1. As used in this section: a. "Commercial distributor" means any person that offers for sale, sells, or distributes to a dealer parts for any new commercial motor vehicle, truck, or semitrailer, or vehicular implements, commercial equipment, or accessories, or attachment units, designed and used primarily for transporting commodities, merchandise, or commercial cargo. b. "Commercial equipment dealer" means a person that engages in the business of: (1) Selling, at retail, parts for any new or used commercial motor vehicle, truck, or semitrailer, or vehicular implements, commercial equipment, or accessories, or attachment units, designed and used primarily for transporting commodities, merchandise, or commercial cargo; or (2) Repairing new or used commercial motor vehicle, truck, or semitrailer parts, or vehicular implements, commercial equipment or, accessories, or attachment units, designed and used primarily for transporting commodities, merchandise, or commercial cargo. c. "Commercial manufacturer" means any person engaged in the business of manufacturing or assembling parts for any new commercial motor vehicle, truck, or semitrailer, or vehicular implements, commercial equipment, or accessories, or attachment units, designed and used primarily for transporting commodities, merchandise, or commercial cargo. d. "Parts" includes essential and nonessential commercial motor vehicle, truck, or semitrailer components. 2. A commercial manufacturer shall include reasonable compensation for diagnostic work, as well as repair service, parts, and labor, in warranty work compensation. In addition, a commercial manufacturer shall provide adequate time allowances for diagnosis and performance of warranty work and service for the work performed. The hourly labor rate paid by a commercial manufacturer to the commercial equipment dealer for warranty services may not be less than the average rate charged by the commercial equipment dealer for like service to nonwarranty customers for nonwarranty service. A commercial manufacturer may not reimburse a commercial equipment dealer for parts used in the performance of warranty repair at a lower rate than the average retail rate customarily charged by the commercial equipment dealer for these parts as provided under subsection 5. 3. A commercial manufacturer shall pay a commercial equipment dealer on a claim made by a commercial equipment dealer under this section within thirty days of the approval of the claim. The commercial manufacturer either shall approve or disapprove a claim within thirty days after the claim is submitted to the commercial manufacturer. The commercial manufacturer may prescribe the manner in which and the forms on which
the commercial equipment dealer must present the claim. A claim not specifically disapproved in writing within thirty days after the commercial manufacturer receives the claim must be construed to be approved and the manufacturer shall pay the claim within thirty days. 4. A commercial manufacturer, commercial distributor, or commercial distributor branch shall compensate fully its commercial equipment dealers licensed in this state for warranty parts, work, and service specified in this section. Failure to fully compensate includes a reduction in the amount due to the commercial equipment dealer or imposing a separate charge, surcharge, or other imposition by which the commercial manufacturer seeks to recover the costs of complying with this section from the commercial equipment dealer. 5. The retail rate customarily charged by the commercial equipment dealer for parts is established by the commercial equipment dealer submitting to the commercial manufacturer or commercial distributor one hundred sequential nonwarranty customer- paid service repair orders that contain warranty-like parts or ninety consecutive days of nonwarranty customer-paid service repair orders that contain warranty-like parts, whichever is less, covering repairs made no more than one hundred eighty days before the submission and declaring the average percentage markup. 6. The retail rate customarily charged by the commercial equipment dealer for labor must be established using the same process as provided under subsection 5 and declaring the average labor rate. The average labor rate must be determined by dividing the amount of the dealer's total labor sales by the number of total hours that generated those sales. If a labor rate and parts markup rate are simultaneously declared by the commercial equipment dealer, the commercial equipment dealer may use the same repair orders to complete each calculation as provided under subsection 5. 7. In calculating the retail rate customarily charged by the commercial equipment dealer for parts and labor, the following work may not be included in the calculation: a. Repairs for commercial manufacturer or commercial distributor special events, specials, or promotional discounts for retail customer repairs; b. Parts sold at wholesale; and c. Nuts, bolts, fasteners, and similar items that do not have an individual part number. 8. The average of the parts markup rates and labor rate is presumed to be fair and reasonable and must become effective thirty days following the commercial manufacturer's approval. Not later than thirty days after submission, a commercial manufacturer or commercial distributor may rebut the presumption by reasonably substantiating that a rate is unreasonable in light of the practices of all other commercial equipment dealers in an economically similar area of the state offering the commercial equipment dealer's declaration of the same part, or vehicular implement, equipment, accessory, or attachment unit. If the average parts markup rate or average labor rate, or both are rebutted, the commercial manufacturer or commercial distributor shall propose an adjustment of the average percentage markup based on that rebuttal not later than thirty days after submission. 9. Each commercial manufacturer, in establishing a schedule of compensation for warranty work, shall rely on the commercial equipment dealer's written schedule of hourly labor rates and parts and may not obligate any commercial equipment dealer to engage in unduly burdensome or time-consuming documentation of rates or parts, including obligating commercial equipment dealers to engage in transaction- by-transaction or part-by-part calculations. 10. A commercial dealer or commercial manufacturer may demand the average parts markup or average labor rate be calculated using the process provided under subsections 5 and 6; however, the demand for the average parts markup may not be made within twelve months of the last parts markup declaration and the demand for the average labor rate may not be made within twelve months of the last labor rate declaration. If a parts markup or labor rate is demanded by the commercial equipment
dealer or commercial manufacturer, the commercial equipment dealer shall determine the repair orders to be included in the calculation under subsections 5 and 6.
51-07-32. Liability for publishing or distributing sexual material harmful to minors - Age verification requirement - Damages. 1. As used in this section: a. "Commercial entity" includes a corporation, limited liability company, partnership, limited partnership, sole proprietorship, or other legally recognized business entity. b. "Distribute" means to issue, sell, give, provide, deliver, transfer, transmute, circulate, or disseminate by any means. c. "Minor" means an individual under eighteen years of age. d. "News-gathering organization" means an employee of a: (1) Newspaper, news publication, or news source, printed or on an online or mobile platform, of current news and public interest, who is acting within the scope of employment and can provide documentation of employment with the newspaper, news publication, or news source; or (2) Radio broadcast station, television broadcast station, cable television operator, or wire service, who is acting within the scope of employment and can provide documentation of employment with the radio broadcast station, television broadcast station, cable television operator, or wire service. e. "Publish" means to communicate or make information available to another person on a publicly available internet website. f. "Reasonable age verification methods" includes verifying the individual seeking to access the material is eighteen years of age or older by using: (1) A digitized identification card; or (2) Requiring the individual attempting to access the material to comply with a commercial age verification system including the use of: (a) Government-issued identification; (b) A commercially available database regularly used by a business or government entity for the purpose of age and identity verification; or (c) Any commercially reasonable method that relies on public or private transactional data to verify the age of the individual attempting to access the information is eighteen years of age or older. g. "Sexual material harmful to a minor" includes material that: (1) The average individual applying contemporary community standards would find, taking the material as a whole and with respect to a minor, is designed to appeal to or pander to the prurient interest; (2) In a manner patently offensive with respect to a minor, exploits, is devoted to, or principally consists of descriptions of actual, simulated, or animated displays or depictions of: (a) An individual's pubic hair, anus, genitals, or the nipple of the female breast; (b) Touching, caressing, or fondling of nipples, breasts, buttocks, anuses, or genitals; or (c) Sexual intercourse, masturbation, sodomy, bestiality, oral copulation, flagellation, excretory functions, exhibitions, or any other sexual act; and (3) Taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for a minor. h. "Substantial portion" means if more than thirty-three and one-third percent of total material on a website is sexual material harmful to a minor. i. "Transactional data" means a sequence of information that documents an exchange, agreement, or transfer between an individual, commercial entity, or third party used for the purpose of satisfying a request or event. The term includes records from mortgage, education, and employment entities.
2. A commercial entity that knowingly publishes or distributes sexual material harmful to a minor on the internet from a website that contains a substantial portion of the material must be held liable if the entity fails to perform reasonable age verification methods to verify the age of an individual attempting to access the material. 3. A commercial entity or third party that performs the required age verification may not retain any identifying information of the individual after access has been granted to the material. 4. A commercial entity found to have violated subsection 2 or 3 is liable for damages. 5. A civil action may be brought against any commercial entity, or third party that performs the required age verification on behalf of the commercial entity, by: a. A parent or guardian whose minor child was allowed access to the material in violation of subsection 2; or b. An individual whose identifying information is retained in violation of subsection 3. 6. An individual authorized to bring a civil action under subsection 5 may seek and the court may award: a. An injunction to enjoin continued violation of this section; b. Compensatory and exemplary damages; and c. Costs and fees, including reasonable attorney fees. 7. This section does not apply to any bona fide news or public interest broadcast, website video, report, or event, and may not be construed to affect the rights of any news- gathering organization. 8. An internet service provider or its affiliates or subsidiaries, a search engine, a cloud service provider, or an application store, may not be held to have violated this section solely for providing access or connection to or from a website or other information or content on the internet or a facility, system, or network not under the provider's control, including transmission, downloading, intermediate storage, access software, or other forms of access or storage to the extent the provider is not responsible for the creation of the content of the communication that constitutes sexual material harmful to a minor.