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RTO Online
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Texas Rental
Purchase Factoids |
| Texas defines a Rental Purchase agreement as having an
initial period of 4 months or less |
| Dealer must supply agreements in all languages used in
advertising |
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Late fees may not be assigned unless agreement is 7 days past due |
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Late fee must be the lesser of five percent of the delinquent payment or $5,
and not less than $2; |
A customer may
re-instatement a past due agreement for 7 days, or 1/2 of the days in a
payment period (i.e. 15 days for monthly) If a customer returns the
merchandise during this period, the re-instatement period is extended for 30
days. |
If you advertise payments, the ad must also include, among other things
- The total amount and number of payments necessary to acquire ownership
- That the consumer does not acquire ownership rights unless the
merchandise is rented for a specified number of payment periods.
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Violators are subject to...
Actual damages and
25 percent of an amount equal to the total amount of payments required to
obtain ownership of the merchandise involved, except that the amount
recovered under this subdivision may not be less than $250 nor more than
$1,000; and
(3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs.
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This is a feature of the Texas Rental Purchase Act of 1984. We
have included a printable version of the bill
.
RTO Online maintains links to all available State Statutes
on our Regulations page.
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Following is the Texas Statute in its entirety
Read Disclaimer Current as of 08-08-02
Please check with your legislature to verify
Texas
SUBCHAPTER F
RENTAL-PURCHASE AGREEMENTS
Effective since Sept. 1, 1985.
SUBCHAPTER F. RENTAL-PURCHASE AGREEMENTS
§ 35.71. Definitions
In this subchapter:
(1) "Advertisement" means a commercial message in any medium that directly or
indirectly promotes or assists a rental-purchase agreement.
(2) "Cash price" means the price for which the merchant would have sold the
merchandise to the consumer for cash on the date of the rental-purchase
agreement.
(3) "Consumer" means an individual who leases personal property under a
rental-purchase agreement.
(4) "Merchandise" means the personal property that is the subject of a
rental-purchase agreement.
(5) "Merchant" means a person who, in the ordinary course of business, regularly
leases, offers to lease, or arranges for the leasing of merchandise under a
rental-purchase agreement, and includes a person who is assigned an interest in
a rental-purchase agreement.
(6) "Rental-purchase agreement" means an agreement for the use of merchandise by
a consumer for personal, family, or household purposes, for an initial period of
four months or less that is automatically renewable with each payment after the
initial period, and that permits the consumer to become the owner of the
merchandise.
Added by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 209, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1985.
§ 35.72. Form
(a) A rental-purchase agreement must be written in plain English and in any
other language used by the merchant in an advertisement related to the
rental-purchase agreement. Numerical amounts must be stated in figures.
(b) Disclosures required by this subchapter must be printed or typed in each
rental-purchase agreement in a size equal to at least 10-point bold-faced type.
The attorney general shall provide a form agreement that may be used to satisfy
the requirements of an agreement under this subchapter.
(c) A rental-purchase agreement may not contain a provision:
(1) requiring a confession of judgment;
(2) authorizing a merchant or an agent of the merchant to commit a breach of the
peace in the repossession of merchandise;
(3) waiving a defense, counterclaim, or right the consumer may have against the
merchant or an agent of the merchant;
(4) requiring the purchase of insurance from the merchant to cover the
merchandise;
(5) requiring the payment of a late charge or reinstatement fee unless a
periodic payment is delinquent for more than seven days and the charge or fee is
in an amount equal to not more than the lesser of five percent of the delinquent
payment or $5, and not less than $2; or
(6) requiring a payment at the end of the scheduled rental-purchase term in
excess of or in addition to a regular periodic payment in order to acquire
ownership of the merchandise. In no event shall the consumer be required to pay
a sum greater than the total amount to be paid to acquire ownership, as
disclosed in Subsection (g)(3) of this section.
(d) Only one late charge or reinstatement fee may be collected on a payment
regardless of the period during which it remains in default.
(e) A rental-purchase agreement must provide that:
(1) a charge in addition to periodic payments, if any, must be reasonably
related to the service performed; and
(2) a consumer who fails to make a timely payment may reinstate an agreement,
without losing rights or options previously acquired, by taking the required
action before the later of one week or half of the number of days in a regular
payment period after the due date of the payment.
(f) Notice of the right to reinstate an agreement must be disclosed in the
agreement. This subchapter does not prevent a merchant from attempting
repossession of merchandise during the reinstatement period, and the consumer's
right to reinstate an agreement does not expire because of such a repossession.
If the merchandise is returned during the applicable reinstatement period, other
than through judicial process, the right to reinstate the agreement shall be
extended for a period of not less than 30 days after the date of the return of
the merchandise. On reinstatement, the merchant shall provide the consumer with
the same merchandise or substitute merchandise of comparable quality and
condition. If substitute merchandise is provided, the merchant shall provide the
consumer with the disclosures required in Subsection (g) of this section.
(g) A rental-purchase agreement must disclose:
(1) whether the merchandise is new or used;
(2) the amount and timing of payments;
(3) the total number of payments necessary and the total amount to be paid to
acquire ownership of the merchandise;
(4) the amount and purpose of any payment, charge, or fee in addition to the
regular periodic payments;
(5) whether the consumer is liable for loss or damage to the merchandise, and if
so the maximum amount for which the consumer may be liable;
(6) that the consumer does not acquire ownership rights unless the consumer has
complied with the ownership terms of the agreement; and
(7) the cash price of the merchandise.
Added by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 209, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1985.
§ 35.73. Advertisement
An advertisement for a rental-purchase agreement that refers to or states the
amount of a payment or the right to acquire ownership of any one particular item
under the agreement must clearly and conspicuously state:
(1) that the transaction advertised is a rental-purchase agreement;
(2) the total amount and number of payments necessary to acquire ownership; and
(3) that the consumer does not acquire ownership rights unless the merchandise
is rented for a specified number of payment periods.
Added by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 209, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1985.
§ 35.74. Enforcement
(a) A consumer damaged by a violation of this subchapter by a merchant is
entitled to recover from the merchant:
(1) actual damages;
(2) 25 percent of an amount equal to the total amount of payments required to
obtain ownership of the merchandise involved, except that the amount recovered
under this subdivision may not be less than $250 nor more than $1,000; and
(3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs.
(b) A merchant is not liable under this section for a violation of this
subchapter caused by the merchant's error if before the 31st day after the date
the merchant discovers the error, and before an action under this section is
filed or written notice of the error is received by the merchant from the
consumer, the merchant gives the consumer written notice of the error and makes
adjustments in the consumer's account as necessary to assure that the consumer
will not be required to pay an amount in excess of the amount disclosed and that
the agreement otherwise complies with this subchapter.
(c) A violation of this subchapter is a deceptive trade practice under
Subchapter E of Chapter 17, Business & Commerce Code.
Added by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 209, § 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1985.
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