Colo. Rev. Stat. § 5-2-211

Current through 11/5/2024 election
Section 5-2-211 - Rebate upon prepayment - definitions
(1) Except as otherwise provided in this section, upon prepayment in full of the unpaid balance of a precomputed consumer credit transaction, an amount not less than the unearned portion of the finance charge calculated according to this section shall be rebated to the consumer. If the rebate otherwise required is less than one dollar, no rebate need be made.
(2) Upon prepayment in full of a consumer credit transaction, other than one pursuant to a revolving account, a refinancing, or a consolidation, whether or not precomputed, the creditor may collect or retain a minimum charge within the limits stated in this subsection (2) if the finance charge earned at the time of prepayment is less than any minimum charge contracted for. The minimum charge may not exceed the lesser of the amount of finance charge contracted for or twenty-five dollars.
(3)
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the unearned portion of the finance charge is a fraction of the finance charge of which the numerator is the sum of the periodic balances scheduled to follow the computational period in which prepayment occurs, and the denominator is the sum of all periodic balances under either the consumer credit agreement or, if the balance owing resulted from a refinancing described in section 5-2-205 or a consolidation described in section 5-2-206, under the refinancing agreement or consolidation agreement.
(b) With respect to a precomputed transaction entered into on or after October 28, 1975, and payable according to its original terms in more than sixty-one installments or on any precomputed transaction entered into on or after January 1, 1982, the unearned portion of the finance charge is, at the option of the lender, either:
(I) That portion that is applicable to all fully unexpired computational periods as originally scheduled, or if deferred, as deferred, that follow the date of prepayment. For this purpose, the applicable charge is the total of that which would have been made for each such period, had the consumer credit transaction not been precomputed, by applying to unpaid balances of the amount financed, according to the actuarial method, the annual percentage rate of charge previously stated to the consumer pursuant to the provisions on disclosure contained in section 5-3-101 based upon the assumption that all payments were made as originally scheduled, or if deferred, as deferred. The creditor, at the creditor's option, may round the annual percentage rate to the nearest one-half of one percent so long as such procedure is not consistently used to obtain a greater yield than would otherwise be permitted; or
(II) The total finance charge minus the earned finance charge. The earned finance charge shall be determined by applying the annual percentage rate previously stated to the consumer pursuant to the provisions on disclosure contained in section 5-3-101 according to the actuarial method to the actual unpaid balances for the actual time the balances were unpaid up to the date of prepayment. If a delinquency or deferral charge was collected, it shall be treated as a payment.
(c) In the case of a consumer credit transaction primarily secured by an interest in land, reasonable sums actually paid or payable to persons not related to the creditor for customary closing costs included in the finance charge shall be deducted from the finance charge before the calculation prescribed by this subsection (3) is made.
(4) As used in this section, unless the context otherwise requires:
(a) "Computational period" means one month if one-half or more of the intervals between scheduled payments under the agreement is one month or more and otherwise means one week.
(b) The "interval" to the due date of the first scheduled installment or the final scheduled payment date is measured from the date of a consumer credit transaction and includes either the first or last day of the interval. If the interval to the due date of the first scheduled installment does not exceed one month by more than fifteen days when the computational period is one month or eleven days when the computational period is one week, the interval shall be considered as one computational period.
(c) "Periodic balance" means the amount scheduled to be outstanding on the last day of a computational period before deducting the payment, if any, scheduled to be made on that day.
(5)
(a) This subsection (5) applies only if the schedule of payments is not regular.
(b) If the computational period is one month and:
(I) If the number of days in the interval to the due date of the first scheduled installment is less than one month by more than five days or more than one month by more than five but not more than fifteen days, the unearned finance charge shall be increased by an adjustment for each day by which the interval is less than one month and, at the option of the creditor, may be reduced by an adjustment for each day by which the interval is more than one month; the adjustment for each day shall be one-thirtieth of that part of the finance charge earned in the computational period prior to the due date of the first scheduled installment assuming that period to be one month; and
(II) If the interval to the final scheduled payment date is a number of computational periods plus an additional number of days less than a full month, the additional number of days shall be considered a computational period only if sixteen days or more. This subparagraph (II) applies whether or not subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (b) applies.
(c) Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of this subsection (5), if the computational period is one month, the number of days in the interval to the due date of the first installment exceeds one month by not more than fifteen days and the schedule of payments is otherwise regular, the creditor at the creditor's option may exclude the extra days and the charge for the extra days in computing the unearned finance charge; but if the creditor does so and a rebate is required before the due date of the first scheduled installment, the creditor shall compute the earned charge for each elapsed day as one-thirtieth of the amount the earned charge would have been if the first interval had been one month.
(d) If the computational period is one week and:
(I) If the number of days in the interval to the due date of the first scheduled installment is less than five days or more than nine days but not more than eleven days, the unearned finance charge shall be increased by an adjustment for each day by which the interval is less than seven days and, at the option of the creditor, may be reduced by an adjustment for each day by which the interval is more than seven days; the adjustment for each day shall be one-seventh of that part of the finance charge earned in the computational period prior to the due date of the first scheduled installment assuming that period to be one week; and
(II) If the interval to the final scheduled payment date is a number of computational periods plus an additional number of days less than a full week, the additional number of days shall be considered a computational period only if four days or more. This subparagraph (II) applies whether or not subparagraph (I) of this paragraph (d) applies.
(6) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of this section, if a deferral described in section 5-2-204 has been agreed to, the unearned portion of the finance charge is the portion thereof attributable according to the sum of the balances method to the period from the first day of the computational period following that in which prepayment occurs; except that the numerator of the fraction is the sum of the periodic balances, after rescheduling to give effect to any deferral, scheduled to follow the computational period in which prepayment occurs. A separate rebate of the deferral charge is not required unless the unpaid balance of the transaction is paid in full during the deferral period, in which event the creditor shall also rebate the unearned portion of the deferral charge.
(7) Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b) of subsection (3) of this section, this section does not preclude the collection or retention by the creditor of delinquency charges described in section 5-2-203.
(8) If the maturity is accelerated for any reason and judgment is obtained, the consumer is entitled to the same rebate as if payment had been made on the date judgment is entered.
(9) Upon prepayment in full of a consumer credit transaction by the proceeds of consumer credit insurance described in section 5-4-103, the consumer or the consumer's estate is entitled to the same rebate as though the consumer had prepaid the agreement on the date the proceeds of the insurance are paid to the creditor but no later than ten business days after satisfactory proof of loss is furnished to the creditor.

C.R.S. § 5-2-211

L. 2000: Entire article R&RE, p. 1203, § 1, effective July 1. L. 2001: IP(3)(b) and (5)(d)(I) amended, p. 28, § 3, effective March 9.

This section is similar to former § 5-2-210, as it existed prior to 2000.