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
the provisions of New York law concerning the availability of funds.
This preemption determination addresses the relation of the act and
Regulation CC to the New York funds-availability law. (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 1983, the New York State Banking Department, pursuant
to section 14-d of the New York Banking Law, issued regulations requiring
that funds deposited in an account be made available for withdrawal
within specified time periods, and provided certain exceptions to
those availability schedules. Part 34 of the New York State Banking
Department’s general regulations established time frames within which
commercial banks, trust companies, and branches of foreign banks (banks);
and savings banks, savings and loan associations, and credit unions
(savings institutions) must make funds deposited in customer accounts
available for withdrawal.
The Banking Department amended part 34, effective September
1, 1988, generally to exclude accounts covered by Regulation CC from
the scope of the state regulation. Part 34.4(a)(2) and (b)(2) of the
revised New York rules, however, continue to apply to checks deposited
to accounts, as defined in Regulation CC. These provisions require
that the proceeds of nonlocal checks payable by a New York institution
be made available for withdrawal not later than the start of the fourth
business day following deposit, if deposited in a bank, or the fifth
business day following deposit, if deposited in a savings institution.
The revised regulation also provides that, with respect to savings
accounts and time deposits, New York institutions could elect to comply
with either the state or federal availability and disclosure requirements.
This preemption determination supersedes the determination
issued by the Board on August 18, 1988 (53 Fed. Reg. 32,357
(August 24, 1988)).
Coverage The New York law and regulation govern
the availability of funds in savings accounts and time deposits, as
well as accounts as defined in section 229.2(a) of Regulation
CC. The New York law continues to apply to deposits to savings accounts
and time deposits 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 New York law and regulation apply to items deposited
to accounts. Part 34.3(e) defines item as “a check, negotiable
order of withdrawal or money order deposited into an account.”
The Board interprets the definition of item in New York law
to be consistent with the definition of check in Regulation
CC (§ 229.2(k)).
Availability
Schedules The provisions of New York
law governing the availability of in-state nonlocal items provide
for a shorter hold than is provided under Regulation CC, and supersede
the federal availability requirements. With the exception of these
provisions, the New York regulation does not apply to deposits to
accounts covered by Regulation CC.
Temporary schedule. The time periods for
the availability of in-state nonlocal checks, contained in part 34.4(a)(2)
and (b)(2), are shorter than the seventh-business-day availability
required for nonlocal checks under section 229.11(c) of Regulation
CC, although they are not necessarily shorter than the schedules for
nonlocal checks set forth in section 229.11(c)(2) and appendix B-1
of Regulation CC. Thus, these state schedules supersede the federal
schedule to the extent that they apply to an item payable by a New
York bank or savings institution that is defined as a nonlocal check
under Regulation CC and the applicable state schedule is less than
the applicable schedule specified in section 229.11(c) and appendix
B-1.
Permanent schedule. The New York schedule for banks supersedes the Regulation CC requirement
in the permanent schedule, effective September 1, 1990, that nonlocal
checks be made available for withdrawal by the start of the fifth
business day following deposit, to the extent that the in-state checks
are defined as nonlocal under Regulation CC, and the Regulation CC
schedule for nonlocal checks is not shortened under section 229.12(c)(2)
and appendix B-2 of Regulation CC. In addition, the New York schedule
for savings institutions supersedes the Regulation CC time-period
adjustment for withdrawal by cash or similar means in the permanent
schedule, to the extent that the in-state checks are defined as nonlocal
under Regulation CC, and the Regulation CC schedule for nonlocal checks
is not shortened under section 229.12(c)(2) and appendix B-2.
Exceptions to the availability
schedules. New York law provides exceptions to the state availability
schedules for large deposits, new accounts, repeated overdrafters,
doubtful collectibility, foreign items, and emergency conditions (part
34.4). The state exceptions apply only with respect to deposits of
in-state nonlocal checks that are subject to the state availability
schedule. For these deposits, the depositary bank may invoke a state
exception and place a hold on the deposit up to the federal availability-schedule
limit for that type of deposit. Once the federal availability-schedule
limit is reached, the depositary bank may further extend the hold
under any of the federal exceptions that apply to that 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 revised New York
regulation does not contain funds-availability disclosure requirements
applicable to accounts subject to Regulation CC.