Hawkers And Peddlers
Chapter 320
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§ 320:1 Definition. The terms
"hawker" and "peddler" shall mean and include any person, as defined
by RSA 358-A:1, either principal or agent, who:
I. Travels from town to town or from place to place in the same town
selling or bartering, or carrying for sale or barter or exposing therefor, any goods,
wares, or merchandise, either on foot or from any animal, cart, or vehicle; or
II. Travels from town to town, or place to place in the same town,
offering to perform personal services for household repairs or improvements, or solicits
or induces any person to sign any contracts relating to household repairs and
improvements, including contracts for the replacement or installation of siding on any
residence or building; or
III. Keeps a regular place of business, open during regular business
hours at the same location, but who offers for sale or sells and delivers, personally or
through his agents, at a place other than his regular place of business, goods, wares, or
merchandise.
§ 320:2 Prohibition; Selling on State Property; Contracts Void; Penalty.
No hawker or peddler shall sell or barter or carry for sale or barter, or
expose therefor, any goods, wares or merchandise, unless he holds a license to do so as
herein provided. No person may operate as a hawker or a peddler in any building or on any
land owned, leased, or controlled by the state, except as provided in RSA 186-B:13. Any
person violating this section shall, notwithstanding the provisions of title LXII, be
guilty of a violation and fined not more than $500. The clerk of the district or municipal
court shall dispose of fines so collected by the court as provided in RSA 502:14 or RSA
502-A:8. Any contract relating to household repairs and improvements or for siding for any
building or residence solicited by any person who has not obtained the licenses as herein
provided for shall be void and unenforceable, and any sale or barter of any goods, wares
or merchandise by any such person shall be voidable. Provided further that any time before
midnight, at the expiration of 3 business days following the signing of any solicited home
repair, home improvement installment contract or cash sale of $25 or more by the parties
solicited or the owner, the parties solicited or the owner may serve a notice of
cancellation upon the licensee or principal vendor.
§ 320:3 Exceptions. The provisions of this chapter shall not
apply to the following:
I. Itinerant vendors as defined in RSA 321:1.
II. Any person selling the product of his own labor or the labor of
his family or the product of his own farm or the one he tills.
III. Any person conducting sales of personal household goods on his
own property.
IV. Any nonprofit organization, community chest, fund or foundation
organized and operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, literary, or
educational purposes when no part of the entity's earnings benefit any private shareholder
or individual.
V. Any person conducting business in any industry or association
trade show.
VI. Any person who sells exclusively antiques, used goods, or vintage
items.
§§ 320:4- 320:7. [Repealed 1969, 481:10, eff. Sept.
1, 1969.]
§ 320:8 State Licenses. I. Upon compliance
with this section and upon payment of $50 for a state license, the secretary of state may
grant special state licenses. Applications for such licenses shall be made upon blanks
prepared by the secretary of state requiring such information regarding the applicant's
character and qualifications as the secretary shall deem pertinent.
II. Any person so licensed may do business as a hawker or peddler in
any city or town in this state, provided the licensee complies with all local ordinances,
bylaws and regulations, including those adopted under RSA 31:102-a. If an applicant not a
natural person applies for a license under this chapter, the sum of $5,000 deposited with
the secretary of state in cash or surety bond shall be required, and the employees or
agents of such corporation shall be covered under such cash payment or surety bond. Any
surety bond posted under this section shall remain effective for at least 60 days after
the annual renewal date. All such agents or employees shall be permitted to apply for
licenses under such cash payment or surety bond.
III. The annual license renewal fee shall be $50. At the time the
renewal fee is submitted to the secretary of state, the licensee shall:
(a) Update information pertaining to the license, if necessary.
(b) Submit written proof that any surety bond required by paragraph
II is in effect and will remain in effect as required in paragraph II.
§ 320:9 Term; Transfer. All licenses issued
under the provisions of this chapter shall bear the date on which they are issued and
shall continue in force, subject to the provisions of RSA 320:8, III, unless revoked by
the secretary of state under RSA 320:14. Any hawker or peddler who does not comply with
the requirements for license renewal under RSA 320:8, III shall be subject to the same
penalty as if he had no license. Said licenses may not be transferred.
§ 320:10 Record. The secretary of state
shall keep records of all licenses issued by him with the number of each, the names and
residences of the persons licensed and the sums received therefor, and all such records
shall be open for public inspection.
§ 320:11 Persons Exempt. Any soldier or
sailor disabled in any war in which the United States has been engaged or by sickness or
disability contracted therein or since his discharge because of such service, and the
widow of any such soldier or sailor so long as she remains unmarried, or any citizen of
this state over 70 years of age, shall be exempt from paying the license fees required by
this chapter.
§ 320:12 Endorsing License; Exhibiting License.
Every person licensed as a hawker or peddler shall endorse his usual signature
upon his license. When this license is demanded of him by a mayor, selectmen, alderman,
city or town clerk, sheriff or his deputy, any constable or police officer or the person
to whom he sells or offers or exposes for sale his wares, he shall forthwith exhibit the
same; and, if he neglects or refuses to do so, he shall be liable to the same penalty as
if he had no license.
§ 320:13 License, Effective Where.
[Repealed 1969, 481:10, eff.
Sept. 1, 1969.]
§ 320:13-a Veterans' Conventions. Licenses
granted pursuant to the provisions of this chapter shall entitle a peddler or hawker to
operate at meetings or conventions of recognized veterans' organizations, but only at such
meetings or conventions with the specific approval of the organization concerned.
§ 320:14 Revocation of Licenses. Any
license granted by the secretary of state may be revoked by him after hearing (1) upon
conviction of the licensee of any offense which in the judgment of the secretary of state
warrants such revocation or (2) upon the submission to the secretary of state of evidence
satisfactory to him that, during the term of the license, and acting under cover thereof,
the licensee has accepted or solicited money, otherwise than through a bona fide sale or
barter of goods, wares or merchandise or has in any manner solicited alms from the public,
or (3) upon a finding by him that the applicant has wilfully falsified his application for
license or (4) upon consideration of evidence that the holder of said license is insane, a
sexual psychopath, is or has been guilty of assault upon others or whose conduct has been
otherwise disorderly and is of such violent or offensive demeanor that to permit him to
retain such license would constitute a threat to the peace or safety of the public or (5)
that the holder of said license is at large pending appeal from a conviction for a
violation of the law involving extreme moral turpitude. Whenever any person is convicted
of a violation of any provision of this chapter relative to hawkers and peddlers, the
clerk of the court or the trial justice by whom such person was convicted shall notify the
secretary of state. Any person whose license has been revoked under this section shall be
ineligible to be licensed as a hawker or peddler in this state for a period of not less
than one year or more than 5 years from the date of said revocation. Any person whose
license has been revoked, as a condition precedent to issuance of any new license, shall
be required to furnish to the revoking authority satisfactory evidence of renewed
reputation and character or mental health in addition to the certificate required to
qualify for such license under RSA 320:8.
§ 320:14-a Appeal.
Any person whose license is revoked under
this chapter shall have the right of appeal provided by RSA 541.
§ 320:15 Counterfeiting Licenses, etc. Whoever
counterfeits or forges a license, or has a counterfeited or forged license in his
possession with the intent to utter or use the same as true, knowing it to be false or
counterfeit, or attempts to sell under a license which has expired or has been revoked or
cancelled, or which has not been issued or transferred to him, or has in his possession
another's license with intent to use the same shall be guilty of a misdemeanor if a
natural person, or guilty of a felony if any other person.
§ 320:16 Assistance for Issuance. The
secretary of state is authorized to employ such assistance and to incur such expense for
the issuance of state licenses hereunder as the governor and council may approve, and the
governor is authorized to draw his warrant therefor.
§ 320:17 Prohibition. No person, except as
hereinafter provided, shall sell or offer for sale on the streets, or any other place
frequented by the public in any city or town, any artificial flowers or miniature flags.
§ 320:18 Permission Granted. The mayor and
aldermen of a city or the selectmen of towns may, in their discretion, authorize from time
to time the sale or the offering for sale on the streets, or any other place frequented by
the public in said city or town, of artificial flowers or miniature flags by the American
Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, the Disabled American Veterans, United Spanish War
Veterans, and organizations affiliated with them and other recognized charitable,
patriotic, fraternal, labor or military organizations chartered in this state; provided,
however, that nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit the sale or the
offering for sale by bona fide merchants in their stores or other business establishments
of such merchandise as herein named.
§ 320:19 Penalty.
Any person or persons violating any of the
provisions of RSA 320:17, 18, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
§ 320:20 Right to Solicit and Sell. [Repealed
1987, 260:4, II, eff. July 19, 1987.]
§ 320:21 Exemptions.
[Repealed 1987, 260:4, III, eff. July 19,
1987.]
§ 320:21-a Certain Negotiable Instruments Prohibited.
In a
consumer credit sale or consumer lease by a hawker or peddler, other than a sale or lease
primarily for an agricultural purpose, the hawker or peddler may not take a negotiable
instrument other than a check as evidence of the obligation of the buyer or lessee. A
holder is not in good faith if he takes a negotiable instrument with notice that it is
issued in violation of this section.
§ 320:21-b When Assignee not Subject to Defenses.
With respect to a consumer credit sale or consumer lease, by a hawker or
peddler, other than a sale or lease primarily for an agricultural purpose, an assignee of
the rights of the hawker or peddler is subject to all claims and defenses of the buyer or
lessee against the hawker or peddler arising out of the sale or lease notwithstanding an
agreement to the contrary, but the assignee's liability under this section may not exceed
the amount owing to the assignee at the time the claim or defense is asserted against the
assignee. Rights of the buyer or lessee under this section can only be asserted as a
matter of defense to or set-off against a claim by the assignee.
§ 320:22 Penalty. Any person violating the
provisions of this subdivision shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
§ 31:102-a Hawkers, Peddlers and Vendors. The
governing board of a city, town or village district may adopt, by ordinance or regulation,
provisions for the licensure and regulation of itinerant vendors, hawkers, peddlers,
traders, farmers, merchants, or other persons who sell, offer to sell, or take orders for
merchandise from temporary or transient sales locations within a town or who go from town
to town or place to place within a town for such purposes. Any person who violates any
provision of such ordinance or regulation shall be guilty of a violation, and each
continuing day of violation after notice shall constitute a separate offense. A
city, town, or village district shall be specifically prohibited, however, from licensing
or regulating a candidate for public office in the process of obtaining signatures on
nomination papers, who seeks to have the candidate's name placed on the ballot for the
state general election by submitting nomination papers under RSA 655:40. Provisions
adopted under this section shall be in addition to any requirements imposed by the state
under either RSA 320 or RSA 321 and may include, but shall not be limited to:
I. Classification of licensees consistent with constitutional
requirements of equal protection;
II. Imposition of reasonable requirements, including fees, for the
issuance of a license;
III. Restrictions as to the areas of the municipality open to
licensees and the hours and days of their operation; and
IV. Other reasonable conditions and terms deemed necessary for public
convenience and safety as the governing board determines.
§ 186-B:10 Definitions. In
this subdivision:
I. "Blind person" means a person whose central acuity does
not exceed 20/200 in the better eye with correcting lenses or whose visual acuity, if
better than 20/200 is accompanied by a limit to the field of vision in the better eye to
such a degree that its widest diameter subtends an angle of no greater than 20 degrees. In
determining whether an individual is blind, there shall be an examination by a physician
skilled in diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist, whichever the individual shall
select.
II. "Blind services" means the administrative unit for the
blind services program within the bureau of vocational rehabilitation, department of
education.
III. "State property" means any building or land owned,
leased or controlled by the state.
IV. "Vending facility" means a vending machine, cafeteria,
snack bar, cart service, shelter, counter or any other facility for the vending of
newspapers, periodicals, confections, tobacco products, foods or beverages, or any
combination of them, whether dispensed automatically or manually, and which are prepared
on or off the property.
V. "Vending machine income" means receipts other than those
of a blind licensee from the operation of vending machines on state property, after cost
of goods sold, where the machines are operated, serviced or maintained by, or with the
approval of the state, or commissions paid other than to a blind licensee by a commercial
vending concern which operates, services or maintains vending machines on state property
for, or with the approval of the state.
§ 186-B:11 Duties. Blind services shall:
I. Survey the vending facility opportunities on all state property;
II. Establish, whenever feasible, vending facilities on state
property to the extent that such facilities do not adversely affect the interests of the
state;
III. License blind persons for the operation of vending facilities on
state property;
IV. Provide vending facility equipment and an adequate initial stock
of suitable articles to licensed blind persons;
V. Provide the necessary training and supervision to licensed blind
persons;
VI. [Repealed.]
VII. Conduct mandatory training seminars for operators of its vending
facilities, which shall address topics concerning the management of vending facilities,
including, but not limited to, the following:
(a) Customer relations,
(b) Marketing techniques,
(c) Personnel hiring and training,
(d) Inventory control,
(e) New products,
(f) Machine repair and maintenance, and
(g) Accounting.
§ 186-B:11-a Rulemaking Authority; Board of Education.
The state board of education shall adopt rules, pursuant to RSA 541-A, to carry
out the provisions of this chapter
§ 186-B:12 Licenses. Blind services shall
issue a license for the operation of a vending facility only to a blind person who is
able, with such disability, to operate a vending facility. In issuing any license, blind
services shall give preference to a blind person who is a resident of this state. Each
license issued shall be for an indefinite period, but may be terminated by blind services
if it is satisfied that the facility is not being operated in accordance with rules
adopted by the board of education under RSA 186-B:11-a.
§ 186-B:13 Vending Facilities. I. No person in control of the
maintenance, operation and protection of any state property may offer or grant to any
other party a contract or concession to operate a vending facility unless:
(a) He has notified blind services and has attempted to make an
agreement with blind services for a licensed blind person to operate a vending facility;
and
(b) He has determined in good faith that blind services is not
willing to establish a vending facility on such property.
II. [Repealed.]
III. Blind services, with the cooperation of the person in control of
the maintenance, operation and protection of any state property, shall select the type of
location of the vending facility to be provided and the person to operate such facility.
IV. If blind services determines that a vending facility operated by
a full-time licensed blind person is not feasible on any state property, blind services
may install vending machines on such property with income accruing pursuant to RSA
186-B:14.
V. The contract for the operation of any vending facility shall
specify that it shall be operated at a reasonable cost consistent with a fair return, high
quality food and reasonable prices.
VI. This section shall not apply to Franconia Notch state park, Mount
Sunapee state park and Mount Washington state park; nor shall it apply to any state
property which operates its own vending facility unless the person in control of the
maintenance, operation and protection of the property contracts with blind services to
operate the vending facility.
§ 186-B:14 Vending Machine Income. I. If a new vending
machine or a replacement for an existing vending machine is installed after August 5,
1975, on any state property, vending machine income shall accrue to the licensed blind
person operating a vending facility on the same property, or if none, to blind services.
The licensed blind person or blind services shall be responsible for servicing and
maintaining the vending machines from which vending machine income is received.
II. Vending machine income which accrues to blind services pursuant
to paragraph I may be used to:
(a) Purchase new equipment and replace existing equipment for new and
existing vending facilities;
(b) Purchase initial stock and supplies;
(c) Provide training services; and
(d) Establish retirement funds, health insurance contributions, paid
sick leave and vacation time for licensed blind persons.
III. If vending machine income which accrues to blind services
pursuant to paragraph I is limited, it may be used to earn federal funds on a matching
basis.
§ 186-B:15 Appeal.
Any person aggrieved by a decision of blind
services under this subdivision may apply for rehearing and appeal pursuant to RSA 541.