GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF NORTH CAROLINA
1989 SESSION
CHAPTER 524
AN ACT TO PERMIT PERSONS TO ENGAGE IN BUSINESS AS A PAWNBROKER IN UNINCORPORATED AREAS OF COUNTIES.
The General Assembly of North Carolina enacts:
Section 1. Chapter 91 of the General Statutes reads as rewritten:
"Chapter 91.
"Pawnbrokers.
"§ 91-1. Pawnbroker defined.
Any person, firm, or corporation who shall engage in the business of lending or advancing money on the pledge and possession of personal property, or dealing in the purchasing of personal property or valuable things on condition of selling the same back again at stipulated prices, is hereby declared and defined to be a pawnbroker.
"§ 91-2. License;
business confined to municipalities. License.
No person, firm, or corporation shall engage in the business
of lending money, or other things, for profit or on account of specific
articles of personal property deposited with the lender in pledge in this
State, which business is commonly known as that of pawnbrokers, except in
incorporated cities and towns, and without first having obtained a license to
do so from such incorporated cities and towns, and by paying the county, State,
and municipal tax required by law, and otherwise complying with the
requirements made in this and succeeding sections. without first having
obtained a pawnbroker license from the incorporated cities and towns or from
the county in which such person, firm or corporation shall engage in business
as a pawnbroker, and by paying the county, State and municipal license tax
required by law, and otherwise complying with the requirements of this and
succeeding sections. Provided, however, no person engaged in business as
a pawnbroker in any incorporated city or town shall be required to obtain a
pawnbroker license from the county in which such city or town is located but
shall obtain only a pawnbroker license from such city or town.
"§ 91-3. Municipal or county authorities to grant and control license; bond.
The board of aldermen, or other governing body, of any city
or town in this State or board of commissioners of any county in this State may
grant to such person, firm, or corporation as it may deem proper, and who shall
produce satisfactory evidence of good character, a pawnbroker license
authorizing such person, firm, or corporation to carry on the business of a
pawnbroker, which said license shall designate the house in which such person,
firm, or corporation shall carry on said business, and no person, firm, or
corporation shall carry on the business of a pawnbroker without being duly
licensed, nor in any other house than the one designated in the said
license. Provided, however, no governing body of any city or town
shall have authority to license any person, firm or corporation to carry on the
business of a pawnbroker outside the corporate limits of such city or town and
no board of county commissioners shall have authority to license any person, firm
or corporation to carry on the business of a pawnbroker within the limits of
any incorporated city or town. Every person, firm, or corporation so
licensed to carry on the business of a pawnbroker shall, at the time of
receiving such license, file with the mayor of the city or town granting the
same, or with the board of county commissioners, as the case may be, a
bond payable to such city or town or to such county, as the case may be, in
the sum of one thousand dollars ($1,000), to be executed by the person so
licensed and by two responsible sureties, or a surety company licensed to do
business in the State of North Carolina, to be approved of by such mayor, mayor
or county commission chairman, which said bond shall be for the faithful
performance of the requirements and obligations pertaining to the business so
licensed. The board of aldermen, board of county commissioners or other
governing body, shall have full power and authority to revoke such license and
sue for forfeiture of the bond upon a breach thereof. Any person who may obtain
a judgment against a pawnbroker and upon which judgment execution is returned
unsatisfied, may maintain an action in his own name upon the said bond of said
pawnbroker, in any court having jurisdiction of the amount demanded, to satisfy
said judgment.
"§ 91-4. Records to be kept.
Every pawnbroker shall keep a book in which shall be legibly written, at the time of each transaction involving the pawning, pledging or selling of used goods, articles or things between any person and the pawnbroker, his employee or agent, the following information:
An account and description of the used goods, articles, or things including if applicable, the manufacturer's name, the model, the model number, the serial number of the used goods, articles or things, and any engraved numbers or initials found on the goods, articles or things;
The amount of money paid or loaned thereon and the rate of interest to be paid, if applicable;
The date of the transaction; and
The name and residence of the person pawning, pledging, or selling the used goods, articles, or things.
The pawnbroker or his employee or agent shall require that the person pawning, pledging, or selling the used goods, articles, or things, present two forms of positive identification to him before the pawnbroker may complete any transaction regarding the pawning, pledging, or buying of used goods, articles, or things; provided, however, that the presentation of any one state or federal government issued identification containing a photographic representation imprinted thereon shall constitute compliance with the identification requirements of this paragraph. The pawnbroker or his employee or agent shall legibly record this identification information next to the person's name and residence in the book heretofore required to be kept.
Such book shall be a permanent record to be kept at all times
on the premises of the place of business of the pawnbroker and shall be made
available, during regular business hours, to any law-enforcement officer who
requests to inspect the book. A copy of the records required to be kept by this
section shall be filed within 48 hours of the transaction in the office of the
sheriff of the county in which the pawnshop is located and or the
chief of police of the city or town issuing the pawnbroker license to such
pawnbroker.
"§ 91-5. Pawn ticket.
Every such pawnbroker shall at the time of each loan deliver to the person pawning or pledging any used goods, articles, or things, a ticket or memorandum or note signed by him containing the substance of the entry required to be made by him in his book as set out in G.S. 91-4. The said tickets or memorandums so issued shall be numbered consecutively and dated the day issued.
"§ 91-6. Sale of pledges.
No pawnbroker shall sell any pawn or pledge until the same shall have remained 60 days in his possession after the maturity of the debt for which the property was pledged. And no pawnbroker shall advertise or sell at his place of business as unredeemed pledges any articles of property other than those received by him as pawns or pledges in the usual course of his business at the place where he is licensed to do business.
"§ 91-7. Usury law applicable.
The provisions of this Chapter shall not be construed to relieve any person from the penalty incurred under the laws against usury in this State.
"§ 91-8. Violation of Chapter misdemeanor.
Any person, firm, or corporation violating the provisions of this Chapter shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined or imprisoned, or both, in the discretion of the court."
Sec. 2. Chapter 1155 of the 1957 Session Laws, Chapter 768 of the 1967 Session Laws, Chapter 361 of the 1977 Session Laws, and Chapter 76 of the 1987 Session Laws are repealed.
Sec. 3. This act is effective upon ratification.
In the General Assembly read three times and ratified this the 30th day of June, 1989.