A management official of a bank
holding company and its subsidiary bank, which are depository institutions
with assets exceeding $1 billion each, is also a director of a savings
and loan holding company, whose savings and loan subsidiary has assets
exceeding $500 million, and a director of one of its nonbanking subsidiaries.
The management official became a director of the bank holding company
in 1969, of the bank in 1964, of the savings and loan holding company
in 1979, and of its nondepository institution subsidiary before November
10, 1978. The director’s interlock between the bank holding company
and the bank on the one hand, and the savings and loan holding company
on the other violates section 204 of the Interlocks Act, which prohibits
interlocks between depository institutions or their affiliates if
their assets exceed $1 billion and $500 million, respectively, and
the interlock is not grandfathered as existing prior to November 10,
1978.
The director’s service with the non-depository institution
subsidiary of the savings and loan holding company is grandfathered,
however, since it existed before November 10, 1978. The act does not
provide for the automatic transfer of grandfather rights to affiliates,
especially if the transfer is from a nondepository institution to
a depository institution. Since the management official would move
from a position with no direct management responsibilities with respect
to a depository organization to a position with direct management
responsibilities related to the organization, the transfer of grandfather
rights in this case would undermine the purposes of the act. Therefore,
the director’s grandfather privilege with respect to the non-depository
institution subsidiary does not extend to the savings and loan holding
company. STAFF OP. of July 22, 1980.
Authority:
Interlocks Act §§ 202, 204, and 205, 12 USC 3201, 3203, and
3204; 12 CFR 202.5.