BILL ANALYSIS C.S.S.B. 336 By: Rosson Int'l Relations, Trade & Tech. 03-02-95 Committee Report (Substituted) BACKGROUND Colonias are substandard, generally impoverished, rural subdivisions that typically lack one or more of the basic amenities of water, wastewater service, paved streets, drainage or electric service. The lack of these services has been implicated in a variety of social and health problems, including an incidence of tuberculosis and hepatitis not usually found outside third world countries. Although it is generally assumed that colonias exist only along the U.S.-Mexico border, there are, in fact, similarly substandard subdivisions in virtually every area of Texas. Nevertheless, the greatest concentration of colonias is along the Texas-Mexico border, particularly in the lower Rio Grande Valley and El Paso County. Colonias residents almost always acquire their lots by means of an executory contract, generally known as a "contract for deed" or "contract for sale." This type of conveyance is unlike a typical deed of trust transaction in several notable respects: first, the property being conveyed generally is only land, with no house, structure or improvements; second, under a contract for deed, legal title does not transfer until all payments are made, and the purchaser may not accrue any equity in a tract even though substantial payments may have been; third, contracts for deed are not required to be recorded; and fourth, virtually none of the state and federal protections afforded conventional home buyers are provided to a purchaser under a contract for deed. The fact that a purchaser has very few rights or remedies under a contract for deed has led to a number of abusive practices by sellers of colonia lots. Sellers have sold individual lots to two or more buyers, sold lots without a written contract, and placed liens on lots subsequent to the sale without informing the purchaser. Colonia residents also suggest that sellers frequently misrepresent the availability of water, sewer service and other utilities, and that they are often not informed that the property being sold lies in a flood plain or is otherwise unsuitable for habitation. The magnitude of problems resulting from colonia development and the role that contracts for deed play in allowing these problems to develop have led some parties to call for an outright prohibition on this type of conveyance. However, low income families needing housing currently have no other alternatives, as few, if any, banks or other conventional financial institutions are willing to lend, and few insurers will provide coverage for this type of property. PURPOSE As proposed, C.S.S.B. 336 requires, in certain counties, recording of contracts for deed and specific notice as to the availability of water, wastewater, electric service, and flood plain status. RULEMAKING AUTHORITY It is the committee's opinion that this bill does not grant any additional rulemaking authority to a state officer, institution, or agency. SECTION BY SECTION ANALYSIS SECTION 1. Sets forth the findings of the legislature. SECTION 2. Amends Chapter 5D, Property Code, as follows: SUBCHAPTER D. EXECUTORY CONTRACT FOR CONVEYANCE Sec. 5.061. New title: AVOIDANCE OF FORFEITURE AND ACCELERATION OR RESCISSION. Authorizes a seller to enforce the remedy of rescission or forfeiture and acceleration against a purchaser in default under an executory contract (contract) for conveyance of real property used or to be used as the purchaser's residence if the seller notifies the purchaser of certain conditions. Sec. 5.062. NOTICE. Sets forth the requirements, language, and conditions of a notice under Section 5.061 of this code. Sec. 5.063. RIGHT TO CURE DEFAULT. Authorizes a purchaser in default of a contract to avoid the enforcement of a remedy described by Section 5.061 by complying with the terms of the contract up to the date of compliance. Sec. 5.064. PLACEMENT OF LIEN FOR UTILITY SERVICE. Makes no change. Sec. 5.065. DEFAULT. Defines "default." SECTION 3. Amends Chapter 5, Property Code, by adding Subchapter E, as follows: SUBCHAPTER E. REQUIREMENTS FOR EXECUTORY CONTRACT FOR CONVEYANCE APPLICABLE TO CERTAIN COUNTIES Sec. 5.091. APPLICABILITY. Establishes the required demographics a county must meet in order for this subsection to be applicable to that county. Sec. 5.092. DETERMINATION AND NOTICE OF APPLICABILITY. (a) Requires the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (department) to determine annually in which counties this subchapter applies. (b) Requires the department to publish a list of the counties in which this subchapter applies in the Texas Register, and to notify the county clerk of each county. (c) Sets forth the required contents of the notice. (d) Requires the department to make its determination not later than May 1 of each year. Provides that the determination becomes effective June 1. (e) Requires the county clerk to publish a copy of the notice on three separate days in a newspaper of general circulation immediately following receipt of the notice. Requires the clerk to post a copy of the notice on three separate days on a bulletin board at a place convenient to the public in the county courthouse. Sec. 5.093. SPANISH LANGUAGE REQUIREMENT. Requires the seller to provide a copy of all written documents in Spanish if the negotiations that precede the execution of a contract are conducted primarily in Spanish. Sec. 5.094. SELLER'S DISCLOSURE OF PROPERTY CONDITION. (a) Requires the seller to provide the purchaser with a survey or plat of the real property, a list of title exceptions and copies of documents which list title exceptions, and a specific written notice. (b) Requires the seller to provide the purchaser with a separate disclosure form stating that utilities may not be available to the property until the subdivision is recorded by law. (c) Requires an advertisement by the seller to disclose information regarding the availability of water, sewer, and electric service. (d) Sets forth the options for a seller's failure to disclose information required by this section. (e) Provides that Subsection (d) does not limit the purchaser's remedy against the seller for other false, misleading, or deceptive acts or practices actionable in a suit brought under Chapter 17E, Business & Commerce Code. Sec. 5.095. SELLER'S DISCLOSURE OF FINANCING TERMS. Sets forth the information the seller is required to provide the purchaser before a contract is signed. Sec. 5.096. CONTRACT TERMS PROHIBITED. Prohibits a seller from including certain provisions as terms of the contract. Sec. 5.097. PURCHASER'S RIGHT TO CANCEL CONTRACT WITHOUT CAUSE. (a) Authorizes the purchaser to cancel and rescind a contract for any reason within 14 days of the contract. (b) Sets forth a statement the seller is required to include in the contract. (c) Sets forth the language of a notice of cancellation the seller is required to provide a purchaser at the time the purchaser signs the contract. Sec. 5.098. PURCHASER'S RIGHT TO PLEDGE INTEREST IN PROPERTY ON CONTRACTS ENTERED INTO BEFORE SEPTEMBER 1, 1995. (a) Authorizes a purchaser to pledge the interest in the property, which accrues pursuant to Section 5.100, only to obtain a loan for improving the safety of the property or any improvements on the property, on a contract entered into before September 1, 1995. (b) Establishes the criteria for loans that improve the safety of the property and improvements on the property. Sec. 5.099. RECORDING REQUIREMENTS. (a) Requires the seller to record the contract as prescribed by Title 3. (b) Provides that Section 12.002(c) does not apply to a contract filed for record under this section. (c) Requires the seller to record the instrument that terminates the contract if the contract is terminated for any reason. (d) Requires the county clerk to collect a filing fee prescribed by Section 118.011, Local Government Code. Sec. 5.100. ANNUAL ACCOUNTING STATEMENT. (a) Requires the seller to provide the purchaser with an annual statement in January of each year for the term of the contract. (b) Sets forth the required contents of the statement. Sec. 5.101. EQUITY PROTECTION; SALE OF PROPERTY. (a) Grants the seller the power to sell the purchaser's interest in the property if the purchaser defaults after paying 40 percent or more of the amount due or the equivalent of 48 monthly payments under the contract. Prohibits the seller from enforcing the remedy of rescission or forfeiture and acceleration. (b) Requires the seller to notify a purchaser of a default under the contact and allow the purchaser at least 60 days after the date notice is given to cure the default. Sets forth the language of the notice. (c) Requires the seller to post, file, and serve a notice of sale and the county clerk to record and maintain the notice of sale. Provides that a notice of sale is not valid unless it is given after the period to cure has expired. (d) Requires the seller to conduct the sale as prescribed by Section 51.002. Sec. 5.102. TITLE TRANSFER. (a) Requires the seller to transfer title of the property covered by the contract to the purchaser not later than the 30th day after the date the seller receives the purchaser's final payment. (b) Provides that a seller who violates Subsection (a) is subject for each day of the violation to a penalty that is equivalent to a daily payment under the contract. Sec. 5.103. LIABILITY FOR DISCLOSURES. Provides that a disclosure required by this subchapter that is made by a seller's agent is a disclosure. SECTION 4. Amends Section 2306.092, Government Code, to add developing a consumer education program to educate consumers on contract transactions for conveyance of real property used or to be used as the consumer's residence to the duties the community affairs division is required to perform. SECTION 5. Makes application of Section 2 of this Act prospective. SECTION 6. Effective date: September 1, 1995. Provides that Chapter 5E, Property Code, applies in a county on a date designated by the department, but not later than November 1, 1995; and requires the department to act as soon as a practicable to make the initial determination under Chapter 5E, Property Code, as added by this Act, and to publish and give notice of those determinations by October 1, 1995. SECTION 7. Emergency clause.