N.M. Stat. Ann. § 58-21-6
The following persons shall be exempt from all provisions of the Mortgage Loan Company Act:
History: Laws 1983, ch. 86, § 6; 1984, ch. 15, § 1; 1985, ch. 73, § 3; 2001, ch. 251, § 5; 2001, ch. 264, § 5; 2003, ch. 436, § 16; 2009, ch. 122, § 30.
Cross references. — For the federal Small Business Investment Act of 1958, see 15 U.S.C. § 661.
The 2009 amendment, effective July 31, 2009, changed the name of the act from the "Mortgage Loan Company and Loan Broker Act" to the "Mortgage Loan Company Act".
Severability. — Laws 2009, ch. 122, § 60 provided that if any part or application of this act is held invalid, the remainder or its application to other situations or persons shall not be affected.
The 2003 amendment, effective June 20, 2003, deleted "consumer finance companies" following "credit unions" in Subsection A.
The 2001 amendment, effective January 31, 2002, deleted Subsection H, which exempted any person doing business in New Mexico who has as one of his principal purposes the brokering, making or originating of loans secured by real estate mortgages and who does not place or sell more than ten percent of such loans to persons other than institutional investors from the Mortgage Loan Company and Loan Broker Act, and defined institutional investors.
Incidental contacts not "transacting business in state". — A foreign loan brokerage firm's incidental contacts with New Mexico necessary to communicate with its New Mexico client were too remote to constitute "transacting business in this state." Also, the fact that the firm chose to sue its client to recover its commission in a New Mexico court did not in and of itself constitute "transacting business in this state." V.P. Clarence Co. v. Colgate, 1993-NMSC-022, 115 N.M. 471, 853 P.2d 722.