Nevada Code § 482.3333

Brokers: Duty to procure and file bond with Department; amount of bond; use of bond to cover multiple categories of vehicles; requirements for bond; recourse for consumers injured by broker or employee
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1. Before a person may be licensed as a broker,
the person must procure and file with the Department a good and sufficient bond
in the amount of $100,000 with a corporate surety thereon licensed to do
business within the State of Nevada, approved as to form by the Attorney
General, and conditioned that the applicant shall conduct business as a broker
without breaching a consumer contract or engaging in a deceptive trade
practice, fraud or fraudulent representation, and without violation of the
provisions of this chapter.
2. The Department may allow a broker who
provides services for more than one category of vehicle described in subsection
1 of NRS 482.345 at a principal place of
business or at any branch location within the same county as the principal
place of business to provide a good and sufficient bond for a single category
of vehicle and may consider that single bond sufficient coverage to include all
other categories of vehicles.
3. The bond must be continuous in form,
and the total aggregate liability on the bond must be limited to the payment of
the total amount of the bond.
4. The undertaking on the bond is for the
use and benefit of the consumer and includes any breach of a consumer contract,
deceptive trade practice, fraud, fraudulent representation, negligent
misrepresentation, abuse of process, conversion or violation of any of the
provisions of this chapter or chapter 41 , 97 , 104 , 104A , 104B , 104C or 598 of
NRS by any employee of the licensed broker who acts on behalf of the broker and
within the scope of his or her employment.
5. The bond must provide that it is for
the use and benefit of any consumer of the broker or an employee of the broker
for any loss or damage established, including, without limitation:
(a) Actual damages;
(b) Consequential damages;
(c) Incidental damages;
(d) Statutory damages;
(e) Damages for noneconomic loss; and
(f) Attorneys fees and costs.
The surety
issuing the bond shall appoint the Commissioner of Insurance as its agent to
accept service of notice or process for the surety in any action upon the bond
brought in a court of competent jurisdiction or brought before the Director.
6. If a consumer has a claim for relief
against a broker or an employee of the broker, the consumer may:
(a) Bring and maintain an action in any court of
competent jurisdiction. If the court enters:
(1) A judgment on the merits against the
broker or employee, the judgment is binding on the surety.
(2) A judgment other than on the merits
against the broker or employee, including, without limitation, a default judgment,
the judgment is binding on the surety only if the surety was given notice and
an opportunity to defend at least 20 days before the date on which the judgment
was entered against the broker or employee.
(b) Apply to the Director, for good cause shown,
for compensation from the bond. The Director may determine the amount of
compensation and the consumer to whom it is to be paid. The surety shall then
make the payment.
(c) Settle the matter with the broker or
employee. If such a settlement is made, the settlement must be reduced to
writing, signed by both parties and acknowledged before any person authorized
to take acknowledgments in this State, and submitted to the Director with a
request for compensation from the bond. If the Director determines that the
settlement was reached in good faith and there is no evidence of collusion or
fraud between the parties in reaching the settlement, the surety shall make the
payment to the consumer in the amount agreed upon in the settlement.
7. Any judgment entered by a court in
favor of a consumer and against a broker or an employee of the broker may be
executed through a writ of attachment, garnishment, execution or other legal
process, or the consumer in whose favor the judgment was entered may apply to
the Director for compensation from the bond of the broker or employee.
8. As used in this section, consumer
means any person who comes into possession of a vehicle as a final user for any
purpose other than offering it for sale.

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