SECTION
229.20—Relation to State Law
A. 229.20(a) In General 1. Several
states have enacted laws that govern when banks in those states must
make funds available to their customers. The EFA Act provides that
any state law in effect on September 1, 1989, that provides that funds
be made available in a shorter period of time than provided in this
regulation, will supersede the time periods in the EFA Act and the
regulation. The conference report on the EFA Act clarifies this provision
by stating that any state law enacted on or before September 1, 1989,
may supersede federal law to the extent that the law relates to the
time funds must be made available for withdrawal (H.R. Rep. No. 261,
100th Cong. 1st Sess. 182 (1987)).
2. Thus, if a state had wished to adopt a law governing
funds availability, it had to have made that law effective on or before
September 1, 1989. Laws adopted after that date do not supersede federal
law, even if they provide for shorter availability periods than are
provided under federal law. If a state that has a law governing funds
availability in effect before September 1, 1989, amended its law after
that date, the amendment would not supersede federal law, but an amendment
deleting a state requirement would be effective.
3. If a state provides for a shorter hold
for a certain category of checks than is provided for under federal
law, that state requirement will supersede the federal provision.
For example, most state laws base some hold periods on whether the
check being deposited is drawn on an in-state or out-of-state bank.
If a state contains more than one check-processing region, the state’s
hold period for in-state checks may be shorter than the federal maximum
hold period for nonlocal checks. Thus, the state schedule would supersede
the federal schedule to the extent that it applies to in-state, nonlocal
checks.
4. The EFA Act also provides that any state law that
provides for availability in a shorter period of time than required
by federal law is applicable to all federally insured institutions
in that state, including federally chartered institutions. If a state
law provides shorter availability only for deposits in accounts in
certain categories of banks, such as commercial banks, the superseding
state law continues to apply only to those categories of banks, rather
than to all federally insured banks in the state.
9-266
1. This paragraph reflects the statutory provision
that other provisions of state law that are inconsistent with federal
law are preempted. Preemption does not require a determination by
the Board to be effective.
9-267
1. This section
describes the standards the Board uses in making determinations on
whether federal law will preempt state laws governing funds availability.
A provision of state law is considered inconsistent with federal law
if it permits a depositary bank to make funds available to a customer
in a longer period of time than the maximum period permitted by the
EFA Act and this regulation. For example, a state law that permits
a hold of four business days or longer for local checks permits a
hold that is longer than that permitted under the EFA Act and this
regulation, and therefore is inconsistent and preempted. State availability
schedules that provide for availability in a shorter period of time
than required under Regulation CC supersede the federal schedule.
2. Under a
state law, some categories of deposits could be available for withdrawal
sooner or later than the time required by this subpart, depending
on the composition of the deposit. For example, the EFA Act and this
regulation (section 229.10(c)(1)(vii)) require next-day availability
for the first $225 of the aggregate deposit of local or nonlocal checks
on any day, and a state law could require next-day availability for
any check of $200 or less that is deposited. Under the EFA Act and this regulation,
if either one $300 check or three $100 checks are deposited on a given
day, $225 must be made available for withdrawal on the next business
day, and $75 must be made available in accordance with the local or
nonlocal schedule. Under the state law, however, the two deposits
would be subject to different availability rules. In the first case,
none of the proceeds of the deposit would be subject to next-day availability;
in the second case, the entire proceeds of the deposit would be subject
to next-day availability. In this example, because the state law would,
in some situations, permit a hold longer than the maximum permitted
by the EFA Act, this provision of state law is inconsistent and preempted
in its entirety.
3. In addition to the differences between state and federal
availability schedules, a number of state laws contain exceptions
to the state availability schedules that are different from those
provided under the EFA Act and this regulation. The state exceptions
continue to apply only in those cases where the state schedule is
shorter than or equal to the federal schedule, and then only up to
the limit permitted by the Regulation CC schedule. Where a deposit
is subject to a state exception under a state schedule that is not
preempted by Regulation CC and is also subject to a federal exception,
the hold on the deposit cannot exceed the hold permissible under the
federal exception in accordance with Regulation CC. In such cases,
only one exception notice is required, in accordance with section
229.13(g). This notice need only include the applicable federal exception
as the reason the exception was invoked. For those categories of checks
for which the state schedule is preempted by the federal schedule,
only the federal exceptions may be used.
4. State laws that provide maximum availability
periods for categories of deposits that are not covered by the EFA
Act would not be preempted. Thus, state funds-availability laws that
apply to funds in time and savings deposits are not affected by the
EFA Act or this regulation. In addition, the availability schedules
of several states apply to “items” deposited to an account.
The term items may encompass deposits, such as nonnegotiable
instruments, that are not subject to the Regulation CC availability
schedules. Deposits that are not covered by Regulation CC continue
to be subject to the state availability schedules. State laws that
provide maximum availability periods for categories of institutions
that are not covered by the EFA Act would also not be preempted. For
example, a state law that governs money market mutual funds would
not be affected by the EFA Act or this regulation.
5. Generally, state rules governing
the disclosure or notice of availability policies applicable to accounts
also are preempted. Nevertheless, a state law requiring disclosure
of funds-availability policies that apply to deposits other than “accounts,”
such as savings or time deposits, are not inconsistent with the EFA
Act and this subpart. Banks in these states would have to follow the
state disclosure rules for these deposits.
9-268
1. The Board may issue preemption determinations
upon the request of an interested party in a state. The determinations
will relate only to the provisions of subparts A and B; generally
the Board will not issue individual preemption determinations regarding
the relation of state UCC provisions to the requirements of subpart
C.
9-269
1. This provision
sets forth the information that must be included in a request by an
interested party for a preemption determination by the Board.