Bill Text: MS SB2230 | 2017 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Motor vehicles; prohibit transfer without a title to a licensed used vehicle parts dealer or scrap metal processor.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Republican 1-0)
Status: (Failed) 2017-01-31 - Died In Committee [SB2230 Detail]
Download: Mississippi-2017-SB2230-Introduced.html
MISSISSIPPI LEGISLATURE
2017 Regular Session
To: Finance
By: Senator(s) Fillingane
Senate Bill 2230
AN ACT TO AMEND SECTION 63-21-39, MISSISSIPPI CODE OF 1972, TO REMOVE THE PROVISION THAT AUTHORIZES A VEHICLE THAT IS AT LEAST 10 MODEL YEARS OLD TO BE TRANSFERRED WITHOUT A CERTIFICATE OF TITLE TO A LICENSED USED MOTOR VEHICLE PARTS DEALER OR SCRAP METAL PROCESSOR IF THE OWNER SIGNS A STATEMENT SWEARING THAT HE OR SHE HAS LOST THE CERTIFICATE OF TITLE TO THE VEHICLE OR RETURNED THE CERTIFICATE OF TITLE TO THE DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE; AND FOR RELATED PURPOSES.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI:
SECTION 1. Section 63-21-39, Mississippi Code of 1972, is amended as follows:
63-21-39. (1) (a) An owner who scraps, dismantles or destroys a vehicle and a person who purchases a vehicle as scrap or to be dismantled or destroyed shall indicate same on the back of the certificate of title and shall immediately cause the certificate of title and any other documents required by the Department of Revenue to be mailed or delivered to the Department of Revenue for cancellation. A certificate of title of the vehicle shall not again be issued except upon application containing the information the Department of Revenue requires, accompanied by a certificate of inspection in the form and content specified in Section 63-21-15(5) and proof of payment of a fee as provided in subsection (2) of this section.
* * *
, punishable by a fine of not more than One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00)
or imprisonment for not more than six (6) months,
( * * *b) Within two (2) business days of
each day's close of business, the used motor vehicle parts dealer or scrap
metal processor who purchases or receives motor vehicles for scrap or for parts
shall deliver in a format approved by the department, by electronic means once
developed and made available by the department, a list of all such vehicles
purchased that day for scrap or for parts. That list shall contain the
following information:
(i) The name, address and contact information for the reporting entity;
(ii) The vehicle identification numbers of such vehicles;
(iii) The dates such vehicles were obtained;
(iv) The names of the individuals or entities from whom the vehicles were obtained, for use by law enforcement personnel and appropriate governmental agencies only;
(v) A statement of whether the vehicles were, or will be, crushed or disposed of, or offered for sale or other purposes;
(vi) A statement of whether the vehicle is intended for export out of the United States; and
(vii) The National Motor Vehicle Title Information System identification number of the business acquiring the vehicle.
( * * *c) (i) For purposes of this
subsection, the term "motor vehicle" shall not include a vehicle
which has been crushed or flattened by mechanical means such that it is no
longer the motor vehicle as described by the certificate of title, or such that
the vehicle identification number is no longer visible or accessible.
(ii) In cases in which crushed or flattened vehicles are purchased or received, the purchasing or receiving used motor vehicle parts dealer or scrap metal processor shall verify that the seller has reported the vehicles in accordance with this subsection. Such verification may be in the form of a certification from the seller or a contract between the seller and the purchasing or receiving used motor vehicle parts dealer or scrap metal processor attesting to the seller's compliance with the reporting requirements of this subsection. Such verification must clearly identify the seller by a government issued photograph identification card or employer identification number, and the verification and copy of the identification card or number shall be maintained by the purchasing or receiving used motor vehicle parts dealer or scrap metal processor for a period of not less than two (2) years.
( * * *d) The information obtained by the
department in accordance with paragraph ( * * *b) of this subsection (1) shall be
reported to the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System, in a format
that will satisfy the requirement for reporting this information, in accordance
with rules adopted by the United States Department of Justice in 28 C.F.R.
25.56.
( * * *e) Until such time as the department
develops and makes available the Internet-based system described in paragraph ( * * *b) of this subsection, the used motor
vehicle parts dealer or scrap metal processor who purchases or receives motor
vehicles for scrap or for parts shall deliver the information required by
paragraph ( * * *b)
to the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System through any data
consolidator approved by such system, within forty-eight (48) hours of the day
the vehicle was purchased or acquired by such used motor vehicle parts dealer
or scrap metal processor which shall satisfy the requirements of paragraph ( * * *b).
( * * *f) The information obtained by the
department in accordance with paragraph ( * * *b) of this subsection (1) shall be made
available only to law enforcement agencies and for purposes of canceling
certificates of title. The information shall otherwise be considered to be
confidential business information of the respective reporting entities.
( * * *g) All records required under the
provisions of this subsection shall be maintained for a period of two (2) years
by the reporting entity and shall include a scanned or photocopied copy of the
seller's or seller's representative's driver's license or state issued
identification card.
( * * *h) A person who knowingly and
willfully violates this subsection (1), or any person who knowingly and
willfully falsifies or assists another person in falsifying the statement or
information required under * * * paragraph (b) * * * of this subsection, or any person who
knowingly and willfully sells a vehicle upon which there is an unsatisfied lien
or security interest, or who purchases a vehicle without complying with * * *
paragraph
(a) * * *
of this subsection and who knowingly and willfully destroys or
dismantles a vehicle upon which he knows that there is an unsatisfied lien or
security interest shall:
(i) Be guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable by a fine not more than One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) or imprisonment for not more than six (6) months, or both, for conviction of a first offense; or
(ii) Upon conviction of a second or subsequent offense, a felony, punishable by imprisonment for not less than one (1) year nor more than five (5) years or a fine of not less than One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) nor more than Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00), or both.
In addition, the court may order each person convicted to pay restitution to any party suffering monetary loss in the amount of such loss. No part of any sentence imposed by the court shall be suspended unless such restitution has been paid in full.
( * * *i) A person who knowingly and
willfully fails to deliver the title as required under paragraph (a) of this
subsection * * * to the Department of Revenue within seventy-two
(72) hours of the completion of the transaction, or who, until such time
as the department develops and makes available the Internet-based system
described in paragraph ( * * *db), fails to deliver the information required by
paragraph ( * * *b)
to the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System through any data
consolidator approved by such system, within two (2) business days of the day
the vehicle was purchased or acquired by such used motor vehicle parts dealer
or scrap metal processor shall be in violation of this section, and subject to
a civil penalty of up to One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) per violation.
Actions to impose this penalty may be brought by any local or state law
enforcement agency, district attorney, or by the Attorney General, in any court
of competent jurisdiction. One-half (1/2) of the monies generated from such
civil penalties shall be deposited in a special fund created in the State
Treasury for use by the Department of Revenue's Title Bureau, and one-half
(1/2) of the monies generated from such civil penalties shall be deposited in
the general fund of the municipality if the suit was brought in a municipal
court, or in the general fund of the county if the suit was brought in the
court of a county.
(2) For the purpose of requesting a clear title or a branded title on a vehicle with a salvage certificate of title, every owner of a vehicle that has been issued a salvage certificate of title in this state or any other state which has been restored in this state to its operating condition which existed prior to the event which caused the salvage certificate of title to be issued shall make application to the Department of Revenue, accompanied by a certificate of inspection issued by the Department of Public Safety in the form and content specified in Section 63-21-15(5) and the payment of a fee of Seventy-five Dollars ($75.00) for each motor vehicle for which a certificate of inspection is issued. In addition, the Department of Public Safety may charge such a person a fee in the amount of Twenty-five Dollars ($25.00) for performing any vehicle identification number verification required by federal law or regulation for the vehicle for which the person is applying for a title. All such monies shall be collected by the Department of Public Safety and paid to the State Treasurer for deposit in a special fund that is hereby created in the State Treasury to be known as the "Salvage Certificate of Title Fund." Monies in the special fund may be expended by the Department of Public Safety, upon appropriation by the Legislature. The Department of Revenue shall establish by regulation the minimum requirements by which a vehicle which has been issued a salvage certificate of title may be issued a clear title.
(3) Before a clear title or a branded title may be issued for a vehicle for which a salvage certificate of title has been issued, the applicant shall submit, by hand delivery or mail, such documents and information to the Department of Public Safety as the department may require for the purpose of determining if the vehicle complies with the requirements of this section and all applicable regulations promulgated by the Commissioner of Public Safety and the Department of Revenue. The Department of Public Safety also may require that an applicant bring a vehicle for which application for a clear title or a branded title is being made to a Highway Patrol facility for a visual inspection whenever the department deems that a visual inspection is necessary or advisable. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit inspectors of the Mississippi Highway Patrol from conducting on-site inspections and investigations of motor vehicle rebuilders or motor vehicle repair businesses to determine if such businesses are in compliance with all applicable laws relating to the motor vehicle title laws of this state and regulations promulgated by the Commissioner of Public Safety and the Department of Revenue.
SECTION 2. This act shall take effect and be in force from and after July 1, 2017.