Terms used in this chapter mean:

(1) “Cash sale price,” the price for which the person making a sale pursuant to an installment sales contract would have sold the goods or services if the sale had been for cash. The cash sale price may include any taxes or license, title, and registration fees actually paid and the cash price of any accessories or services related to the sale, such as charges for delivery, installation, alterations, modifications, improvements, and any other similar charges agreed upon between the parties. The cash price of a motor vehicle may also include a documentary fee or document administration fee for services actually rendered to, for, or on behalf of, the retail buyer, in preparing, handling, and processing documents relating to the motor vehicle and the closing of the retail sale;

Terms Used In South Dakota Codified Laws 54-3A-1

  • Contract: A legal written agreement that becomes binding when signed.
  • Finance charge: The total cost of credit a customer must pay on a consumer loan, including interest. The Truth in Lending Act requires disclosure of the finance charge. Source: OCC
  • Obligation: An order placed, contract awarded, service received, or similar transaction during a given period that will require payments during the same or a future period.
  • Person: includes natural persons, partnerships, associations, cooperative corporations, limited liability companies, and corporations. See South Dakota Codified Laws 2-14-2
  • Property: includes property, real and personal. See South Dakota Codified Laws 2-14-2
  • Real property: Land, and all immovable fixtures erected on, growing on, or affixed to the land.
  • Services: includes :

    (a) Work, labor, and other personal services. See South Dakota Codified Laws 54-3A-1

(2) “Consumer,” a natural person who seeks or acquires, or is offered property, services, or credit for personal, family, or household purposes;

(3) “Consumer transaction,” a transaction involving the purchase or sale of goods or services for personal, family, or household use from one, who in the ordinary course of business sells goods or services. The parties to a transaction, which involves the purchase or sale of goods or services but which is not a consumer transaction, may agree to be governed by all of the provisions of this chapter with respect to the transaction, and in such event the transaction is deemed to be a consumer transaction for all purposes of this chapter;

(4) “Finance charge,” however denominated, the amount which is paid or payable for the privilege of paying for goods or services in one or more installments. It does not include a delinquency charge as permitted in §§ 54-3A-11 and 54-3A-12, additional charges as permitted in § 54-3A-5, or any charge imposed by a creditor upon another person for purchasing or accepting an obligation of a consumer unless the consumer is required to pay any part of that charge in cash, as an addition to the obligation, or as a deduction from the proceeds of the obligation;

(5) “Goods,” tangible personal chattels, whether or not in existence at the time the transaction is entered into, and including things which, at the time of sale or subsequently, are to be so affixed to real property as to become a part thereof, whether or not severable therefrom, but excluding money, chattel paper, documents of title, and other instruments;

(6) “Installment sales contract,” an arrangement other than a revolving charge account, entered into in this state evidencing any consumer transaction in which a consumer purchases goods or services from a creditor, under which arrangement a finance charge may be imposed and the consumer agrees to pay for the goods or services in one or more installments;

(7) “Official fees,” the fees prescribed by law for filing, recording, or otherwise perfecting a security interest or the premium payable for any insurance in lieu of perfecting any security interest if the premium does not exceed the fees otherwise prescribed by law;

(8) “Services” includes:

(a) Work, labor, and other personal services;

(b) Privileges and contract rights with respect to accommodations or facilities, including hotels and restaurants, transportation, education, entertainment, recreation, physical culture, hospital accommodations, funerals, and cemetery associations;

(c) Diagnostic work, maintenance, repair, or improvement, other than as part of the manufacture or original construction, of properties; and

(d) Insurance;

(9) “Transaction,” all of the agreements made between two or more persons to carry out an exchange of value, including the entire process of soliciting, negotiating, making, performing, and enforcing such agreements, whether or not any agreement is enforceable by action.

Source: SL 1974, ch 305, § 1; SL 1975, ch 299, §§ 1, 2; SL 1999, ch 237, § 1; SL 2000, ch 227, § 1; SL 2003, ch 243, §§ 1, 2.