A. A museum may acquire title to loaned property pursuant to this section. If, since the expiration date of the loan, seven years have passed with no written contact between the lender and the museum or if the loan has no expiration date and at least seven years have passed since the loan was made and written contact between the lender and the museum occurred the museum shall send a notice by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the lender’s last known address. This notice shall contain a statement that the loan is now terminated as well as all information required in the notice under section 44-353, subsection A, paragraph 1. If proof of delivery of the notice is not received within thirty days from the date the notice was mailed, the museum shall publish a notice as prescribed by section 44-353, subsection A, paragraph 1.

Terms Used In Arizona Laws 44-352

  • Lender: means a person whose name appears on the records of the museum as the person legally entitled to property held or owing by the museum. See Arizona Laws 44-351
  • Museum: means an organized and permanent nonprofit or public institution which is primarily educational, scientific, historic or aesthetic in purpose and which owns, borrows, cares for, studies, archives or exhibits property. See Arizona Laws 44-351
  • Property: means all tangible objects, animate and inanimate, under a museum's care which have intrinsic scientific, historic, artistic or cultural value. See Arizona Laws 44-351

B. If the requirements of subsection A of this section are met the museum may acquire title to the loaned property by sending a notice by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the lender’s last known address. This notice shall contain all information required in the notice under section 44-353, subsection A, paragraph 2. If proof of delivery of the notice is not received within thirty days from the date the notice was mailed, the museum shall publish a notice as prescribed by section 44-353, subsection A, paragraph 2.