opinion of the court to appointment as
5conservator of the person or estate or both, preference is to be
6given in the following order:

7(1) The spouse or domestic partner of the proposed conservatee
8or the person nominated by the spouse or domestic partner pursuant
9to Section 1811.

10(2) An adult child of the proposed conservatee or the person
11nominated by the child pursuant to Section 1811.

12(3) A parent of the proposed conservatee or the person
13nominated by the parent pursuant to Section 1811.

14(4) A brother or sister of the proposed conservatee or the person
15nominated by the brother or sister pursuant to Section 1811.

16(5) Any other person or entity eligible for appointment as a
17conservator under this code or, if there is no person or entity willing
18to act as a conservator, under the Welfare and Institutions Code.

19(c) The preference for any nominee for appointment under
20paragraphs (2), (3), and (4) of subdivision (b) is subordinate to the
21preference for any other parent, child, brother, or sister in that
22class.

23

SEC. 30.  

Section 1813 of the Probate Code is amended to read:

24

1813.  

(a) (1) The spouse of a proposed conservatee may not
25petition for the appointment of a conservator for a spouse or be
26appointed as conservator of the person or estate of the proposed
27conservatee unless the petitioner alleges in the petition for
28appointment as conservator, and the court finds, that the spouse is
29not a party to any action or proceeding against the proposed
30conservatee for legal separation of the parties, dissolution of
31marriage, or adjudication of nullity of their marriage. However, if
32the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that the
33appointment of the spouse, who is a party to an action or
34proceeding against the proposed conservatee for legal separation
35of the parties, dissolution of marriage, or adjudication of nullity
36of their marriage, or has obtained a judgment in any of these
37proceedings, is in the best interests of the proposed conservatee,
38the court may appoint the spouse.

39(2) Prior to making this appointment, the court shall appoint
40counsel to consult with and advise the conservatee, and to report
P135  1to the court his or her findings concerning the suitability of
2appointing the spouse as conservator.

3(b) The spouse of a conservatee shall disclose to the conservator,
4or if the spouse is the conservator, shall disclose to the court, the
5filing of any action or proceeding against the conservatee for legal
6separation of the parties, dissolution of marriage, or adjudication
7of nullity of the marriage, within 10 days of the filing of the action
8or proceeding by filing a notice with the court and serving the
9notice according to the notice procedures under this title. The court
10may, upon receipt of the notice, set the matter for hearing on an
11order to show cause why the appointment of the spouse as
12conservator, if the spouse is the conservator, should not be
13terminated and a new conservator appointed by the court.

14

SEC. 30.5.  

Section 1851.5 of the Probate Code is amended to
15read:

16

1851.5.  

Each court shall assess each conservatee in the county
17for any investigation or review conducted by a court investigator
18with respect to that person. Subject to Section 68631 of the
19Government Code, the court may order reimbursement to the court
20for the amount of the assessment, unless the court finds that all or
21any part of the assessment would impose a hardship on conservatee
22or the conservatee’s estate. There shall be a rebuttable presumption
23that the assessment would impose a hardship if the conservatee is
24receiving Medi-Cal benefits.

25

SEC. 31.  

Section 2356.5 of the Probate Code is amended to
26read:

27

2356.5.  

(a) The Legislature hereby finds and declares:

28(1) That people with dementia, as defined in the last published
29edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
30Disorders,” should have a conservatorship to serve their unique
31and special needs.

32(2) That, by adding powers to the probate conservatorship for
33people with dementia, their unique and special needs can be met.
34This will reduce costs to the conservatee and the family of the
35conservatee, reduce costly administration by state and county
36government, and safeguard the basic dignity and rights of the
37conservatee.

38(3) That it is the intent of the Legislature to recognize that the
39administration of psychotropic medications has been, and can be,
40abused by caregivers and, therefore, granting powers to a
P136  1conservator to authorize these medications for the treatment of
2dementia requires the protections specified in this section.

3(b) Notwithstanding any other law, a conservator may authorize
4the placement of a conservatee in a secured perimeter residential
5care facility for the elderly operated pursuant to Section 1569.698
6of the Health and Safety Code, and which has a care plan that
7meets the requirements of Section 87705 of Title 22 of the
8California Code of Regulations, upon a court’s finding, by clear
9and convincing evidence, of all of the following:

10(1) The conservatee has dementia, as defined in the last
11published edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
12Mental Disorders.”

13(2) The conservatee lacks the capacity to give informed consent
14to this placement and has at least one mental function deficit
15pursuant to subdivision (a) of Section 811, and this deficit
16significantly impairs the person’s ability to understand and
17appreciate the consequences of his or her actions pursuant to
18subdivision (b) of Section 811.

19(3) The conservatee needs or would benefit from a restricted
20and secure environment, as demonstrated by evidence presented
21by the physician or psychologist referred to in paragraph (3) of
22subdivision (f).

23(4) The court finds that the proposed placement in a locked
24facility is the least restrictive placement appropriate to the needs
25of the conservatee.

26(c) Notwithstanding any other law, a conservator of a person
27may authorize the administration of medications appropriate for
28the care and treatment of dementia, upon a court’s finding, by clear
29and convincing evidence, of all of the following:

30(1) The conservatee has dementia, as defined in the last
31published edition of the “Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
32Mental Disorders.”

33(2) The conservatee lacks the capacity to give informed consent
34to the administration of medications appropriate to the care of
35dementia, and has at least one mental function deficit pursuant to
36subdivision (a) of Section 811, and this deficit or deficits
37significantly impairs the person’s ability to understand and
38appreciate the consequences of his or her actions pursuant to
39subdivision (b) of Section 811.

P137  1(3) The conservatee needs or would benefit from appropriate
2medication as demonstrated by evidence presented by the physician
3or psychologist referred to in paragraph (3) of subdivision (f).

4(d) Pursuant to subdivision (b) of Section 2355, in the case of
5a person who is an adherent of a religion whose tenets and practices
6call for a reliance on prayer alone for healing, the treatment
7required by the conservator under subdivision (c) shall be by an
8accredited practitioner of that religion in lieu of the administration
9of medications.

10(e) A conservatee who is to be placed in a facility pursuant to
11this section shall not be placed in a mental health rehabilitation
12center as described in Section 5675 of the Welfare and Institutions
13Code, or in an institution for mental disease as described in Section
145900 of the Welfare and Institutions Code.

15(f) A petition for authority to act under this section shall be
16governed by Section 2357, except:

17(1) The conservatee shall be represented by an attorney pursuant
18to Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1470) of Part 1.

19(2) The conservatee shall be produced at the hearing, unless
20excused pursuant to Section 1893.

21(3) The petition shall be supported by a declaration of a licensed
22physician, or a licensed psychologist within the scope of his or her
23licensure, regarding each of the findings required to be made under
24this section for any power requested, except that the psychologist
25has at least two years of experience in diagnosing dementia.

26(4) The petition may be filed by any of the persons designated
27in Section 1891.

28(g) The court investigator shall annually investigate and report
29to the court every two years pursuant to Sections 1850 and 1851
30if the conservator is authorized to act under this section. In addition
31to the other matters provided in Section 1851, the conservatee shall
32be specifically advised by the investigator that the conservatee has
33the right to object to the conservator’s powers granted under this
34section, and the report shall also include whether powers granted
35under this section are warranted. If the conservatee objects to the
36conservator’s powers granted under this section, or the investigator
37determines that some change in the powers granted under this
38section is warranted, the court shall provide a copy of the report
39to the attorney of record for the conservatee. If no attorney has
40been appointed for the conservatee, one shall be appointed pursuant
P138  1to Chapter 4 (commencing with Section 1470) of Part 1. The
2attorney shall, within 30 days after receiving this report, do one
3of the following:

4(1) File a petition with the court regarding the status of the
5conservatee.

6(2) File a written report with the court stating that the attorney
7has met with the conservatee and determined that the petition
8would be inappropriate.

9(h) A petition to terminate authority granted under this section
10shall be governed by Section 2359.

11(i) Nothing in this section shall be construed to affect a
12conservatorship of the estate of a person who has dementia.

13(j) Nothing in this section shall affect the laws that would
14otherwise apply in emergency situations.

15(k) Nothing in this section shall affect current law regarding the
16power of a probate court to fix the residence of a conservatee or
17to authorize medical treatment for any conservatee who has not
18been determined to have dementia.

19

SEC. 32.  

Section 6401 of the Probate Code is amended to read:

20

6401.  

(a) As to community property, the intestate share of the
21surviving spouse is the one-half of the community property that
22belongs to the decedent under Section 100.

23(b) As to quasi-community property, the intestate share of the
24surviving spouse is the one-half of the quasi-community property
25that belongs to the decedent under Section 101.

26(c) As to separate property, the intestate share of the surviving
27spouse is as follows:

28(1) The entire intestate estate if the decedent did not leave any
29surviving issue, parent, brother, sister, or issue of a deceased
30brother or sister.

31(2) One-half of the intestate estate in the following cases:

32(A) Where the decedent leaves only one child or the issue of
33one deceased child.

34(B) Where the decedent leaves no issue, but leaves a parent or
35parents or their issue or the issue of either of them.

36(3) One-third of the intestate estate in the following cases:

37(A) Where the decedent leaves more than one child.

38(B) Where the decedent leaves one child and the issue of one
39or more deceased children.

P139  1(C) Where the decedent leaves issue of two or more deceased
2children.

3

SEC. 32.5.  

Section 6402 of the Probate Code is amended to
4read:

5

6402.  

Except as provided in Section 6402.5, the part of the
6intestate estate not passing to the surviving spouse, under Section
76401, or the entire intestate estate if there is no surviving spouse,
8passes as follows:

9(a) To the issue of the decedent, the issue taking equally if they
10are all of the same degree of kinship to the decedent, but if of
11unequal degree those of more remote degree take in the manner
12provided in Section 240.

13(b) If there is no surviving issue, to the decedent’s parent or
14parents equally.

15(c) If there is no surviving issue or parent, to the issue of the
16parents or either of them, the issue taking equally if they are all of
17the same degree of kinship to the decedent, but if of unequal degree
18those of more remote degree take in the manner provided in Section
19240.

20(d) If there is no surviving issue, parent or issue of a parent, but
21the decedent is survived by one or more grandparents or issue of
22grandparents, to the grandparent or grandparents equally, or to the
23issue of those grandparents if there is no surviving grandparent,
24the issue taking equally if they are all of the same degree of kinship
25to the decedent, but if of unequal degree those of more remote
26degree take in the manner provided in Section 240.

27(e) If there is no surviving issue, parent or issue of a parent,
28grandparent or issue of a grandparent, but the decedent is survived
29by the issue of a predeceased spouse, to that issue, the issue taking
30equally if they are all of the same degree of kinship to the
31predeceased spouse, but if of unequal degree those of more remote
32degree take in the manner provided in Section 240.

33(f) If there is no surviving issue, parent or issue of a parent,
34grandparent or issue of a grandparent, or issue of a predeceased
35spouse, but the decedent is survived by next of kin, to the next of
36kin in equal degree, but where there are two or more collateral
37kindred in equal degree who claim through different ancestors,
38those who claim through the nearest ancestor are preferred to those
39claiming through an ancestor more remote.

P140  1(g) If there is no surviving next of kin of the decedent and no
2surviving issue of a predeceased spouse of the decedent, but the
3decedent is survived by the parents of a predeceased spouse or the
4issue of those parents, to the parent or parents equally, or to the
5issue of those parents if both are deceased, the issue taking equally
6if they are all of the same degree of kinship to the predeceased
7spouse, but if of unequal degree those of more remote degree take
8in the manner provided in Section 240.

9

SEC. 33.  

Section 21189.2 of the Public Resources Code is
10amended to read:

11

21189.2.  

The Judicial Council shall report to the Legislature
12on or before January 1, 2017, on the effects of this chapter on the
13administration of justice.

14

SEC. 34.  

Chapter 4.2 (commencing with Section 10830) of
15Part 2 of Division 9 of the Welfare and Institutions Code is
16repealed.

begin insert
17

begin insertSEC. 34.5.end insert  

Sections 5.2 and 5.7 of this bill incorporate
18amendments to Section 1936 of the Civil Code proposed by both
19this bill and Assembly Bill 1981. They shall only become operative
20if (1) both bills are enacted and become effective on or before
21January 1, 2015, (2) each bill amends Section 1936 of the Civil
22Code, and (3) this bill is enacted after Assembly Bill 1981, in which
23case Sections 5 and 5.5 of this bill shall not become operative.

end insert
24

SEC. 35.  

No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to
25Section 6 of Article XIII B of the California Constitution because
26a local agency or school district has the authority to levy service
27charges, fees, or assessments sufficient to pay for the program or
28level of service mandated by this act, within the meaning of Section
2917556 of the Government Code.



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