AUCTIONEER REGULATION S.B. 1413:
COMMITTEE SUMMARY
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Senate Bill 1413 (as introduced 7-1-10)
Sponsor: Senator Jason E. Allen
Committee: Commerce and Tourism
Date Completed: 9-13-10
CONTENT
The bill would amend Article 29 (Auctioneers) of the Occupational Code to do all of the following:
-- Require an auctioneer to give a client a full accounting at the end of a transaction.
-- Specify that money given to an auctioneer for presale auction services would not have to be placed in trust.
-- Require an auctioneer's written records to include presale auction services.
-- Require a registered auctioneer to give a copy of a contract to his or her client.
-- Require the Department of Energy, Labor, and Economic Growth (DELEG) to register a person as an auctioneer if he or she submitted a completed application and an affidavit attesting to having had at least three years of experience before the effective date of Article 29.
Presale Auction Services
Trust Account. Article 29 specifies that money paid by any person to a registrant (a registered auctioneer) in connection with an auction is considered to be held in trust for the benefit of the person making the payment, and the registrant is considered the trustee for the money.
Under the bill, a registrant would have to give a client a full accounting upon the closing or termination of any transaction, including any money given to the registrant for presale auction services.
Money given to an auctioneer by a client or other person for presale auction services would not have to be placed in the trust account. An auctioneer, however, would have to provide a complete accounting of all auction service expenses to the client or other person at the closing or termination of the transaction.
Written Records. Article 29 requires a registrant to maintain written records of each auction sale for a period of at least three years from the date of the auction or at least three years from consummation or termination of the transaction, whichever is later. Under the bill, the written records would include presale auction services.
The records must include consignment receipts, bidder registrations, and documents relating to final settlements with consignors. Under the bill, the records also would have to include documents relating to presale auction services.
Contract
The Code prohibits a registered auctioneer from conducting an auction unless he or she executes a written contract with the person desiring auction services. A registrant must keep a written copy of the contract as part of his or her records. The bill also would require the registrant to give a copy of the contract to the client.
Registration
Article 29 requires DELEG to issue a registration to an individual or the qualifying member of a legal entity who meets certain educational and experience requirements. Notwithstanding these requirements, DELEG must register as an auctioneer an individual who applies within two years of the effective date of Article 29 (October 1, 2007) and submits to the Department an affidavit attesting to at least three years' experience in the conduct of auctions before that date, if the individual has conducted at least 12 auctions. The Department must verify the applicant's experience.
The bill would delete the requirement that the individual apply within two years after the effective date. The bill would require DELEG to register an individual who submitted to it a completed application and affidavit attesting to having had at least three years' experience in the conduct of auctions before that date, if he or she had conducted at least 12 auctions.
MCL 339.2909-339.2913 Legislative Analyst: Patrick Affholter
FISCAL IMPACT
The bill would have no fiscal impact on State or local government.
Fiscal Analyst: Elizabeth Pratt
Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. sb1413/0910