SECTION
229.18—Additional Disclosure Requirements
A. 229.18(a) Deposit Slips 1. This paragraph requires banks to include a notice
on all preprinted deposit slips. The deposit-slip notice need only
state, somewhere on the front of the deposit slip, that deposits may
not be available for immediate withdrawal. The notice is required
only on preprinted deposit slips —those printed with the customer’s
account number and name and furnished by the bank in response to a
customer’s order to the bank. A bank need not include the notice on
deposit slips that are not preprinted and supplied to the customer—such
as counter deposit slips—or on those special deposit slips provided
to the customer under section 229.10(c). A bank is not responsible
for ensuring that the notice appear on deposit slips that the customer
does not obtain from or through the bank. This paragraph applies to
preprinted deposit slips furnished to customers on or after September
1, 1988.
9-231
1. This paragraph
describes the statutory requirement that a bank post in each location
where its employees accept consumer deposits a notice of its availability
policy pertaining to consumer accounts. The notice that is required
must specifically state the availability periods for the various deposits
that may be made to consumer accounts. The notice need not be posted
at each teller window, but the notice must be posted in a place where
consumers seeking to make deposits are likely to see it before making
their deposits. For example, the notice might be posted at the point
where the line forms for teller service in the lobby. The notice is
not required at any drive-through teller windows nor is it required
at night depository locations, or at locations where consumer deposits
are not accepted. A bank that acts as a contractual branch at a particular
location must include the availability policy that applies to its
own customers but need not include the policy that applies to the
customers of the bank for which it is acting as a contractual branch.
9-232
1. This paragraph sets forth the required notices
for ATMs. Paragraph (c)(1) provides that the depositary bank is responsible
for posting a notice on all ATMs at which deposits can be made to
accounts at the depositary bank. The depositary bank may arrange for
a third party, such as the owner or operator of the ATM, to post the
notice and indemnify the depositary bank from liability if the depositary
bank is liable under section 229.21 for the owner or operator failing
to provide the required notice.
2. The notice may be posted on a sign, shown on the screen,
or included on deposit envelopes provided at the ATM. This disclosure
must be given before the customer has made the deposit. Therefore,
a notice provided on the customer’s deposit receipt or appearing on
the ATM’s screen after the customer has made the deposit would not
satisfy this requirement.
3. Paragraph (c)(2) requires a depositary bank that operates
an off-premise ATM from which deposits are removed not more than two
times a week to make a disclosure of this fact on the off-premise
ATM. The notice must disclose to the customer the days on which deposits
made at the ATM will be considered received.
9-233
1. This paragraph requires
banks to provide written notice of their specific availability policy
to any person upon that person’s oral or written request. The notice
must be sent within a reasonable period of time following receipt
of the request.
9-234
1. This paragraph requires banks to
send notices to their customers when the banks change their availability
policies with regard to consumer accounts. A notice may be given in
any form as long as it is clear and conspicuous. If the bank gives
notice of a change by sending the customer a complete new availability
disclosure, the bank must direct the customer to the changed terms
in the disclosure by use of a letter or insert, or by highlighting
the changed terms in the disclosure.
2. Generally, a bank must send a notice at least 30 calendar
days before implementing any change in its availability policy. If
the change results in faster availability of deposits—for example,
if the bank changes its availability for nonlocal checks from the
fifth business day after deposit to the fourth business day after
deposit—the bank need not send advance notice. The bank must, however,
send notice of the change no later than 30 calendar days after the
change is implemented. A bank is not required to give a notice when
there is a change in appendix B (Reduction of Schedules for Certain
Nonlocal Checks).
3. A bank that has provided its customers with a list
of ATMs under section 229.16(b)(5) shall provide its customers with
an updated list of ATMs once a year if there are changes in the list
of ATMs previously disclosed to the customers.