Current through all regulations passed and filed through September 16, 2024
(A) Definition.
Distress Sale. A "distress sale" is any sale which is described
or represented either directly or indirectly by any term which would reasonably
lead a consumer to believe that the offer of such goods, either by choice or
necessity, has been occasioned by any of the following factors:
(1) Termination or discontinuance by the
supplier of all or any portion of the supplier's business;
(2) Loss or termination of lease;
(3) Liquidation of assets;
(4) Fire, smoke, water or other disaster,
regardless of cause;
(5)
Bankruptcy or receivership;
(6)
The financial condition of the supplier.
Distress sale does not include the sale of special purchase
items, clearance items, or seasonal items as those terms are defined in rule 109:4-3-03 of the Administrative Code.
(B) It shall be a deceptive act or practice
in connection with a consumer transaction for a supplier to:
(1) Make any representation concerning the
cause, basis, reason or necessity of any distress sale unless such
representation is true;
(2)
Advertise, conduct or continue any distress sale for a period greater than
forty-five days except that a supplier may extend the duration of a distress
sale for an additional forty-five-day period by clearly and conspicuously
disclosing in any advertisement or other representation regarding such distress
sale the fact of such extension;
(3) Substitute or supplement the stock or
inventory by purchase, consignment or transfer of goods from another outlet
unless (a) such item of goods was ordered for that outlet prior to the
placement of any advertisement or other representation declaring a distress
sale; (b) such item of goods was ordered in compliance with rule 109:4-3-03 of the Administrative Code; or (c) such item of goods owned prior to the filing of
bankruptcy or creation of a receivership is transferred from another outlet of
the supplier in conformity with a court order and the supplier provides a clear
and conspicuous notice of that fact in all advertisements that merchandise has
been added;
(4) Misrepresent the
former price, savings, quality or ownership of any goods to be sold at such
sale;
(5) Fail to include in any
advertisement concerning a distress sale the opening and terminating dates of
the sale;
(6) Advertise or
represent a distress sale for the purpose of closing and relocating an outlet
at another location without clearly and conspicuously disclosing that fact;
(7) Fail to separate or otherwise
clearly identify distress sale merchandise from regular stock in any distress
sale advertisement;
(8) Fail to
clearly and conspicuously mark, identify or otherwise physically separate at
the business location each item of goods that is subject to the terms of any
distress sale advertisement so their identity may be readily ascertained;
(9) Misrepresent the identity of
the person or entity conducting a distress sale;
(10) Make reference to a liquidation sale or
use a term of similar import unless the supplier is in fact liquidating all
assets for final distribution;
(11) Advertise, announce or conduct a
going-out-of-business sale and subsequently reopen, or resume within twelve
months of any such distress sale the same business under the same or any new
name if the ownership and/or control of such business substantially remains the
same. Nothing in this provision shall be deemed to preclude a true sale of a
business if that fact is clearly disclosed;
(12) Fail to comply with any license,
registration, inventory itemization or other requirement of the particular
political subdivision of this state wherein such distress sale is being
conducted.
(C)
Exceptions.
(1) Except as set forth herein,
this rule shall have no application to licensed auctioneers, sheriffs or other
public officials or court officers or any other person acting under the
direction or authority of any court selling goods in the course of their
official duties; provided that suppliers in receivership, bankruptcy, or any
liquidator acting on their behalf shall be subject to the provisions of this
rule unless enforcement would conflict and be preempted by federal law;
(2) Except as specifically set
forth above, the requirements of this rule are in addition to all other
requirements contained in Chapter 109:4-3 of the Administrative Code,
pertaining to consumer transactions.