(a) The administrator may enter into an agreement with another state to exchange information relating to abandoned property or its possible existence. The agreement may permit the other state, or another person acting on behalf of a state, to examine records as authorized in Section 20 [7-8A-20 NMSA 1978] of the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (1995). The administrator by rule may require the reporting of information needed to enable compliance with an agreement made under this section and prescribe the form.
(b) The administrator may join with another state to seek enforcement of the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (1995) against any person who is or may be holding property reportable under that act.
(c) At the request of another state, the attorney general of this state may maintain an action on behalf of the other state to enforce, in this state, the unclaimed property laws of the other state against a holder of property subject to escheat or a claim of abandonment by the other state, if the other state has agreed to pay expenses incurred by the attorney general in maintaining the action.
(d) The administrator may request that the attorney general of another state or another attorney commence an action in the other state on behalf of the administrator. With the approval of the attorney general of this state, the administrator may retain any other attorney to commence an action in this state on behalf of the administrator. This state shall pay all expenses, including attorney's fees, in maintaining an action under this subsection. With the administrator's approval, the expenses and attorney's fees may be paid from money received under the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (1995). The administrator may agree to pay expenses and attorney's fees based in whole or in part on a percentage of the value of any property recovered in the action. Any expenses or attorney's fees paid under this subsection may not be deducted from the amount that is subject to the claim by the owner under the Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (1995).
History: Laws 1997, ch. 25, § 23.
Effective dates. — Laws 1997, ch. 25, § 34 made Laws 1997, ch. 25, § 23 effective July 1, 1997.