North Dakota Code § 13-11-14

Trust funds - Requirements and restrictions
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. All funds received by a debt-settlement provider or the provider's agent from and for 
the purpose of paying bills, invoices, or accounts of a debtor constitute trust funds 
owned by and belonging to the debtor from whom the funds were received. All such 
funds received by the debt-settlement provider must be separated from the funds of 
the debt-settlement provider not later than the end of the business day following 
receipt by the debt-settlement provider. All such funds must be kept separate and 
apart at all times from funds belonging to the debt -settlement provider or any of its 
officers, employees, or agents and may be used for no purpose other than paying bills, 
invoices, or accounts of the debtor. On or before the close of the business day 
following receipt, all such trust funds received at the main or branch offices of a 
debt-settlement provider must be deposited in a bank in an account in the name of the 
debt-settlement provider-designated trust account, or by some other appropriate name 
indicating that the funds are not the funds of the debt-settlement provider or its 
officers, employees, or agents.
2. At least once every month, the debt-settlement provider shall render an accounting to 
the debtor that itemizes the total amount received from the debtor, the total amount 
paid each creditor, the amount of charges deducted, and any amount held in reserve, 
if applicable, and the status of each of the debtor's enrolled accounts. In addition, a 
debt-settlement provider shall provide such an accounting to a debtor within seven 
days after written demand, but not more than three times per six-month period.
3. This chapter does not require the establishment of a trust account if no consumer 
funds other than earned settlement fees are held or controlled by a debt-settlement 
provider.

‹ Prev All North Dakota sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.