This legislation has been repealed.
(1) Notice to be
given. A credit provider that has taken possession of goods under a mortgage
must, within 14 days after doing so, give the mortgagor a written notice
containing the following matters —
(a) the
estimated value of the goods;
(b) the
enforcement expenses incurred up to the date on which the goods were taken
into the credit provider’s possession and, if enforcement expenses are
accruing while the goods remain in the credit provider’s possession, the
rate of accrual;
(c) a
statement of the mortgagor’s rights and obligations in the form set out
in the regulations.
(2) Goods not to be
sold immediately. A credit provider must not dispose of goods taken under the
mortgage within 21 days after the date of the notice, unless the Court
authorises the credit provider to do so.
(3) Effect of
proceedings. If at the end of that 21-day period a stay of enforcement
proceedings is in force under this Code or an application under section 70 has
not been determined, the credit provider must not dispose of the goods until
those proceedings have been determined and any period allowed for appeal has
elapsed.
(4) Payment during
notice period. The credit provider must return the goods if —
(a) the
amount in arrears (less any accelerated amount) and the credit
provider’s reasonable enforcement expenses are paid within that 21-day
period and the debtor has not committed a further default of the same kind
under the credit contract; or
(b) the
credit contract is paid out.
(5) Offence. A credit
provider that contravenes this section is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty (subsection (5)) — 50
penalty units.