Background The Board has been requested, in accordance
with section 229.20(d) of Regulation CC (12 CFR 229), to determine
whether the Expedited Funds Availability Act (the act) and subpart
B (and in connection therewith, subpart A) of Regulation CC, preempt
provisions of Connecticut law relating to the availability of funds.
This preemption determination specifies those provisions of the Connecticut
funds-availability law that supersede the act and Regulation CC. (See
also the Board’s preemption determination regarding the Uniform Commercial
Code, section 4-213(5), pertaining to availability of cash deposits
(at
9-660).)
In 1987, Connecticut amended its statute governing funds
availability (Conn. Gen. Stat. § 36-9v), which requires Connecticut
depository institutions to make funds deposited in a checking, time,
interest, or savings account available for withdrawal within specified
periods.
Generally, the Connecticut statute, as amended, provides
that items deposited in a checking, time, interest, or savings account
at a depository institution must be available for withdrawal in accordance
with the following table:
Depository institution
must be available for withdrawal in accordance
|
Availability |
On-us checks |
2nd day |
In-state checks |
4th day |
Out-of-state checks |
6th day |
Exceptions to the schedules are provided
for items received for deposit for the purpose of opening an account
and for items that the depositary bank has reason to believe will
not clear. The Connecticut statute also requires availability-policy
disclosures to depositors in the form of written notices and notices
posted conspicuously at each branch.
Coverage The Connecticut statute governs the availability of funds deposited
in savings and time accounts, as well as accounts as defined
in section 229.2(a) of Regulation CC. The federal preemption of state
funds-availability requirements only applies to accounts subject to
Regulation CC, which generally consist of transaction accounts. Regulation
CC does not affect the Connecticut statute to the extent that the
state law applies to deposits in savings and other accounts (including
transaction accounts where the account holder is a bank, foreign bank,
or the U.S. Treasury) that are not accounts under Regulation CC. (Note,
however, that under section 229.19(e) of Regulation CC, “Holds on
Other Funds,” the federal availability schedules may apply to savings,
time, and other accounts not defined as accounts under Regulation
CC, in certain circumstances.)
The Connecticut statute applies to items deposited
in accounts. This term encompasses instruments that are not defined
as checks in Regulation CC (§ 229.2(k)), such as nonnegotiable
instruments, and are therefore not subject to Regulation CC’s provisions
governing funds availability. Those items that are subject
to Connecticut law but are not subject to Regulation CC will continue
to be covered by the state availability schedules and exceptions.
Availability Schedules Temporary schedule. Connecticut law provides that certain checks that are nonlocal under
Regulation CC must be available in a shorter time (sixth business
day after deposit for checks payable by depository institutions not
located in Connecticut) than under the federal regulation (seventh
business day after deposit under the temporary schedule for nonlocal
checks). Accordingly, the Connecticut law supersedes Regulation CC
with respect to nonlocal checks (other than checks covered by appendix
B-1) deposited in accounts until the federal permanent availability
schedules take effect on September 1, 1990.
The Connecticut statute does not specify whether it applies
to deposits of checks at nonproprietary ATMs. Under the temporary
schedule in Regulation CC, deposits at nonproprietary ATMs must be
made available for withdrawal at the start of the seventh business
day after deposit. To the extent that the Connecticut schedules provide
for shorter availability for deposits at nonproprietary ATMs, they
would supersede the temporary schedule in Regulation CC for deposits
at nonproprietary ATMs specified in section 229.11(d).
Exceptions to the availability
schedule. The Connecticut law provides exceptions for items received
for deposit for the purpose of opening new accounts and for items
that the depositary bank has reason to believe will not clear. In
all cases where the federal availability schedule preempts the state
schedule, only the federal exceptions will apply. For deposits that
are covered by the state availability schedule (e.g., nonlocal out-of-state
checks under the temporary schedule), the state exceptions may be
used to extend the state availability schedule (of six business days)
to meet the federal availability schedule (of seven business days).
Once the deposit is held up to the federal availability schedule limit
under a state exception, the depositary bank may further extend the
hold under any federal exception that can be applied to the deposit.
Any time a depositary bank invokes an exception to extend a hold beyond
the time periods otherwise permitted by law, it must give notice of
the extended hold to its customer, in accordance with section 229.13(g)
of Regulation CC.
Disclosures The Connecticut statute (Conn. Gen. Stat.
§ 36-9v(b)) requires written notice to depositors of an institution’s
check-hold policy and requires a notice of the policy to be posted
in each branch.
Regulation CC preempts state disclosure requirements concerning
funds availability that relate to accounts that are inconsistent
with the federal requirements. The state requirements are different
from, and therefore inconsistent with, the federal disclosure rules
(§ 229.20(c)(2)). Thus, the Connecticut statute is preempted by Regulation
CC to the extent that these disclosure provisions apply to accounts as defined by Regulation CC. The Connecticut disclosure rules would
continue to apply to accounts, such as savings and time accounts,
not governed by the Regulation CC disclosure requirements.