Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2004 )


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  •                                  ATTORNEY             GENERAL OF TEXAS
    GREG         ABBOTT
    January 13,2004
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph.                          Opinion No. GA-O 133
    Chair, Veteran Affairs and Military Installations
    Texas State Senate                                                  Re: Whether a certain promotional campaign
    P.O. Box 12068                                                      violates chapter 40 of the Business and
    Austin, Texas 7871 l-2068                                           Commerce    Code, the Contest and Gift
    Giveaway Act (RQ-0080-GA)
    Dear Senator Van de Putte:
    You ask whether a certain promotional campaign violates chapter 40 of the Business and
    Commerce Code, the Contest and Gift Giveaway Act.’
    I.       Backwound
    Your questions pertain to a used car sales business’s promotional campaign. A marketing
    firm hired by the business mails promotional materials to “10,000 individuals within a particular
    metropolitan area.” Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. The promotional materials state
    that the individuals receiving such promotional materials, which
    include a sealed envelope with a key inside, can . . . win a car if the
    individuals come to the dealership on the date listed in the
    promotional materials and try the key in the ignition of such vehicle.
    If the key starts the engine, the individual wins the vehicle.
    
    Id. The promotional
    materials further state, “‘Do not remove key from the envelope unless you are
    in the presence of a sales associate.“’ 
    Id. The promotional
    materials also provide the date and the
    time of the sales event. See 
    id. You inform
    us that on the day of the event, “numerous individuals appear at the sales location
    of the used auto sales business to test their keys in the ‘prize vehicle.“’ 
    Id. The business
    responds
    to the individuals who arrive with keys by asking them if they are interested in purchasing a used
    vehicle:
    ‘See Letter from Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph., Chair, Veteran Affairs and Military Installations, Texas
    State Senate, to Honorable Greg Abbott, Texas Attorney General (July 15, 2003) (on file with Opinion Committee)
    [hereinafter Request Letter].
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 2             (GA-0133)
    The individuals are then requested to register with agents of the used
    auto sales business prior to testing their keys in the “prize vehicle.”
    Upon determining that their keys, in fact, do not “match” the “prize
    vehicle,” the agent for the used car sales business asks whether such
    agent can escort the individuals around the sales lot so as to look at
    other vehicles which the used car sales business has for sale.
    
    Id. None of
    the keys presented on the day of the event match the “prize vehicle,” and no “prize
    vehicle” is awarded to any individual. 
    Id. Further, no
    drawing is held to award the “prize vehicle”
    to one of the individuals who attended the event and registered with the used car sales business. 
    Id. A month
    following the event, the business sells the “prize vehicle” at its retail value. 
    Id. You ask
    several questions about the promotional campaign’s legality under chapter 40 of the
    Business and Commerce Code, the Contest and Gift Giveaway Act (the “Act”), which regulates
    advertising and other promotional programs whereby a person is offered a gift or a chance to win a
    prize as an inducement to attend a sales presentation.     See 
    id. at 2.
    Under the Act, the term “gift”
    means “an item of value that is offered, transferred, or given to a person as an inducement to attend
    a sales presentation but that is not offered, transferred, or awarded by chance through a contest.”
    TEX. Bus.& COM.CODEANN.§ 40.003(a)@)(V emon 2002); see also 
    id. 9 40.035(b)
    (“An item of
    value offered as an inducement to a person to attend a sales presentation constitutes a gift unless the
    item qualifies as a prize offered, transferred, or given through a contest.“). A “prize,” on the other
    hand, means “an item of value that is offered, awarded, or given to a person through a contest.” 
    Id. fj 40.003(a)(12);
    see also 
    id. 5 40.003(a)(
    1) (defining “contest”). Subchapter B regulates using a gift
    as part of an advertising plan or program. See 
    id. $9 40.03
    l-.036. Subchapter C regulates using a
    contest or drawing as part of an advertising plan or program. See 
    id. $5 40.061-.067.
    Subchapter C includes special rules for “matched contests,” which are a subcategory of
    contests. See 
    id. 8 40.003(a)(7)
    (defining “matched contest”). For example, section 40.065 requires,
    among other things, that each major prize to be awarded in a “matched contest” must be identified
    on the entry form and must be awarded within a year either in the contest or by a drawing from
    names of the individuals who have attended the sales presentation.       
    Id. tj 40.065;
    see also 
    id. 0 40.003(a)(6)
    (defining “major prize” to mean “a prize that has an actual unit cost to the offeror of
    at least $250”). Further, section 40.066 prohibits certain conduct in connection with a matched
    contest, including, for example, “misrepresent[ing] the rules or terms of participation in a contest,”
    
    id. 5 40.066(a)(8),
    and requires a person using a matched contest to make certain disclosures, see
    
    id. 0 40.066(b).
    A person who violates the Act commits a criminal offense. See 
    id. 5 40.12
    1. In addition,
    a violation of the Act is a deceptive trade practice and is actionable under the Deceptive Trade
    Practices-Consumer   Protection Act (the “DTPA”), which is set forth in chapter 17, subchapter E of
    the Business and Commerce Code. See 
    id. 5 40.12
    2; see also 
    id. 85 17.41-.63
    (DTPA). You ask
    six questions about the Contest and Gift Giveaway Act; you do not ask whether the promotional
    campaign violates any other law, such as the DTPA, which may impose additional limitations on the
    business’s conduct. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 3            (GA-0133)
    II.    An alvsis
    A.     Whether the Promotional       Campaign Involves a “Matched Contest”
    First, you ask whether the promotional campaign you describe is a “matched contest”
    governed by section 40.065 of the Business and Commerce Code. See Request Letter, supra note
    1, at 2. In order to answer this question, we must necessarily answer your third and fourth questions,
    which are “[wlhether the facts set forth herein would constitute a matched contest” and “[wlhether
    the key. . . would constitute a winning number.” 
    Id. The Act
    defines a “matched contest” as
    a contest in which:
    (A) winning numbers are preselected, printed on an entry form, and
    distributed to the public; and
    (B) the numbers on the entry form are subsequently matched with
    the list of winning numbers at a sales location to determine prize
    eligibility.
    TEX. Bus. & COM. CODE ANN. tj 4O.O03(a)(7)(V emon 2002) (emphasis added). The Act also
    defines the term “contest.” See 
    id. 5 4O.O03(a)(
    1). A matched contest is a contest that uses “winning
    numbers” to award prizes. See 
    id. 8 40.003(a)(7)
    . The Act provides that the term “winning number”
    “includes a letter or other identifying symbol.” 
    Id. 8 4O.O03(a)(14).
    Under these definitions, a matched contest involves matching numbers, letters, or symbols
    that are printed on an entry form with numbers, letters, or symbols contained on a list. See 
    id. 5 40.003(a)(
    7).   B ecause they must be printed on an entry form and contained on a list, these
    numbers, letters, or symbols must be written. A key is not a number, letter, or other identifying
    symbol that may be printed on an entry form or written on a list and therefore is not a “winning
    number.”
    As we understand the scenario you describe, the business distributes car keys to recipients
    who then use the keys to attempt to start the prize vehicle. The business says it will award the prize
    vehicle to the person who presents the key that starts the vehicle. See Request Letter, supra note 1,
    at 1. The business does not preselect winning numbers, letters, or other identifying symbols that it
    prints on an entry form (which could include the written promotional materials, the sealed envelope,
    and any written information on the key itself, see part II. C, infra pp. 4-5), nor does the business
    match any such numbers, letters, or other identifying symbols to winning numbers, letters, or other
    identifying symbols. Because the business does not use numbers, letters, or other identifying
    symbols to award prizes, the promotional campaign is not a matched contest as defined by the Act.
    Furthermore, because the promotional campaign is not a matched contest, section 40.065 of the
    Business and Commerce Code does not apply to it.
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 4                        (GA-0133)
    Given this conclusion, we need not answer your sixth question. See Request Letter, supra
    note 1, at 2 (“Whether, if the factual scenario set forth herein does constitute a violation of a matched
    contest as set forth in Chapter 40 of the Business and Commerce Code, appropriate damages should
    be the actual value of the vehicle in question (the ‘prize vehicle’).“).
    B.       Whether the Promotional            Materials Constitute         an “Entry Form”
    Second, you ask “[wlhether promotional materials, with sealed keys, which were
    received by targeted individuals would constitute an entry form as set forth in section 40.003(a)(4)
    of the Business and Commerce Code.” 
    Id. at 2.*
    The Act uses the term “entry form” as an element
    ofthe term “matched contest,“see TEX. BUS. & COM. CODEANN. 6 40.003(a)(7) (Vernon 2002), and
    in provisions governing matched contests, see 
    id. $5 40.006(a)(2),
    40.065-.066. We answer this
    question, however, because it is not conditioned on an affirmative answer to your first question.
    Section 40.003 defines the term “entry form” to mean “a card, letter, entry blank, token, or
    similar device that identifies a contestant by: (A) name; (B) number, letter, or symbol; or (C) both
    name and number, letter, or symbol.” 
    Id. 5 40.003(a)(4).
    Because this definition includes within
    its scope a “token” or “similar device,” the term “entry form” is not limited to traditional printed
    material like cards or letters. To be an entry form, however, the item must identify the contestant
    by (i) name or by (ii) number, letter or symbol, or both. As we have discussed, a key itself is not a
    number, letter, or symbol that would identify a contestant, as these terms suggest information that
    may be written. But a key could be labeled with written information.
    It is not clear from the information you have provided whether any of the promotional
    materials mailed by the business, which would include the written materials, the sealed envelope,
    or written information on the key, identifies the recipient by name or by number, letter, or symbol.
    If any such item does identify a recipient by name or by number, letter, or symbol, then it may
    constitute an “entry form” within the Act’s definition.
    c.       Whether the Promotional            Campaign Involves a “Sales Presentation”
    In addition, you ask “[wlhether the statements made by the used auto sales business
    as set forth herein would constitute a solicitation to execute a contract that obligates a consumer
    to purchase goods or services as set forth in section 40.003( 13) of the Business and Commerce
    Code, so as to constitute a ‘sales presentation.“’ Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2 (question 5).
    The term “sales presentation” is an element of the term “contest.” See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE
    ANN. 0 40.003(a)(l) (Vernon 2002). The Act also uses the term in provisions governing gift
    giveaways, matched contests, and contests. See, e.g., 
    id., $9 40.006,40.035,40.064-.066.
    2Although you inform us that the business’s agents register key-holders before “testing their keys in the ‘prize
    vehicle,“’ Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1, you have not asked whether such registration generates an “entry form”
    within the meaning of the Act.
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 5                            (GA-0133)
    Under the Act, “sales presentation” means “a transaction or occurrence in which a consumer
    is solicited to execute a contract that obligates the consumer to purchase goods or services as defined
    by Subchapter E, Chapter 17,” the DTPA. 
    Id. 8 4O.O03(a)(
    13).3 Under the DTPA, “goods” means
    “tangible chattels or real property purchased or leased for use” and “services” means “work, labor,
    or service purchased or leased for use, including services furnished in connection with the sale
    or repair of goods.” 
    Id. 5 17.45(l)-(2).
    A used car is a good within the meaning of this definition.
    However, the promotional materials you describe, enclosing a sealed key and informing recipients
    of their chance to win a car at a certain time and place, do not appear to solicit consumers to execute
    a contract. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You also state that the business asks people who
    come to its premises in response to the promotional materials whether they are interested in buying
    a used car and that an “agent for the used car sales business asks whether such agent can escort the
    individuals around the sales lot so as to look at other vehicles which the used car sales business
    has for sale.” 
    Id. The facts
    you describe do not indicate whether any agent, in showing a car in
    connection with the promotional campaign, may have solicited a consumer to execute a contract that
    would have obligated the consumer to purchase a used car.
    Thus, in answer to your specific question, the statements made by the used auto sales
    business described in your letter do not appear to constitute a “sales presentation.”   Whether the
    promotional campaign you describe actually included sales presentations is a question of fact beyond
    the purview of an attorney general opinion.
    D.        Whether the Promotional                 Campaign Otherwise Violates the Act
    Although your first question specifically asks whether the promotional campaign involves
    a matched contest and your other questions ask about particular provisions, you also ask more
    generally in your first question whether the promotional campaign violates the Act. See Request
    Letter, supra note 1, at 2 (question 1).
    In addition to imposing specific limitations on matched contests, the Act regulates contests.
    SeeT~x. Bus.& COMXODEANN.~ 40.003(a)(l)(V emon 2002) (defining “contest”), (7) (defining
    “matched contest”). For example, the subchapter C limitations imposed by sections 40.062 through
    40.064 govern the conduct of those offering a prize in a “contest,” as opposed to just a “matched
    contest .” See 
    id. 95 40.061
    (Subchapter C “applies to a person who uses a contest as part of an
    advertising plan or program.“), 40.062 (prohibiting offeror from requiring a person to pay
    consideration for a prize), 40.063 (prohibiting offeror from requiring a person to purchase a good
    or service unrelated to the prize to receive a prize), 40.064 (requiring offeror to disclose certain
    information); see also 
    id. 5 4O.O03(a)(
    10) (“‘Offeror’ means a person who solicits a person to attend
    a sales presentation.“), (12) (“‘Prize’ means an item of value that is offered, awarded, or given to a
    person through a contest.“). Similarly, record-keeping requirements found in subchapter D apply
    to “a person who uses a contest as part of an advertising plan or program,” 
    id. 8 40.09
    1, and therefore
    3This definition   also specifically   includes within its scope a timeshare interest or membership   interest. See TEX.
    BUS. & COM. CODEANN. 5 4O.O03(a)( 13)(A)-(B)            (Vernon 2002).
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 6           (GA-0133)
    are not limited to those who use matched contests.     See also 
    id. $9 40.092,
    40.094-.095    (contest
    record requirements).
    Under the Act, the term “contest” means “a promotional     device” in which:
    (A) a person is offered, as an inducement to attend a sales
    presentation, a chance to win or receive a prize by complying with
    specified entry requirements;
    (B) the chance to win any prize is determined by random selection;
    and
    (C) all offered prizes are awarded.
    
    Id. 5 40.003(a)(l).
    We cannot definitively determine whether the promotional campaign constitutes a “contest”
    based on the facts you have provided. As we have explained, we cannot determine whether the
    business offers a person a chance to win a car by complying with specified entry requirements as an
    inducement to attend a sales presentation. See Part II. C, supra pp. 4-5. Furthermore, it is not clear
    from the facts set forth in your letter whether a chance to win the car is determined by random
    selection. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1.
    The Honorable Leticia Van de Putte, R. Ph. - Page 7          (GA-0133)
    SUMMARY
    A car key does not constitute a “winning number” under
    chapter 40 of the Business and Commerce Code, the Contest and Gift
    Giveaway Act. See TEX. BUS. & COM. CODEANN. 9 4O.O03(a)(14)
    (Vernon 2002). For this reason, a promotional campaign pursuant to
    which a used car sales business distributes keys and offers to award
    a car as a prize to the person whose key starts the car does not
    constitute a “matched contest” under the Act. See 
    id. tj 40.003(a)(7).
                   If any of the promotional materials mailed by the business (including
    the written materials, the sealed envelope containing the key, or
    written information on the key) identifies the recipient by name or
    by number, letter, or symbol, then the item may constitute an “entry
    form” under the Act. See 
    id. § 40.003(a)(4).
    The determination
    whether     a particular   promotional    campaign    involves    sales
    presentations or constitutes a contest within the meaning of the Act
    would require factual inquiry beyond the purview of an attorney
    general opinion.
    BARRY R. MCBEE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DON R. WILLETT
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    NANCY S. FULLER
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Mary R. Crouter
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: GA-0133

Judges: Greg Abbott

Filed Date: 7/2/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017