Source: http://www.creditdetailer.com/center/state-laws/id-idaho
Timestamp: 2019-04-21 08:44:23+00:00

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This act shall be known as the "Idaho Collection Agency Act."
(1) "Agent" means any person who is compensated on a commission basis or by salary, or both, by any permittee and who either contacts debtors or creditors in connection with the collection agency business of the permittee.
(2) "Business funds" means all moneys belonging to or due the permittee in connection with the operation of a collection agency business.
(3) "Collection agency," "collection bureau" or "collection office" shall be a person who engages in any of the activities enumerated in section 26-2223, Idaho Code.
(4) "Director" means the director of the department of finance.
(5) "Creditor" means any person who transfers to a permittee accounts due and owing for collection purposes.
(6) "Creditors' account" means all funds due and owing a creditor within the definition of this chapter.
(7) "Net collections" means all funds that are due to creditors from the permittee pursuant to the contract between the permittee and creditor, or permittee and debtor without taking into account any offset or funds due from the creditor to the permittee, because of the creditor having collected any part of the account due, plus all funds that the permittee agreed to return to debtors or that were not to be applied to debts.
(8) "Permittee" means a person who has a permit to do business as a collection agency, or debt counselor, or credit counselor in Idaho .
(9) "Person" means any permittee, agent, solicitor, individual, corporation, association, copartnership, trust, company or unincorporated organization.
(10) "Debt counselor" means any person engaged in any of the activities enumerated in subsection (6) of section 26-2223, Idaho Code.
(11) "Credit counselor" means any person engaged in any of the activities enumerated in subsection (6) or (7) of section 26-2223, Idaho Code. No credit counselor shall be granted a permit pursuant to this chapter unless qualified as an exempt organization under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code [FN1].
(1) Operate as a collection agency, collection bureau, collection office, debt counselor, or credit counselor in this state.
(2) Engage, either directly or indirectly in this state in the business of collecting or receiving payment for others of any account, bill, claim or other indebtedness.
(3) Solicit or advertise for the right to collect or receive payment for another of any account, bill, claim or other indebtedness.
(4) Sell or otherwise distribute any system or systems of collection letters and similar printed matter where the name of any person other than the particular creditor to whom the debt is owed appears.
(5) Engage in any activity which indicates, directly or indirectly, that a third party may be involved in effecting any collections.
(6) Engage or offer to engage in the business of receiving money from debtors for application to or payment of or prorating of any creditor or creditors of such debtor.
(7) Engage or offer to engage in the business of providing counseling or other services to debtors in the management of their debts, and contracting with the debtor to effect the adjustment, compromise, or discharge of any account, note or other indebtedness of the debtor.
(8) Engage or offer to engage in the business of credit repair which includes obtaining, for others, improvements in credit records, extensions of credit for clients, or causing the removal of documents from the credit records of a client maintained by a credit reporting agency.
(9) Engage or offer to engage in this state, directly or indirectly, in the business of collecting any form of indebtedness for that person's own account if the indebtedness was acquired from another person and if the indebtedness was either delinquent or in default at the time it was acquired.
Every permittee under this chapter must maintain an office in the state of Idaho, staffed with at least one (1) natural person who passed the examination required in section 26-2229, Idaho Code, or is exempt from the provisions of this chapter pursuant to section 26-2239(1), Idaho Code, at each branch or facility. Each permittee must have a listed Idaho telephone number and must be open to the public during normal business hours on each business day, provided, however, that the director may in his discretion approve a request for opening at hours other than normal business hours or a portion of a business day. A business day within the meaning of this section does not include Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays. Each permittee under this chapter must designate a natural person, who need not be a resident of the state of Idaho , to be responsible for the business carried on at the office and who has passed the examination for a permit required by section 26-2229, Idaho Code. If the person designated by the permittee to be responsible for business carried on at the office is not normally available in the Idaho office, then the permittee's collection activities with debtors must begin with a written notice to each debtor setting forth a mailing address and a toll-free telephone number whereby a debtor may contact the designated responsible person during normal business hours.
(1) The name of the applicant if an individual; if the applicant is a corporation a list of its officers and directors and their addresses; if the applicant is a partnership a list of the partners and their addresses; or if the applicant is a limited liability company a list of its members or managers and their addresses. Every corporation shall designate and appoint one (1) or more of its officers or employees, every partnership shall designate and appoint one (1) or more of its partners, and every limited liability company shall designate and appoint one (1) or more of its members or managers who shall submit to the examination hereinafter required. No permit shall be issued to any corporation, partnership or limited liability company unless and until the persons so designated shall submit to and pass the examination required by this chapter.
(2) The location of the principal office or place of business of the applicant.
(3) Other names, if any, by which the applicant conducts, engages in or solicits business.
(4) The names of all persons and organizations with which the applicant is affiliated in such business, and the location of the principal office or place of business of each such affiliation.
(6) A list of all papers and filings used by the applicant which must accompany the application and be identified as exhibits by number.
(7) A financial statement showing the applicant to have a financial net worth of not less than two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500), which statement shall be subject to disclosure according to chapter 3, title 9, Idaho Code. The financial statement shall specify assets and liabilities, providing detailed reference to each item listed to inform the director of the nature and extent of such assets and liabilities. This financial statement shall be signed by the applicant or its proper agent. The net worth shall not include any notes, accounts, bills, and judgments held for collection by the applicant nor shall it include good will or other assets the value of which is speculative and not susceptible to prompt liquidation.
(8) Such other information concerning the applicant's business as the director may reasonably require. Such application shall be executed and verified by the applicant or applicants personally, or by an individual associated with the applicant as designated by the director.
(1) Complete copies of all literature and circulars issued or circulated by or on behalf of the applicant in soliciting or advertising for business including circular and form letters.
(2) Complete forms of all contracts designed for execution by persons placing any account, bill, claim or other indebtedness in the hands of the applicant for collection.
(3) Complete forms of all contracts and assignments designed for execution by debtors making any assignments to or placing any property with the applicant for the purpose of paying the creditors of such debtors.
(4) Complete forms of all contracts and releases designed for execution by creditors to whom payments are made or are to be made by the applicant.
(5) If the applicant is a corporation or association, a copy of its articles of incorporation or association, duly authenticated.
(6) A list of the names and addresses of all agents who will contact debtors or creditors or solicit business for the applicant in this state.
(7) The names and addresses of all directors and officers, if the applicant is a corporation or association; and the names of the members, if the applicant is an unincorporated company, a firm or copartnership.
(8) An agreement executed by the applicant stipulating that no literature or form of contract not submitted with the application will be issued, circulated or used by the applicant prior to the filing thereof with the director.
(9) An initial examination fee as fixed by the director, but not to exceed one hundred dollars ($100), except that no examination fee need be paid by a nonprofit corporation or association conducting credit counseling or debt prorating activities.
(10) Complete copies of all literature, circulars, contracts, and/or other related material to be circulated or distributed by the permit holder to a debtor.
(11) An irrevocable consent to service executed by the applicant appointing the director and his successors in office to be attorney of the applicant to receive service of any lawful process in any civil suit, action, or proceeding against the applicant which arises under this act or any rule or order hereunder. After the consent has been filed, any service hereunder shall have the same force and validity as if personally served on a person filing the consent. A person who has filed such a consent in connection with a previous registration need not file another. Service may be made by leaving a copy of the process in the office of the director.
(2)(a) Whenever it appears to the director that a person has violated subsection (1) of this section, the director shall have the powers and remedies set forth in sections 67-2754 and 67-2755, Idaho Code, as well as the powers and remedies found in this chapter, as to any such violation.
(b) Any person who violates subsection (1) of this section shall be subject to the criminal proceedings and penalties set forth in sections 67-2757, 67- 2758 and 67-2759, Idaho Code, as well as the criminal proceedings and penalties provided in this chapter.
The director shall have the power to provide the manner and method for conducting examinations. Applications for examination shall be filed with the director at least ten (10) days prior to the examination date.
The examination shall be uniformly given, may be written or oral or a combination of both and shall be practical in nature. The examination may include questions on bookkeeping, credit adjusting, business law, collection procedure, business ethics, agency, debtor and creditor relationship, trust funds, creditors' funds, business funds, fiduciary relationships, and the provisions of this act and the rules duly issued by the director pursuant to this act, and such other subject matter as the director by rule may specify. The examination shall be given twice each year or at such more frequent intervals as the director may direct.
(1) The director shall examine each application for a permit and accompanying papers and investigate the qualifications of the applicant and if he finds therefrom that the same are in proper form, that the literature proposed to be circulated does not tend to conceal or misrepresent any fact to the detriment of any person dealing with the applicant, that the contract or contracts proposed to be entered into for the collection or payment or prorating of accounts, bills, claims or other indebtedness by the applicant, or prorating or receiving money for payment to creditors are equitable, fair and reasonable, and that the applicant meets all other requirements and qualifications of this act, he shall examine the applicant if an individual, or the designated officer or officers or employees of any corporation and the designated member or members of any partnership, in the manner described in section 26-2225, Idaho Code, and if such applicant or designee passes a satisfactory examination, he shall cause a permit to be issued authorizing the applicant to conduct such a business in this state subject to the provisions of this act, until the fifteenth day of March next thereafter.
(2) If the director finds that the applicant does not qualify under the provisions of this act, the application shall be denied. If he finds the applicant is qualified he must issue a permit upon the filing of the bonds required by this act and the payment of an annual permit fee as fixed by the director, but not to exceed fifty dollars ($50), except that no permit fee need be paid by a nonprofit corporation or association conducting credit counseling or debt prorating activities.
(a) Permits the applicant to retain any sums due the creditor on any account, bill, claim or other indebtedness collected for him by the applicant on account of, or as a setoff against, any fee, commission, charge, expense or compensation claimed, other than the regular collection fees or commissions, to be due from such creditor on any other account whatever.
(b) Penalizes the creditor for failure to produce evidence in support of any account, bill, claim or item of indebtedness placed with the applicant for collection in addition to that delivered upon the execution of such contract.
(c) Penalizes such creditor for any unintentional error, mistake or omission in furnishing to the applicant the correct name or address of any debtor.
(d) Stipulates, directly or indirectly, for the payment of any fee, commission or compensation in excess of fifty per cent (50%) of the amount actually collected on any account, bill, claim or other indebtedness entrusted to the applicant for collection, provided, however, that in the case of interest collected by a permittee, the creditor and the permittee by agreement between them may provide for division of such interest between them without such percentage limitation; and provided further that in the case of collection of checks dishonored by nonacceptance or nonpayment the creditor and the permittee by written agreement between them may provide, in place of a percentage fee, for the payment of a set dollar amount collection fee not to exceed the amount provided in section 28-22-105, Idaho Code, which shall not be subject to the fifty per cent (50%) limitation. Collection agreements to proceed under section 1-2301A, Idaho Code, shall be subject to the fifty per cent (50%) limitation.
(4) A permit holder, engaging in the business of receiving money from debtors for application to or payment or prorating the account or accounts of any creditor or creditors of such debtor, for compensation or otherwise, or in the business of acting as the assignee for the benefit of creditors as a primary or secondary object, shall not take or receive for services performed by such permit holder for any one (1) person more than fifteen per cent (15%) of the amount received by it at any one (1) time from or on behalf of that person for payment or prorating to creditors and no other charges shall be made or received for any such service.
(1) Every permittee, foreign permittee and agent shall deal openly, fairly, and honestly without deception in the conduct of the collection agency business. When not inconsistent with the statutes of this state, the provisions of the federal fair debt collection practices act, 15 U.S.C. section 1692, et seq., as amended, may be enforced by the director against agents, permittees and foreign permittees under the provisions of this chapter.
(2) In any and every instance where the permittee has a managerial or financial interest in the creditor, or where the creditor has a managerial or financial interest in the permittee, disclosure of such interest must be made on each and every contact with a debtor in seeking to make a collection of any account, claim, or other indebtedness where such interest or relationship exists between creditor and permittee.
(d) Are provided for in a written form agreement, to be signed by both the debtor and the permittee, and which has the prior approval of the director with respect to the terms of the agreement and amounts of the fees, interest, charges and expenses.
(4) No person shall sell, distribute or make use of collection letters, demand forms or other printed matter which are made similar to or resemble governmental forms or documents, or legal forms used in civil or criminal proceedings.
(5) No person shall use any trade name, address, insignia, picture, emblem or any other means which creates any impression that such person is connected with or is an agency of government.
(1) The director may authorize a permittee, upon request, to conduct collection activities authorized in this chapter at additional locations. The additional locations shall be considered branches of the permittee. The director shall be informed of the opening and closing of all branch locations operated by permittees.
(2) The director may authorize a permittee, upon written request, to conduct limited collection activities at locations other than the principal location of the permittee or branches. The facilities may be at the domiciles of the agents employed by the permit holder. Collection activities at facilities shall be limited to telecommunications with creditors, clients, debtors, and the permittee's offices and branches. The director shall be informed of the opening and closing of all facility locations operated by permittees.
Upon application postmarked on or before the fifteenth day of March of each year, the holder of any permit issued under the provisions of this chapter shall be entitled to have such permit renewed for the succeeding calendar year upon payment of the annual permit fee as fixed by the director, but not to exceed fifty dollars ($50.00), compliance with the bond requirements of this chapter, the filing of a financial statement in the form required by section 26-2224(7), Idaho Code, showing a net worth of at least two thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) for each place of business for which a permit is sought, filing of all other documents required by section 26-2224, Idaho Code, and approval by the director of all literature to be employed by the permittee during the course of the business year, except no annual permit renewal fee need be paid by a nonprofit corporation or association conducting credit counseling or debt prorating activities.
Upon approval of the application and prior to the issuance of the permit the applicant must file in the department of finance two (2) bonds. Both bonds shall be in a form provided by the attorney general of this state, and shall be executed by the applicant as principal and by some surety company authorized to do business in this state as surety, and shall be for the term of any permit issued to the applicant. Each permittee shall be required to have the two (2) bonds for each permit as hereinafter provided. In lieu of the bonds required by this section, a certificate of deposit issued by an Idaho bank and made payable to the director may be provided to the director in the same principal amount as required for bonds. The interest on the certificate of deposit shall be payable to the permittee. The certificate of deposit shall be maintained at all times during which the permittee is authorized to do business under Idaho law, and must provide that it will remain in effect for at least three (3) years following discontinuance of operations, unless released earlier by the director when all statutory requirements have been met.
(a) A bond shall be executed to the state of Idaho in the sum of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) or upon renewal in such larger sum as hereinafter provided. In any case where a permittee or its representatives has failed to account for and pay over the proceeds of any collection made or money received for payment or prorating to creditors, or has failed to return to a debtor any sum received that was not to be applied to his debts, the creditor or debtor shall have in addition to all other legal remedies a right of action in his own name on such bond without the necessity of joining the permittee in such action. The bond shall be continuous in form and shall remain in full force and effect for the permit period. The surety may cancel the bond provided that the surety shall in such event provide the permittee and the director with notice thirty (30) days prior to cancelation of said bond. Such notice shall be by registered or certified mail with request for a return receipt and addressed to the permittee at its main office and to the director. In no event shall the liability of the surety for any and all claims against the bond exceed the face amount of such bond.
Upon renewal of any permit, the permittee shall supply the director with a statement of the preceding year's net collections. The amount of the bond upon renewal shall be in the amount of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000), or two (2) times the average monthly net collections for the preceding year computed to the next highest one thousand dollars ($1,000), whichever sum is greater, up to a maximum of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000).
(b) A bond shall be executed to the state of Idaho in the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000), which shall be limited to the indemnification of the department of finance for any and all expenses incurred as a result of investigations, administrative proceedings, and prosecutions which shall be instituted by the director against a permittee or licensee pursuant to this act. The bond shall be continuous in form and remain in full force and effect and run concurrently with the permit period and any renewal thereof. The surety may cancel the bond provided that the surety shall in such event provide the permittee and the director with notice thirty (30) days prior to cancelation of said bond. Such notice shall be registered or certified mail with request for a return receipt and addressed to the permittee at its main office and to the director. In no event shall the liability of the surety for any and all claims against the bond exceed the face amount of such bond.
(1) A debt counselor or credit counselor which holds a valid permit under this chapter and is engaged in the activities described in section 26-2223(6) or 26-2223(7), Idaho Code, may, upon approval of the director of the department of finance, supply the director, upon renewal of its permit, in lieu of the bond required in section 26-2232(a), Idaho Code, a bond in the minimum amount of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) or two (2) times the average monthly net of unremitted funds received from debtors for the preceding year, computed to the next highest one thousand dollars ($1,000), whichever is greater.
(2) Such bonds shall be subject to the same conditions and requirements as the bond set forth in section 26-2232(a), Idaho Code, and shall be in addition to the bond required by section 26-2232(b), Idaho Code.
(3) Application for approval by the director of the department of finance shall be on a form provided by the director and shall include such information as the director shall require.
(4) A credit counselor applicant shall furnish with the application a certified copy of applicant's determination as an exempt corporation under section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, made by the district director of internal revenue, or in the subsequent renewal of its permit and bond, evidence of continuance of its exempt determination by the district director of internal revenue.
(a) The amount of net unremitted funds received from debtors it held on the first day of each calendar month which was collected or received in any prior month or months showing the exact month received and the amount for such month.
(b) The amount of money received during each calendar month from debtors.
(c) The amount of money remitted to creditors or returned to debtors during each calendar month.
(d) The moneys, fees, or commissions retained from the moneys received during each calendar month.
(e) The amount of net unremitted funds due creditors or debtors at the end of each calendar month.
(6) For the purposes of this section money or moneys remitted shall mean money which has actually been conveyed or transferred to the creditor or debtor or his designated agent by physical transfer of cash or by certified or cashier's check or other means so that actual ownership of such funds shall have passed to the creditor or debtor or his agent and no right or interest shall remain in the credit counseling service. A check or bank draft issued but not actually paid, without recourse shall not constitute a remittance.
(7) At any time that the director of the department of finance shall deem that the alternate bond provided for in this section shall be inadequate he may withdraw and cancel approval for the "in lieu" bond and require the bond provided in section 26-2232(a), Idaho Code, or cancel or suspend the permit of the consumer credit counseling service as provided in section 26-2236, Idaho Code.
(1) Establish and maintain a separate trust account for deposit and remittance of creditors' funds in a financial institution, the deposits of which are insured by the federal deposit insurance corporation.
(2) Establish and maintain a separate business account for the business funds and moneys in a financial institution, the deposits of which are insured by the federal deposit insurance corporation.
(1) The director or his duly authorized representatives may make an annual examination, or more frequently in the director's discretion, of the place of business of each permittee and foreign permittee and for that purpose the director shall have free access to the offices and places of business, books, creditors' accounts, trust accounts, business accounts, records, papers, files, safes and vaults of all such permittees.
(2) The director may, upon his own motion, and shall, upon the sworn complaint in writing of any person, investigate the action of any person or persons claimed to have violated the provisions of this chapter, and for that purpose the director shall have free access to the offices and places of business, books, creditors' accounts, trust accounts, business accounts, records, papers, files, safes and vaults of all such persons.
(3) Every permittee and foreign permittee shall execute to the director an agreement of consent to examination of any and all bank accounts of the permittee providing the director with authority to make such examination at any time the director, in his discretion, deems it to be in the public interest.
(4) The cost of examination for the first annual examination each year and any investigation shall be paid to the director by each permittee so examined or investigated and the director may maintain an action for the recovery of such costs against the permittee or against the surety providing the bond to indemnify the state for such expenditures as required by this chapter. The cost shall be fixed annually by the director, but shall not exceed twenty-five dollars ($25.00) per examination hour.
(5) Each permittee shall acknowledge in writing each account received for collection and shall maintain a record of such account, make a permanent record of all sums collected by him and of all disbursements made by him. Every permittee shall keep and preserve all records relating to accounts received for collection, collections, receipts, and disposal or disbursement of all creditors' funds for a period of five (5) years after the final disposition of any account. It shall be unlawful for any person to intentionally make any false entry, omit to make a necessary entry, mutilate, secrete away, destroy or otherwise dispose of any record mentioned in this subsection, provided a record may be disposed of after the five (5) year period heretofore provided.
(6) Every permittee shall, within thirty (30) days after the close of each calendar month, pay to his creditors the net proceeds of all collections made by the permittee during said calendar month. Each permittee shall report to the creditor all collections made by him and/or any payments made to the creditor within thirty (30) days after the close of each calendar month.
(7) Every permittee shall maintain his books and records in accordance with generally accepted accounting practices subject to such rules and regulations as adopted by the director.
(8) The director, may impound the creditors' accounts, or trust accounts of any permittee if it shall be deemed in the general public interest.
(l) owes outstanding, unpaid, delinquent and undisputed accounts or judgments.
(2) The director, after notice and hearing, may impose a civil penalty of not more than one thousand dollars ($1,000) for each violation upon any permittee found to have violated any provision of this chapter.
(3) Permits shall be issued hereunder only to persons who are, and to partnerships, firms, companies, and associations whose members and managers are, and to corporations whose managers are over twenty-one (21) years of age.
(4) The director may, after notice and hearing, impose any sanction authorized by this section on a permit holder if the director finds that an agent of the permit holder has violated any provision of section 26-2229A, Idaho Code.
(5) The director may, in his discretion, and by an order issued in accordance with chapter 52, title 67, Idaho Code, prohibit permit holders from utilizing an individual as an agent if the individual has participated in a violation of this act, or any similar statute of another state.
The director shall have the power to issue subpoenas and bring before him any person, book, or writing in this state, to swear witnesses and to take the testimony of any person by deposition, with the same fees and mileage and in the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial procedure in district courts of this state in civil cases. Any party to a proposed revocation or suspension of a permit shall have the right of subpoena to compel the attendance of witnesses and produce all books and writing on his behalf. In case any witness shall fail or refuse to comply with a subpoena to appear before the director, the clerk of the district court of the county in which the administrative proceedings are held shall, upon demand of the director, issue a subpoena reciting the demand therefor and summoning the witness to appear and testify at a time and place fixed; and violation of such subpoena or disobedience thereto shall be deemed and punished as a violation of any other subpoena issued from the district court. Any revocation or suspension of any permit or license provided for by this chapter shall be governed by chapter 52, title 67, Idaho Code.
All fees provided for in this chapter shall be paid to the director and by him remitted to the state treasurer pursuant to section 59-1014, Idaho Code, and all such funds shall be deposited to the credit of the finance administrative account in the state dedicated fund.
Any person who shall do business within the state of Idaho as defined in this act, without a permit, or any permit holder who fails to establish and maintain a separate trust account for such creditors' funds for each permit which he holds, or fails to make and keep the records required by this act, shall be guilty of a felony and punishable by a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000) or by imprisonment in the state penitentiary for not more than five (5) years, or both, and any person who shall fail to comply with any of the other provisions of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
(10) A person while acting as a debt collector for another person, both of whom are related by common ownership or affiliated by corporate control, if the person acting as a debt collector does so only for persons to whom he is so related or affiliated and if the principal business of such person is not the collection of debts.
Each permit holder shall, with its initial application and each annual renewal, file with the director a list of all agents including the name of the agent and any other identifying information the director may require. A fee of twenty dollars ($20.00) for each listed agent shall accompany the list. The director shall be notified in writing of any additions to the agent list no less often than every calendar quarter. A fee of twenty dollars ($20.00) shall be filed with the director for each additionally identified agent in the quarterly notification of additions to a permit holder's agent list. An agent is not required to be listed, nor the fee paid therefor, unless the agent acted for the permit holder for more than five (5) business days.
A permit holder shall have a property right in any account assigned to it for collection; provided, however, no right herein granted shall authorize such permit holder to engage in the practice of law.
(1) Whenever it appears to the director that it is in the public interest, he may order any person to cease and desist from acts, practices, or omissions which constitute a violation of this chapter.
(c) Issue an order that the person violating this chapter pay costs, which in the discretion of the director may include an amount representing reasonable attorney's fees and reimbursement for investigative efforts.
(1) Whenever it appears to the director that any person, or employee or agent thereof, has engaged in or is about to engage in any act or practice or omission constituting a violation of any provision of this chapter, or any rule or order hereunder, he may in his discretion bring an action in any court of competent jurisdiction to enjoin any such acts or practices and to enforce compliance with this chapter or any rules hereunder. Upon a showing that a person, or employee or agent of any person, has engaged in or is about to engage in an act or practice constituting a violation of this chapter or any rule or order hereunder, a permanent or temporary injunction, or restraining order shall be granted and a receiver or conservator may be appointed for the defendant's assets. The director shall not be required to furnish bond.
(a) Proper remittance has been made to all creditors or claimants of money collected.
(b) All accounts have been returned to the creditors and certification to that effect has been provided to the director.
(c) All valuable papers and assignments of judgment given to the permittee by the creditor [creditors] in connection with claims have been returned to the creditor [creditors].
(d) All judgments obtained by the collection agency against debtors, in the agency's name, have been returned and assigned to the creditors.
(2) Any permittee discontinuing doing business as a collection agency shall maintain the bonds required of such permittee to conduct a collection agency business until a final accounting has been made to the director and approved by him.
The administration of the provisions of this act shall be under the general supervision and control of the director, subject to chapter 52, title 67, Idaho Code. The director may from time to time make, amend, and rescind such rules, regulations and forms necessary to carry out the provisions of this act. No rule, regulation or form may be made unless the director finds that the action is necessary or appropriate for the public interest or for the protection of creditors and debtors consistent with the purpose of this act.
(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, if a permittee meets the conditions of subsection (2) of this section, it shall be exempt, as a foreign permittee, from the requirements that it maintain an agent or office in this state.
(g) Maintain its books and records in accordance with generally accepted accounting practices. The director or his duly authorized representatives may make an annual examination, or more frequent in the director's discretion, of the principal place of business of a foreign permittee outside the state of Idaho, and for that purpose the director shall have free access to the offices and places of business, books, creditors' accounts, trust accounts, business accounts, records, papers, files, safes and vaults of all such permittees. The actual cost of examination for the first annual examination each year and any investigation shall be paid to the director by each permittee so examined or investigated. The director may maintain an action for the recovery of such costs against the foreign permittee.
(3) The director shall examine each application for a foreign permit hereunder in the manner provided in section 26-2229, Idaho Code, and if the applicant is found to be qualified under the provisions of this chapter, shall cause a permit to be issued authorizing the applicant to conduct a business in this state as a foreign permittee. An applicant who has been issued a foreign permit pursuant to this chapter shall be known as a "foreign permittee." If the director finds that the applicant does not qualify under the provisions of this chapter, the application shall be denied.
(4) The failure of a permittee to comply with the provisions of this section shall constitute grounds for denial, revocation or suspension of a foreign permit pursuant to section 26-2235, Idaho Code.
Any permittee or foreign permittee failing to apply in a timely manner for renewal of a permit shall have said permit canceled effective the day following the last day for renewal applications to be filed. Engaging in collection agency business with a canceled permit shall be a violation of the provisions of this chapter. To restore a canceled permit the fee shall be two hundred dollars ($200). A canceled permit may be restored only before the expiration of six (6) months following the date of annual renewal.
Current through all 2007 laws of the First Regular Session of the 59th Legislature, Chs. 1-358 that are effective on or before Apr. 11, 2007.
I identified only one significant case construing the Act. In Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. McEldowney, 564 F. Supp. 257 (D. Idaho 1983). Dunn addressed application of the Act, and a regulatory application of the Act, to a debt collection agency. Although the facts do not involve a credit repair business, the legal requirements addressed in the case apply with equal force to debt collection and credit repaid businesses. The court ruled that the statute’s requirement that business licensed under the Act maintain an in state office was clear and did not violate the dormant commerce clause. The court ruled that regulatory construction of the Act that would have required all communications from a licensed business to in-state residents to come from the required in-state office was beyond the language of the act and would violate the dormant commerce clause. Plaintiff’s also challenged the Act based on their reading that it would deny a license required by the Act to anyone who was not an in-state resident. The court found that the residency requirement was discretionary with the licensing authority, not mandatory, and thus was valid.
PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Plaintiff debt collector brought action against defendant, Director of the Department of Finance of the State of Idaho, to enjoin the director from enforcing Idaho Code §§ 26-2223A, 26-2229, 26-2233, and 26-2242(8), which required debt collection to be conducted from within the State of Idaho.
OVERVIEW: Plaintiff debt collector was incorporated in Delaware . It operated an office, as required by Idaho law, within the State of Idaho . It sought a declaratory judgment that certain Idaho statutes that governed debt collection within the state were unconstitutional because they violated the U.S. Constitution's Commerce Clause. The court examined the statutes and their affect on interstate commerce and concluded that one statute, which prohibited communications to persons within the state of Idaho to be instigated from within that state to be unconstitutional. Other statutes, which required debt collectors to maintain in-state offices and which connected the issuance of licenses to residency requirements, were deemed constitutional. Thus the debt collector's motion for summary judgment was granted in part and denied in part.
OUTCOME: The court denied plaintiff debt collector's motion for a declaratory judgment as to certain statutes and granted the motion concerning the statute that required intrastate communications and excluded interstate communications, holding that it was constitutionally impermissible.
COUNSEL: [**1] Dale G. Higer of Eberle, Berlin, Kading, Turnbow & Gillespie, Boise, Idaho, for Plaintiff.
Patric V. Collins, Deputy Attorney General, Department of Finance, Boise , Idaho , for Defendant.
This action is brought by the plaintiff, Dun & Bradstreet, to restrain and enjoin Tom D. McEldowney, Director of the Department of Finance of the State of Idaho, from enforcing the provisions of Chapter 22, Title 26, Idaho Code, and more particularly, Section 26-2223A, Section 26-2229, Section 26-2233, and Section 26-2242(8), [*259] Idaho Code, and the rules and regulations adopted thereunder. Dun & Bradstreet asks this court to enter a declaratory judgment in accordance with the provisions of 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202 declaring that the provisions of said statutes of the State of Idaho and the rules and regulations adopted thereunder are null and void and have no effect as being a contravention of the commerce clause, Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution of the United States.
The parties have caused to be filed a Stipulation and Order Concerning Issues Presented and Conduct of the Case, and providing that depositions [**2] be taken of one witness for each party, after which the parties fully briefed the matter to the court. The court heard oral argument of counsel, and being fully advised in the premises, sets forth the following opinion.
(a) Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware , and has its principal place of business in New York City , New York .
(b) Tom D. McEldowney is the Director of the Department of Finance of the State of Idaho .
(c) Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., is a collection agency and as such engages in the activities enumerated in Section 26-2223, Idaho Code, and is a permittee authorized to engage in such activities within the State of Idaho.
(d) As an entity which has a nationwide collection agency practice, Dun & Bradstreet is engaged in interstate commerce.
(e) As a permittee, Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., is required under the provisions of Section 26-2223A, Idaho Code, to maintain an office within the State of Idaho. This office is maintained in Boise , Idaho , and must be open to the public during normal business hours on each business day under the provisions [**3] of this section of the Idaho Code. Dun & Bradstreet is required to employ a resident of the State of Idaho who has passed the examination for a permit required by Section 26-2229, Idaho Code, to be personally and actively in charge of the business of Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., carried on at their office. In addition, the resident employee must have a license as required by Section 26-2240, Idaho Code.
(f) Tom D. McEldowney and employees of the Department of Finance of the State of Idaho have interpreted the provisions of Chapter 22, Title 26, Idaho Code, to prohibit Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., and other collection agencies from soliciting for collection the accounts of creditors within the State of Idaho through the use of the mails of the United States or telephone from outside the State of Idaho, or effecting the collection of creditors' accounts assigned to Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., or other collection agencies for collection (except by forwarding such accounts to collection agencies licensed and located in the State of Idaho) through the use of the mails of the United States or telephone from outside the State of Idaho.
(a) Whether the provisions of Section 26-2223A, Idaho Code, impose an unreasonable restriction on interstate commerce in violation of the commerce clause, Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution of the United States.
(b) Whether the provisions of Section 26-2242(8), Idaho Code, impose an unreasonable restriction on interstate commerce in violation of the commerce clause, Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution of the United States .
(c) Whether the interpretation of Chapter 22, Title 26, Idaho Code, made by Tom D. McEldowney and employees of the Department of Finance of the State of Idaho, that a collection agency permittee and its employees are prohibited from soliciting for collection the accounts of creditors within the State of Idaho through the use of the mails of the United States or telephone from outside the State of Idaho, and that a collection agency permittee and its employees are prohibited from effecting the collection [*260] of creditors' accounts assigned to such permittee for collection (except by forwarding the account to a collection agency licensed and located in the State of Idaho) through the use of the mails of the United [**5] States or telephone from outside the State of Idaho, imposes an unreasonable restriction on interstate commerce in violation of the commerce clause, Article I, Section 8, of the Constitution of the United States.
26-2223A. Office to be maintained in state. -- Every permittee under this act must maintain an office in the state of Idaho at each location for which a permit is issued. Each office must be open to the public during normal business hours on each business day, provided, however, that the director may in his discretion approve a request for opening at hours other than normal business hours or a portion of a business day. A business day within the meaning of this section does not include Saturdays, Sundays, or legal holidays. Each permittee under this act must designate a person to be personally and actively in charge of the business carried on at any office for which a permit is held. No office may be operated by a permittee under this act unless the person who is personally and actively in charge of the operation of an office doing business under this act passes [**6] the examination for a permit required by section 26-2229, Idaho Code, provided that persons operating under a valid collection agency permit on July 1, 1974 shall not be required to comply with this requirement until July 1, 1976.
HN2 Section 26-2223A requires every permittee to maintain an office in the State of Idaho at each location for which a permit is issued, and requires each permittee to designate a person to be personally and actively in charge of the business carried on at such office. The Department of Finance has interpreted this section to require that a collection agency permittee conduct its business from its designated Idaho (offices). This interpretation prohibits any collection agency from either soliciting accounts from Idaho creditors or attempting to effect collections from Idaho debtors from any location outside the State of Idaho , since business must be conducted from the location for which a permit has been issued, and no permit will be issued for a location outside the State of Idaho . This interpretation also prohibits any collection agency from conducting its business from any location within the State of Idaho for which no permit has been issued.
(8) Is not a bona fide resident of this state; . . .
any person licensed by the director who is employed by a collection agency and whose primary function is as a solicitor engaged in collection or receiving payment or soliciting the receiving or collection of payment for others of any account, bill or other indebtedness for the collection agency.
(1) No person shall act as a licensee of any firm, company or person holding a permit under this act without first obtaining a license to do so.
HN4 Article I, Section 8, of the United States Constitution reads in pertinent part: "The Congress shall have Power . . . To regulate commerce . . . among the several [**8] States . . ."
HN6 Where the statute regulates evenhandedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits. [**9] (citations omitted) If a legitimate local purpose is found, then the question becomes one of degree. And the extent of the burden that will be tolerated will of course depend on the nature of the local interest involved, and on whether it could be promoted as well with a lesser impact on interstate activities.
The defendant submits that the challenged statutes and the interpretation thereof by the Department of Finance, will pass constitutional muster under the "Pike balancing test."
The defendant argues that the instant case falls within a third category wherein Congress enacted the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act (hereinafter "FDCPA"), 15 U.S.C. §§ 1692-1692o, which legislates in the same area regulated by the Idaho Collection Agency Law.
This title does not annul, alter, or affect, or exempt any person subject to the provisions of this title from complying with the laws of any State with respect to debt collection practices, except to the extent that those laws are inconsistent with any provision of this title, and then only to the extent of the inconsistency. For purposes of [**10] this section, a State law is not inconsistent with this title if the protection such law affords any consumer is greater than the protection provided by this title.
The defendant states that an express congressional recognition of rights of states to legislate in a particular area would be dispositive in that Congress has expressly approved of stricter state laws in the field of collection agency regulation; therefore, ordinary "dormant" commerce clause analysis does not apply to such regulation and the statutes and interpretation which are the subject of the instant case do not contravene the commerce clause of the United States Constitution.
However, plaintiff argues that it is a commercial collection agency and that the FDCPA has application only to consumer collection agencies. An analysis of the challenged statutes and the interpretation thereof, varies depending upon whether the FDCPA is applicable to commercial collection agencies.
At oral argument, neither party could point to a judicial determination of the applicable difference as between consumer collection agency and commercial collection agency. Thus, this issue appears to be one of first impression. Defendant [**11] maintains that since FDCPA refers to debt collection agencies and debt collectors, the Act applies to the Idaho legislation in question and thus provides the state a greater flexibility in dealing with the regulation of debt collections than if Congress had been wholly silent on the matter. Dun & Bradstreet counters that the legislative history of the Act explicitly limits the application of the Act to consumer collection agencies as opposed to commercial collection agencies.
S. Rep. No. 382, 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 1-2, reprinted in 1977 U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News 1696.
Later, in the same Senate Report under "Explanation of the Legislation," the report [**12] reads: "This bill applies only to debts contracted by consumers for personal, family, or household purposes; it has no application to the collection of commercial accounts." Id. at 3, and 1697. The legislative history clearly indicates that the statute was intended to apply only to consumer debts. While this construction of the statute may lead to some ambiguity in that consumer and commercial debts are difficult to separate from a legislative standpoint, the only interpretation available to this court is that presented by Plaintiff Dun & Bradstreet. Therefore, this court finds that the FDCPA applies only to consumer debt collection agencies and is therefore inapplicable to this action. The analysis of the challenged legislation will thus proceed on the basis that Congress has not addressed the question of commercial collection agencies.
The defendant argues that the office requirement as provided for in Section 26-2223A and the communications requirement set forth in the finance director's interpretation and requirements cannot be discussed separately for if the statute falls, the interpretation must therefore fall, and conversely, if the [**13] in-state office requirement is constitutionally valid, the interpretation is likewise valid. Because two distinct questions are presented by the in-state office requirement and the interpretation thereof, the court will consider each question separately.
The plaintiff contends that the requirement of an in-state office is an impermissible burden on interstate commerce and should be declared unconstitutional. Plaintiff asserts that the statute would be a restraint on interstate commerce as applied and is thus per se unconstitutional. In support of the per se unconstitutional argument, plaintiff cites Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. 617, 57 L. Ed. 2d 475, 98 S. Ct. 2531 (1978), and Lewis v. BT Invest. Managers, Inc., 447 U.S. 27, 64 L. Ed. 2d 702, 100 S. Ct. 2009 (1980). In the alternative, plaintiff argues that if the statute passes the constitutional per se challenge, the in-state office requirement should be analyzed under the balancing test set forth in Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U.S. 137, 25 L. Ed. 2d 174, 90 S. Ct. 844 (1970), and thus declared constitutionally impermissible.
From a study of the statute, it appears that the requirement applies evenhandedly [**14] both to Dun & Bradstreet and each and every other collection agency that may be operating in the State of Idaho . It is evident that the statute requires Dun & Bradstreet (or any other collection agency) to maintain an office within the State of Idaho , and that its manager must be personally familiar with correspondence and communications that would involve Idaho debtors. However, in Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland, 437 U.S. 117, 57 L. Ed. 2d 91, 98 S. Ct. 2207 (1978), the United States Supreme Court stated that, HN8 "the commerce clause protects the interstate market, not particular interstate firms, from prohibitive or burdensome regulation." Id. at 127-28. Thus, the Court does not view the statutory requirements to be per se unconstitutional.
HN9 Where the [state] statute regulates evenhandedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the burden imposed [**15] on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits. If a legitimate local purpose is found, then the question becomes one of degree.
Id. at 142 (citations omitted). Pike thus requires a balancing between the state's interest in the regulation and the burden it imposes on interstate commerce.
Plaintiff asserts that Pike is indistinguishable from the case at bar. In Pike, Arizona cantaloupe growers challenged an Arizona law which required that all fruit grown in the state be processed there too. In striking down the legislation, the Supreme Court found that they "viewed with particular suspicion state statutes requiring business operations to be performed in the home State that could more efficiently be performed elsewhere. Even where the State is pursuing a clearly legitimate local interest, this particular burden on commerce has been declared to be virtually per se illegal." 397 U.S. at 145 (citations omitted). Plaintiff contends that Pike is directly on point and that it therefore controls. However, it must be noted that the Court did not find in-state office requirements per se illegal. It is critical to the analysis [**16] of Pike to understand what the putative benefit of the legislation is. The Court in Pike found that, "the impetus for the Act was the fear that some growers were shipping inferior or deceptively packaged produce, with the result that the reputation of Arizona growers generally was being tarnished and their financial return concomitantly reduced." Id. at 143. The Court in striking down the legislation held that, "such an incidental consequence of a regulatory scheme could perhaps be tolerated if a more compelling state interest were involved." Id. at 146 (emphasis added). The question thus before the court is whether Idaho 's interest in regulating collection agencies is compelling enough to require the incidental consequences of its regulatory scheme.
In this situation the court finds that the putative benefit of Idaho's regulatory scheme outweighs the incidental consequences incurred by collection agencies and upholds Idaho Code § 26-2223A (1977). In Pike, the putative rationale was to protect the reputation of Arizona cantaloupe growers. In the case at bar, the putative rationale is to regulate collection agencies. To this end, the policy adopted by [**17] the Idaho Legislature in enacting Chapter 26, Title 22, Idaho Code, is to protect Idaho debtors, be they consumer or commercial, from abusive, unethical, and unfair practices by collection agencies.
15 U.S.C. § 1692(a) (Supp.IV 1980).
The court is of the opinion that the rationale contained in FDCPA enacted by Congress applies in a commercial debt collection setting as well. Although Congress [**18] did limit the FDCPA to consumer debt collection, certainly abusive, unfair, or unethical practices are not limited just to consumer collection agencies. Regulation of commercial debt collection practices is a sufficiently compelling state interest to meet the [*264] Pike balancing test, and consequently, justifies the state's adopted policy. The court finds that the challenged statute is constitutionally permissible.
The defendant argues that the director's interpretation of Idaho Code § 26-2223A is a correct statutory construction. The director's interpretation requires that all communications from Dun & Bradstreet to Idaho debtors, whether by mail or telephone, must emanate from within Idaho . The department relies on a portion of Section 26-2223A which requires: "Each permittee under this act must designate a person to be personally and actively in charge of the business carried on at any office for which a permit is held." The department argues that by reason of the above a significant part of the business of a collection agency permittee is the solicitation [**19] of accounts and collection of debts. Both of these functions involve sending letters or making phone calls, and that if a person is to be personally and actively in charge of the business carried on at the office, that must mean that he is in charge of the very important business of communicating with creditors and debtors.
With this, the court does not agree, as this interpretation certainly stretches a new meaning and a new concept into what the statute actually says. By restricting the plaintiff to initiating all communication either by letter or by phone intrastate and thus forbidding the permittee company any interstate communications in soliciting creditors' accounts at least, certainly interferes with interstate commerce. Such a statutory construction is constitutionally impermissible as a regulation or restriction. It is not a proper rationale, from a common sense standpoint or from a regulatory standpoint, to so restrict the plaintiff's communication network and coordination of its business affairs in soliciting creditors' accounts or, for that matter, in communicating with debtors.
The crux of plaintiff's challenge is that this statute in requiring residency in the State of Idaho as a prerequisite to operating a collection agency in this state imposes an impermissible burden on interstate commerce. Plaintiff argues that a residency requirement such as that in Idaho Code § 26-2242(8) discriminates on its face and thus is presumed to be unconstitutional. In support of that argument, plaintiff cites Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 437 U.S. 617, 57 L. Ed. 2d 475, 98 S. Ct. 2531 (1978); Service Machine & Shipbuilding Corp. v. Edwards, 617 F.2d 70 (5th Cir.), aff'd, 449 U.S. 913, 66 L. Ed. 2d 142, 101 S. Ct. 310 (1980); [**21] Smith v. Dept. of Agriculture of the State of Georgia, 630 F.2d 1081 (5th Cir. 1980); Dutchess Sanitation v. Town of Plattekill, 51 N.Y.2d 670, 417 N.E.2d 74, 435 N.Y.S.2d 962 (N.Y. 1980).
However, in a close reading of Idaho Code § 26-2242(8), it is noted that HN11 the requirement of residency of a licensee is discretionary with the Director of the Department of Finance. The plaintiff does not actually make any showing that the residency requirement has in fact had an impact or burden on either interstate commerce or upon the plaintiff. Just as an in-state office requirement applies evenhandedly [*265] to a permittee, so too does a requirement of residency as a condition for the license of a licensee, even though such residency requirement is discretionary with the Director of the State Department of Finance. The court is of the opinion, therefore, that the impact of a residency requirement on the licensee is incidental. The court makes no finding that the statute is constitutional or unconstitutional as it applies to an individual licensee applicant who may challenge the residency requirement. The residency requirement is merely incidental as it applies to Dun & Bradstreet. [**22] In viewing the legislative scheme as a whole, the court is of the opinion that an in-state office requirement required of the permittee, along with a requirement that a representative licensee be a resident of Idaho, serves a legitimate state purpose wherein it serves to protect Idaho debtors from unfair debt collectors and also presents a means by which the director of finance may properly regulate collection agencies as permittees and the representative licensee.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that plaintiff's motion for a declaratory judgment declaring Idaho Code § 26-2223A as unconstitutional, should be, and the same is hereby, DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff's motion for a declaratory judgment declaring that the interpretation of the statute requiring intrastate communications and excluding interstate communications is constitutionally impermissible, should be, and the same is hereby, GRANTED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that plaintiff's motion for declaratory judgment declaring Idaho Code § 26-2242(8) unconstitutional should be, and the same is hereby, DENIED.

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