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COMMENTARY

SECTION 229.54—Expedited Recredit for Consumers
A. 229.54(a) Circumstances Giving Rise to a Claim
1. A consumer may make a claim for expedited recredit under this section only for a substitute check that he or she has received and for which the bank charged his or her deposit account. As a result, checks used to access loans, such as credit card checks or home-equity line of credit checks, that are reconverted to substitute checks would not give rise to an expedited-recredit claim, unless such a check was returned unpaid and the bank charged the consumer’s deposit account for the amount of the returned check. In addition, a consumer who received only a statement that contained images of multiple substitute checks per page would not be entitled to make an expedited-recredit claim, although he or she could seek redress under other provisions of law, such as section 229.52 or UCC 4-401. However, a consumer who originally received only a statement containing images of multiple substitute checks per page but later received a substitute check, such as in response to a request for a copy of a check shown in the statement, could bring a claim if the other expedited-recredit criteria were met. Although a consumer must at some point have received a substitute check to make an expedited-recredit claim, the consumer need not be in possession of the substitute check at the time he or she submits the claim.
2. A consumer must in good faith assert that the bank improperly charged the consumer’s account for the substitute check or that the consumer has a warranty claim for the substitute check (or both). The warranty in question could be a substitute-check warranty described in section 229.52 or any other warranty that a bank provides with respect to a check under other law. A consumer could, for example, have a warranty claim under section 229.34(a) or (d), which contain returned-check warranties that are made to the owner of the check.
3. A consumer’s recovery under the expedited-recredit section is limited to the amount of his or her loss, up to the amount of the substitute check subject to the claim, plus interest if the consumer’s account is an interest-bearing account. The consumer’s loss could include fees that resulted from the allegedly incorrect charge, such as bounced-check fees that were imposed because the improper charge caused the bank to dishonor subsequently presented checks that it otherwise would have honored. A consumer who suffers a total loss greater than the amount of the substitute check plus interest could attempt to recover the remainder of that loss by bringing warranty, indemnity, or other claim under this subpart or other applicable law.
Examples
a. A consumer who received a substitute check believed that he or she wrote the check for $150, but the bank charged his or her account for $1,500. The amount on the substitute check the consumer received is illegible. If the substitute check contained a blurry image of what was a legible original check, the consumer could have a claim for a breach of the legal-equivalence warranty in addition to an improper-charge claim. Because the amount of the check cannot be determined from the substitute check provided to the consumer, the consumer, if acting in good faith, could assert that the production of the original check or a better copy of the original check is necessary to determine the validity of the claim. The consumer in this case could attempt to recover his or her losses by using the expedited-recredit procedure. The consumer’s losses recoverable under section 229.54 could include the $1,350 he or she believed was incorrectly charged plus any improperly charged fees associated with that charge, up to $150 (plus foregone interest on the amount of the consumer’s loss if the account was an interest-bearing account) The consumer could recover any additional losses, if any, under other law, such as UCC 4-401 and 4-402.
b. A consumer received a substitute check for which his or her account was charged and believed that the original check from which the substitute was derived was a forgery. The forgery was good enough that analysis of the original check was necessary to verify whether the signature is that of the consumer. Under those circumstances, the consumer, if acting in good faith, could assert that the charge was improper, that he or she therefore had incurred a loss in the amount of the check (plus foregone interest if the account was an interest-bearing account), and that he or she needed the original check to determine the validity of the forgery claim. By contrast, if the signature on the substitute check obviously was forged (for example, if the forger signed a name other than that of the account holder) and there was no other defect with the substitute check, the consumer would not need the original check or a sufficient copy to determine the fact of the forgery and thus would not be able to make an expedited-recredit claim under this section. However, the consumer would have a claim under UCC 4-401 if the item was not properly payable.
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B. 229.54(b) Procedures for Making Claims
1. The consumer must submit his or her expedited-recredit claim to the bank within 40 calendar days of the later of the day on which the bank mailed or delivered, by a means agreed to by the consumer, (1) the periodic account statement containing information concerning the transaction giving rise to the claim or (2) the substitute check giving rise to the claim. The mailing or delivery of a substitute check could be in connection with a regular account statement, in response to a consumer’s specific request for a copy of a check, or in connection with the return of a substitute check to the payee.
2. Section 229.54(b) contemplates more than one possible means of delivering an account statement or a substitute check to the consumer. The time period for making a claim thus could be triggered by the mailed, in-person, or electronic delivery of an account statement or by the mailed or in-person delivery of a substitute check. In-person delivery would include, for example, making an account statement or substitute check available at the bank for the consumer’s retrieval under an arrangement agreed to by the consumer. In the case of a mailed statement or substitute check, the 40-day period should be calculated from the postmark on the envelope. In the case of in-person delivery, the 40-day period should be calculated from the earlier of the calendar day on which delivery occurred or the bank first made the statement or substitute check available for the consumer’s retrieval.
3. A bank must extend the consumer’s time for submitting a claim for a reasonable period if the consumer is prevented from submitting his or her claim within 40 days because of extenuating circumstances. Extenuating circumstances could include, for example, the extended travel or illness of the consumer.
4. For purposes of determining the timeliness of a consumer’s actions, a consumer’s claim is considered received on the banking day on which the consumer’s bank receives a complete claim in person or by telephone or on the banking day on which the consumer’s bank receives a letter or e-mail containing a complete claim. (But see paragraphs 9(11 of this section for a discussion of time periods related to oral claims that the bank requires to be put in writing.)
5. A consumer who makes an untimely claim would not be entitled to recover his or her losses using the expedited-recredit procedure. However, he or she still could have rights under other law, such as a warranty or indemnity claim under subpart D, a claim for an improper charge to his or her account under UCC 4-401, or a claim for wrongful dishonor under UCC 4-402.
6. A consumer’s claim must include the reason why the consumer believes that his or her account was charged improperly or why he or she has a warranty claim. A charge could be improper, for example, if the bank charged the consumer’s account for an amount different than the consumer believes he or she authorized or charged the consumer more than once for the same check, or if the check in question was a forgery or otherwise fraudulent.
7. A consumer also must provide a reason why production of the original check or a sufficient copy is necessary to determine the validity of the claim identified by the consumer. For example, if the consumer believed that the bank charged his or her account for the wrong amount, the original check might be necessary to prove this claim if the amount of the substitute check were illegible. Similarly, if the consumer believed that his or her signature had been forged, the original check might be necessary to confirm the forgery if, for example, pen pressure or similar analysis were necessary to determine the genuineness of the signature.
8. The information that the consumer is required to provide under section 229.54(b)(2)(iv) to facilitate the bank’s investigation of the claim could include, for example, a copy of the allegedly defective substitute check or information related to that check, such as the number, amount, and payee.
9. A bank may accept an expedited-recredit claim in any form but could in its discretion require the consumer to submit the claim in writing. A bank that requires a recredit claim to be in writing must inform the consumer of that requirement and provide a location to which such a written claim should be sent. If the consumer attempts to make a claim orally, the bank must inform the consumer at that time of the written-notice requirement. A bank that receives a timely oral claim and then requires the consumer to submit the claim in writing may require the consumer to submit the written claim within 10 business days of the bank’s receipt of the timely oral claim. If the consumer’s oral claim was timely and the consumer’s written claim was received within the 10-day period for submitting the claim in writing, the consumer would satisfy the requirement of section 229.54(b)(1) to submit his or her claim within 40 days, even if the bank received the written claim after that 40-day period.
10. A bank may permit but may not require a consumer to submit a written claim electronically.
11. If a bank requires a consumer to submit a claim in writing, the bank may compute time periods for the bank’s action on the claim from the date that the bank received the written claim. Thus, if a consumer called the bank to make an expedited-recredit claim and the bank required the consumer to submit the claim in writing, the time at which the bank must take action on the claim would be determined based on the date on which the bank received the written claim, not the date on which the consumer made the oral claim.
12. Regardless of whether the consumer’s communication with the bank is oral or written, a consumer complaint that does not contain all the elements described in section 229.54(b) is not a claim for purposes of section 229.54. If the consumer attempts to submit a claim but does not provide all the required information, then the bank has a duty to inform the consumer that the complaint does not constitute a claim under section 229.54 and identify what information is missing.
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C. 229.54(c) Action on Claims
1. If the bank has not determined whether or not the consumer’s claim is valid by the end of the 10th business day after the banking day on which the consumer submitted the claim, the bank must by that time recredit the consumer’s account for the amount of the consumer’s loss, up to the lesser of the amount of the substitute check or $2,500, plus interest if the account is an interest-bearing account. A bank must provide the recredit pending investigation for each substitute check for which the consumer submitted a claim, even if the consumer submitted multiple substitute-check claims in the same communication.
2. A bank that provides a recredit to the consumer, either provisionally or after determining that the consumer’s claim is valid, may reverse the amount of the recredit if the bank later determines that the claim in fact was not valid. A bank that reverses a recredit also may reverse the amount of any interest that it has paid on the previously recredited amount. A bank’s time for reversing a recredit may be limited by a statute of limitations.
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D. 229.54(d) Availability of Recredit
1. The availability of a recredit provided by a bank under section 229.54(c) is governed solely by section 229.54(d) and therefore is not subject to the availability provisions of subpart B. A bank generally must make a recredit available for withdrawal no later than the start of the business day after the banking day on which the bank provided the recredit. However, a bank may delay the availability of up to the first $2,500 that it provisionally recredits to a consumer account under section 229.54(c)(3)(i) if (1) the account is a new account, (2) without regard to the substitute check giving rise to the recredit claim, the account has been repeatedly overdrawn during the six-month period ending on the date the bank received the claim, or (3) the bank has reasonable cause to believe that the claim is fraudulent. These first two exceptions are meant to operate in the same manner as the corresponding new-account and repeated-overdraft exceptions in subpart B, as described in section 229.13(a) and (d) and the commentary thereto regarding application of the exceptions. When a recredit amount for which a bank delays availability contains an interest component, that component also is subject to the delay because it is part of the amount recredited under section 229.54(c)(3)(i). However, interest continues to accrue during the hold period.
2. Section 229.54(d)(2) describes the maximum period of time that a bank may delay availability of a recredit provided under section 229.54(c). The bank may delay availability under one of the three listed exceptions until the business day after the banking day on which the bank determines that the consumer’s claim is valid or the 45th calendar day after the banking day on which the bank received the consumer’s claim, whichever is earlier. The only portion of the recredit that is subject to delay under section 229.54(d)(2) is the amount that the bank recredits under section 229.54(c)(3)(i) (including the interest component, if any) pending its investigation of a claim.
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E. 229.54(e) Notices Relating to Consumer Expedited-Recredit Claims
1. A bank must notify a consumer of its action regarding a recredit claim no later than the business day after the banking day that the bank makes a recredit, determines a claim is not valid, or reverses a recredit, as appropriate. As provided in section 229.58, a bank may provide any notice required by this section by U.S. mail or by any other means through which the consumer has agreed to receive account information.
2. A bank that denies the consumer’s recredit claim must demonstrate to the consumer that the substitute check was properly charged or that the warranty claim was not valid, such as by explaining the reason that the substitute-check charge was proper or the consumer’s warranty claim was not valid. For example, if a consumer has claimed that the bank charged its account for an improper amount, the bank denying that claim must explain why it determined that the charged amount was proper.
3. A bank denying a recredit claim also must provide the original check or a sufficient copy, unless the bank is providing the claim-denial notice electronically and the consumer has agreed to receive that type of information electronically. In that case, section 229.58 allows the bank instead to provide an image of the original check or an image of the sufficient copy that the bank would have sent to the consumer had the bank provided the notice by mail.
4. A bank that relies on information or documents in addition to the original check or sufficient copy when denying a consumer expedited-recredit claim also must either provide such information or documents to the consumer or inform the consumer that he or she may request copies of such information or documents. This requirement does not apply to a bank that relies only on the original check or a sufficient copy to make its determination.
5. Models C-22 through C-25 in appendix C contain model language for each of three notices described in section 229.54(e). A bank may, but is not required to, use the language listed in the appendix. The Check 21 Act does not provide banks that use these models with a safe harbor. However, the Board has published these models to aid banks’ efforts to comply with section 229.54(e).
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F. 229.54(f) Recredit Does Not Abrogate Other Liabilities.
1. The amount that a consumer may recover under section 229.54 is limited to the lesser of the amount of his or her loss or the amount of the substitute check, plus interest on that amount if his or her account earns interest. However, a consumer’s total loss associated with the substitute check could exceed that amount, and the consumer could be entitled to additional damages under other law. For example, if a consumer’s loss exceeded the amount of the substitute check plus interest and he or she had both a warranty and an indemnity claim with respect to the substitute check, he or she would be entitled to additional damages under section 229.53 of this subpart. Similarly, if a consumer was charged bounced-check fees as a result of an improperly charged substitute check and could not recover all of those fees because of the section 229.54’s limitation on recovery, he or she could attempt to recover additional amounts under UCC 4-402.

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