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VETOES
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H.B. 678
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Dear Mr. Speaker:
In accordance with Article II, Section 17 of the Maryland Constitution, I have today
vetoed House Bill 678 - State Lottery - Prize Winners - Voluntary Assignments.
This bill, for the first time in the history of the Maryland State Lottery, authorizes
voluntary assignment by a lottery prizewinner. A voluntary assignment is an
uncompelled transfer by way of sale or gift of the right to receive the lottery prize
from the winner (assignor) to another person or entity (assignee). House Bill 678 was
drafted to intentionally minimize the involvement of the Lottery Agency in any
judicial proceedings arising out or otherwise caused by a voluntary assignment of a
lottery prize. This intention is clearly reflected in a subsection of the legislation which
provides "The Agency need not appear in or be named as a party to an action that
seeks judicial approval of an assignment but may intervene as of right in the action."
The clear intent to keep the State out of any judicial proceedings is further reinforced
by a later subsection in the legislation which provides "The assignor and assignee
shall hold harmless and indemnify the [Lottery] Agency, the [Lottery] Commission,
and the State and its employees and agents from all claims, suits, actions, complaints,
or liabilities related to the assignment."
Unfortunately, it appears that the drafter and the General Assembly were unaware of
relatively recent changes in the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) as codified in the
Commercial Law Article (CL) of the Annotated Code of Maryland. Chapter 282 of the
1999 Laws of Maryland (which became effective on July 1, 2001) made extensive
changes in the UCC.
Of particular significance, for purposes of this legislation, is a provision contained in
Chapter 282 that added lottery winnings to the definition of "account" to CL §
9-102(a)(2). As a consequence of this legislative alteration, the UCC became
applicable to winnings from the Maryland State Lottery. The legal and procedural
implications arising from the applicability of the UCC, when coupled with voluntary
assignability of lottery prize winnings, expose the Maryland Lottery Agency, its
employees, and its agents to a myriad of legal proceedings.
CL § 9-406 sets out the duties and obligations associated with the discharging of
assignment under the UCC. Subsection (j), added to the statute by Chapter 408 of the
2001 Laws of Maryland, and still later modified by Chapter 477 of the 2002 Laws of
Maryland, provides "This section prevails over any inconsistent statute of this State,
unless the provision is contained in statute of this State, refers expressly to this
section, and states that the provision prevails over this section."
House Bill 678 does not, of course, contain any provision which purports to exempt
this legislation from the preemption of CL Section 9-406(j)(l). Thus, the "hold
harmless" and indemnification provisions of this legislation are rendered inoperative.
Without a specific provision having been added to the statute authorizing the
voluntary assignment of lottery prize winnings, the Lottery Agency will be necessarily
and unavoidably entangled in disputes between competing "assignees" and a host of
others.
Further, the option of signing the legislation with the expectation of an appropriate
amendment being adopted in the 2006 session of the General Assembly is inadequate.
- 4160 -
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