Bill Text: NC S18 | 2010 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Amend Cemetery Act
Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill
Status: (Passed) 2010-07-20 - Ch. SL 2010-102 [S18 Detail]
Download: North_Carolina-2010-S18-Amended.html
GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
SESSION 2009
S 3
SENATE BILL 18
Commerce Committee Substitute Adopted 5/12/09
House Committee Substitute Favorable 6/17/10
Short Title: Amend Cemetery Act. |
(Public) |
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Sponsors: |
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Referred to: |
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February 2, 2009
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT to AMEND THE North Carolina CEMETERY ACT BY requiring proof of a sufficient trust fund or surety bond prior to approving a change of control of a cemetery company, Changing the INVESTMENTS options for Perpetual care trust funds, REQUIRING CEMETERY COMPANIES TO LIST THE COST OF OPENING AND CLOSING A GRAVE SPACE AS PART OF THE CONTRACT, prohibiting a cemetery company from requiring a purchaser of a grave space to purchase a vault from a particular seller, increasing the extension that may be given to a cemetery company for completion of construction of mausoleums, and creating the legislative study commission on the north carolina cemetery act.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
SECTION 1. G.S. 65‑59 reads as rewritten:
"§ 65‑59. Application for a change of control; filing fee.
A person who proposes to acquire control of an existing cemetery company, whether by purchasing the capital stock of the company, purchasing an owner's interest in the company, or otherwise acting to effectively change the control of the company, shall first make application on a form supplied by the Commission for a certificate of approval of the proposed change of control. The application shall contain the name and address of each proposed new owner. The Commission shall issue a certificate of approval only after it determines that the proposed new owners are qualified by character, experience, and financial responsibility to control and operate the cemetery company in a legal and proper manner, and that the interest of the public generally will not be jeopardized by the proposed change in control. An application for approval of a change of control must be completed and accompanied by a filing fee to be set by the Commission in an amount not to exceed one thousand six hundred dollars ($1,600). The Commission shall not approve any change of control until the applicant has provided sufficient evidence that any trust account required under G.S. 65‑66(b) and G.S. 65‑70(b) is maintained and funded in the required amount. If the cemetery company posted a performance bond in lieu of any trust account required under G.S. 65‑66(b) and G.S. 65‑70(b), then the Commission shall not approve any change of control until the applicant has provided sufficient evidence that the performance bond is being appropriately maintained and in an amount sufficient to cover all payments made directly or indirectly by or on account of purchasers who have not received the purchased property and services."
SECTION 2. G.S. 65‑60.1 reads as rewritten:
"§ 65‑60.1. Trustees; qualifications; examination of records; enforcement.
(a) The term "corporate trustee" as used in
this Article shall mean either a bank a bank, credit union, or
trust company authorized to do business in North Carolina under the supervision
of the Commissioner of Banks Banks, Credit Union Administrator, or
any other corporate entity; provided that any corporate entity other than a bank
bank, credit union, or trust company which acts as trustee under
this Article shall first be approved by the Cemetery Commission and shall be
subject to supervision by the Cemetery Commission as provided herein.
(b) Any corporate entity, other than a bank bank,
credit union, or trust company, which desires to act as trustee for cemetery
funds under this Article shall make application to the Commission for approval.
The Commission shall approve the trustee when it has become satisfied that:
(1) The applicant employs and is directed by persons who are qualified by character, experience, and financial responsibility to care for and invest the funds of others.
(2) The applicant will perform its duties in a proper and legal manner and the trust funds and interest of the public generally will not be jeopardized.
(3) The applicant will act as trustee for cemetery funds which will exceed five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) in the aggregate.
(4) The applicant is authorized to do business in North Carolina and has adequate facilities to perform its duties as trustee.
(c) Any trustee under this Article, other than a bank
bank, credit union, or trust company under the supervision of the
Commissioner of Banks, shall maintain records relative to cemetery trust funds
as the Commission may by regulation prescribe. The records shall be available
at the trustee's place of business in North Carolina and shall be available at
all reasonable times for examination by a representative of the Commission. The
records shall be audited annually, within 90 days from the end of the trust
fund's fiscal year, by an independent certified public accountant, and a copy
of the audit report shall be promptly forwarded to the Commission.
(d) Whenever it appears that an officer, director, or
employee of a trustee, other than a bank bank, credit union, or
trust company, is dishonest, incompetent, or reckless in the management of a
cemetery trust fund, the Commission may bring an action in the courts to remove
the trustee and to impound the property and business of the trustee as may be
reasonably necessary to protect the trust funds.
(e) Any trustee shall invest and reinvest cemetery
trust funds in the same manner as provided by law for the investment of trust
funds by the clerk of the superior court; provided, however, that this
subsection does not apply to a perpetual trust fund described in G.S. 65‑64
or that cemetery trust funds held in a fund designated as Trust Fund
"A" pursuant to G.S. 65‑64(e)G.S. 65‑64(e),
which may be invested and reinvested in accordance with G.S. 36A‑2.G.S. 32‑71."
SECTION 3. G.S. 65‑64 reads as rewritten:
"§ 65‑64. Deposits to perpetual care fund.
(a) Deposits to the care and maintenance trust fund
must be made by the cemetery company holding title to the subject cemetery
lands on or before the last day of the calendar month following the calendar
month in which final payment is received as provided herein; however the entire
amount required to be deposited into the fund shall be paid within four years
from the date of any contract requiring such the payment
regardless of whether all amounts have been received by the cemetery company.
If the cemetery company fails to make timely deposit, the Commission may levy
and collect a late filing fee of one dollar ($1.00) per day for each day the
deposit is delinquent on each grave space, niche or mausoleum crypt sold. The
care and maintenance trust fund shall be invested and reinvested by the trustee
in accordance with G.S. 32‑71. the same manner as provided
by law for the investment of other trust funds by the clerk of the superior
court except that such investments may be made through means of a common trust
fund as described in G.S. 36A‑90; provided, further, that cemetery Investments
may be made through means of a common trust fund as described in G.S. 53‑163.5.
Cemetery trust funds held in a fund designated as Trust Fund "A"
pursuant to G.S. 65‑64(e) may be invested and reinvested in
accordance with G.S. 36A‑2.G.S. 32‑71. The
fees and other expenses of the trust fund shall be paid by the trustee from the
net income thereof and may not be paid from the corpus. To the extent that the said
net income is not sufficient to pay such the fees and other
expenses, the same fees and other expenses shall be paid by the
cemetery company.
(b) When a municipal, church‑owned or fraternal
cemetery converts to a private cemetery as defined in G.S. 65‑48,
then said the cemetery shall establish and maintain a care and
maintenance trust fund pursuant to this section; provided, however, the initial
deposit for establishment of this trust fund shall be an amount equal to fifty dollars
($50.00) per space for all spaces either previously sold or contracted for sale
in said the cemetery at the time of conversion or fifty thousand
dollars ($50,000), whichever sum is greater.
(c) Repealed by 1991 (Regular Session, 1992), c. 1007, s. 35.
(d) In each sales contract, reservation or agreement
wherein burial rights are priced separately, the purchase price of said the
burial rights shall be the only item subject to care and maintenance trust
fund deposits; but if the burial rights are not priced separately therein, the
full amount of the contract, reservations or agreement shall be subject to care
and maintenance trust fund deposits as provided herein, unless the purchase
price of said the burial rights can be determined from the
accounting records of the cemetery company.
(e) When the amount deposited in the perpetual care
fund required by this Article of any cemetery company shall amount to one
hundred fifty thousand dollars ($150,000), anything in this Article to the
contrary notwithstanding, the cemetery company may make all deposits thereafter
either into the original perpetual care trust fund or into a separate fund
established as an irrevocable trust, designated as Perpetual Care Trust Fund "A,"
and invested by the trustee, in accordance with G.S. 36A‑2, as
directed by the cemetery company.G.S. 32‑71. Funds in a
trust fund designated as Trust Fund "A" may not be invested in
another cemetery company.
(f) For special endowments for a specific lot, grave,
or a family mausoleum, memorial, marker, or monument, the cemetery may set
aside the full amounts received for this individual special care in a separate
trust or by a deposit to a savings account in a bank bank, credit
union, or savings and loan association located within and authorized to do
business in the State; provided, however, if the licensee does not set up a
separate trust or savings account for the special endowment the full amount
thereof shall be deposited in Perpetual Care Trust Fund 'A.'"
SECTION 4. G.S. 65‑66 reads as rewritten:
"§ 65‑66. Receipts from sale of personal property or services; trust account; penalties.
(a) It shall be deemed contrary to public policy if
any person or legal entity receives, holds, controls or manages funds or
proceeds received from the sale of, or from a contract to sell, personal
property or services which may be used in a cemetery in connection with the
burial of or the commemoration of the memory of a deceased human being, where
payments for the same are made either outright or on an installment basis prior
to the demise of the person or persons so purchasing them or for whom they are
so purchased, unless such the person or legal entity holds,
controls or manages said the funds, subject to the limitations
and regulations prescribed in this section. This section shall apply to all
cemetery companies or other legal entities that offer for sale or sell personal
property or services which may be used in a cemetery in connection with the
burial of, or the commemoration of the memory of, a deceased human being, but
shall exclude persons holding a license under Article 13D of Chapter 90 of the
General Statutes.
(b) Any cemetery company or other entity entering into a contract for the sale of personal property or services, to be used in a cemetery in connection with disposing of, or commemorating the memory of a deceased human being wherein the use of the personal property or the furnishing of services is not immediately requested or required, shall comply with the following requirements and conditions:
(1) The cemetery company or other entity shall deposit
an amount equal to sixty percent (60%) of all proceeds received on such the
contracts into a trust account, either in the form of an account governed
by a trust agreement and handled by a corporate trustee or in the form of a
passbook savings account, certificates of deposit for time certificates, and/oror
money‑market certificates with a licensed and insured bank bank,
credit union, or savings institution located in the State of North Carolina
until the amount deposited equals sixty percent (60%) of the actual sale price
of the property or services sold. Such The accounts and/or
or deposits or both shall be in the name of the cemetery company or
other entity in a form which will permit withdrawals only with the
participation and consent of the Cemetery Commission as required by subdivision
(4) of this subsection.
(2) All funds received on account of a contract for the
sale of such the personal property or services, whether the funds
be received directly from the purchaser or from the sale or assignment of notes
entered into by the purchase or otherwise, shall be deposited into the trust
account as required by subdivision (1) of this section.subsection.
(3) All deposits required herein shall be made into the trust account so established on or before the last day of the month following receipt of the funds by the cemetery company or other entity.
(4) Withdrawals from a trust account may be made by the
depositor, but only with the written approval of the Commission or officer or
employee of the Commission authorized to act for the Commission. Withdrawals
may be made only upon delivery of the merchandise or services for which the
funds were deposited, cancellation of a contract, the presence of excess funds
in the trust account, or under other circumstances deemed appropriate by the
Commission. The Commission shall promulgate rules and regulations governing
withdrawals from trust accounts, including time and frequency of withdrawals, payments
that will be made with the withdrawals, notice to the Commission prior to
withdrawals, the number and identity of persons other than the owner who are
authorized by the owner to make withdrawals, the officers and employees of the
Commission authorized to approve withdrawals, and any other matters necessary
to implement the provisions of this subdivision. Withdrawals will not be
allowed if the amount remaining in the trust account would fall below sixty
percent (60%) of all proceeds received on account of contracts for the sale of such
the personal property or services.
(5) If for any reason a cemetery company or other entity who has entered into a contract for the sale of personal property or services cannot or does not provide the personal property or perform the services called for by the contract after request in writing to do so, the purchaser or his heirs or assigns or duly authorized representative shall be entitled to receive the entire amount paid on the contract and any income if any, earned thereon by the trust account.
(6) Every year after September 1, 1975, the cemetery
company, the trustee or other entity shall within 75 days after the end of the
calendar year, file a financial report of the trust funds with the Commission,
setting forth the principal thereof, the investments and payments made, the
income earned and disbursed; provided, however, that the Commission may require
the cemetery, trustee, or other entity to make such the additional
financial reports as it may deem advisable.
(c) Whenever a contract for the sale of personal
property and/or or services or both allocates payments to
apply to one item at a time under a specific schedule, the contract shall be
considered divisible. Title to each item of personal property or the right to
each item of services shall pass to the purchaser upon full payment for that
item regardless of the remaining balance on other items under the same
contract.
(d) Any contract for the sale of personal property and/or
or services or both shall state separate costs for each item
of personal property, for each act of installation required by the contract, for
opening and closing each grave space, and for each other item of services
included in the contract.
(e) All contracts for the sale of personal property and/or
or services or both must be printed in type size as required by
the Truth in Lending Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1601 et seq., and regulations adopted
pursuant to that act.
(f) In the event of prepayment, interest charged shall be no more than the interest earned on the unpaid balance computed on a percent per month basis for each month or part of a month up to the date of final payment. Any excess interest which has been paid by the purchaser must be refunded to him, his assigns, or his representative within 30 days after the final payment. No penalty or additional charge for prepayment may be required.
(g) In lieu of the deposits required under subsection (b) of this section, the cemetery company or other entity may post with the Commission a good and sufficient performance bond by surety company licensed to do business in North Carolina and in an amount sufficient to cover all payments made directly or indirectly by or on account of purchasers who have not received the purchased property and services. Money received from the sale or assignment of notes entered into by the purchasers, or otherwise, shall be treated as payments made by the purchasers.
(h) The Commission shall have the power and is
required from time to time as it may deem necessary to examine the business of
any cemetery company or other entity writing contracts for the sale of the
property or services as herein contemplated. The written report of such the
examination shall be filed in the office of the Commission. Any person or
entity being examined shall produce the records of the company needed for such
the examination.
(i) Any provision of any contract for the sale of the personal property or the performance of services herein contemplated under which the purchaser or beneficiary waives any of the provisions of this section shall be void.
(j) Repealed by Session Laws 1991, c. 653, s. 7.
(k) Nothing in this section shall apply to persons or legal entities holding licenses under Article 13D of Chapter 90 of the General Statutes when engaging in activities for which a license is required under that Article.
(l) If any report is not received within the time stipulated by the Commission or herein, the Commission may levy and collect a late filing fee of twenty‑five dollars ($25.00) per month for each month of delinquency.
(m) Within 30 days following the execution of a contract for the sale of personal property or performance of services, a purchaser may cancel his contract by giving written notice to the seller. The seller may cancel the contract, upon default by purchaser, by giving written notice to the purchaser. Within 30 days of notice of cancellation, the cemetery company or other entity shall refund to purchaser the principal amount on deposit in the trust account for his benefit on any undelivered merchandise or services. This amount (no other obligations owed the purchaser by the seller) shall constitute the purchaser's entire entitlements under the contract. The seller may not terminate the contract without complying with this subsection.
(n) A cemetery company shall not require the purchaser or consumer of a grave space, mausoleum, or mausoleum section to purchase a vault from the cemetery company or from any other particular seller of vaults as a condition to the purchase or use of a grave space, mausoleum, or mausoleum section but may require that a casket be enclosed within a vault. A cemetery company may charge a reasonable fee not to exceed twenty dollars ($20.00) for delivery of vaults or inspection of vaults that are purchased from a person other than the cemetery company."
SECTION 5. G.S. 65‑70 reads as rewritten:
"§ 65‑70. Construction of mausoleums and belowground crypts; trust fund for receipts from sale of preconstruction crypts; compliance requirements.
(a) A cemetery company shall be required to start construction
of that section of a mausoleum or bank of belowground crypts in which sales,
contracts for sale, reservations for sales or agreements for sales are being
made, within 48 months after the date of the first such sale. The
construction of such the mausoleum section or bank of belowground
crypts shall be completed within five years after the date of the first sale
made; provided, however, extensions for completion, not to exceed one year,three
years, may be granted by the Commission for good reasons shown.
(b) A cemetery company which plans to offer for sale
space in a section of a mausoleum or bank of underground crypts prior to its
construction shall establish a preconstruction trust account. The trust account
shall be administered and operated in the same manner as the merchandise trust
account provided for in G.S. 65‑66 and shall be exclusive of the
merchandise trust account or such the other trust accounts or
funds that may be required by law. The personal representative of any purchaser
of such the space who dies before completion of construction
shall be entitled to a refund of all moneys paid for such the space
including any income earned thereon.
(c) Before a sale, contract for sale, reservation for
sale or agreement for sale in the first mausoleum section or bank of
underground crypts in each cemetery may be made the funds (one hundred twenty
percent (120%) of construction cost) to be deposited to the preconstruction
trust account shall be computed as to said the section or bank of
crypts and such the trust account payments must be made on or
before the last day of the calendar month following receipt by the cemetery
company or its agent of each payment. The trust account portion of each such
payment shall be computed by dividing the cost of the project plus twenty
percent (20%) of said the cost, as computed by a licensed
contractor, engineer or architect by the number of crypts in the section or
bank of crypts to ascertain the cost per unit. The unit cost shall be divided
by the contract sales price of each unit to obtain a percentage which shall be
multiplied by the amount of each payment. The formula shall be computed as
follows:
Cost plus twenty percent (20%) divided by number of crypts = cost per unit
Cost per unit divided by contract sales price = percentage
Percentage x payment received = deposit required to preconstruction trust account.
(d) The cemetery company shall be entitled to withdraw
the funds from said the preconstruction trust account only after
the Commission has become satisfied that construction has been completed;
provided, however, that during construction of the mausoleum or bank of
belowground crypts the Commission may, in its discretion, authorize a specific
percentage of the funds to be withdrawn when it appears that at least an
equivalent percentage of construction has been completed.
(e) If a mausoleum section or bank of underground
crypts is not completed within the time limits set out in this section the
corporate trustee, if any, shall contract for and cause said the project
to be completed and paid therefor from the trust account funds deposited to the
project's account paying any balance, less cost and expenses, to the cemetery
company. In the event there is no corporate trustee, the Commission shall
appoint a committee to serve as trustees to contract for and cause said the
project to be completed and paid therefor from the trust account funds
deposited to the project's account paying any balance, less cost and expenses,
to the cemetery company.
(f) In lieu of the payments outlined hereunder to the preconstruction trust account the cemetery company may deliver to the Commission a good and sufficient completion or performance bond in an amount and by surety companies acceptable to the Commission."
SECTION 6. G.S. 90‑210.60(2) reads as rewritten:
"(2) "Financial institution" means a bank,
bank, credit union, trust company, savings bank, or savings and loan
association authorized by law to do business in this State;".
SECTION 7.(a) There is created the Legislative Study Commission on the North Carolina Cemetery Act to study issues related to the regulation of cemeteries under the Act.
SECTION 7.(b) The Commission shall consist of 10 members as follows:
(1) Five members appointed by the Speaker of the House of Representatives. At least one of the appointees shall represent the interests of consumers and shall have no vested interest in the death care industry. At least one of the appointees shall be a person who resides in Western North Carolina.
(2) Five members appointed by the President Pro Tempore of the Senate. At least one of the appointees shall represent the interests of consumers and shall have no vested interest in the death care industry. At least one of the appointees shall be a person who resides in Eastern North Carolina.
SECTION 7.(c) The President Pro Tempore of the Senate shall designate one senator as cochair and the Speaker of the House of Representatives shall designate one representative as cochair. Vacancies on the Commission shall be filled by the same appointing authority that made the initial appointment.
SECTION 7.(d) The Commission shall study the following issues relating to the North Carolina Cemetery Act:
(1) Membership of the Cemetery Commission.
(2) Powers and duties of the Cemetery Commission, including:
a. The Commission's authority to investigate and address consumer complaints.
b. The Commission's authority and responsibilities with regard to approval of a proposed change of control pursuant to G.S. 65‑59.
(3) Qualifications of trustees for cemetery funds.
(4) Security of trust accounts maintained by cemetery companies.
(5) Adequacy of trust accounts maintained by cemetery companies, the adequacy of bonds posted in lieu thereof, and whether there should be any additional options in lieu of maintaining trust accounts.
(6) Bond requirements.
(7) Qualified bond companies.
(8) Ways to ensure proper maintenance and funding of trust accounts and performance bonds as a condition for approval of a change of control under G.S. 65‑59.
(9) Protection for consumers who die before final payment is collected on a preneed contract.
(10) Establishment of a consumer recovery fund to protect consumers from cemetery insolvency and/or fraud.
(11) Establishing trust accounts in the names of individual consumers.
(12) Any other matters the Commission deems appropriate.
SECTION 7.(e) The Executive Director of the Cemetery Commission and the Executive Director of the N.C. Board of Funeral Service shall assist the Commission in its work. The Commission, while in the discharge of its official duties, may exercise all powers provided for under G.S. 120‑19 and G.S. 120‑19.1 through G.S. 120‑19.4. The Commission may meet at any time upon the joint call of the cochairs. The Commission may meet in the Legislative Building or the Legislative Office Building.
The Legislative Services Commission, through the Legislative Services Officer, shall assign professional staff to assist the Commission in its work. The Senate's and the House of Representatives' Directors of Legislative Assistants shall assign clerical staff to the Commission, and the expenses relating to the clerical employees shall be borne by the Commission. The Commission may contract for professional, clerical, or consultant services as provided by G.S. 120‑32.02. If the Commission hires a consultant, the consultant shall not be a State employee or a person currently under contract with the State to provide services.
All State departments and agencies and local governments and their subdivisions shall furnish the Commission with any information in their possession or available to them.
SECTION 7.(f) The Commission shall report the results of its study and its recommendations to the 2011 General Assembly upon its convening, and the Commission shall terminate upon the filing of its report.
SECTION 8. Sections 1 through 6 of this act become effective October 1, 2010. The remainder of this act is effective when it becomes law.