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 Massachusetts law relating to the availability of funds.
This preemption determination addresses the relationship of the act
and Regulation CC to the Massachusetts funds-availability law. (See
also the Board’s preemption determination regarding the Uniform Commer
cial Code,
section 4-213(5), pertaining to availability of cash deposits (at
9-660).)
In 1988, Massachusetts amended its statute governing funds
availability (Mass. Gen. L. ch. 167D, § 35), to require Massachusetts
banking institutions to make funds available for withdrawal and disclose
their availability policies in accordance with the act and Regulation
CC. The Massachusetts law, however, provides that “local originating
depository institution” is to be defined as any originating depository
institution located in the commonwealth.
Coverage The
Massachusetts statute governs the availability of funds deposited
in “any demand deposit, negotiable order of withdrawal account, savings
deposit, share account or other asset account.” Regulation CC applies
only to accounts as defined in section 229.2(a). Regulation
CC does not affect the Massachusetts 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.
Availability Schedules The Massachusetts
definition of local originating depository institution (local
paying bank in Regulation CC terminology) requires that in-state checks
that are nonlocal checks under Regulation CC be made available in
accordance with the Regulation CC local schedule. The Massachusetts
law supersedes Regulation CC under the temporary and permanent schedule
with respect to nonlocal checks payable by banks located in Massachusetts
and deposited into accounts. Regulation CC preempts the Massachusetts
law, however, to the extent the state law does not define banks located
outside of Massachusetts, but in the same check-processing region
as the paying bank, as local originating depository institutions.
Disclosures The Massachusetts regulation incorporates the Regulation
CC disclosure requirements with respect to both accounts covered by
Regulation CC and savings and other accounts not governed by the federal
regulation. Because the state requirements are consistent with the
federal requirements, the Massachusetts regulation is not preempted
by, nor does it supersede, the federal law. The Massachusetts disclosure
rules would continue to apply to accounts not governed by the Regulation
CC disclosure requirements.