HB4560 S JUD AM #1 3-8
Smith 7883
The Committee on the Judiciary moved to amend the bill by striking out everything after the enacting clause and inserting in lieu thereof the following:
Article 6A. Motor Vehicle Dealers, distributors, wholesalers, and manufacturers.
§17A-6A-2. Governing law.
(a) In accord with the settled public policy of this state to protect the rights of its citizens, each franchise or agreement between a manufacturer or distributor and a dealer or dealership which is located in West Virginia, or is to be performed in substantial part in West Virginia, shall be construed and governed by the laws of the State of West Virginia, regardless of the state in which it was made or executed and of any provision in the franchise or agreement to the contrary. The public policy of this state is to protect the rights of its citizens and each new motor vehicle dealer for any agreement governed by this article.
(b) The provisions of this article apply only to any franchises and agreements entered into, continued, modified, or renewed subsequent to the effective date of this article.
§17A-6A-3. Definitions.
For the purposes of this article, the words and phrases defined in this section have the meanings ascribed to them, except where the context clearly indicates a different meaning.
(1) “Dealer agreement” means the franchise, agreement, or contract in writing between a manufacturer, distributor, and a new motor vehicle dealer which purports to establish the legal rights and obligations of the parties to the agreement or contract with regard to the operation and business of a new motor vehicle dealer, including, but not limited to, the purchase, lease, or sale of new motor vehicles, accessories, service, and sale of parts for motor vehicles where applicable.
(2) “Designated family
member” means the spouse, child, grandchild, parent, brother, or sister of a deceased
new motor vehicle dealer who is entitled to inherit the deceased
dealer’s ownership interest in the new motor vehicle dealership under the terms
of the dealer’s will, or who has otherwise been designated in writing by a
deceased dealer to succeed the deceased dealer in the new motor vehicle
dealership, or is entitled to inherit under the laws of intestate succession of
this state. With respect to an incapacitated new motor vehicle dealer, the term
means the person appointed by a court as the legal representative of the new
motor vehicle dealer’s property. The term also includes the appointed and
qualified personal representative and the testamentary trustee of a deceased
new motor vehicle dealer. However, the term means only that designated
successor nominated by the new motor vehicle dealer in a written document filed
by the dealer with the manufacturer or distributor, if such a document
is filed.
(3) “Distributor” means any person, resident, or nonresident who, in whole or in part, offers for sale, sells, or distributes any new motor vehicle to a new motor vehicle dealer or who maintains a factor representative, resident, or nonresident, or who controls any person, resident, or nonresident who, in whole or in part, offers for sale, sells, or distributes any new motor vehicle to a new motor vehicle dealer.
(4) “Established place of business” means a permanent, enclosed commercial building located within this state easily accessible and open to the public at all reasonable times and at which the business of a new motor vehicle dealer, including the display and repair of motor vehicles, may be lawfully carried on in accordance with the terms of all applicable building codes, zoning, and other land-use regulatory ordinances and as licensed by the Division of Motor Vehicles.
(5) “Factory branch” means an office maintained by a manufacturer or distributor for the purpose of selling or offering for sale vehicles to a distributor, wholesaler, or new motor vehicle dealer, or for directing or supervising, in whole or in part, factory or distributor representatives. The term includes any sales promotion organization maintained by a manufacturer or distributor which is engaged in promoting the sale of a particular make of new motor vehicles in this state to new motor vehicle dealers.
(6) “Factory representative” means an agent or employee of a manufacturer, distributor, or factory branch retained or employed for the purpose of making or promoting the sale of new motor vehicles or for supervising or contracting with new motor vehicle dealers or proposed motor vehicle dealers.
(7) “Good faith” means honesty in fact and the observation of reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing in the trade.
(8) “Manufacturer” means
any person who manufactures or assembles new motor vehicles; or any
distributor, factory branch, or factory representative and, in the case of a
school bus, truck tractor, road tractor, or truck as defined in section one,
article one of this chapter, §17A-1-1 of this code, also means a person
engaged in the business of manufacturing a school bus, truck tractor, road
tractor or truck, their engines, power trains, or rear axles, including when
engines, power trains or rear axles are not warranted by the final manufacturer
or assembler, and any distributor, factory branch, or representative.
(9) “Motor vehicle” means
that term as defined in section one, article one of this chapter, §17A-1-1
of this code, including a motorcycle, school bus, truck tractor,
road tractor, truck, or recreational vehicle, all-terrain vehicle and utility
terrain vehicle as defined in subsections (c), (d), (f), (h), (l), (nn) and
(vv), respectively, of in said section, but not including a farm tractor
or farm equipment. The term “motor vehicle” also includes a school bus, truck
tractor, road tractor, truck, its component parts, including, but not limited
to, its engine, transmission, or rear axle manufactured for installation in a
school bus, truck tractor, road tractor, or truck.
(10) “New motor vehicle” means a motor vehicle which is in the possession of the manufacturer, distributor, or wholesaler, or has been sold only to a new motor vehicle dealer and on which the original title has not been issued from the new motor vehicle dealer.
(11) “New motor vehicle dealer” means a person who holds a dealer agreement granted by a manufacturer or distributor for the sale of its motor vehicles, who is engaged in the business of purchasing, selling, leasing, exchanging, or dealing in new motor vehicles, service of said vehicles, warranty work, and sale of parts who has an established place of business in this state and is licensed by the Division of Motor Vehicles.
(12) “The operation and business of a new motor vehicle dealer or dealership” includes selling, leasing, exchanging, or otherwise conveying a new motor vehicle at retail and performing warranty and recall work for a motor vehicle: Provided, That the provisions of this subdivision do not apply to over the air updates.
(12) (13) “Person” means a natural person,
partnership, corporation, association, trust, estate, or other legal entity.
(13) (14) “Proposed new motor vehicle dealer” means
a person who has an application pending for a new dealer agreement with a
manufacturer or distributor. “Proposed motor vehicle dealer” does not include a
person whose dealer agreement is being renewed or continued.
(14) (15) “Relevant market area” means the area
located within a 20 air mile radius around an existing same line-make new motor
vehicle dealership: Provided, That a 15 mile relevant market area as it
existed prior to the effective date of this statute shall apply to any proposed
new motor vehicle dealership as to which a manufacturer or distributor and the
proposed new motor vehicle dealer have executed on or before the effective date
of this statute a written agreement, including a letter of intent, performance
agreement, or commitment letter concerning the establishment of the proposed
new motor vehicle dealership.
§17A-6A-5. Circumstances not constituting good cause.
Notwithstanding any
agreement, the following alone does not constitute good cause for the
termination, cancellation, nonrenewal, or discontinuance of a dealer agreement
under subdivision (d), subsection (1), section four of this article: §17A-6A-4
of this code.
(a) (1) A change in ownership of the new motor
vehicle dealer’s dealership. This subdivision section does not
authorize any change in ownership which would have the effect of a sale or an
assignment of the dealer agreement or a change in the principal management of
the dealership without the manufacturer's or distributor's prior written
consent which may not be unreasonably or untimely withheld.
(b) (2) The refusal of the new motor vehicle
dealer to purchase or accept delivery of any new motor vehicle parts,
accessories, or any other commodity or services not ordered by the new motor
vehicle dealer.
(c) (3) The fact that the new motor vehicle dealer
owns, has an investment in, participates in the management of, or holds a
dealer agreement for the sale of another make or line of new motor vehicles, or
that the new motor vehicle dealer has established another make or line of new
motor vehicles in the same dealership facilities as those of the manufacturer
or distributor: Provided, That the new motor vehicle dealer maintains a
reasonable line of credit for each make or line of new motor vehicles, and that
the new motor vehicle dealer remains in substantial compliance with the terms
and conditions of the dealer agreement and with any reasonable facilities’
requirements of the manufacturer or distributor.
(d) (4) The fact that the new motor vehicle dealer
designates as an executive manager or sells or transfers ownership of
the dealership or sells or transfers capital stock in the dealership to the new
motor vehicle dealer’s spouse, son, or daughter: Provided, That the sale
or transfer shall not have the effect of a sale or an assignment of the dealer
agreement or a change in the principal management of the dealership without the
manufacturer’s or distributor’s prior written consent, which may not be
unreasonably or untimely withheld or refused in a manner inconsistent with
§17A-6A-11 of this code.
(e) (5) This section does not apply to any
voluntary agreement entered into after a disagreement or civil action has
arisen for which the dealer has accepted separate and valuable consideration.
Any prospective agreement is void as a matter of law.
§17A-6A-8a. Compensation to dealers for service rendered.
(1) (a) Every motor vehicle manufacturer,
distributor, or wholesaler, factory branch or distributor branch, or officer,
agent, or representative thereof, shall:
(a) (1) Specify in writing to each of its motor
vehicle dealers, the dealer's obligation for delivery, preparation, warranty,
and factory recall services on its products;
(b) (2) Compensate the motor vehicle dealer for warranty
and factory recall service required of the dealer by the manufacturer,
distributor or wholesaler, factory branch or distributor branch or officer,
agent, or representative thereof;
(c) (3) Provide the dealer the schedule of
compensation, which shall be reasonable, to be paid the dealer for
parts, work, and service, including reasonable and adequate allowances for
diagnostic time necessary for a qualified technician to perform the service,
in connection with warranty and recall services and the time allowance for the
performance of the diagnosis, work, and service. If a disagreement
arises between the manufacturer, distributor, or wholesaler, factory branch or
distributor branch and the new motor vehicle dealer about the time allowance
for the performance of the diagnosis, work, or service, the new motor vehicle
dealer shall submit a written request for modification of the time allowance. A
manufacturer, distributor, or wholesaler, factory branch or distributor branch
shall not unreasonably deny a written request submitted by a new motor vehicle
dealer for modification of a time allowance for a specific warranty repair, or
a request submitted by a new motor vehicle dealer for an additional time
allowance for either diagnostic or repair work on a specific vehicle covered
under warranty, provided the request includes any information and documentation
reasonably required by the manufacturer, distributor, or wholesaler, factory
branch or distributor branch to assess the merits of the request; and
(4) Provide compensation to a new motor vehicle dealer for assistance requested by a customer whose vehicle was subjected to an over the air or remote change, repair, or update to any part, system, accessory, or function by the vehicle manufacturer or distributor and performed at the dealership to satisfy the customer.
(2) (b) In no event may:
(a) (1) The schedule of compensation fail to
compensate the dealers for the diagnosis, work, and services they are
required to perform in connection with the dealer's delivery and preparation
obligations, or fail to adequately and fairly compensate the dealers for labor time
or rate, parts, and other expenses incurred by the dealer to perform under
and comply with manufacturer’s warranty agreements and factory recalls;
(b) (2) Any manufacturer, distributor or
wholesaler, or representative thereof, pay its dealers an amount of money for
warranty or recall work that is less than that charged by the dealer to the
retail customers of the dealer for nonwarranty and nonrecall work of the like
kind; and
(c) (3) Any manufacturer, distributor or
wholesaler, or representative thereof, compensate for warranty and recall work
based on a flat-rate figure that is less than what the dealer charges for
retail work.
(3) (c) It is a violation of this section for any
manufacturer, distributor, wholesaler, or representative to require any dealer
to pay in any manner, surcharges, limited allocation, audits, charge backs, or
other retaliation if the dealer seeks to recover its nonwarranty retail rate
for warranty and recall work.
(4) (d) The retail rate charged by the dealer for
parts is established by the dealer submitting to the manufacturer or distributor
100 sequential nonwarranty customer-paid service repair orders that contain
warranty-like parts or 90 consecutive days of nonwarranty customer-paid service
repair orders that contain warranty-like parts covering repairs made no more
than 180 days before the submission and declaring the average percentage markup.
A dealer may decide to submit a single set of repair orders for the purpose
of calculating both the labor rate and parts mark-up, or submit separate sets
of repair orders for a labor rate and parts mark-up calculation .
(5) (e) The retail rate customarily charged by the
dealer for labor rate must be established using the same process as
provided under subsection (4)(d) of this section and declaring
the average labor rate. The average labor rate must be determined by dividing
the amount of the dealer's total labor sales by the number of total hours that
generated those sales. If a labor rate and parts markup rate simultaneously
declared by the dealer, the dealer may use the same repair orders to complete
each calculation as provided under subsection (4)(d) of this
section. A reasonable allowance for labor for diagnostic time shall be either
included in the manufacturer's labor time allowance or listed as a separate
compensable item. A dealer may request additional time allowance for either
diagnostic or repair time for a specific repair, which request shall not
be unreasonably denied by the manufacturer.
(6) (f) In calculating the retail rate
customarily charged by the dealer for parts and labor, the following work may
not be included in the calculation:
(a) (1) Repairs for manufacturer or distributor
special events, specials, or promotional discounts for retain customer
repairs;
(b) (2) Parts sold at wholesale;
(c) (3) Routine maintenance not covered under any
retail customer warranty, including bulbs, batteries, fluids, filters,
and belts not provided in the course of repairs;
(d) (4) Nuts, bolts, fasteners, and similar items
that do not have an individual part number;
(e) (5) Tires; and
(f) (6) Vehicle reconditioning.
(7) (g) The average of the parts markup rates and
labor rate is presumed to be reasonable and must go into effect 30 days
following the manufacturer’s approval. A manufacturer or distributor may
must approve or rebut the presumption by demonstrating that
the submitted parts markup rate or labor rate is: (1) fraudulent or inaccurate;
(2) not established in accordance with this section; or (3) the submitted parts
markup rate or labor rate is unreasonable in light of the practices of all
other same line-make franchised motor vehicle dealers in an economically
similar area of the state offering the same line-make vehicles, not later than
30 days after submission. If the average parts markup rate or average labor
rate is rebutted, or both disputed by the manufacturer or
distributor, the manufacturer or distributor shall provide written
notice to the new motor vehicle dealer stating the specific reasons for the
rebuttal, providing a full explanation of the reasons for the allegation, and
providing a copy of all calculations used by the manufacturer or distributor
in determining the manufacturer or distributor’s position if the manufacturer’s
or distributor’s objection is based on the accuracy or reasonableness of the
new motor vehicle dealer’s rate submission, propose an adjustment of the
average percentage parts markup or labor rate based on that
rebuttal not later than 30 days after submission. If the new motor vehicle
dealer does not agree with the manufacturer’s proposed average percentage parts
markup or labor rate, the new motor vehicle dealer may file a civil action in
the circuit court for the county in which it operates not later than 90 days
after receipt of that proposal by the manufacturer or distributor. In the
event a civil action is filed, the manufacturer or distributor has the burden
of proof to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that the new motor
vehicle dealer’s submitted parts markup rate or labor rate was fraudulent,
inaccurate, not established in accordance with this section, or is unreasonable
in light of the practices of all other same line-make franchised motor vehicle
dealers in an economically similar area of the state offering the same
line-make vehicles.
(8) (h) Each manufacturer, in establishing a
schedule of compensation for warranty work, shall rely on the vehicle dealer’s
declaration of hourly labor rates and parts as stated in subsections (4),
(5) and (6) (d), (e) and (f) of this section and may not obligate
any vehicle dealer to engage in unduly burdensome or time-consuming
documentation of rates or parts, including obligating vehicle dealers to engage
in transaction-by-transaction or part-by-part calculations.
(9) (i) A dealer or manufacturer may demand
that the average parts markup or average labor rate be calculated using the
process provided under subsections (4) and (5) (d) and (e) of
this section; however, the demand for the average parts markup may not be made
within 12 months of the last parts markup declaration and the demand for the
average labor rate may not be made within 12 months of the last labor rate
declaration. If a parts markup or labor rate is demanded by the dealer or
manufacturer, the dealer shall determine the repair orders to be included in
the calculation under subsections (4) and (5) (d) and (e) of this
section.
(10) (j) As it applies to a school bus, truck
tractor, road tractor, and truck as defined in section one, article one of
this chapter, §17A-1-1 of this code with a gross vehicle weight on in
excess of 26,001 pounds the manufacturer, distributor and/or O. E. M.
supplier shall pay the dealer its incurred actual time at the retail labor rate
for retrieving a motor vehicle and returning a motor vehicle to the
dealer’s designated parking area. The dealer shall be paid $50 minimum
for each operation that requires the use of each electronic tool (i.e. laptop
computer). The manufacturer or distributor may not reduce what is paid to a
dealer for this retrieval or return time, or for the electronic tool charge.
The dealer is allowed to add to a completed warranty repair order three hours
for every 24 hours the manufacturer, distributor, and/or O. E. M. supplier
makes the dealer stop working on a vehicle while the manufacturer, distributor,
and/or O. E. M. supplier decides how it wants the dealer to proceed with the
repairs.
(11) (k) All claims made by motor vehicle dealers
pursuant to the this section for compensation for delivery,
preparation, warranty, and recall work, including labor, parts, and other
expenses, shall be paid by the manufacturer within 30 days after approval and
shall be approved or disapproved by the manufacturer within 30 days after
receipt. When any claim is disapproved, the dealer shall be notified in writing
of the grounds for disapproval. No A claim which has been
approved and paid may not be charged back to the dealer unless it can be
shown that the claim was false or fraudulent, that the repairs were not
properly made or were unnecessary to correct the defective condition or the
dealer failed to reasonable substantiate the claim in accordance with the reasonable
written requirements of the manufacturer or distributor in effect at the time
the claim arose. No charge back may be made until the dealer has had notice and
an opportunity to support the claim in question. No An otherwise
valid reimbursement claims may not be denied once properly submitted
within manufacturers’ submission guidelines due to a clerical error or
omission, a dealer’s incidental failure to comply with a specific
non-material claim processing requirement or administrative technicality,
or based on a different level of technician technical certification or the
dealer’s failure to subscribe to any manufacturer’s computerized training
programs. The dealer shall have 30 days to respond to any audit by a
manufacturer or distributor.
(12) (l) Notwithstanding the terms of a franchise
agreement or provision of law in conflict with this section, the dealer’s
delivery, preparation, warranty, and recall obligations constitutes the dealer's
sole responsibility for product liability as between the dealer and
manufacturer and, except for a loss caused by the dealer’s failure to adhere to
the obligations, a loss caused by the dealer’s negligence or intentional
misconduct or a loss caused by the dealer’s modification of a product without
manufacturer authorization, the manufacturer shall reimburse the dealer for all
loss incurred by the dealer, including legal fees, court costs, and damages, as
a result of the dealer having been named a party in a product liability action.
(m) When calculating the compensation that must be provided to a new motor vehicle dealer for labor and parts used to fulfill warranty and recall obligations under this section, all of the following apply:
(1) The manufacturer shall use time allowances for the diagnosis and performance of the warranty and recall work and service that are reasonable and adequate for the work or services to be performed by a qualified technician;
(2) At the request of the new motor vehicle dealer, the manufacturer shall use any retail labor rate and any retail parts markup percentage established in accordance with this section in calculating the compensation;
(3) If the manufacturer provided a part or component to the new motor vehicle dealer at no cost to use in performing repairs under a recall, campaign service action, or warranty repair, the manufacturer shall provide to the new motor vehicle dealer an amount equal to the retail parts markup for that part or component, which shall be calculated by multiplying the dealer cost for the part or component as listed in the manufacturer’s price schedule by the retail parts markup percentage; and
(4) A manufacturer shall not assess penalties, surcharges, or similar costs to a new motor vehicle dealer, transfer or shift any costs to a franchisee, limit allocation of vehicles or parts to a new motor vehicle dealer, or otherwise take retaliatory action against a new motor vehicle dealer based on any new motor vehicle dealer’s exercise of its rights under this section. This section does not prohibit a manufacturer or distributor from increasing the price of a vehicle or part in the ordinary course of business.
§17A-6A-10. Prohibited practices.
(1) (a) A manufacturer or distributor may not
require any new motor vehicle dealer in this state to do any of the following:
(a) (1) Order or accept delivery of any new motor
vehicle, part or accessory of the vehicle, equipment, or any other commodity
not required by law which was not voluntarily ordered by the new motor vehicle
dealer. This section does not prevent the manufacturer or distributor from
requiring that new motor vehicle dealers carry a reasonable inventory of models
offered for sale by the manufacturer or distributor;
(b) (2) Order or accept delivery of any new motor
vehicle with special features, accessories, or equipment not included in the
list price of the new motor vehicle as publicly advertised by the manufacturer
or distributor;
(c) (3) Unreasonably participate monetarily in any
advertising campaign or contest, or purchase any promotional materials, display
devices, display decorations, brand signs and dealer identification,
nondiagnostic computer equipment and displays, or other materials at the
expense of the new motor vehicle dealer;
(d) (4) Enter into any agreement with the
manufacturer or distributor or do any other act prejudicial to the new motor
vehicle dealer by threatening to terminate a dealer agreement, limit inventory,
invoke sales and service warranty, or other types of audits or any contractual
agreement or understanding existing between the dealer and the manufacturer or
distributor, or any manufacturer or distributor’s required or designated
vendor or supplier. Notice in good faith to any dealer of the dealer's
violation of any terms or provisions of the dealer agreement is not a violation
of this article;
(e) (5) Change the capital structure or financial
requirements of the new motor vehicle dealership without reasonable business
justification in light of the dealer’s market, historical performance and
compliance with prior capital structure or financial requirements and business
necessity, or the means by or through which the dealer finances the operation
of the dealership if the dealership at all times meets any reasonable capital
standards determined by the manufacturer in accordance with uniformly applied
criteria. The burden of proof is on the manufacturer to prove business
justification by a preponderance of the evidence;
(f) (6) Refrain from participation in the
management of, investment in, or the acquisition of any other line of new motor
vehicle or related products, provided that the dealer maintains a reasonable
line of credit for each make or line of vehicle, remains in compliance with
reasonable facilities requirements, and makes no change in the principal
management of the dealer. Notwithstanding the terms of any franchise agreement,
a manufacturer or distributor may not enforce any requirements, including
facility or image requirements, that a new motor vehicle dealer
establish or maintain exclusive facilities, personnel, or display space, when
the requirements are unreasonable considering current economic conditions and
are not otherwise justified by reasonable business considerations. The burden
of proving that current economic conditions or reasonable business
considerations justify exclusive facilities such actions is on
the manufacturer or distributor and must be proven by a preponderance of the
evidence;
(g) (7) Change the location of the new motor
vehicle dealership or make any substantial alterations to the dealership premises,
where to do so would be unreasonable. The burden is on the manufacturer or
distributor to prove reasonableness by a preponderance of the evidence;
(h) (8) Prospectively assent to a waiver of trial
by jury release, arbitration, assignment, novation, waiver, or estoppel which
would relieve any person from liability imposed by this article or require any
controversy between a new motor vehicle dealer and a manufacturer or
distributor to be referred to a person other than the duly constituted courts
of this state or the United States District Courts of the Northern or Southern
Districts of West Virginia. Nothing in this article prevents a motor
vehicle dealer, after a civil action is filed, from entering into any agreement
of settlement, arbitration, assignment, or waiver of a trial by jury;
(i) (9) To Coerce or require any dealer,
whether by agreement, program, incentive provision, or otherwise, to construct
improvements to its facilities or to install new signs, or other franchisor
image elements that replace or substantially alter those improvements, signs or
franchisor image elements completed within the proceeding ten preceding
15 years that were required and approved by the manufacturer, factory
branch, distributor or distributor branch, or one of its affiliates. If a
manufacturer, factory branch, distributor or distributor branch offers
incentives or other payments to a consumer or dealer paid on individual vehicle
sales under a program offered after the effective date of this subdivision and
available to more than one dealer in the state that are premised, wholly or in
part, on dealer facility improvements or installation of franchiser image
elements required by and approved by the manufacturer, factory branch,
distributor or distributor branch and completed within ten 15 years
preceding the program shall be deemed determined to be in
compliance with the program requirements pertaining to construction of
facilities or installation of signs or other franchisor image elements that
would replace or substantially alter those previously constructed or installed with
within that ten 15 year period. This subdivision shall not
apply to a program that is in effect with more than one dealer in the state on
the effective date of this subsection, nor to any renewal of such program, nor
to a modification that is not a modification of a material term or condition of
such program;
(j) (10) To Condition the award, sale,
transfer, relocation, or renewal of a franchise or dealer agreement or to
condition sales, service, parts, or finance incentives upon site control or an
agreement to renovate or make substantial improvements to a facility: Provided,
That voluntary and noncoerced acceptance of such conditions by the dealer in
writing, including, but not limited to, a written agreement for which the
dealer has accepted separate and valuable consideration, does not constitute a
violation; and
(k) (11) To Enter into a contractual
requirement imposed by the manufacturer, distributor, or a captive finance
source as follows:
(i) (A) In this section, “captive finance source”
means any financial source that provides automotive-related loans or purchases
retail installment contracts or lease contracts for motor vehicles in this
state and is, directly or indirectly, owned, operated, or controlled by such
manufacturer, factory branch, distributor or distributor branch.
(ii) (B) It shall be is unlawful for
any manufacturer, factory branch, captive finance source, distributor or
distributor branch, or any field representative, officer, agent, or any
representative of them, notwithstanding the terms, provisions, or conditions of
any agreement or franchise, to require any of its franchised dealers located in
this state to agree to any terms, conditions, or requirements in subdivisions (a)
through (j), (1) through (10), inclusive, of this subsection in order
for any such dealer to sell to any captive finance source any retail
installment contract, loan, or lease of any motor vehicles purchased or leased
by any of the dealer's customers, or to be able to participate in, or
otherwise, directly or indirectly, obtain the benefits of the consumer
transaction incentive program payable to the consumer or the dealer and offered
by or through any captive finance source as to that incentive program.
(iii) (C) The applicability of this section is not
affected by a choice of law clause in any agreement, waiver, novation, or any
other written instrument.
(iv) (D) It shall be is unlawful for
a manufacturer or distributor to use any subsidiary corporation, affiliated
corporation, or any other controlled corporation, partnership, association, or
person to accomplish what would otherwise be illegal conduct under this section
on the part of the manufacturer or distributor.
(2) (b) A manufacturer or distributor may not do
any of the following:
(a) (i) (1) Fail to deliver new motor vehicles or new
motor vehicle parts or accessories within a reasonable time and in reasonable
quantities relative to the new motor vehicle dealer’s market area and
facilities, unless the failure is caused by acts or occurrences beyond the
control of the manufacturer or distributor, or unless the failure results from
an order by the new motor vehicle dealer in excess of quantities reasonably and
fairly allocated by the manufacturer or distributor. No A manufacturer
or distributor may not penalize a new motor vehicle dealer for an
alleged failure to meet sales quotas where the alleged failure is due to
actions of the manufacturer or distributor;
(ii) (2) Refuse to offer to its same line-make new
motor vehicle dealers all models manufactured for that line-make, including,
but not limited to, any model that contains a separate label or badge
indicating an upgraded version of the same model. This provision does not apply
to motorhome, travel trailer, or fold-down camping trailer manufacturers;
(iii) (3) Require as a prerequisite to receiving a
model or series of vehicles that a new motor vehicle dealer pay an extra
unreasonable acquisition fee or surcharge, or purchase unreasonable advertising
displays or other materials, or conduct unreasonable facility or image
remodeling, renovation, or reconditioning of the dealer's facilities, or any
other type of unreasonable upgrade requirement;
(4) Use motor vehicles in transit but not yet in the new motor vehicle dealer’s physical possession in any sales effective or efficiency formula to the detriment of the new motor vehicle dealer;
(b) (5) Refuse to disclose to a new motor vehicle
dealer the method and manner of distribution of new motor vehicles by the
manufacturer or distributor, including any numerical calculation or formula
used, nationally or within the dealer's market, to make the allocations within
30 days of a request. Any information or documentation provided by the
manufacturer may be subject to a reasonable confidentiality agreement;
(c) (6) Refuse to disclose to a new motor vehicle
dealer the total number of new motor vehicles of a given model, which the
manufacturer or distributor has sold during the current model year within the
dealer’s marketing district, zone, or region, whichever geographical area is
the smallest within 30 days of a request;
(d) (7) Increase prices of new motor vehicles
which the new motor vehicle dealer had ordered and then eventually delivered to
the same retail consumer for whom the vehicle was ordered, if the order was
made prior to the dealer’s receipt of the written official price increase
notification. A sales contract signed by a private retail consumer and binding
on the dealer which has been submitted to the vehicle manufacturer is evidence
of each order. In the event of manufacturer or distributor price reductions or
cash rebates, the amount of any reduction or rebate received by a dealer shall
be passed on to the private retail consumer by the dealer. Any price reduction
in excess of $5 shall apply to all vehicles in the dealer's inventory which
were subject to the price reduction. A price difference applicable to new model
or series motor vehicles at the time of the introduction of the new models or
the series is not a price increase or price decrease. This subdivision does not
apply to price changes caused by the following:
(i) (A) The addition to a motor vehicle of
required or optional equipment pursuant to state or federal law;
(ii) (B) In the case of foreign-made vehicles or
components, revaluation of the United States dollar; or
(iii) (C) Any increase in transportation charges due
to an increase in rates charged by a common carrier and transporters;
(e) (8) Offer any refunds or other types of
inducements to any dealer for the purchase of new motor vehicles of a certain
line-make to be sold to this state or any political subdivision of this state
without making the same offer available upon request to all other new motor
vehicle dealers of the same line-make;
(f) (9) Release to an outside party, except under
subpoena or in an administrative or judicial proceeding to which the new motor
vehicle dealer or the manufacturer or distributor are parties, any business,
financial, or personal information which has been provided by the dealer to the
manufacturer or distributor, unless the new motor vehicle dealer gives his or
her written consent;
(g) (10) Deny a new motor vehicle dealer the right
to associate with another new motor vehicle dealer for any lawful purpose;
(h) (11) Establish, operate, or engage in the
business of a new motor vehicle dealership. A manufacturer or distributor
is not considered to have established, operated, or engaged in the business
of a new motor vehicle dealership if the manufacturer or distributor is:
(A) Operating a preexisting dealership temporarily for a reasonable period;
(B) Operating a preexisting dealership which is for sale at a reasonable price; and
(C) Operating a dealership with another person who has made a significant investment in the dealership and who will acquire full ownership of the dealership under reasonable terms and conditions;
(i) (12) A manufacturer may not, except as
provided by this section, directly or indirectly:
(A) Own an interest in a dealer or dealership: Provided, That a manufacturer may own stock in a publicly held company solely for investment purposes;
(B) Operate a new or used motor vehicle dealership, including, but not limited to, displaying a motor vehicle intended to facilitate the sale of new motor vehicles other than through franchised dealers, unless the display is part of an automobile trade show that more than two automobile manufacturers participate in; or
(C) Act in the capacity of a new motor vehicle dealer;
(j) (13) A manufacturer or distributor may own an
interest in a franchised dealer, or otherwise control a dealership, for a
period not to exceed 12 months from the date the manufacturer or distributor
acquires the dealership if:
(i) (A) The person from whom the manufacturer or
distributor acquired the dealership was a franchised dealer; and
(ii) (B) The dealership is for sale by the
manufacturer or distributor at a reasonable price and on reasonable terms and
conditions;
(k) (14) The 12 month period may be extended for
an additional 12 months. Notice of any such extension of the original
twelve-month period must be given to any dealer of the same line-make whose
dealership is located in the same county, or within 20 air miles of, the
dealership owned or controlled by the manufacturer or distributor prior to the
expiration of the original 12 month period. Any dealer receiving the notice may
protest the proposed extension within 30 days of receiving notice by bringing a
declaratory judgment action in the circuit court for the county in which the
new motor vehicle dealer is located to determine whether good cause exists for
the extension;
(l) (15) For the purpose of broadening the
diversity of its dealer body and enhancing opportunities for qualified persons
who are part of a group who have historically been under represented in its
dealer body, or other qualified persons who lack the resources to purchase a
dealership outright, but for no other purpose, a manufacturer or distributor
may temporarily own an interest in a dealership if the manufacturer's or
distributor’s participation in the dealership is in a bona fide relationship
with a franchised dealer who:
(i) (A) Has made a significant investment in the
dealership, subject to loss;
(ii) (B) Has an ownership interest in the
dealership; and
(iii) (C) Operates the dealership under a plan to
acquire full ownership of the dealership within a reasonable time and under
reasonable terms and conditions;
(m) (16) Unreasonably withhold consent to the
sale, transfer, or exchange of the dealership to a qualified buyer capable of
being licensed as a new motor vehicle dealer in this state;
(n) (17) Fail to respond in writing to a request
for consent to a sale, transfer, or exchange of a dealership within 60 days
after receipt of a written application from the new motor vehicle dealer on the
forms generally utilized by the manufacturer or distributor for such purpose
and containing the information required therein. Failure to respond to the
request within the 60 days is consent;
(o) (18) Unfairly prevent a new motor vehicle
dealer from receiving reasonable compensation for the value of the new motor
vehicle dealership;
(p) (19) Audit any motor vehicle dealer in this
state for warranty parts or warranty service compensation, service
compensation, service or sales incentives, manufacturer rebates, or other forms
of sales incentive compensation more than 12 months after the claim for payment
or reimbursement has been made by the automobile dealer. No A chargeback
may not be made until the dealer has had notice and an
opportunity to support the claim in question within 30 days of receiving notice
of the chargeback. No An otherwise valid reimbursements
claims may not be denied once properly submitted in accordance with the
material and reasonable manufacturer’s submission
guidelines unless the factory can show that the claim was false or
fraudulent or that the new motor vehicle dealer failed to reasonably
substantiate the claim consistent with the manufacturer’s written reasonable
and material guidelines. due to clerical error or omission This
subsection does not apply where a claim is fraudulent. In addition, the
manufacturer or distributor is responsible for reimbursing the audited dealer
for all documented copying, postage, and administrative and personnel
costs reasonably incurred by the dealer during the audit. Any charges to
a dealer as a result of the audit must be separately billed to the dealer;
(q) (20) Unreasonably restrict a dealer’s
ownership of a dealership through noncompetition covenants, site control,
sublease, collateral pledge of lease, right of first refusal, option to
purchase, or otherwise. A right of first refusal is created when:
(i) (A) A manufacturer has a contractual right of first
refusal to acquire the new motor vehicle dealer's assets where the dealer owner
receives consideration, terms and conditions that are either the same as or
better than those they have already contracted to receive under the proposed
change of more than fifty 50 percent of the dealer's ownership;
(ii) (B) The proposed change of the dealership's
ownership or the transfer of the new vehicle dealer's assets does not involve
the transfer of assets or the transfer or issuance of stock by the dealer or
one of the dealer’s owners to one of the following:
(A) (i) A designated family member of one or more
of the dealer owners;
(B) (ii) A manager employed by the dealer in the
dealership during the previous five years and who is otherwise qualified as a
dealer operator;
(C) (iii) A partnership or corporation controlled
by a designated family member of one of the dealers; or
(D) (iv) A trust established or to be established for
the purpose of allowing the new vehicle dealer to continue to qualify as such
under the manufacturer’s or distributor’s standards, or to provide for the
succession of the franchise agreement to designated family members or qualified
management in the event of the death or incapacity of the dealer or its
principle owner or owners;
(i) for the purpose of
allowing the new vehicle dealer to continue to qualify as such under the
manufacturers or distributor’s standards; or
(ii) to provide for the
succession of the franchise agreement to designated family members or qualified
management in the event of death or incapacity of the dealer or its principle
owner or owners.
(iii) (C) Upon exercising the right of first refusal
by a manufacturer, it eliminates any requirement under its dealer agreement or
other applicable provision of this statute that the manufacturer evaluate,
process, or respond to the underlying proposed transfer by approving or
rejecting the proposal, is not subject to challenge as a rejection or denial of
the proposed transfer by any party;
(iv) (D) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection
section, the manufacturer or distributor agrees to pay the reasonable
expenses, including reasonable out-of-pocket professional fees which shall
include, but not be limited to, accounting, legal, or appraisal services fees
that are incurred by the proposed owner or transferee before the manufacturer’s
or distributor’s exercise of its right of first refusal. Payment of the
expenses and fees for professional services are not required if the dealer
fails to submit an accounting of those expenses and fees within 20 days of the
dealer’s receipt of the manufacturer’s or distributor's written request for
such an accounting. Such a written account of fees and expenses may be
requested by a manufacturer or distributor before exercising its right of first
refusal;
(r) (21) Except for experimental low-volume
not-for-retail sale vehicles, cause warranty and recall repair work to be
performed by any entity other than a new motor vehicle dealer;
(s) (22) Make any material or unreasonable change
in any franchise agreement, including, but not limited to, the dealer’s area of
responsibility without giving the new motor vehicle dealer written notice by
certified mail of the change at least 60 days prior to the effective date of
the change, and shall include an explanation of the basis for the alteration.
Upon written request from the dealer, this explanation shall include, but is
not limited to, a reasonable and commercially acceptable copy of all
information, data, evaluations, and methodology relied on or based its decision
on, to propose the change to the dealer’s area of responsibility. Any
information or documentation provided by the manufacturer or distributor may be
produced subject to a reasonable confidentiality agreement. At any time prior
to the effective date of an alteration of a new motor vehicle dealer’s area of
responsibility and after the completion of any internal appeal process pursuant
to the manufacturer’s or distributor’s policy manual, the motor vehicle dealer
may petition the court to enjoin or prohibit the alteration within 30 days of
receipt of the manufacturer’s internal appeal process decision. The court shall
enjoin or prohibit the alteration of a motor vehicle dealer’s area of responsibility
unless the franchisor shows, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the
alteration is reasonable and justifiable in light of market conditions. If a
motor vehicle dealer petitions the court, no alteration to a motor vehicle
dealer’s area of responsibility shall become effective until a final
determination by the court. If a new motor vehicle dealer’s area of
responsibility is altered, the manufacturer shall allow 24 months for the motor
vehicle dealer to become sales effective prior to taking any action claiming a
breach or nonperformance of the motor vehicle dealer’s sales performance
responsibilities;
(t) (23) Fail to reimburse a new motor vehicle
dealer, at the dealer's regular rate, or the full and actual cost of providing
a loaner vehicle to any customer who is having a vehicle serviced at the
dealership if the provision of the loaner vehicle is required by the
manufacturer;
(u) (24) Compel a new motor vehicle dealer through
its finance subsidiaries to agree to unreasonable operating requirements or to
directly or indirectly terminate a franchise through the actions of a finance
subsidiary of the franchisor. This subsection does not limit the right of a
finance subsidiary to engage in business practices in accordance with the usage
of trade in retail or wholesale vehicle financing;
(v) (25) Discriminate directly or indirectly
between dealers on vehicles of like grade, line, model, or quantity where
the effect of the discrimination would substantially lessen competition;
(w) (26) Use or employ any performance standard
that is not fair and reasonable and based upon accurate and verifiable data
made available to the dealer;
(x) (27) To Require or coerce any new motor
vehicle dealer to sell, offer to sell, or sell exclusively extended service
contract, maintenance plan, or similar product, including gap or other
products, offered, endorsed, or sponsored by the manufacturer or distributor by
the following means:
(i) (A) By an act of statement that the manufacturer
or distributor will adversely impact the dealer, whether it is express or
implied;
(ii) (B) By a contract made to the dealer on the
condition that the dealer shall sell, offer to sell, or sell exclusively an
extended service contract, extended maintenance plan, or similar product
offered, endorsed, or sponsored by the manufacturer or distributor;
(iii) (C) By measuring the dealer’s
performance under the franchise agreement based on the sale of extended service
contracts, extended maintenance plans, or similar products offered, endorsed,
or sponsored by the manufacturer or distributor;
(iv) (D) By requiring the dealer to actively
promote the sale of extended service contracts, extended maintenance plans or
similar products offered, endorsed, or sponsored by the manufacturer or
distributor;
(v) (E) Nothing in this paragraph prohibits a
manufacturer or distributor from providing incentive programs to a new vehicle
dealer who makes the voluntary decision to offer to sell, sell, or sell
exclusively an extended service contract, extended maintenance plan, or similar
product offered, endorsed, or sponsored by the manufacturer or distributor;
(y) (F) Require a dealer to purchase goods or
services from a vendor selected, identified, or designated by a manufacturer,
factory branch, distributor, distributor branch, or one of its affiliates by
agreement, program, incentive provision, or otherwise without making available
to the dealer the option to obtain the goods or services of substantially
similar quality and overall design from a vendor chosen by the dealer and
approved by the manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, or distributor
branch: Provided, That such approval may not be unreasonably
withheld :Provided, however, That the dealer's option to select
a vendor is not available if the manufacturer or distributor provides
substantial reimbursement for the goods or services offered. Substantial
reimbursement is equal to the difference in price of the goods and services
from manufacturer's proposed vendor and the motor vehicle dealer’s selected
vendor: Provided further, That the goods are not subject to the
manufacturer or distributor’s intellectual property or trademark rights, or
trade dress usage guidelines.
(3) (c) A manufacturer or distributor, either
directly or through any subsidiary, may not terminate, cancel, fail to renew,
or discontinue any lease of the new motor vehicle dealer's established place of
business except for a material breach of the lease.
(4) (d) Except as may otherwise be provided in this
article, no a manufacturer or franchisor may sell, not
directly or indirectly, sell, lease, exchange,
or convey a new motor vehicle to a retail customer, offer for retail sale,
lease, exchange, or other conveyance a new motor vehicle; or directly finance
the retail sale, lease, exchange, or other conveyance of a new motor vehicle any new motor vehicle to a retail
customer or consumer in this state, except through a new motor vehicle
dealer holding a franchise for the line-make covering such new motor vehicle.
This subsection does not apply to manufacturer or franchisor sales of new motor
vehicles to charitable organizations, qualified vendors, or employees of the
manufacturer or franchisor.
(5) (e) Except when prevented by an act of God,
labor strike, transportation disruption outside the control of the manufacturer
or time of war, a manufacturer or distributor may not refuse or fail to
deliver, in reasonable quantities and within a reasonable time, to a dealer
having a franchise agreement for the retail sale of any motor vehicle sold or
distributed by the manufacturer, any new motor vehicle or parts or accessories
to new motor vehicles as are covered by the franchise if the vehicles, parts
and accessories are publicly advertised as being available for delivery or are
actually being delivered.
(f) It is be unlawful for any manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, or distributor branch, when providing a new motor vehicle to a new motor vehicle dealer for offer, sale, or lease to the public, to fail to provide to the dealer a written disclosure that may be provided to a potential buyer or lessor of the new motor vehicle of each accessory or function of the vehicle that may be initiated, updated, changed, or maintained by the manufacturer or distributor through over the air or remote means, and the charge to the customer for the initiation, update, change, or maintenance that is known at the time of sale. A manufacturer or distributor may comply with this subdivision by notifying the new motor vehicle dealer that the information is available on a website or by other digital means.
(g) A manufacturer or distributor shall not attempt to coerce, threaten, or take any act prejudicial against a new motor vehicle dealer arising from the retail price at which a new motor vehicle dealer sells a new motor vehicle.
(h)Notwithstanding the terms of any franchise or agreement, or the terms of any
program or policy, a manufacturer or distributor may not do any of the following if it has a dealer agreement with any new motor vehicle dealer in this state and if the manufacturer or distributor permits retail customers the option of reserving the purchase or lease of a vehicle through a manufacturer or distributor reservation system:
(1) Fail to assign any retail vehicle reservation or request to purchase or lease received by the manufacturer or distributor from a resident of this state to the franchised dealer authorized to sell that make and model which is designated by the customer, or if none is designated, to its franchised dealer authorized to sell that make and model located in closest proximity to the customer's location: Provided, That if the customer does not purchase or lease the vehicle from that dealer within 10 days of the vehicle being received by the dealer, or if the customer requests that the transaction be assigned to another dealer, then the manufacturer or distributor may assign the transaction to another franchised dealer authorized to sell that make and model;
(2) Prohibit or unreasonably interfere with a new motor vehicle dealer negotiating the final purchase price of the vehicle with a retail customer that has reserved the purchase or lease through a manufacturer or distributor reservation system;
(3) Prohibit or unreasonably interfere with a new motor vehicle dealer offering and negotiating directly with the customer the terms of vehicle financing or leasing through all sources available to the dealer for the retail customer that has reserved the purchase or lease of a vehicle through a manufacturer or distributor reservation system;
(4) Prohibit or unreasonably interfere with a new motor vehicle dealer’s ability to offer to sell or sell any service contract, extended warranty, vehicle maintenance contract, or guaranteed asset protection (GAP) agreement, or any other vehicle-related products and services offered by the dealer with a retail customer that has reserved to purchase or lease through a manufacturer or distributor reservation system: Provided, That a manufacturer, distributor, or captive finance source shall not be required to finance the product or service;
(5) Prohibit or unreasonably interfere with a new motor vehicle dealer directly negotiating the trade-in value the customer will receive, or prohibit the dealer from conducting an on-site inspection of the condition of a trade-in vehicle before the dealer becomes contractually obligated to accept the trade-in value to negotiated with a retail customer that has reserved to purchase or lease a vehicle through the manufacturer or distributor reservation system;
(6) Use a third party to accomplish what would otherwise be prohibited by this subdivision;
(7) Nothing contained in this subdivision shall:
(A) Require that a manufacturer or distributor allocate or supply additional or supplemental inventory to a franchised dealer located in this state in order to satisfy a retail customer's vehicle reservation or request submitted directly to the manufacturer or distributor as provided in this section;
(B) Apply to the generation of sales leads: Provided, That for purposes of this subdivision the term "sales leads" shall not include any reservation or request to purchase or lease a vehicle submitted directly by a customer or potential customer to a manufacturer or distributor reservation system; or
(C) Apply to a reservation or request to purchase or lease a vehicle through the manufacturer or distributor received from the customer that is a resident of this state if the customer designates a dealer outside of this state to be assigned the reservation or request to purchase or lease or if the dealer in closest proximity to the customer’s location is in another state and the manufacturer or distributor assigns the reservation or request to purchase or lease to that dealer.
(8) Notwithstanding the terms of any dealer agreement, or the terms of any manufacturer or distributor program or policy, a manufacturer or distributor may not, if it has a dealer agreement with any new motor vehicle dealer in this state, offer new motor vehicles through a subscription directly to a retail customer or consumer. However, this subsection is not intended to prevent a manufacturer or distributor from providing or offering new motor vehicles through a subscription program through a new motor vehicle dealer for retail sales to a customer.
(i) Notwithstanding the terms of any dealer agreement, or the terms of any manufacturer or distributor program or policy, a manufacturer or distributor may not, if it has a dealer agreement with any new motor vehicle dealer in this state, offer direct financing for the purchase, lease, or other conveyance of a motor vehicle to a retail customer. However, this subsection is not intended to prevent a manufacturer or distributor from providing or offering a financing program through a new motor vehicle dealer which is available for retail customers.
§17A-6A-11. Where
motor vehicle dealer deceased or incapacitated Motor vehicle dealer
successorship or change in executive management.
(1) Any designated family
member of a deceased or incapacitated new motor vehicle dealer may
succeed the dealer in the ownership or operation, or be a designated
executive manager of the dealership under the existing dealer agreement if
the designated family member gives the manufacturer or distributor written
notice of his or her intention to succeed to, or be designated as the
executive manager of, the dealership within 120 days after the dealer’s
death or incapacity or designation of a successor or executive manager, and
agrees to be bound by all of the terms and conditions of the dealer agreement,
and the designated family member meets the current criteria generally applied
by the manufacturer or distributor in qualifying new motor vehicle dealers or
executive managers. A manufacturer or distributor may refuse to honor the designation
or change existing dealer agreement with the designated family
member only for good cause. In determining whether good cause exists for
refusing to honor the agreement, the manufacturer or distributor has the burden
of proving that the designated successor is a person who is not of good moral
character or does not meet the manufacturer’s existing written, reasonable, and
uniformly applied standards for business experience and financial
qualifications. The designated family member will have a minimum of one year to
satisfy that manufacturer’s written and reasonable standards and financial
qualifications for appointment as the dealer or executive manager and
principal.
(2) The manufacturer or
distributor may request from a designated family member such any information
or application personal and financial data as is reasonably
necessary to determine whether the existing dealer agreement should be honored.
The designated family member shall supply the personal and financial data
promptly upon the request.
(3) If a manufacturer or distributor believes that good cause exists for refusing to honor the succession or designation, the manufacturer or distributor may, within 45 days after receipt of the notice of the designated family member’s intent to succeed the dealer in the ownership or the appointment of an executive manager in the operation of the dealership, or within forty-five days after the receipt of the requested personal and financial data, serve upon the designated family member notice of its refusal to approve the succession.
(4) The notice of the
manufacturer or distributor provided in subsection subdivision (3)
of this section shall state the specific factual and legal grounds for
the refusal to approve the succession or designation of an executive
manager. the succession and that discontinuance of the agreement shall
take effect not less than one hundred-eighty days after the date the notice is
served.
(5) If notice of refusal is
not served within the sixty 45 days provided for in subsection
subdivision (3) of this section, the dealer agreement continues in
effect and is subject to termination only as otherwise permitted by this
article.
(6) This section does not preclude a new motor vehicle dealer from designating any person as his or her successor by will or any other written instrument filed with the manufacturer or distributor, and if such an instrument is filed, it alone determines the succession rights to the management and operation of the dealership.
(7) If the manufacturer
challenges the succession in ownership or executive manager designation,
it maintains the burden of proof to show good cause by a preponderance of the
evidence. If the person or new motor vehicle dealer seeking succession of
ownership or executive manager designation files a civil action within 180 days
of the manufacturer’s refusal to approve or the one year qualifying period
set forth in subdivision (1) of this section, whichever is longer, set
forth in subsection (4) of this section, no action may be taken by the
manufacturer contrary to the dealer agreement until such time as the civil
action and any appeal has been exhausted: Provided, That when a
motor vehicle dealer appeals a decision upholding a manufacturer’s decision to
not allow succession based upon the designated person's insolvency, or
conviction of a crime punishable by imprisonment in excess of one year under
the law which the designated person was convicted, the dealer agreement shall
remain in effect pending exhaustion of all appeals only if the new motor
vehicle dealer establishes that the public interest will not be harmed by
keeping the dealer agreement in effect pending entry of final judgment after
the appeal.
§17A-6A-12. Establishment and relocation or establishment of additional dealers.
(1) As used in this section, “relocate” and “relocation” do not include the relocation of a new motor vehicle dealer within four miles of its established place of business or if an existing new motor vehicle dealer sells or transfers the dealership to a new owner and the successor new motor vehicle dealership owner relocates to a location within four miles of the seller’s last open new motor vehicle dealership location. The relocation of a new motor vehicle dealer to a site within the area of sales responsibility assigned to that dealer by the manufacturing branch or distributor may not be within six air miles of another dealer of the same line-make.
(2) Before a manufacturer or distributor enters into a dealer agreement establishing or relocating a new motor vehicle dealer within a relevant market area where the same line-make is represented, the manufacturer or distributor shall give written notice to each new motor vehicle dealer of the same line-make in the relevant market area of its intention to establish an additional dealer or to relocate an existing dealer within that relevant market area.
(3) Within 60 days after receiving the notice provided in subdivision (2) of this section, or within 60 days after the end of any appeal procedure provided by the manufacturer or distributor, a new motor vehicle dealer of the same line-make within the affected relevant market area may bring a declaratory judgment action in the circuit court for the county in which the new motor vehicle dealer is located to determine whether good cause exists for the establishing or relocating of the proposed new motor vehicle dealer. Provided, That a new motor vehicle dealer of the same line-make within the affected relevant market area shall not be permitted to bring such an action if the proposed relocation site would be further from the location of the new motor vehicle dealer of the same line-make than the location from which the dealership is being moved. Once an action has been filed, the manufacturer or distributor may not establish or relocate the proposed new motor vehicle dealer until the circuit court has rendered a decision on the matter. An action brought pursuant to this section shall be given precedence over all other civil matters on the court’s docket. The manufacturer has the burden of proving that good cause exists for establishing or relocating a proposed new motor vehicle dealer.
(4) This section does not apply to the reopening in a relevant market area of a new motor vehicle dealer that has been closed within the preceding two years if the established place of business of the new motor vehicle dealer is within four air miles of the established place of business of the closed or sold new motor vehicle dealer.
(5) In determining whether good cause exists for establishing or relocating an additional new motor vehicle dealer for the same line-make, the court shall take into consideration the existing circumstances, including, but not limited to, the following:
(a) (A) The permanency and amount of the
investment, including any obligations incurred by the dealer in making the
investment;
(b) (B) The effect on the retail new motor
vehicle business and the consuming public in the relevant market area;
(c) (C) Whether it is injurious or beneficial to
the public welfare;
(d) (D) Whether the new motor vehicle dealers of
the same line-make in the relevant market area are providing adequate
competition and convenient consumer care for the motor vehicles of that
line-make in the market area, including the adequacy of motor vehicle sales and
qualified service personnel;
(e) (E) Whether the establishment or relocation of
the new motor vehicle dealer would promote competition;
(f) (F) The growth or decline of the
population and the number of new motor vehicle registrations in the relevant
market area; and
(g) (G) The effect on the relocating dealer of a
denial of its relocation into the relevant market area.
§17A-6A-13. Obligations regarding warranties.
(1) Each new motor vehicle
manufacturer or distributor shall specify in writing to each of its new motor
vehicle dealers licensed in this state the dealer’s obligations for
preparation, delivery, and warranty service on its products. The manufacturer
or distributor shall compensate the new motor vehicle dealer for warranty
service required of the dealer by the manufacturer or distributor. The
manufacturer or distributor shall provide the new motor vehicle dealer with the
schedule of compensation to be paid to the dealer for parts, diagnostic time
as applicable, work and service, and the time allowance for the performance
of the work, diagnostic time as applicable, and service in a manner in
compliance with section eight-a of this article. §17A-6A-8a of this
code.
(2) The schedule of
compensation shall include reasonable compensation for diagnostic work, as well
as repair service and labor. Time allowances for the diagnosis and performance
of warranty work and service shall be reasonable and adequate for the work to
be performed. In the determination of what constitutes reasonable compensation
under this section, section eight-a of this article §17A-6A-8a of
this code shall govern: Provided, That in the case of a dealer of new
motorcycles, motorboat trailers, all-terrain vehicles, utility terrain vehicles,
and snowmobiles, the compensation of a dealer for warranty parts is the greater
of the dealer’s cost of acquiring the part plus 30 percent or the
manufacturer’s suggested retail price: Provided, however, That in the
case of a dealer of travel trailers, fold-down camping trailers, and
motorhomes, the compensation of a dealer’s cost for warranty parts is not less
than the dealer’s cost of acquiring the part plus 20 percent.
(3) A manufacturer or distributor may not do any of the following:
(a) (A) Fail to perform any warranty obligation;
(b) (B) Fail to include in written notices of
factory recalls to new motor vehicle owners and dealers the expected date by
which necessary parts and equipment will be available to dealers for the
correction of the defects; or
(c) (C) Fail to compensate any of the new motor
vehicle dealers licensed in this state for repairs effected by the recall or the manufacturer’s or distributor’s warranty
obligation as provided under §17A-6A-8a of this code.
(4) All claims made by a
new motor vehicle dealer pursuant to this section for labor and parts shall be
paid within 30 days after their approval. All claims shall be either approved
or disapproved by the manufacturer or distributor within 30 days after their
receipt on a proper form generally used by the manufacturer or distributor and
containing the usually required information therein. Any claim not specifically
disapproved in writing within 30 days after the receipt of the form is
considered to be approved and payment shall be made within 30 days. The
manufacturer has the right to initiate an audit of a claim within twelve months
after payment and to charge back to the new motor vehicle dealer the amount of
any false, fraudulent, or unsubstantiated claim, subject to the requirements of
section eight-a of this article. §17A-6A-8a of this code.
(5) The manufacturer shall accept the return of any new and unused part, component, or accessory that was ordered by the dealer, and shall reimburse the dealer for the full cost charged to the dealer for the part, component, or accessory if the dealer returns the part and makes a claim for the return of the part within one year of the dealer’s receipt of the part, component, or accessory and provides reasonable documentation, to include any changed part numbers to match new part numbers, provided that the part was ordered for a warranty repair.
§17A-6A-15. Indemnity.
Notwithstanding the terms of any dealer agreement, a manufacturer or distributor shall indemnify and hold harmless its dealers for any reasonable expenses incurred, including damages, court costs, and attorney’s fees, arising out of complaints, claims, or actions to the extent such complaints, claims, or actions relate to the manufacture, assembly, or design of a new motor vehicle, manufacturer’s warranty obligations excluding dealer negligence, or other functions by the manufacturer or distributor beyond the control of the dealer, including, without limitation, the selection by the manufacturer or distributor of parts or components for the vehicle, and any damages to merchandise occurring prior to acceptance of the vehicle by the dealer to the dealer if the carrier is designated by the manufacturer or distributor, if the new motor vehicle dealer gives timely notice to the manufacturer or distributor of the complaint, claim, or action.
§17A-6A-15a. Dealer data, obligation of manufacturer, vendors, suppliers and others; consent to access dealership information; unlawful activities; indemnification of dealer.
(a) Except as expressly authorized in this section, a manufacturer or distributor cannot require a motor vehicle dealer to provide its customer information to the manufacturer or distributor unless necessary for the sale and delivery of a new motor vehicle to a consumer, to validate and pay consumer or dealer incentives, for manufacturer's marketing purposes, for evaluation of dealer performance, for analytics, or to support claims submitted by the new motor vehicle dealer for reimbursement for warranty parts or repairs. Nothing in this section shall limit the manufacturer's ability to require or use customer information to satisfy any safety or recall notice obligation or other legal obligation.
(b) The
dealer is only required to provide the customer information to the extent
lawfully permissible, and to the extent the requested information relates
solely to specific program requirements or goals associated with the
manufacturer's or distributor's own vehicle makes. A manufacturer, factory
branch, distributor, distributor branch, dealer, management computer system
data systems vendor, or any third party acting on behalf of any
manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch or dealer or
management computer system data systems vendor may not
prohibit a dealer from providing a means to regularly and continually monitor,
or conduct an audit of, the specific data accessed from or written to the
dealer's computer system data systems
and from complying with applicable state and federal laws and any rules or
regulations promulgated thereunder. These provisions do not impose an
obligation on a manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch,
dealer, management computer vendor, or any third party acting on behalf
of any manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch, dealer, or
management computer data systems vendor to provide that
capability.
(c) A
manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch, dealer,
management computer system data systems vendor, or any third
party acting on behalf of any manufacturer, factory branch, distributor,
distributor branch or dealer, or management computer system data
systems vendor, may not provide access to customer or dealership
information maintained in a dealer management computer system data
systems used by a motor vehicle dealer located in this state, other than a
subsidiary or affiliate of the manufacturer factory branch, distributor or
distributor branch without first obtaining the dealer's prior express written
consent and agreement, revocable by the dealer upon 10 business days
written notice, to provide the access.
(d) Upon a written request from a motor
vehicle dealer, the manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor
branch, dealer, or management computer system data
systems vendor, or any third party acting on behalf of or through any
manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch or dealer management
computer system data systems vendor shall provide to the
dealer a written list of all specific third parties other than a subsidiary or
affiliate of the manufacturer, factory branch, distributor or distributor
branch to whom any data obtained from the dealer has actually been provided
within the 12 month period prior to date of dealer's written request. If
requested by the dealer, the list shall further describe the scope and specific
fields of the data provided. The consent does not change the person's
obligations to comply with the terms of this section and any additional state
or federal laws, and any rules or regulations promulgated thereunder,
applicable to them with respect to the access.
(d) (e) A manufacturer, factory
branch, distributor, distributor branch, dealer, management computer system
data systems vendor, or any third party acting on behalf of or through
any dealer, or management computer system data systems vendor,
having electronic access to customer or motor vehicle dealership data in
a dealership data management computer system used by a motor
vehicle dealer located in this state shall provide notice in a reasonable
timely manner to the dealer of any security breach of dealership or customer
data obtained through the access.
(e) (f) A manufacturer or
distributor or a third party acting on behalf of a manufacturer or distributor
may not require a dealer to provide any customer information: (a) Of
Any individual who is not a customer of such manufacturer’s or distributor’s
own vehicle makes; (b) for any purpose other than for reasonable
marketing purposes on behalf of that dealer, market research, consumer surveys,
market analysis, or dealership performance analysis; (c) if sharing that
information would not be permissible under local, state, or federal law; (d)
except to the extent the requested information relates solely to specific
program requirements or goals associated with such manufacturer’s or
distributor’s own vehicle makes; (e) that is general customer
information or other information related to the dealer, or (f) unless
the requested information can be provided in a manner consistent with dealer's
current privacy policies and Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act privacy notice, and no
a dealer may not be required to amend that notice to accommodate
data sharing with the manufacturer or distributor.
(g) As used in this section:
(1) “Authorized Integrator” means any third party with whom a dealer has entered into a written contract to perform a specific function for a dealer that permits the third party to access protected dealer data and/or to write data to a dealer data system to carry out the specified function (the “authorized integrator contract”).
(2) “Dealer” means a new motor vehicle dealer as defined by §17A-6A-3(11) of this code and any authorized dealer personnel.
(3) “Dealer data system” means any software, hardware, or firmware used by a dealer in its business operations to store, process, or maintain protected dealer data.
(4) “Dealer data systems vendor” means any dealer management system provider, customer relationship management system provider, or other vendor that permissibly stores protected dealer data pursuant to a written contract with the dealer (“dealer data systems vendor contract”).
(5) “Data access overcharge” means any charge to a dealer or authorized integrator for integration beyond reimbursement for any direct costs incurred by the dealer data systems vendor for such Integration. If a dealer data systems vendor chooses to seek reimbursement from any dealer or authorized integrator for such direct costs, the direct costs must be disclosed to the dealer, and justified by documentary evidence of the costs associated with such Integration or it will be considered a data access overcharge.
(6) “Integration” means access to protected dealer data in a dealer’s dealer data system by an authorized integrator, or an authorized integrator writing data to a dealer’s dealer data system. Integration does not require access to any copyrighted material but must allow for access to all protected dealer data. Integration may be accomplished by any commercially reasonable means that do not violate this section, but all dealer data vendors must include an option to integrate via a secure open application programming interface (API), which must be made available to dealers and authorized integrators. In the event that APIs are no longer the reasonable commercial or technical standard for secure data integration, a similar open access integration method may be provided, to the extent it provides the same or better secure access to dealers and authorized Integrators as an API.
(7) “Prior express written consent” means written consent provided by the dealer that is contained in a document separate from any other consent, contract, franchise agreement, or other writing that specifically outlines the dealer’s consent for the authorized Integrator to obtain the dealer data, as well as the scope and duration of that consent. This consent may be unilaterally revoked by the dealer: (A) without cause, upon 30 days’ notice, and (B) immediately for cause.
(8) “Protected dealer data” means any of the following data that is stored in a dealer data system:
(A) Personal, financial, or other data pertaining to a consumer, or a consumer’s vehicle that is provided to a dealer by a consumer or otherwise obtained by a dealer: Provided, That this subdivision does not give a new motor vehicle dealer any ownership or rights to share or use the motor vehicle diagnostic data beyond what is necessary to fulfill a dealer’s obligation to provide warranty, repair, or service work to its customers; or
(B) Any other data regarding a dealer’s business operations in that dealer’s dealer data system:
(9) “Secure open API” means an application programming interface that allows authorized integrators to integrate with dealer data systems remotely and securely. The APIs must be “open” in that all required information to Integrate via the API (software development toolkit and any other necessary technical or other information) must be made available by a dealer data systems vendor to any authorized integrator upon request by a dealer. The secure open API must include all relevant endpoints to allow for access to all protected dealer data, or as are needed to integrate with protected dealer data, and must provide granularity and control necessary for dealers and authorized integrators to Integrate the data necessary under the authorized integrator contract. “Open” does not mean that the API must be available publicly or at no cost to an authorized integrator, however no data access overcharge may be assessed in connection with a secure open API.
(10) “Third party” includes service providers, vendors, including dealer data systems vendors and authorized integrators, and any other individual or entity other than the dealer. Third party does not include any manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch or governmental entity acting pursuant to federal, state, or local law, or any third party acting pursuant to a valid court order.
(h) Prohibited Action
1. A third party may not:
(A) Access, share, sell, copy, use, or transmit protected dealer data from a dealer data system without the express written consent of a dealer;
(B) Take any action, by contract, by technical means, or otherwise, that would prohibit or limit a dealer’s ability to protect, store, copy, share, or use any protected dealer data. This includes, but is not limited to:
(i) Imposing any data access overcharges or other restrictions of any kind on the dealer or any authorized integrator for integration;
(ii) Prohibiting any third party that the dealer has identified as one of its authorized integrators from integrating with that dealer’s dealer data system;
(iii) Place unreasonable restrictions on integration by any authorized integrator or other third party that the dealer wishes to be an authorized integrator. Examples of unreasonable restrictions include, but are not limited to:
(I) Unreasonable restrictions on the scope or nature of the data shared with an authorized integrator;
(II) Unreasonable restrictions on the ability of the authorized integrator to write data to a dealer data system;
(III) Unreasonable restrictions or conditions on a third party accessing or sharing protected dealer data, or writing data to a dealer data system; and
(IV) Requiring unreasonable access to sensitive, competitive, or other confidential business information of a third party as a condition for access to protected dealer data or sharing protected dealer data with an authorized integrator;
(iv) Prohibiting or limiting a dealer’s ability to store, copy, securely share or use protected dealer data outside the dealer data system in any manner and for any reason; or
(v) Permitting access to or accessing protected dealer data without express written consent by the dealer.
(i) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted to prevent any dealer or third party from discharging its obligations as a service provider under an agreement or otherwise under federal, state, or local law to protect and secure protected dealer data, or to otherwise limit those responsibilities.
(j) A dealer data systems vendor or authorized integrator is not responsible for any action taken directly by the dealer, or for any action it takes in appropriately following the written instructions of the dealer, to the extent that such action prevents it from meeting any legal obligation regarding the protection of protected dealer data or results in any liability as a consequence of such actions by the dealer.
(k) A dealer is not responsible for any action taken directly by any of its dealer data systems vendors or authorized integrators, or for any action it takes in appropriately following the written instructions of any of its dealer data systems vendors or authorized integrators, to the extent that such action prevents it from meeting any legal obligation regarding the protection of protected dealer data or results in any liability as a consequence of such actions by the dealer data systems vendor or authorized integrator.
(l) Additional responsibilities and restrictions
(1) All dealer data systems vendors must adopt and make available a standardized Integration framework (use of the STAR Standards or a standard compatible with the STAR standards shall be deemed to be in compliance with this requirement) and allow for integration via secure open APIs to authorized integrators. In the event that APIs are no longer the reasonable commercial or technical standard for secure data integration, a similar open access integration method may be provided, to the extent it provides the same or better secure Integration to dealers and authorized integrators as a secure open API.
(2) All dealer data systems vendors and authorized integrators:
(A) May Integrate, or otherwise access, use, store, or share protected dealer data, only as outlined in, and to the extent permitted by their dealer data systems vendor contract or authorized integrator contract;
(B) Must make any dealer data systems vendor contract or authorized integrator contract terminable upon no more than 90 days notice from the dealer;
(C) Must, upon notice of the dealer’s intent to terminate its dealer data systems vendor contract or authorized integrator contract, in order to prevent any risk of consumer harm or inconvenience, work to ensure a secure transition of all protected dealer data to a successor dealer data systems vendor or authorized integrator. This includes, but is not limited to:
(i) Providing unrestricted access to all protected dealer data and all other data stored in the dealer data system in a commercially reasonable time and format that a successor dealer data systems vendor or authorized integrator can access and use; and
(ii) Deleting or returning to the dealer all protected dealer data prior to termination of the contract pursuant to any written directions of the dealer;
(iii) Providing a dealer, upon request, with a listing of all entities with whom it is sharing or has shared protected dealer data, or with whom it has allowed access to protected dealer data; and
(iv) Allowing a dealer to audit the dealer data systems vendor or authorized integrator’s access to and use of any protected dealer data.
(i) (m) Notwithstanding the terms or
conditions of any consent, authorization, release, novation, franchise, or
other contract or agreement, every manufacturer, factory branch, distributor,
distributor branch, dealer, system data systems vendor, or any
third party acting on behalf of or through a manufacturer, factory branch,
distributor, distributor branch or dealer, management computer system data
systems vendor shall fully indemnify, defend, and hold harmless any dealer
or manufacturer, factory branch, distributor or distributor branch from all
damages, attorney fees, and costs, other costs and expenses incurred by the
dealer from complaints, claims, or actions arising out of manufacturer’s,
factory’s branch, distributor’s, distributor’s branch, dealer management
computer system data systems vendors, or any third party for its
willful, negligent, or impermissible use or disclosure of dealer data or
customer data or other sensitive information in the dealer’s data
computer system. The indemnification includes, but is not limited to,
judgments, settlements, fines, penalties, litigation costs, defense costs,
court costs, costs related to the disclosure of security breaches, and
attorneys’ fees arising out of complaints, claims, civil, or administrative
actions.
(j) (n) The rights conferred on
motor vehicle dealers in this section are not waivable and may not be reduced
or otherwise modified by any contract or agreement.
(k) (o) This section applies to
contracts entered into after the effective date of this section.
(p) If any provision of this section or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this section which can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this section are severable.
(q) A manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch, dealer, data management computer systems vendor, or any third party acting on behalf of itself, or through a manufacturer, factory branch, distributor, distributor branch, or dealer data management computer system vendor shall not take an act prejudicial against a new motor vehicle dealer because of a new motor vehicle dealer exercising its rights under this section.
§17A-6A-15c. Manufacturer performance standards; uniform application; prohibited practices.
A manufacturer may not require dealer adherence to a performance standard or standards which are not applied uniformly to other similarly situated dealers. In addition to any other requirements of the law, the following shall apply:
(1) A performance standard,
sales objective, or program for measuring dealer performance that may have a
material effect on a dealer, including the dealer’s right to payment under any
incentive or reimbursement program and the application of the standard, sales
objective, or program used by a manufacturer, distributor, or factory
branch in determining a dealer’s compliance with the dealer agreement
shall be reasonable and based on accurate information, including, but not
limited to, the dealer’s specific local market circumstances and geographical
characteristics. A manufacturer, distributor, or factory branch may not impose
unreasonable restrictions on a dealer relative to compliance with a sales
performance standard or sales objective.
(2) Upon written request from a dealer participating in the program, the manufacturer shall provide in writing the dealer’s performance requirement or sales goal or objective, which shall include a reasonable and general explanation of the methodology, criteria, and calculations used.
(3) A manufacturer shall allocate a reasonable and appropriate supply of vehicles to assist the dealer in achieving any performance standards established by the manufacturer and distributor.
(4) The manufacturer or distributor has the burden of proving by a preponderance of the evidence that the performance standard, sales objective, or program for measuring dealership performance complies with this article.
§17A-6A-18. West Virginia law to apply.
Notwithstanding the terms, provisions, or requirements of any franchise agreement, contract, or other agreement of any kind between a new motor vehicle dealer and a manufacturer or distributor captive finance source, dealer management system, or any subsidiary, affiliate, or partner of a manufacturer or distributor, or captive finance source or dealer management system, the provisions of this code apply to all such agreements and contracts listed in this section or governed by the article. Any provisions in the agreements and contracts which violate the terms of this section are null and void.
Adopted
Rejected