§ 5613. Special Accounts
TITLE 4: ECONOMIC RESOURCES DIVISION 5: BUSINESS REGULATION § 5613. Penalty for Violation of Business License Requirements. (a) Any person found operating or engaging in a business to sell merchandise, goods, or commodities, or providing services for compensation without a valid business license shall be subject to a penalty of 250.00 per day for every addition- al day that the person is in violation of the business license provisions. (b) The agency action provided for in subsection (a) of this section shall sub- ject to Administrative Procedure Act, 1 CMC §§ 9101 et seq. Provided further, the secretary is also hereby granted authority to issue citations to any person found in violation of this Act. (c) The secretary is hereby granted authority to issue a cease and desist order to any person found in violation of the requirement to obtain a business license pursuant to 4 CMC § 5611(a). Any order shall be effective immediately upon its issuance and shall be effective until the violation is cured. A person may appeal the order to cease operations and if so, shall produce a refundable bond in the amount of 500.00 shall be forfeit if the party does not prevail at said hearing. (d) There is hereby established a special fund within the Department of Fi- nance for all sums collected under 4 CMC § 5613. From this account, the Department of Finance shall retain 75% of the revenue collected and shall use such funds for the enforcement of this Act; 25% of the all* of the revenue collected shall be remitted to the General Fund.
- So in original. Source: PL 11-73, § 6, modified; amended and subsection (d) added by PL 18-35 § 3 (Feb. 14, 2014), modified. Commission Comment: The Commission inserted section symbols and corrected the spelling of “et seq.” pursuant to 1 CMC § 3806(g). As it is un- clear whether the reference to “this Act” in subsection (b) is intended to refer to PL 18-35 or to the remainder of this section, the Commission let the reference stand. Public Law 18-35 (effective Feb. 14, 2014) contained the following addi- tional sections: Section 1. Findings. The amount of lost revenue in the CNMI that re- sults from the lack of law enforcement is significant. Dishonest business operators are able to take advantage of laws that are too complicated to enforce. Currently, dishonest business operators find that it is profitable to ignore the Sale Receipt Act. To reduce their taxes, they purposely fail to produce the necessary business record of the transactions. The result- ing loss to the CNMI coffers is conservatively estimated to be in the
TITLE 4: ECONOMIC RESOURCES DIVISION 5: BUSINESS REGULATION thousands of dollars per quarter. Likewise, the Legislature also finds that the law relating to the business license provisions in the CNMI are ex- tremely difficult to enforce. As a result, prosecuting violations is also ex- tremely burdensome. The Legislature finds that the process of citing business operators that fail to comply with these laws should be less complicated so as to allow for penalties to be issued — penalties that will serve as a valid deterrent and a fair but effective punitive measure. The Legislature finds that Title 4, Section 51206 of the CNMI Code, also known as the “Sales Receipts Act of 2002,” needed to be revised and simplified. The new revisions clarified the process by which violators can be cited and penalized. The criminal aspect wherein violators may serve up to one year in jail time was removed and replaced with a higher civil fine. It should also be clear that the Secretary of Finance or her designee can issue citations to enforce the regulations relating to this law. The amendment clarified this already existing authority. Specifically as to the fines relating to providing a receipt — these fines have been increased from a low of 1000. The new fines are 750 and 500.00 bond that will be re- funded in the case of a successful appeal.
TITLE 4: ECONOMIC RESOURCES DIVISION 5: BUSINESS REGULATION Lastly, 75% of the penalties established herein will be used to fund the enforcement of this Act. This earmark is necessary due to the potential for investigations, APA hearings, and other due process measures to be costly, especially so if they are underfunded. The remainder shall be de- posited like other civil penalties into the CNMI General Fund where it can be used to provide critical governmental services. … Section 5. Severability. If any provisions of this Act or the application of any such provision to any person or circumstance should be held inva- lid by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of this Act or the application of its provisions to persons or circumstances other than those to which it is held invalid shall not be affected thereby. There is no Sav- ings Clause herein because this legislation is intended to legislatively re- peal any and all prior legislation, codified or not, and render null and void any and all contractual provisions not prospectively based on the instant legislation that may have been enacted improperly.
Source: CNMI Law Revision Commission