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 Wisconsin law concerning availability of funds.
This preemption determination specifies those provisions of the Wisconsin
funds-availability law that are not preempted by 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.)
Wisconsin Statutes sections 404.213(4m), 215.136, and
186.117 require Wisconsin banks, savings and loan associations, and
credit unions, respectively, to make funds deposited in accounts available
for withdrawal within specified time frames. Generally, checks drawn
on the U.S. Treasury, the state of Wisconsin, or on a local government
located in Wisconsin must be made available for withdrawal by the
second day following deposit. (The law governing commercial banks
determines availability based on banking day; the laws governing savings
and loan associations and credit unions determine availability based
on business days.) In-state and out-of-state checks must be made available
for withdrawal within five days and eight days following deposit,
respectively. Exceptions are provided for new accounts and reason
to doubt collectibility. In addition, Wisconsin Statutes section 404.103
permits commercial banks to vary these availability requirements by
agreement.
Coverage Wisconsin law defines account, with respect
to the rules governing commercial banks, as “any account with a bank
and includes a checking, time, interest or savings account” (Wisconsin
Statutes section 404.104(1)(a)). The statutes relating to the funds-availability
requirements applicable to savings and loan associations and credit
unions do not define the term account. The federal preemption
of state funds-availability requirements applies only to accounts
subject to Regulation CC, which generally consist of transaction accounts.
Regulation CC does not affect the Wisconsin law to the extent that
the state law applies to deposits in savings, time, 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 Wisconsin 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 Wisconsin law but are not subject to Regulation CC will
continue to be covered by the state availability schedules and exceptions.
Availability Schedules Temporary schedule. The Wisconsin statute requires that in-state nonlocal checks be
made available for withdrawal not later than the fifth day following
deposit (Wisconsin Statutes §§ 404.213(4m)(b)(2); 215.136(2)(b); 186.117(2)(b)).
This time period is shorter than the seventh-business-day availability
required for nonlocal checks under section 229.11(c) of Regulation
CC, although it is not shorter than the schedules for nonlocal checks
set forth in section 229.11(c)(2) and appendix B-1 of Regulation CC.
Thus, the state schedule for in-state nonlocal checks supersedes the
federal schedule to the extent that it applies to an item payable
by a Wisconsin bank that is defined as a nonlocal check under Regulation
CC and is not subject to reduced schedules under section 229.11(c)(2)
and appendix B-1.
Permanent
schedule. Under the federal permanent availability schedule,
nonlocal checks must be made available for withdrawal not later than
the fifth business day following deposit. The fifth-day availability
requirement for in-state items in the Wisconsin statute 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.
Next-day availability. Under the Wisconsin
statute, the proceeds of state and local government checks must be
made available for withdrawal by the second day following deposit,
if the check is indorsed only by the person to whom it was issued
(Wisconsin Statutes §§ 404.213(4m)(b)(1); 215.136(2)(b); and 186.117(2)(a)).
Regulation CC requires next-day availability for these checks if they
are (1) deposited in an account of a payee of the check, (2) deposited
in a depositary bank located in the same state as the state or local
government that issued the check, (3) deposited in person to an employee
of the depositary bank, and (4) deposited with a special deposit slip,
if the depositary bank informed its customers that use of such a slip
is a condition to next-day availability. Under the federal law, if
a state or local government check is not deposited in person to an
employee of the depositary bank, but meets the other conditions set
forth in section 229.10(c)(1)(iv), the funds must be made available
for withdrawal not later than the second business day following deposit.
The Wisconsin statute supersedes Regulation CC to the extent
that the state law does not permit the use of a special deposit slip
as a condition to receipt of second-day availability.
Exceptions to the schedules. Wisconsin law provides exceptions to the state availability schedules
for new accounts (those opened less than 90 days) and reason to doubt
collectibility (Wisconsin Statutes §§ 404.213(4m)(b); 215.136(2);
and 186.117(2)). The state availability law also permits commercial
banks to vary the funds-availability requirements by agreement (Wisconsin
Statute § 404.103(1)). In all cases where the federal schedule preempts
the state schedule, only the federal exceptions apply. For deposits
that are covered by the state availability schedule (e.g., in-state
nonlocal checks), a state exception must apply in order to extend
the state availability schedule up to the federal availability schedule.
Once the deposit is held up to the federal availability limit under
a state exception, the depositary bank may further extend the hold
only if a federal exception 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 § 229.13(g) of Regulation
CC.
Business day/banking
day. The definitions of business day and banking day in the Wisconsin statutes are preempted by the Regulation CC definition
of those terms. For determining the permissible hold under the Wisconsin
schedules that supersede the Regulation CC schedule, deposits are
considered available for withdrawal on the specified number of business
days following the banking day of deposit.
Wisconsin law considers funds to be deposited, for the
purpose of determining when they must be made available for withdrawal,
when an item is “received at the proof and transit facility of the
depository.” For the purposes of this preemption determination, funds
are considered deposited under Wisconsin law in accordance with the
rules set forth in section 229.19(a) of Regulation CC.
Disclosures The Wisconsin statute does not require disclosure of a bank’s funds-availability
policy. The state law does require, however, that a bank give notice
to its customer if it extends the time within which funds will be
available for withdrawal due to the bank’s doubt as to the collectibility
of the item (Wisconsin Statutes §§ 404.213(4m)(b); 215.136(2); and
186.117(2)).
Regulation CC preempts state disclosure requirements concerning
funds availability that relate to accounts that are inconsistent with
the federal requirements. The state requirement is different from,
and therefore inconsistent with, the federal disclosure rules (§ 229.20(c)(2)).
Thus, the Wisconsin statute is preempted by Regulation CC to the extent
that the state notice requirement applies to accounts as defined
by Regulation CC. The Wisconsin requirement would continue to apply
to accounts, such as savings and time accounts, not governed by the
Regulation CC disclosure requirements.