This chapter is intended to regulate the trade in secondhand
or preowned precious metals, gems and jewelry, to prevent or reduce
trafficking in stolen goods, and to improve the likelihood that these
items will be recovered when they have been stolen or otherwise taken
from the rightful owner without permission. This chapter is intended
to assist law enforcement officials and victims of crime in recovering
stolen precious metals and other secondhand goods by requiring minimum
identification, reporting, maintenance and distribution criteria for
licensed dealers in these goods. Accordingly, no person may use, exercise
or carry on the business, trade or occupation of the buying, selling
or pawning of precious metals or other secondhand goods without complying
with the requirements of this chapter in the exact manner described
herein.
As used in this chapter, the following terms mean:
ACCEPTABLE IDENTIFICATION
A current valid New Jersey driver's license or identification
card, a current valid photo driver's license issued by another
state of the United States, a valid United States passport, or other
verifiable United States government-issued identification, which will
be recorded on the receipt retained by the dealer and subsequently
forwarded to the local police department on request.
DEALER
Any person, partnership, limited liability company, corporation
or other entity who, either wholly or in part, engages in or operates
any of the following trades or businesses: the buying for purposes
of resale of precious metals, jewelry or other secondhand goods as
defined herein; pawnbrokers as defined herein; itinerant businesses
as defined herein. For the purposes of this chapter, transient buyers,
as defined herein, are subject to the same licensing and reporting
requirements as any other dealers.
ITINERANT BUSINESS
A dealer who conducts business intermittently within the
municipality or at varying locations.
MAYOR
The Mayor of the Borough.
PAWNBROKER
Any person, partnership, association or corporation lending
money on deposit or pledge of personal property, other than choses
in action, securities or printed evidences of indebtedness; purchasing
personal property on condition of selling it back at a stipulated
price; or doing business as furniture storage warehousemen and lending
money on goods, wares or merchandise pledged or deposited as collateral
security.
PRECIOUS METALS
Gold, silver, platinum, palladium and their alloys as defined
in N.J.S.A. 51:5-1 et seq. and N.J.S.A. 51:6-1 et seq.
PUBLIC
Individuals and retail sellers, not to include wholesale
transactions or transactions between other merchants.
REPORTABLE TRANSACTION
Every transaction conducted between a dealer and a member
of the public in which precious metals, jewelry or any other secondhand
goods as defined herein are purchased or pawned.
SECONDHAND GOODS
Used goods, such as antiques, gold, silver, platinum or other
precious metals, jewelry, coins, gemstones, gift cards, any tools,
telephones, typewriters, word processors, GPS devices, computers,
computer hardware and software, television sets, radios, record or
stereo sets, electronic devices, musical instruments, sporting goods,
automotive equipment, collectibles, game cartridges, DVDs, CDs, and
other electronically recorded material, firearms, cameras and camera
equipment, video equipment, furniture, clothing, and other valuable
articles. For the purposes of this chapter, secondhand goods does
not include goods transacted in the following manner:
A.
Judicial sales or sales by executors or administrators;
B.
Occasional or auction sales of household goods sold from private
homes;
C.
Auctions of real estate; and
D.
The occasional sale, purchase or exchange of coins or stamps
by a person at his permanent residence or in any municipally owned
building who is engaged in the hobby of collecting coins or stamps
and who does not solicit the sale, purchase or exchange of such coins
or stamps to or from the general public by billboard, sign, handbill,
newspaper, magazine, radio, television or other form of printed or
electronic advertising.
SELLER
A member of the public who sells or pawns used goods, such
as precious metal, jewelry or other secondhand goods to a dealer.
TRANSIENT BUYER
A dealer, as defined herein, who has not been in a registered
retail business continuously for at least six months at any address
in the municipality where the dealer is required to register or who
intends to close out or discontinue all retail business within six
months.
No person, partnership, limited liability company, corporation or other entity may engage in the business of buying, selling or pawning of precious metals or other secondhand goods within the jurisdiction of the Borough without having first obtained a license therefor from the Municipal Clerk. The license will bear a number issued by the Municipal Clerk. The application for a license to the Municipal Clerk will state the name, date of birth, and address of the dealer, whether or not he or she is a citizen of the United States, and whether or not he or she has ever been convicted of any crime(s), disorderly persons offense(s), or municipal ordinance violation(s), and the date(s) thereof. Advertising in any print or electronic media or by sign that any of those articles or secondhand goods referred to in §
176-2 above are being bought in any location within the municipality will constitute engaging in business as a dealer of secondhand goods for purposes of this chapter. No person, partnership, limited liability company, corporation or other entity may place or cause to be placed any advertisement for purchase of such articles or goods without stating in the advertising the license number issued to a person or entity by the municipality. In any print advertisement, the license number will appear in type no smaller than eight point in the lower right-hand corner of the advertisement. In any advertisement in electronic media, the license number shall be visually or audibly stated. Failure to state or indicate the license number is a violation of this chapter, and offenders, upon conviction, are subject to the penalties established in §
176-9.
For every reportable transaction between a dealer and the public,
the dealer will:
A. Require of each person selling or pawning precious metals or other secondhand goods acceptable identification as defined above in §
176-2.
B. Require each seller to execute a declaration of ownership, which
will contain the following certification: "My signature confirms that
I am the sole legal owner of and am legally authorized to sell the
goods being sold. By signing below I certify that I did not obtain
and do not possess the identified goods through unlawful means. I
am the full age of 18 years and the identification presented is valid
and correct."
C. Record and issue to each person selling or pawning such goods on
a sequentially numbered receipt:
(1) The name, address and telephone number of the purchaser, including
the clerk or employee of the licensee making the purchase.
(2) The name, address, date of birth and telephone number of the seller
or sellers.
(3) A photographed recording of the seller in a format acceptable to
the Chief of Police, along with a physical description of the seller,
including height and weight (approximate), hair color, eye color,
facial hair, if any, etc.
(4) A photographed recording of the seller's presented acceptable identification, as set forth in §
176-2, in a format acceptable to the Chief of Police.
(5) A photographed recording of all items sold in a format acceptable
to the Chief of Police. When photographing, all items must be positioned
in a manner that makes them readily and easily identifiable. Items
should not be grouped together when photographing or imaging. Each
item should have its own photograph.
(7) A detailed, legible description of the item(s) and the manufacturer
and model of the item(s) if known; in the case of jewelry, the descriptions
must include style, length, color, design, and stones, if any; any
identifying marks, including numbers, dates, sizes, shapes, initials,
names, monograms, social security numbers engraved thereon, serial
numbers, series numbers, or any other information, which sets apart
the particular object from others of like kind.
(8) The price paid for the purchase or pawn of the item(s).
(9) If precious metals, the net weight in terms of pounds Troy, pennyweight
(Troy) or kilograms/grams; fineness in terms of karats for gold, and
sterling or coin for silver, in accordance with N.J.S.A. 51:5-1 and
N.J.S.A. 51:6-1 et seq.
(10)
The time and date of the transaction.
D. The information outlined in Subsection
C above must additionally be electronically documented through the use of an electronic database system authorized by the Chief of Police. Installation and training in this software will be made mandatory as of the effective date of this chapter, and licensing will be conditional upon compliance with proper use of the system as described herein. These records are subject to the inspection of any authorized police officer or any sworn law enforcement officer acting in the performance of his or her duty as set forth in Subsection
F below. Through the use of applicably required computer equipment, and using the electronic format approved by the Chief of Police, every dealer will enter all reportable transactions into the electronic database by the end of the close of business on the same date as the purchase or receipt of property for pawn or consignment. The information entered must contain all pertinent information outlined in Subsection
C above.
E. If a database fails, or dealer's computer equipment malfunctions, all transaction information is required to be submitted on paper forms approved by the Chief of Police within 24 hours from the date of purchase. If paper forms are used, the dealer is responsible to enter all transaction information set forth in Subsection
C above into the database as soon as possible upon the dealer's equipment being repaired or replaced, or the database coming back into service. Dealers failing to properly maintain computer equipment in a reasonable fashion or failing to replace faulty computer equipment may be cited for a violation of this chapter and subsequently be subject to the penalties for doing so, including revocation of the dealer's license as described in §
176-6.
F. Every dealer, and every person in the dealer's employ, will to admit to the premises during business hours any member of the Police Department to examine any database, book, ledger, or any other record on the premises relating to the reportable transactions of precious metals or other secondhand goods, as well as the articles purchased or received and, where necessary, relinquish custody of those articles as provided in §
176-6. Itinerant businesses and transient buyers will be responsible for notifying the Chief of Police of the address where these records and articles will be stored.
Each dealer covered under this chapter will deliver a bond to
the Municipal Clerk executed by the applicant as principal and executed
by a surety company authorized to do business under the laws of the
State of New Jersey as surety. The bond will be subject to review
and approval by the Borough Attorney, and will be in the penal sum
of $10,000, conditioned for the due and proper observance of and compliance
with the provisions and requirements of all ordinances of the municipality
in force or which may be adopted respecting the conduct of this business
and conditioned also that the bond will be and remain for the benefit
of any person or persons obtaining judgment against the dealer licensed
under this chapter, which damage is established by a judgment of a
court of proper jurisdiction. The bond will contain the following
language: "The obligation of this bond will, in addition to the Borough,
be and remain for the benefit of any person obtaining a judgment against
obligor as a result of damage sustained in operation pursuant to any
license granted under this chapter." Said bond will be kept for a
minimum of one year from the date of issuance of license and must
be renewed annually along with the license.
A nonrefundable fee for initial application and license for a pawnbroker or a dealer in precious metals or other secondhand goods, as covered under this chapter, is $300. The annual renewal fee for a license is $300. These fees are separate from and in addition to any fees the dealer must pay in relation to the mandatory electronic database system designated by the Chief of Police, as provided by §
176-5D of this chapter. Payments are to be made in the manner directed by the Municipal Clerk. A license is valid for a one-year period from the date it is issued.
Violation of any provision of this chapter by any dealer will, upon conviction thereof, be punished by a fine not in excess of the limitations of N.J.S.A. 40:49-5 or by a term of imprisonment or a period of community service not exceeding 90 days in addition to a suspension or revocation of the operating license as provided in §
176-6E and
F above. Each and every violation will be considered a separate violation. Each violation will result in an additional suspension period. Any person who is found guilty of violating the provisions of this chapter within one year of the date of a previous violation and who was fined for the previous violation may be sentenced by the court to an additional fine as a repeat offender and, in addition, may be subject to revocation proceedings as provided in §
176-6F. The additional fine imposed as a repeat offender will not be less than the minimum or exceed the maximum fine provided herein, and same will be calculated separately from the fine imposed for the violation of this chapter.
This chapter is not intended to be inconsistent with or replace
any statutory requirements governing pawnbrokers, in N.J.S.A. 45:22-1
et seq., the sale of precious metals, in N.J.S.A. 51:6A-1 et seq.,
the sale of secondhand jewelry in N.J.S.A. 2C:21-36 to 2C:21-41; or
any other New Jersey statute or regulation regarding any subject matter
of this chapter.