N.M. Stat. Ann. § 59A-51-13
A. A bail bondsman or solicitor shall not:
(7) charge or accept anything of value except the premium on the bond and any extraterritorial recovery expenses, but the bondsman may accept collateral security or other indemnity if:
(e) the person from whom the collateral or security is taken is given a receipt describing the condition of the collateral or security at the time it is taken into the custody of the bondsman.
B. When a bail bondsman accepts cash as collateral, the bondsman shall deposit the cash in the bondsman's trust account and give a written receipt for same, and this receipt shall give in detail a full account of the collateral received.
C. Law enforcement, adjudication and prosecution officials and their employees, attorneys-at-law, officials authorized to admit to bail and state and county officers shall not directly or indirectly receive any benefits from the execution of any bail bond.
D. A bail bondsman shall not sign nor countersign in blank any bond, nor shall the bondsman give a power of attorney to or otherwise authorize anyone to countersign the bondsman's name to bonds unless the person so authorized is a licensed bondsman directly employed by the bondsman giving such power of attorney.
E. No bail bond agency shall advertise as or hold itself out to be a surety insurer.
F. Every bail bondsman shall have a permanent street address, and all bail bond business shall be conducted from that address.
G. Every bail bondsman shall transact all bail bond business, surety or property, in the bondsman's proper individual name or one agency name as stated on the application for license and on the license as issued by the superintendent.
History: Laws 1984, ch. 127, § 940; 1987, ch. 228, § 4; 2005, ch. 259, § 3; 2014, ch. 21, § 6.
The 2014 amendment, effective May 21, 2014, prohibited a bail bondsman or solicitor from offering a reduction in rates, charges or premiums; and in Subsection A, in Paragraph (4), after "fee or rebate", added "or offer a reduction in rates, charges or premiums".
Temporary provisions. — Laws 2014, ch. 21, § 10 provided the supreme court shall by rule determine the conditions under which a bail bondsman or solicitor may appear in court without the assistance of an attorney and without constituting the practice of law.
The 2005 amendment, effective April 6, 2005, added Subsection A(6) to provide that a bail bondsman or solicitor shall not, except for the premium received for the bond, fail to return any collateral security within a reasonable time after termination of liability on the bond; provided in Subsection A(7) that a bail bondsman or solicitor shall not charge anything except the premium on the bond and any extraterritorial recovery expenses, but may accept security or indemnity; deleted the former provision in Subsection A(7) that a bail bondsman or solicitor could not accept anything from a principal except the premium which could be paid in cash or property and that a bondsman could accept security or indemnity from a principal; added Subsection A(7)(b) through (e) to provide conditions for taking collateral security or other indemnity; and added Subsection G to provide that every bondsman shall conduct business in the bondsman's name or agency name as stated on the bondsman's license.
County officers as bail bondsmen. — The prohibitions against county officers acting as bail bondsmen in 59A-51-4 NMSA 1978 and Subsection C of this section fail to satisfy heightened rational-basis scrutiny; that element of the statutes is invalid under the equal protection clause of the New Mexico Constitution. Alvarez v. Chavez, 1994-NMCA-133, 118 N.M. 732, 886 P.2d 461, overruled on other grounds by Trujillo v. City of Albuquerque, 1998-NMSC-031, 125 N.M. 721, 965 P.2d 305.