Appendix E to Part 229 - Commentary
12:3.0.1.1.9.6.8.1.39 : Appendix E
Appendix E to Part 229 - Commentary I. Introduction A. Background
1. The Board interpretations, which are labeled “Commentary” and
follow each section of Regulation CC (12 CFR Part 229), provide
background material to explain the Board's intent in adopting a
particular part of the regulation; the Commentary also provides
examples to aid in understanding how a particular requirement is to
work. Under section 611(e) of the Expedited Funds Availability Act
(12 U.S.C. 4010(e)), no provision of section 611 imposing any
liability shall apply to any act done or omitted in good faith
conformity with any rule, regulation, or interpretation thereof by
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System,
notwithstanding the fact that after such act or omission has
occurred, such rule, regulation, or interpretation is amended,
rescinded, or determined by judicial or other authority to be
invalid for any reason. The Commentary is an “interpretation” of a
regulation by the Board within the meaning of section 611.
II. Section 229.2 Definitions A. Background
1. Section 229.2 defines the terms used in the regulation. For
the most part, terms are defined as they are in section 602 of the
Expedited Funds Availability Act (12 U.S.C. 4001). The Board has
made a number of changes for the sake of clarity, to conform the
terminology to that which is familiar to the banking industry, to
define terms that are not defined in the EFA Act, and to carry out
the purposes of the EFA Act. The Board also has incorporated by
reference the definitions of the Uniform Commercial Code where
appropriate. Some of Regulation CC's definitions are
self-explanatory and therefore are not discussed in this
Commentary.
B. 229.2(a) Account
1. The EFA Act defines account to mean “a demand deposit account
or similar transaction account at a depository institution.” The
regulation defines account, for purposes other than subpart D, in
terms of the definition of “transaction account” in the Board's
Regulation D (12 CFR part 204). This definition of account,
however, excludes certain deposits, such as nondocumentary
obligations (see 12 CFR 204.2(a)(1)(vii)), that are covered under
the definition of “transaction account” in Regulation D. The
definition applies to accounts with general third party payment
powers but does not cover time deposits or savings deposits,
including money market deposit accounts, even though they may have
limited third party payment powers. The Board believes that it is
appropriate to exclude these accounts because of the reference to
demand deposits in the EFA Act, which suggests that the EFA Act is
intended to apply only to accounts that permit unlimited third
party transfers.
2. The term account also differs from the definition of
transaction account in Regulation D because the term account refers
to accounts held at banks. Under Subparts A and C, the term bank
includes not only any depository institution, as defined in the EFA
Act, but also any person engaged in the business of banking, such
as a Federal Reserve Bank, a Federal Home Loan Bank, or a private
banker that is not subject to Regulation D. Thus, accounts at these
institutions benefit from the expeditious return requirements of
Subpart C.
3. Interbank deposits, including accounts of offices of domestic
banks or foreign banks located outside the United States, and
direct and indirect accounts of the United States Treasury
(including Treasury General Accounts and Treasury Tax and Loan
deposits) are exempt from subpart B and, in connection therewith,
subpart A. However, interbank deposits are included as accounts for
purposes of subparts C and D and, in connection therewith, subpart
A.
4. The Check 21 Act defines account to mean any deposit account
at a bank. Therefore, for purposes of subpart D and, in connection
therewith, subpart A, account means any deposit, as that term is
defined by § 204.2(a)(1)(i) of Regulation D, at a bank. Many
deposits that are not accounts for purposes of the other subparts
of Regulation CC, such as savings deposits, are accounts for
purposes of subpart D.
C. 229.2(b) Automated Clearinghouse (ACH)
1. The Board has defined automated clearinghouse as a facility
that processes debit and credit transfers under rules established
by a Federal Reserve Bank operating circular governing automated
clearinghouse items or the rules of an ACH association. ACH credit
transfers are included in the definition of electronic payment.
2. The reference to “debit and credit transfers” does not refer
to the corresponding debit and credit entries that are part of the
same transaction, but to different kinds of ACH payments. In an ACH
credit transfer, the originator orders that its account be debited
and another account credited. In an ACH debit transfer, the
originator, with prior authorization, orders another account to be
debited and the originator's account to be credited.
3. A facility that handles only wire transfers (defined
elsewhere) is not an ACH.
D. 229.2(c) Automated Teller Machine (ATM)
1. ATM is not defined in the EFA Act. The regulation defines an
ATM as an electronic device located in the United States at which a
natural person may make deposits to an account by cash or check and
perform other account transactions. Point-of-sale terminals,
machines that only dispense cash, night depositories, and lobby
deposit boxes are not ATMs within the meaning of the definition,
either because they do not accept deposits of cash or checks
(e.g., point-of-sale terminals and cash dispensers) or
because they only accept deposits (e.g., night depositories
and lobby boxes) and cannot perform other transactions. A lobby
deposit box or similar receptacle in which written payment orders
or deposits may be placed is not an ATM.
2. A facility may be an ATM within this definition even if it is
a branch under state or federal law, although an ATM is not a
branch as that term is used in this regulation.
E. 229.2(d) Available for Withdrawal
1. Under this definition, when funds become available for
withdrawal, the funds may be put to all uses for which the customer
may use actually and finally collected funds in the customer's
account under the customer's account agreement with the bank.
Examples of such uses include payment of checks drawn on the
account, certification of checks, electronic payments, and cash
withdrawals. Funds are available for these uses notwithstanding
provisions of other law that may restrict the use of uncollected
funds (e.g., 18 U.S.C. 1004; 12 U.S.C. 331).
2. If a bank makes funds available to a customer for a specific
purpose (such as paying checks that would otherwise overdraw the
customer's account and be returned for insufficient funds) before
the funds must be made available under the bank's policy or this
regulation, it may nevertheless apply a hold consistent with this
regulation to those funds for other purposes (such as cash
withdrawals). For purposes of this regulation, funds are considered
available for withdrawal even though they are being held by the
bank to satisfy an obligation of the customer other than the
customer's potential liability for the return of the check. For
example, a bank does not violate its obligations under this subpart
by holding funds to satisfy a garnishment, tax levy, or court order
restricting disbursements from the account; or to satisfy the
customer's liability arising from the certification of a check,
sale of a cashier's or teller's check, guaranty or acceptance of a
check, or similar transaction to be debited from the customer's
account.
F. 229.2(e) Bank
1. The EFA Act uses the term depository institution, which it
defines by reference to section 19(b)(1)(A)(i) through (vi) of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 461(b)(1)(A)(i) through (vi)). This
regulation uses the term bank, a term that conforms to the usage
the Board has previously adopted in Regulation J. Bank is also used
in Articles 4 and 4A of the Uniform Commercial Code.
2. Bank is defined to include depository institutions, such as
commercial banks, savings banks, savings and loan associations, and
credit unions as defined in the EFA Act, and U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banks. For purposes of Subpart B, the term does
not include corporations organized under section 25A of the Federal
Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. 611-631 (Edge corporations) or corporations
having an agreement or undertaking with the Board under section 25
of the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. 601-604a (agreement
corporations). For purposes of Subparts C and D, and in connection
therewith, Subpart A, any Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Home Loan
Bank, or any other person engaged in the business of banking is
regarded as a bank. The phrase “any other person engaged in the
business of banking” is derived from U.C.C. 1-201(4), and is
intended to cover entities that handle checks for collection and
payment, such as Edge and agreement corporations, commercial
lending companies under 12 U.S.C. 3101, certain industrial banks,
and private bankers, so that virtually all checks will be covered
by the same rules for forward collection and return, even though
they may not be covered by the requirements of Subpart B. For the
purposes of Subparts C and D, and in connection therewith, Subpart
A, the term also may include a state or a unit of general local
government to the extent that it pays warrants or other drafts
drawn directly on the state or local government itself, and the
warrants or other drafts are sent to the state or local government
for payment or collection.
3. Unless otherwise specified, the term bank includes all of a
bank's offices in the United States. The regulation does not cover
foreign offices of U.S. banks.
4. For purposes of subpart D and, in connection therewith,
subpart A, the term bank also includes the Treasury of the United
States and the United States Postal Service to the extent that they
act as paying banks because the Check 21 Act includes these two
entities in the definition of the term bank to the extent that they
act as payors.
G. 229.2(f) Banking Day and (g) Business Day
1. The EFA Act defines business day as any day excluding
Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. Legal holiday, however, is
not defined, and the variety of local holidays, together with the
practice of some banks to close midweek, makes the EFA Act's
definition difficult to apply. The Board believes that two kinds of
business days are relevant. First, when determining the day when
funds are deposited or when a bank must perform certain actions
(such as returning a check), the focus should be on a day that the
bank is actually open for business. Second, when counting days for
purposes of determining when funds must be available under the
regulation or when notice of nonpayment must be received by the
depositary bank, there would be confusion and uncertainty in trying
to follow the schedule of a particular bank, and there is less need
to identify a day when a particular bank is open. Most banks that
act as intermediaries (large correspondents and Federal Reserve
Banks) follow the same holiday schedule. Accordingly, the
regulation has two definitions: Business day generally follows the
standard Federal Reserve Bank holiday schedule (which is followed
by most large banks), and banking day is defined to mean that part
of a business day on which a bank is open for substantially all of
its banking activities.
2. The definition of banking day corresponds to the definition
of banking day in U.C.C. 4-104(a)(3), except that a banking day is
defined in terms of a business day. Thus, if a bank is open on
Saturday, Saturday might be a banking day for purposes of the
U.C.C., but it would not be a banking day for purposes of
Regulation CC because Saturday is never a business day under the
regulation.
3. The definition of banking day is phrased in terms of when “an
office of a bank is open” to indicate that a bank may observe a
banking day on a per-branch basis. A deposit made at an ATM or
off-premise facility (such as a remote depository or a lock box) is
considered made at the branch holding the account into which the
deposit is made for the purpose of determining the day of deposit.
All other deposits are considered made at the branch at which the
deposit is received. For example, under § 229.19(a)(1), funds
deposited at an ATM are considered deposited at the time they are
received at the ATM. On a calendar day that is a banking day for
the branch or other location of the depositary bank at which the
account is maintained, a deposit received at an ATM before the
ATM's cut-off hour is considered deposited on that banking day, and
a deposit received at an ATM after the ATM's cut-off hour is
considered deposited on the next banking day of the branch or other
location where the account is maintained. On a calendar day that is
not a banking day for the account-holding location, all ATM
deposits are considered deposited on that location's next banking
day. This rule for determining the day of deposit also would apply
to a deposit to an off-premise facility, such as a night depository
or lock box, which is considered deposited when removed from the
facility and available for processing under § 229.19(a)(3). If an
unstaffed facility, such as a night depository or lock box, is on
branch premises, the day of deposit is determined by the banking
day at the branch at which the deposit is received, whether or not
it is the branch at which the account is maintained.
H. 229.2(h) Cash
1. Cash means U.S. coins and currency. The phrase in the EFA Act
“including Federal Reserve notes” has been deleted as unnecessary.
(See 31 U.S.C. 5103.)
I. 229.2(i) Cashier's Check
1. The regulation adds to the second item in the EFA Act's
definition of cashier's check the phrase, “on behalf of the bank as
drawer,” to clarify that the term cashier's check is intended to
cover only checks that a bank draws on itself. The definition of
cashier's check includes checks provided to a customer of the bank
in connection with customer deposit account activity, such as
account disbursements and interest payments. The definition also
includes checks acquired from a bank by noncustomers for remittance
purposes, such as certain loan disbursement checks. Cashier's
checks provided to customers or others are often labeled as
“cashier's check,” “officer's check,” or “official check.” The
definition excludes checks that a bank draws on itself for other
purposes, such as to pay employees and vendors, and checks issued
by the bank in connection with a payment service, such as a payroll
or a bill-paying service. Cashier's checks generally are sold by
banks to substitute the bank's credit for the customer's credit and
thereby enhance the collectibility of the checks. A check issued in
connection with a payment service generally is provided as a
convenience to the customer rather than as a guarantee of the
check's collectibility. In addition, such checks are often more
difficult to distinguish from other types of checks than are
cashier's checks as defined by this regulation.
J. 229.2(j) Certified Check
1. The EFA Act defines a certified check as one to which a bank
has certified that the drawer's signature is genuine and that the
bank has set aside funds to pay the check. Under the Uniform
Commercial Code, certification of a check means the bank's signed
agreement that it will honor the check as presented (U.C.C. 3-409).
The regulation defines certified check to include both the EFA
Act's and U.C.C.'s definitions.
K. 229.2(k) Check
1. Check is defined in section 602(7) of the EFA Act as a
negotiable demand draft drawn on or payable through an office of a
depository institution located in the United States, excluding
noncash items. The regulation includes six categories of
instruments within the definition of check.
2. The first category is negotiable demand drafts drawn on, or
payable through or at, an office of a bank. As the definition of
bank includes only offices located in the United States, this
category is limited to checks drawn on, or payable through or at, a
banking office located in the United States.
3. The EFA Act treats drafts payable through a bank as checks,
even though under the U.C.C. the payable-through bank is a
collecting bank to make presentment and generally is not authorized
to make payment (U.C.C. 4-106(a)). The EFA Act does not expressly
address items that are payable at a bank. This regulation treats
both payable-through and payable-at demand drafts as checks. The
Board believes that treating demand drafts payable at a bank as
checks will not have a substantial effect on the operations of
payable-at banks - by far the largest proportion of payable-at
items are not negotiable demand drafts, but time items, such as
commercial paper, bonds, notes, bankers' acceptances, and
securities. These time items are not covered by the requirements of
the EFA Act or this regulation. (The treatment of payable-through
drafts is discussed in greater detail in connection with the
definitions of local check and paying bank.)
4. The second category is checks drawn on Federal Reserve Banks
and Federal Home Loan Banks. Principal and interest payments on
federal debt instruments often are paid with checks drawn on a
Federal Reserve Bank as fiscal agent of the United States, and
these fiscal agency checks are indistinguishable from other checks
drawn on Federal Reserve Banks. (See 31 CFR Part 355.) Federal
Reserve Bank checks also are used by some banks as substitutes for
cashier's or teller's checks. Similarly, savings and loan
associations often use checks drawn on Federal Home Loan Banks as
teller's checks. The definition of check includes checks drawn on
Federal Home Loan Banks and Federal Reserve Banks because in many
cases they are the functional equivalent of Treasury checks or
teller's checks.
5. The third and fourth categories of instrument included in the
definition of check refer to government checks. The EFA Act refers
to checks drawn on the U.S. Treasury, even though these instruments
are not drawn on or payable through an office of a depository
institution, and checks drawn by state and local governments. The
EFA Act also gives the Board authority to define functionally
equivalent instruments as depository checks. 1 Thus, the EFA Act is
intended to apply to instruments other than those that meet the
strict definition of check in section 602(7) of the EFA Act. Checks
and warrants drawn by states and local governments often are used
for the purposes of making unemployment compensation payments and
other payments that are important to the recipients. Consequently,
the Board has expressly defined check to include drafts drawn on
the U.S. Treasury and drafts or warrants drawn by a state or a unit
of general local government on itself.
1 Section 602(11) of the EFA Act (12 U.S.C. 4001(11)) defines
“depository check” as “any cashier's check, certified check,
teller's check, and any other functionally equivalent instrument as
determined by the Board.”
6. The fifth category of instrument included in the definition
of check is U.S. Postal Service money orders. These instruments are
defined as checks because they often are used as a substitute for
checks by consumers, even though money orders are not negotiable
under Postal Service regulations. The Board has not provided
specific rules for other types of money orders; these instruments
generally are drawn on or payable through or payable at banks and
are treated as checks on that basis.
7. The sixth and final category of instrument included in the
definition of check is traveler's checks drawn on or payable
through or at a bank. Traveler's check is defined in paragraph (hh)
of this section.
8. Finally, for the purposes of Subparts C and D, and in
connection therewith, Subpart A, the definition of check includes
nonnegotiable demand drafts because these instruments are often
handled as cash items in the forward collection process.
9. A substitute check as defined in § 229.2(aaa) is a check for
purposes of Regulation CC and the U.C.C., even if that substitute
check does not meet the requirements for legal equivalence set
forth in § 229.51(a).
10. The definition of check does not include an instrument
payable in a foreign currency (i.e., other than in United States
money as defined in 31 U.S.C. 5101) or a credit card draft (i.e., a
sales draft used by a merchant or a draft generated by a bank as a
result of a cash advance), or an ACH debit transfer. The definition
of check includes a check that a bank may supply to a customer as a
means of accessing a credit line without the use of a credit
card.
L. 229.2(l) [Reserved] M. 229.2(m) Check Processing Region
1. The EFA Act defines this term as “the geographic area served
by a Federal Reserve bank check processing center or such larger
area as the Board may prescribe by regulations.” The Board has
defined check processing region as the territory served by one of
the Federal Reserve head offices, branches, or regional check
processing centers. Appendix A includes a list of routing numbers
arranged by Federal Reserve Bank office. The definition of check
processing region is key to determining whether a check is
considered local or nonlocal.
N. 229.2(n) Consumer Account
1. Consumer account is defined as an account used primarily for
personal, family, or household purposes. An account that does not
meet the definition of consumer account is a nonconsumer account. A
clearing account maintained at a bank directly by a brokerage firm
is not a consumer account, even if the account is used to pay
checks drawn by consumers using the funds in that account. The
bank's relationship is with the brokerage firm, and the account is
used by the brokerage firm to facilitate the clearing of its
customers' checks. Because for purposes of Regulation CC the term
account includes only deposit accounts, a consumer's revolving
credit relationship or other line of credit with a bank is not a
consumer account, even if the consumer draws on such credit lines
by using a check. Both consumer and nonconsumer accounts are
subject to the requirements of this regulation, including the
requirement that funds be made available according to specific
schedules and that the bank make specified disclosures of its
availability policies. Section 229.18(b) (notices at branch
locations) and § 229.18(e) (notice of changes in policy) apply only
to consumer accounts. Section 229.13(g)(2) (one-time exception
notice) and § 229.19(d) (use of calculated availability) apply only
to nonconsumer accounts.
O. 229.2(o) Depositary Bank
1. The regulation uses the term depositary bank rather than the
term receiving depository institution. Receiving depository
institution is a term unique to the EFA Act, while depositary bank
is the term used in Article 4 of the U.C.C. and Regulation J.
2. A depositary bank includes the bank in which the check is
first deposited. If a foreign office of a U.S. or foreign bank
sends checks to its U.S. correspondent bank for forward collection,
the U.S. correspondent is the depositary bank because foreign
offices of banks are not included in the definition of bank.
3. If a customer deposits a check in its account at a bank, the
customer's bank is the depositary bank with respect to the check.
For example, if a person deposits a check into an account at a
nonproprietary ATM, the bank holding the account into which the
check is deposited is the depositary bank even though another bank
may service the nonproprietary ATM and send the check for
collection. (Under § 229.35 the depositary bank may agree with the
bank servicing the nonproprietary ATM to have the servicing bank
place its own indorsement on the check as the depositary bank. For
the purposes of Subpart C, the bank applying its indorsement as the
depositary bank indorsement on the check is the depositary
bank.)
4. For purposes of Subpart B, a bank may act as both the
depositary bank and the paying bank with respect to a check, if the
check is payable by the bank in which it was deposited, or if the
check is payable by a nonbank payor and payable through or at the
bank in which it was deposited. A bank also is considered a
depositary bank with respect to checks it receives as payee. For
example, a bank is a depositary bank with respect to checks it
receives for loan repayment, even though these checks are not
deposited in an account at the bank. Because these checks would not
be “deposited to accounts,” they would not be subject to the
availability or disclosure requirements of Subpart B.
P. 229.2(p) Electronic Payment
1. Electronic payment is defined to mean a wire transfer as
defined in § 229.2(11) or an ACH credit transfer. The EFA Act
requires that funds deposited by wire transfer be made available
for withdrawal on the business day following deposit but expressly
leaves the definition of the term wire transfer to the Board.
Because ACH credit transfers frequently involve important consumer
payments, such as wages, the regulation requires that funds
deposited by ACH credit transfers be available for withdrawal on
the business day following deposit.
2. ACH debit transfers, even though they may be transmitted
electronically, are not defined as electronic payments because the
receiver of an ACH debit transfer has the right to return the
transfer, which would reverse the credit given to the originator.
Thus, ACH debit transfers are more like checks than wire transfers.
Further, bank customers that receive funds by originating ACH debit
transfers are primarily large corporations, which generally would
be able to negotiate with their banks for prompt availability.
3. A point-of-sale transaction would not be considered an
electronic payment unless the transaction was effected by means of
an ACH credit transfer or wire transfer.
Q. 229.2(q) Forward Collection
1. Forward collection is defined to mean the process by which a
bank sends a check to the paying bank for collection, including
sending the check to an intermediary collecting bank for
settlement, as distinguished from the process by which the check is
returned unpaid. Noncash collections are not included in the term
forward collection.
R. 229.2(r) Local Check
1. Local check is defined as a check payable by or at a local
paying bank, or, in the case of nonbank payors, payable through a
local paying bank. A check payable by a local bank but payable
through a nonlocal bank is a local check. Conversely, a check
payable through a local bank but payable by a nonlocal bank is a
nonlocal check. Where two banks are named on a check and neither is
designated as a payable-through bank, the check is considered
payable by either bank and may be considered local or nonlocal
depending on the bank to which it is sent for payment. Generally,
the depositary bank may rely on the routing number to determine
whether a check is local or nonlocal. Appendix A includes a list of
routing numbers arranged by Federal Reserve Bank Office to assist
persons in determining whether or not such a check is local. If,
however, a check is payable by one bank but payable through another
bank, the routing number appearing on the check will be that of the
payable-through bank, not the paying bank. Many credit union share
drafts and certain other checks payable by banks are payable
through other banks. In such cases, the routing number cannot be
relied on to determine whether the check is local or nonlocal. For
payable-through checks that meet the labeling requirements of §
229.36(e), the depositary bank may rely on the four-digit routing
symbol of the paying bank that is printed on the face of the check
as required by that section, e.g., in the title plate, but not on
the first four digits of the payable-through bank's routing number
printed in magnetic ink in the MICR line or in fractional form, to
determine whether the check is local or nonlocal.
S. 229.2(s) Local Paying Bank
1. “Local paying bank” is defined as a paying bank located in
the same check-processing region as the branch, contractual branch,
or proprietary ATM of the depositary bank. For example, a check
deposited at a contractual branch would be deemed local or nonlocal
based on the location of the contractual branch with respect to the
location of the paying bank.
Examples.
a. If a check that is payable by a bank that is located in the
same check processing region as the depositary bank is payable
through a bank located in another check processing region, the
check is considered local or nonlocal depending on the location of
the bank by which it is payable even if the check is sent to the
nonlocal bank for collection.
b. The location of the depositary bank is determined by the
physical location of the branch or proprietary ATM at which a check
is deposited, regardless of whether the deposit is made in person,
by mail, or otherwise. For example, if a branch of the depositary
bank located in one check-processing region sends a check that was
deposited at that branch to the depositary bank's central facility
in another check-processing region, and the central facility is in
the same check-processing region as the paying bank, the check is
still considered nonlocal. (See the commentary to the
definition of “paying bank.”)
c. If a person deposits a check to an account by mailing or
otherwise sending the check to a facility or office that is not a
bank, the check is considered local or nonlocal depending on the
location of the bank whose indorsement appears on the check as the
depositary bank.
T. 229.2(t) Merger Transaction
1. Merger transaction is a term used in Subparts B and C in
connection with transition rules for merged banks. It encompasses
mergers, consolidations, and purchase/assumption transactions of
the type that usually must be approved under the Bank Merger Act
(12 U.S.C. 1828(c)) or similar statutes; it does not encompass
acquisitions of a bank under the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1842) where an acquired bank maintains its separate
corporate existence.
2. Regulation CC adopts a one-year transition period for banks
that are party to a merger transaction during which the merged
banks will continue to be treated as separate entities. (See §§
229.19(g) and 229.40.)
U. 229.2(u) Noncash Item
1. The EFA Act defines the term check to exclude noncash items,
and defines noncash items to include checks to which another
document is attached, checks accompanied by special instructions,
or any similar item classified as a noncash item in the Board's
regulation. To qualify as a noncash item, an item must be handled
as such and may not be handled as a cash item by the depositary
bank.
2. The regulation's definition of noncash item also includes
checks that consist of more than a single thickness of paper
(except checks that qualify for handling by automated check
processing equipment, e.g. those placed in carrier envelopes) and
checks that have not been preprinted or post-encoded in magnetic
ink with the paying bank's routing number, as well as checks with
documents attached or accompanied by special instructions. (In the
context of this definition, paying bank refers to the paying bank
as defined for purposes of Subpart C.)
3. A check that has been preprinted or post-encoded with a
routing number that has been retired (e.g., because of a merger)
for at least three years is a noncash item unless the current
number is added for processing purposes by placing the check in an
encoded carrier envelope or adding a strip to the check.
4. Checks that are accompanied by special instructions are also
noncash items. For example, a person concerned about whether a
check will be paid may request the depositary bank to send a check
for collection as a noncash item with an instruction to the paying
bank to notify the depositary bank promptly when the check is paid
or dishonored.
5. For purposes of forward collection, a copy of a check is
neither a check nor a noncash item, but may be treated as either.
For purposes of return, a copy is generally a notice in lieu of
return. (See §§ 229.30(f) and 229.31(f).)
V. 229.2(v) [Reserved] W. 229.2(w) [Reserved] X. 229.2(x)
[Reserved] Y. 229.2(y) [Reserved] Z. 229.2(z) Paying Bank
1. The regulation uses this term in lieu of the EFA Act's
“originating depository institution.” For purposes of all subparts
of Regulation CC, the term paying bank includes the bank by which a
check is payable, the payable-at bank to which a check is sent, or,
if the check is payable by a nonbank payor, the bank through which
the check is payable and to which it is sent for payment or
collection. For purposes of subparts C and D, the term paying bank
also includes the payable-through bank and the bank whose routing
number appears on the check, regardless of whether the check is
payable by a different bank, provided that the check is sent for
payment or collection to the payable through bank or the bank whose
routing number appears on the check.
2. Under § 229.31, a bank designated as a payable-through bank
or payable-at bank and to which the check is sent for payment or
collection is responsible for the expedited return of checks and
notice of nonpayment requirements of Subpart C. The payable-through
or payable-at bank may contract with the payor with respect to its
liability in discharging these responsibilities. The Board believes
that the EFA Act makes a clear connection between availability and
the time it takes for checks to be cleared and returned. Allowing
the payable-through bank additional time to forward checks to the
payor and await return or pay instructions from the payor may delay
the return of these checks, increasing the risks to depositary
banks. Subpart C of this part requires payable-through and
payable-at banks to return a check expeditiously based on the time
the payable-through or payable-at bank received the check for
forward collection.
3. If a check is sent for forward collection based on the
routing number, the bank associated with the routing number is a
paying bank for the purposes of Subparts C and D requirements,
including notice of nonpayment, even if the check is not drawn by a
customer of that bank or the check is fraudulent.
4. The phrase “and to which [the check] is sent for payment or
collection” includes sending not only the physical check, but
information regarding the check under a truncation arrangement.
5. Federal Reserve Banks and Federal Home Loan Banks are also
paying banks under all subparts of the regulation with respect to
checks payable by them, even though such banks are not defined as
banks for purposes of Subpart B.
6. In accordance with the Check 21 Act, for purposes of subpart
D and, in connection therewith, subpart A, paying bank includes the
Treasury of the United States or the United States Postal Service
with respect to a check payable by that entity and sent to that
entity for payment or collection, even though the Treasury and
Postal Service are not defined as banks for purposes of subparts B
and C. Because the Federal Reserve Banks act as fiscal agents for
the Treasury and the U.S. Postal Service and in that capacity are
designated as presentment locations for Treasury checks and U.S.
Postal Service money orders, a Treasury check or U.S. Postal
Service money order presented to a Federal Reserve Bank is
considered to be presented to the Treasury or U.S. Postal Service,
respectively.
AA. 229.2(aa) Proprietary ATM
1. All deposits at nonproprietary ATMs are treated as deposits
of nonlocal checks, and deposits at proprietary ATMs generally are
treated as deposits at banking offices. The Conference Report on
the EFA Act indicates that the special availability rules for
deposits received through nonproprietary ATMs are provided because
“nonproprietary ATMs today do not distinguish among check deposits
or between check and cash deposits” (H.R. Rep. No. 261, 100th
Cong., 1st Sess. at 179 (1987)). Thus, a deposit of any combination
of cash and checks at a nonproprietary ATM may be treated as if it
were a deposit of nonlocal checks, because the depositary bank does
not know the makeup of the deposit and consequently is unable to
place different holds on cash, local check, and nonlocal check
deposits made at the ATM.
2. A colloquy between Senators Proxmire and Dodd during the
floor debate on the Competitive Equality Banking Act (133 Cong.
Rec. S11289 (Aug. 4, 1987)) indicates that whether a bank operates
the ATM is the primary criterion in determining whether the ATM is
proprietary to that bank. Because a bank should be capable of
ascertaining the composition of deposits made to an ATM operated by
that bank, an exception to the availability schedules is not
warranted for these deposits. If more than one bank meets the “owns
or operates” criterion, the ATM is considered proprietary to the
bank that operates it. For the purpose of this definition, the bank
that operates an ATM is the bank that puts checks deposited into
the ATM into the forward collection stream. An ATM owned by one or
more banks, but operated by a nonbank servicer, is considered
proprietary to the bank or banks that own it.
3. The EFA Act also includes location as a factor in determining
whether an ATM that is either owned or operated by a bank is
proprietary to that bank. The definition of proprietary ATM
includes an ATM located on the premises of the bank, either inside
the branch or on its outside wall, regardless of whether the ATM is
owned or operated by that bank. Because the EFA Act also defines a
proprietary ATM as one that is “in close proximity” to the bank,
the regulation defines an ATM located within 50 feet of a bank to
be proprietary to that bank unless it is identified as being owned
or operated by another entity. The Board believes that the
statutory proximity test was designed to apply to situations where
it would appear to the depositor that the ATM is run by his or her
bank, because of the proximity of the ATM to the bank. The Board
believes that an ATM located within 50 feet of a banking office
would be presumed proprietary to that bank unless it is clearly
identified as being owned or operated by another entity.
BB. 229.2(bb) Qualified Returned Check
1. Subpart C requires the paying bank and returning bank(s) to
return checks in an expeditious manner. The banks may meet this
responsibility by returning a check to the depositary bank by the
same general means used for forward collection of a check from the
depositary bank to the paying bank. One way to speed the return
process is to prepare the returned check for automated processing.
Qualified returned checks are identified by placing a “2” in the
case of an original check (or a “5” in the case of a substitute
check) in position 44 of the qualified return MICR line as a return
identifier in accordance with American National Standard
Specifications for Placement and Location of MICR Printing, X9.13
(hereinafter “ANS X9.13”) for original checks or American National
Standard Specifications for an Image Replacement Document - IRD,
X9.100-140 (hereinafter “ANS X9.100-140”) for substitute
checks.
2. Generally, under the standard of care imposed by § 229.38, a
paying or returning bank would be liable for any damages incurred
due to misencoding of the routing number, the amount of the check,
or return identifier on a qualified returned check unless the error
was due to problems with the depositary bank's indorsement. (See
also discussion of § 229.38(c).) A qualified returned check that
contains an encoding error would still be a qualified returned
check for purposes of the regulation.
3. A qualified returned check need not contain the elements of a
check drawn on the depositary bank, such as the name of the
depositary bank. Because indorsements and other information on
carrier envelopes or strips will not appear on a returned check
itself, banks will wish to retain carrier envelopes and/or
microfilm or other records of carrier envelopes or strips with
their check records.
CC. 229.2(cc) Returning Bank
1. Returning bank is defined to mean any bank (excluding the
paying bank and the depositary bank) handling a returned check. A
returning bank may or may not be a bank that handled the returned
check in the forward collection process. A returning bank includes
a bank that agrees to handle a returned check for expeditious
return to the depositary bank under § 229.31(a). A returning bank
is also a collecting bank for the purpose of a collecting bank's
duty to exercise ordinary care under U.C.C. 4-202(b) and is
analogous to a collecting bank for purposes of final settlement.
(See Commentary to § 229.35(b).)
DD. 229.2(dd) Routing Number
1. Each bank is assigned a routing number by an agent of the
American Bankers Association. The routing number takes two forms -
a fractional form and a nine-digit form. A paying bank is
identified by both the fractional form routing number (which
normally appears in the upper right hand corner of the check) and
the nine-digit form. The nine-digit form of the routing number of
the paying bank generally is printed in magnetic ink near the
bottom of the check (the MICR line; see ANS X9.13). In the case of
an electronic check, the routing number of the paying bank is
contained in the electronic image of the check (in nine-digit form
and fractional form) and in the electronic information related to
the check (in nine-digit form). When a check is payable by one bank
but payable through another bank, the routing number appearing on
the check is that of the payable-through bank, not the payor bank.
Industry standards require depositary banks, subsequent collecting
banks, and returning banks to place their routing numbers in
nine-digit form in their indorsements. (See § 229.35 and commentary
thereto).
EE. 229.2(ee) [Reserved] FF. 229.2(ff) [Reserved] GG. 229.2(gg)
Teller's Check
1. Teller's check is defined in the EFA Act to mean a check
issued by a depository institution and drawn on another depository
institution. The definition in the regulation includes not only
checks drawn by a bank on another bank, but also checks payable
through or at a bank. This would include checks drawn on a nonbank,
as long as the check is payable through or at a bank. The
definition does not include checks that are drawn by a nonbank on a
nonbank even if payable through or at a bank. The definition
includes checks provided to a customer of the bank in connection
with customer deposit account activity, such as account
disbursements and interest payments. The definition also includes
checks acquired from a bank by a noncustomer for remittance
purposes, such as certain loan disbursement checks. The definition
excludes checks used by the bank to pay employees or vendors and
checks issued by the bank in connection with a payment service,
such as a payroll or a bill-paying service. Teller's checks
generally are sold by banks to substitute the bank's credit for the
customer's credit and thereby enhance the collectibility of the
checks. A check issued in connection with a payment service
generally is provided as a convenience to the customer rather than
as a guarantee of the check's collectibility. In addition, such
checks are often more difficult to distinguish from other types of
checks than are teller's checks as defined by this regulation.
HH. 229.2(hh) Traveler's Check
1. The EFA Act and regulation require that traveler's checks be
treated as cashier's, teller's, or certified checks when a new
depositor opens an account. (See § 229.13(a); 12 U.S.C.
4003(a)(1)(C).) The EFA Act does not define traveler's check.
2. One element of the definition states that a traveler's check
is “drawn on or payable through or at a bank.” Sometimes traveler's
checks that are not issued by banks do not have any words on them
identifying a bank as drawee or paying agent, but instead bear
unique routing numbers with an 8000 prefix that identifies a bank
as paying agent.
3. Because a traveler's check is payable by, at, or through a
bank, it is also a check for purposes of this regulation. When not
subject to the next-day availability requirement for new accounts,
a traveler's check should be treated as a local or nonlocal check
depending on the location of the paying bank. The depositary bank
may rely on the designation of the paying bank by the routing
number to determine whether local or nonlocal treatment is
required.
II. 229.2(ii) Uniform Commercial Code
1. Uniform Commercial Code is defined as the version of the Code
adopted by the individual states. For purposes of uniform citation,
all citations to the U.C.C. in this part refer to the Official Text
as approved by the American Law Institute and the National
Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.
JJ. 229.2(jj) [Reserved] KK. 229.2(kk) Unit of General Local
Government
1. Unit of general local government is defined to include a
city, county, parish, town, township, village, or other general
purpose political subdivision of a state. The term does not include
special purpose units, such as school districts, water districts,
or Indian nations.
LL. 229.2(ll) Wire Transfer
1. The EFA Act delegates to the Board the authority to define
the term wire transfer. The regulation defines wire transfer as an
unconditional order to a bank to pay a fixed or determinable amount
of money to a beneficiary, upon receipt or on a day stated in the
order, that is transmitted by electronic or other means over
certain networks or on the books of banks and that is used
primarily to transfer funds between commercial accounts.
“Unconditional” means that no condition, such as presentation of
documents, must be met before the bank receiving the order is to
make payment. A wire transfer may be transmitted by electronic or
other means. “Electronic means” include computer-to-computer links,
on-line terminals, telegrams (including TWX, TELEX, or similar
methods of communication), telephone calls, or other similar
methods. Fedwire (the Federal Reserve's wire transfer network),
CHIPS (Clearing House Interbank Payments System, operated by the
New York Clearing House), and book transfers among banks or within
one bank are covered by this definition. Credits for credit and
debit card transactions are not wire transfers. The term wire
transfer excludes electronic fund transfers as that term is defined
by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
MM. 229.2(mm) [Reserved] NN. 229.2(nn) Good Faith
1. This definition of good faith derives from U.C.C.
3-103(a)(4).
OO. 229.2(oo) Interest Compensation
1. This calculation of interest compensation derives from
U.C.C. 4A-506(b). (See §§ 229.34(e) and 229.36(f).)
PP. 229.2(pp) Contractual Branch
1. When one bank arranges for another bank to accept deposits on
its behalf, the second bank is a contractual branch of the first
bank. For further discussion of contractual branch deposits and
related disclosures, see §§ 229.2(s) and 229.19(a) of the
regulation and the commentary to §§ 229.2(s), 229.10(c), 229.14(a),
229.16(a), 229.18(b), and 229.19(a).
QQ. 229.2(qq) [Reserved] RR. 229.2(rr) [Reserved] SS. 229.2(ss)
[Reserved] TT. 229.2(tt) [Reserved] UU. 229.2(uu) [Reserved] VV.
229.2(vv) MICR Line
1. Information in the MICR line of a check must be printed in
accordance with ANS X9.13 for original checks and in accordance
with ANS X9.100-140 for substitute checks, and must be contained in
electronic checks in accordance with ANS X9.100-187. These
standards could vary the requirements for printing the MICR line,
such as by indicating circumstances under which the use of magnetic
ink is not required. Banks that exchange checks electronically may
agree to other standards for including MICR line information in the
checks that they exchange electronically.
WW. 229.2(ww) Original Check
1. The definition of original check distinguishes the first
paper check signed or otherwise authorized by the drawer to effect
a particular payment transaction from a substitute check or other
paper or electronic representation that is derived from an original
check or substitute check. There is only one original check for any
particular payment transaction. However, multiple substitute checks
could be created to represent that original check at various points
in the check collection and return process.
XX. 229.2(xx) Paper or Electronic Representation of a Substitute
Check
1. Receipt of a paper or electronic representation of a
substitute check does not trigger indemnity or expedited recredit
rights, although the recipient nonetheless could have a warranty
claim or a claim under other check law with respect to that
document or the underlying payment transaction. A paper or
electronic representation of a substitute check would include a
representation of a substitute check that was drawn on an account,
as well as a representation of a substitute traveler's check,
credit card check, or other item that meets the substitute check
definition. The following examples illustrate the scope of the
definition.
Examples.
a. A bank receives electronic presentment of a substitute check
that has been converted to electronic form and charges the
customer's account for that electronic item. The periodic account
statement that the bank provides to the customer includes
information about the electronically-presented substitute check in
a line-item list describing all the checks the bank charged to the
customer's account during the previous month. The electronic file
that the bank received for presentment and charged to the
customer's account would be an electronic representation of a
substitute check, and the line-item appearing on the customer's
account statement would be a paper representation of a substitute
check.
b. A paying bank receives and settles for a substitute check and
then realizes that its settlement was for the wrong amount. The
paying bank sends an adjustment request to the presenting bank to
correct the error. The adjustment request is not a paper or
electronic representation of a substitute check under the
definition because it is not being handled for collection or return
as a check. Rather, it is a separate request that is related to a
check. As a result, no substitute check warranty, indemnity, or
expedited recredit rights attach to the adjustment.
YY. 229.2(yy) [Reserved] ZZ. 229.2(zz) Reconverting Bank
1. A substitute check is “created” when and where a paper
reproduction of an original check that meets the requirements of §
229.2(aaa) is physically printed. A bank is a reconverting bank if
it creates a substitute check directly or if another person by
agreement creates a substitute check on the bank's behalf. A bank
also is a reconverting bank if it is the first bank that receives a
substitute check created by a nonbank and transfers, presents, or
returns that substitute check or, in lieu thereof, the first paper
or electronic representation of such substitute check.
Examples.
a. Bank A, by agreement, sends an electronic check file for
collection to Bank B. Bank B chooses to use that file to print a
substitute check that meets the requirements of § 229.2(aaa). Bank
B is the reconverting bank as of the time it prints the substitute
check.
b. Company A, which is not a bank, by agreement receives check
information electronically from Bank A. Bank A becomes the
reconverting bank when Company A prints a substitute check on
behalf of Bank A in accordance with that agreement.
c. A depositary bank's customer, which is a nonbank business,
receives a check for payment, truncates that original check, and
creates a substitute check to deposit with its bank. The depositary
bank receives that substitute check from its customer and is the
first bank to handle the substitute check. The depositary bank
becomes the reconverting bank as of the time that it transfers or
presents the substitute check (or in lieu thereof the first paper
or electronic representation of the substitute check) for forward
collection.
d. A bank is the payable-through bank for checks that are drawn
on a nonbank payor, which is the bank's customer. When the customer
decides not to pay a check that is payable through the bank, the
customer creates a substitute check for purposes of return. The
payable-through bank becomes the reconverting bank when it returns
the substitute check (or in lieu thereof the first paper or
electronic representation of the substitute check) to a returning
bank or the depositary bank.
e. A paying bank returns a substitute check to the depositary
bank, which in turn gives that substitute check back to its nonbank
customer. That customer then redeposits the substitute check for
collection at a different bank. Because the substitute check was
already transferred by a bank, the second depositary bank does not
become a reconverting bank when it transfers or presents that
substitute check for collection.
2. In some cases there will be one or more banks between the
truncating bank and the reconverting bank.
Example.
A depositary bank truncates the original check and sends an
electronic representation of the original check for collection to
an intermediary bank. The intermediary bank sends the electronic
representation of the original check to the presenting bank, which
creates a substitute check to present to the paying bank. The
presenting bank is the reconverting bank.
3. A check could move from electronic form to substitute check
form several times during the collection and return process. It
therefore is possible that there could be multiple substitute
checks, and thus multiple reconverting banks, with respect to the
same underlying payment.
AAA. 229.2(aaa) Substitute Check
1. “A paper reproduction of an original check” could include a
reproduction created directly from the original check or a
reproduction of the original check that is created from some other
source that contains an image of the original check, such as an
electronic representation of an original check or substitute check,
or a previous substitute check.
2. Because a substitute check must be a piece of paper, an
electronic file or electronic check image that has not yet been
printed in accordance with the substitute check definition is not a
substitute check.
3. Because a substitute check must be a representation of a
check, a paper reproduction of something that is not a check cannot
be a substitute check. For example, a savings bond or a check drawn
on a non-U.S. branch of a foreign bank cannot be reconverted to a
substitute check.
4. As described in § 229.51(b) and the commentary thereto, a
reconverting bank is required to ensure that a substitute check
contains all indorsements applied by previous parties that handled
the check in any form. Therefore, the image of the original check
that appears on the back of a substitute check would include
indorsements that were physically applied to the original check
before an image of the original check was captured. An indorsement
that was applied physically to the original check after an image of
the original check was captured would be conveyed as an electronic
indorsement (see paragraph 3 of the commentary to § 229.35(a)). The
back of the substitute check would contain a physical
representation of any indorsements that were applied electronically
to the check after an image of the check was captured but before
creation of the substitute check.
Example.
Bank A, which is the depositary bank, captures an image of an
original check, indorses it electronically and, by agreement,
transmits to Bank B an electronic image of the check accompanied by
the electronic indorsement. Bank B then creates a substitute check
to send to Bank C. The back of the substitute check created by Bank
B must contain a representation of the indorsement previously
applied electronically by Bank A and Bank B's own indorsement. (For
more information on indorsement requirements, see § 229.35,
appendix D, and the commentary thereto.)
5. Some substitute checks will not be created directly from the
original check, but rather will be created from a previous
substitute check. The back of a subsequent substitute check will
contain an image of the full length of the back of the previous
substitute check. ANS X9.100-140 requires preservation of the full
length of the back of the previous substitute check in order to
preserve previous indorsements and reconverting bank
identifications. By contrast, the front of a subsequent substitute
check will not contain an image of the entire previous substitute
check. Rather, the image field of the subsequent substitute check
will contain the image of the front of the original check that
appeared on the previous substitute check at the time the previous
substitute check was converted to electronic form. The portions of
the front of the subsequent substitute check other than the image
field will contain information applied by the subsequent
reconverting bank, such as its reconverting bank identification,
the MICR line, the legal equivalence legend, and optional security
information.
Examples.
a. The back of a subsequent substitute check would contain the
following indorsements, all of which would be preserved through the
image of the back of the previous substitute check: (1) The
indorsements that were applied physically to the original check
before an image of the original check was captured; (2) a physical
representation of indorsements that were applied electronically to
the original check after an image of the original check was
captured but before creation of the first substitute check; and (3)
indorsements that were applied physically to the previous
substitute check. In addition, the reconverting bank for the
subsequent substitute check must overlay onto the back of that
substitute check a physical representation of any indorsements that
were applied electronically after the previous substitute check was
converted to electronic form but before creation of the subsequent
substitute check.
b. Because information could have been physically added to the
image of the front of the original check that appeared on the
previous substitute check, the original check image that appears on
the front of a subsequent substitute check could contain
information in addition to that which appeared on the original
check at the time it was truncated.
6. The MICR line applied to a substitute check must contain
information in all fields of the MICR line that were encoded on the
original check at any time before an image of the original check
was captured. This includes all the MICR-line information that was
preprinted on the original check, plus any additional information
that was added to the MICR line before the image of the original
check was captured (for example, the amount of the check). The
information in each field of the substitute check's MICR line must
be the same information as in the corresponding field of the MICR
line of the original check, except as provided by ANS X9.100-140
(unless the Board by rule or order determines that a different
standard applies). Industry standards may not, however, vary the
requirement that a substitute check at the time of its creation
must bear a full-field MICR line.
7. ANS X9.100-140, provides that a substitute check must have a
“4” in position 44 and that a qualified returned substitute check
must have a “4” in position 44 of the forward-collection MICR line
as well as a “5” in position 44 of the qualified return MICR line.
The “4” and “5” indicate that the document is a substitute check so
that the size of the check image remains constant throughout the
collection and return process, regardless of the number of
substitute checks created that represent the same original check
(see also §§ 229.30(a)(2) and 229.31(a)(2) and the
commentary thereto regarding requirements for qualified returned
substitute checks). An original check generally has a blank
position 44 for forward collection. Because a reconverting bank
must encode position 44 of a substitute check's forward collection
MICR line with a “4,” the reconverting bank must vary any character
that appeared in position 44 of the forward-collection MICR line of
the original check. A bank that misencodes or fails to encode
position 44 at the time it attempts to create a substitute check
has failed to create a substitute check. A bank that receives a
properly-encoded substitute check may further encode that item but
does so subject to the encoding warranties in Regulation CC and the
U.C.C.
8. A substitute check's MICR line could contain information in
addition to the information required at the time the substitute
check is created. For example, if the amount field of the original
check was not encoded and the substitute check therefore did not,
when created, have an encoded amount field, the MICR line of the
substitute check later could be amount-encoded.
9. A bank may receive a substitute check that contains a
MICR-line variation but nonetheless meets the MICR-line replication
requirements of § 229.2(aaa)(2) because that variation is permitted
by ANS X9.100-140. If such a substitute check contains a MICR-line
error, a bank that receives it may, but is not required to, repair
that error. Such a repair must be made in accordance with ANS
X9.100-140 for repairing a MICR line, which generally allows a bank
to correct an error by applying a strip that may or may not contain
information in all fields encoded on the check's MICR line. A
bank's repair of a MICR-line error on a substitute check is subject
to the encoding warranties in Regulation CC and the U.C.C.
10. A substitute check must conform to all the generally
applicable industry standards for substitute checks set forth in
ANS X9.100-140, which incorporates other industry standards by
reference. Thus, multiple substitute check images contained on the
same page of an account statement are not substitute checks.
BBB. 229.2(bbb) Sufficient Copy and Copy
1. A “copy” or a “sufficient copy” as defined in 229.2(bbb) must
be a paper reproduction of a check, unless the parties sending and
receiving the copy otherwise agree. Therefore, an electronic image
of a check is not a “copy” or a “sufficient copy” absent an
agreement to that effect. If a customer has agreed to receive such
information electronically, however, a bank that is required to
provide a copy or sufficient copy may satisfy that requirement by
providing an electronic image. (See § 229.58).
2. A sufficient copy, which is used to resolve claims related to
the receipt of a substitute check, must be a copy of the original
check.
3. A bank under § 229.53(b)(3) may limit its liability for an
indemnity claim and under §§ 229.54(e)(2) and 229.55(c)(2) may
respond to an expedited recredit claim by providing the claimant
with a copy of a check that accurately represents all of the
information on the front and back of the original check as of the
time the original check was truncated or that otherwise is
sufficient to determine the validity of the claim against the
bank.
Examples
a. A copy of an original check that accurately represents all
the information on the front and back of the original check as of
the time of truncation would constitute a sufficient copy if that
copy resolved the claim. For example, if resolution of the claim
required accurate payment and indorsement information, an accurate
copy of the front and back of a legible original check (including
but not limited to a substitute check) would be a sufficient
copy.
b. A copy of the original check that does not accurately
represent all the information on both the front and back of the
original check also could be a sufficient copy if such copy
contained all the information necessary to determine the validity
of the relevant claim. For instance, if a consumer received a
substitute check that contained a blurry image of a legible
original check, the consumer might seek an expedited recredit
because his or her account was charged for $1,000, but he or she
believed that the check was written for only $100. If the amount
that appeared on the front of the original check was legible, an
accurate copy of only the front of the original check that showed
the amount of the check would be sufficient to determine whether or
not the consumer's claim regarding the amount of the check was
valid.
CCC. 229.2(ccc) Transfer and Consideration
1. Under §§ 229.52 and 229.53, a bank is responsible for the
warranties and indemnity when it transfers, presents, or returns a
substitute check (or a paper or electronic representation thereof)
for consideration. Drawers and other nonbank persons that receive
checks from a bank are not transferees that receive consideration
as those terms are defined in the U.C.C. However, the Check 21 Act
clearly contemplates that such nonbank persons that receive
substitute checks (or representations thereof) from a bank will
receive the warranties and indemnity from all previous banks that
handled the check. To ensure that these parties are covered by the
substitute check warranties and indemnity in the manner
contemplated by the Check 21 Act, § 229.2(ccc) incorporates the
U.C.C. definitions of the term transfer and consideration by
reference and expands those definitions to cover a broader range of
situations. Delivering a check to a nonbank that is acting on
behalf of a bank (such as a third-party check processor or
presentment point) is a transfer of the check to that bank.
Examples.
a. A paying bank pays a substitute check and then provides that
paid substitute check (or a representation thereof) to a drawer
with a periodic statement. Under the expanded definitions, the
paying bank thereby transfers the substitute check (or
representation thereof) to the drawer for consideration and makes
the substitute check warranties described in § 229.52. A drawer
that suffers a loss due to receipt of a substitute check may have
warranty, indemnity, and, if the drawer is a consumer, expedited
recredit rights under the Check 21 Act and subpart D. A drawer that
suffers a loss due to receipt of a paper or electronic
representation of a substitute check would receive the substitute
check warranties but would not have indemnity or expedited recredit
rights.
b. The expanded definitions also operate such that a paying bank
that pays an original check (or a representation thereof) and then
creates a substitute check to provide to the drawer with a periodic
statement transfers the substitute check for consideration and
thereby provides the warranties and indemnity.
c. The expanded definitions ensure that a bank that receives a
returned check in any form and then provides a substitute check to
the depositor gives the substitute check warranties and indemnity
to the depositor.
d. The expanded definitions apply to substitute checks
representing original checks that are not drawn on deposit
accounts, such as checks used to access a credit card or a home
equity line of credit.
DDD. 229.2(ddd) Truncate
1. Truncate means to remove the original check from the forward
collection or return process and to send in lieu of the original
check either a substitute check or, by agreement, information
relating to the original check. Truncation does not include removal
of a substitute check from the check collection or return
process.
EEE. 229.2(eee) Truncating Bank
1. A bank is a truncating bank if it truncates an original check
or if it is the first bank to transfer, present, or return another
form of an original check that was truncated by a person that is
not a bank.
Example.
a. A bank's customer that is a nonbank business receives a check
for payment and deposits either a substitute check or an electronic
representation of the original check with its depositary bank
instead of the original check. That depositary bank is the
truncating bank when it transfers, presents, or returns the
substitute check or electronic representation in lieu of the
original check. That bank also would be the reconverting bank if it
were the first bank to transfer, present, or return a substitute
check that it received from (or created from the information given
by) its nonbank customer (see § 229.2(yy) and the commentary
thereto).
2. A truncating bank does not make the subpart D warranties and
indemnity unless it also is the reconverting bank. Therefore, a
bank that truncates the original check and sends an electronic file
to a collecting bank does not provide subpart D protections to the
recipient of that electronic item. However, a recipient of an
electronic item may protect itself against losses associated with
that item by agreement with the truncating bank.
FFF. 229.2(fff) Remotely Created Check
1. A check authorized by a consumer over the telephone that is
not created by the paying bank and bears a legend on the signature
line, such as “Authorized by Drawer,” is an example of a remotely
created check. A check that bears the signature applied, or
purported to be applied, by the person on whose account the check
is drawn is not a remotely created check. A typical forged check,
such as a stolen personal check fraudulently signed by a person
other than the drawer, is not covered by the definition of a
remotely created check.
2. The term signature as used in this definition has the meaning
set forth at U.C.C. 3-401. The term “applied by” refers to the
physical act of placing the signature on the check.
3. The definition of a “remotely created check” differs from the
definition of a “remotely created consumer item” under the U.C.C. A
“remotely created check” may be drawn on an account held by a
consumer, corporation, unincorporated company, partnership,
government unit or instrumentality, trust, or any other entity or
organization. A “remotely created consumer item” under the U.C.C.,
however, must be drawn on a consumer account.
4. Under Regulation CC (12 CFR part 229), the term “check”
includes a negotiable demand draft drawn on or payable through or
at an office of a bank. In the case of a “payable through” or
“payable at” check, the signature of the person on whose account
the check is drawn would include the signature of the payor
institution or the signatures of the customers who are authorized
to draw checks on that account, depending on the arrangements
between the “payable through” or “payable at” bank, the payor
institution, and the customers.
5. The definition of a remotely created check includes a
remotely created check that has been reconverted to a substitute
check.
GGG. 229.2(ggg) Electronic Check and Electronic Returned Check
1. Banks often enter into agreements under which a check may be
transferred, returned, or presented electronically instead of
transferring, returning, or presenting the paper check. For
example, an agreement may provide that either an electronic image
of the check or electronic information related to the check may be
sent instead of the paper check. In order to satisfy Regulation
CC's definition of “electronic check” (or “electronic returned
check”), however, both the electronic image of the check and
electronic information derived from the check must be sent. A
sending bank and receiving bank may also agree, for example, that
instead of sending the electronic check or electronic returned
check directly to the receiving bank, the electronic check or
electronic returned check may be sent to an intermediary that
stores the electronic check or electronic returned check on the
receiving bank's behalf and makes the electronic check or
electronic returned check available for the receiving bank to
retrieve.
2. A sending bank must have an agreement with the receiving bank
in order to send an electronic check instead of a paper check. The
agreement to receive an electronic check or electronic returned
check may be either bilateral or through a Federal Reserve Bank
operating circular, clearinghouse rule, or other interbank
agreement. (See UCC 4-110).
3. ANS X9.100-187 is the most prevalent industry standard for
electronic checks and electronic returned checks that will enable
banks to create substitute checks. Multiple standards, however,
exist that would enable a bank to create a substitute check from an
electronic check. Therefore, the banks exchanging electronic checks
may agree that a different standard applies to electronic checks
exchanged between the two banks. Additionally, banks that exchange
checks electronically may agree to transfer, present, or return
only electronic images of checks or only electronic information
related to checks. In these situations, the sending bank and
receiving bank will have agreed to a different standard as ANS
X9.100-187 requires both an electronic image and electronic
information.
4. Electronic checks and electronic returned checks as defined
in Regulation CC are subject to subpart C, except as otherwise
provided in that subpart. (See § 229.30 and commentary
thereto).
HHH. 229.2(hhh) Electronically-Created Item
1. Electronically-created items are also sometimes referred to
in the industry as “electronic payment orders” or “EPOs.”
2. Because an electronically-created item as defined in
Regulation CC never existed in paper form, it does not meet the
definition of “electronic check” in 229.2(ggg) and therefore an
electronically-created item cannot be used to create a substitute
check that is the legal equivalent of the original paper check.
3. An electronically-created item can resemble an electronic
image of a paper check or an electronic image of a remotely created
check. (See 229.2(fff) (definition of remotely created check)).
Examples
a. A corporate customer of a bank, rather than printing and
mailing a paper check to a payee, electronically creates an image
that looks like an image of the corporate customer's paper checks
and emails the image to the payee.
b. A consumer uses a smart-phone application through which the
consumer provides the payee name, amount, and the consumer's
signature. The application electronically sends this information,
appearing formatted as a check, to the payee.
c. A consumer calls his utility company to make an emergency
bill payment, and provides his bank account information. The
utility company uses this information to create an
electronically-created item and deposits the electronically-created
item with its bank to obtain payment from the consumer.
III. Section 229.3 Administrative Enforcement [Reserved] IV.
Section 229.10 Next-Day Availability A. Business Days and Banking
Days
1. This section, as well as other provisions of this subpart
governing the availability of funds, provides that funds must be
made available for withdrawal not later than a specified number of
business days following the banking day on which the funds are
deposited. Thus, a deposit is considered made only on a banking
day, i.e., a day that the bank is open to the public for carrying
on substantially all of its banking functions. For example, if a
deposit is made at an ATM on a Saturday, Sunday, or other day on
which the bank is closed to the public, the deposit is considered
received on that bank's next banking day.
2. Nevertheless, business days are used to determine the number
of days following the banking day of deposit that funds must be
available for withdrawal. For example, if a deposit of a local
check were made on a Monday, the availability schedule requires
that funds be available for withdrawal on the second business day
after deposit. Therefore, funds must be made available on Wednesday
regardless of whether the bank was closed on Tuesday for other than
a standard legal holiday as specified in the definition of business
day.
B. 229.10(a) Cash Deposits
1. This paragraph implements the EFA Act's requirement for
next-day availability for cash deposits to accounts at a depositary
bank “staffed by individuals employed by such institution.” 2 Under
this paragraph, cash deposited in an account at a staffed teller
station on a Monday must become available for withdrawal by the
start of business on Tuesday. It must become available for
withdrawal by the start of business on Wednesday if it is deposited
by mail, at a proprietary ATM, or by other means other than at a
staffed teller station.
2 Nothing in the EFA Act or this regulation affects terms of
account arrangements, such as negotiable order of withdrawal
accounts, which may require prior notice of withdrawal. (See 12 CFR
204.2(e)(2).)
C. 229.10(b) Electronic Payments
1. The EFA Act provides next-day availability for funds received
for deposit by wire transfer. The regulation uses the term
electronic payment, rather than wire transfer, to include both wire
transfers and ACH credit transfers under the next-day availability
requirement. (See discussion of definitions of automated
clearinghouse, electronic payment, and wire transfer in §
229.2.)
2. The EFA Act requires that funds received by wire transfer be
available for withdrawal not later than the business day following
the day a wire transfer is received. This paragraph clarifies what
constitutes receipt of an electronic payment. For the purposes of
this paragraph, a bank receives an electronic payment when the bank
receives both payment in finally collected funds and the payment
instructions indicating the customer accounts to be credited and
the amount to be credited to each account. For example, in the case
of Fedwire, the bank receives finally collected funds at the time
the payment is made. (See 12 CFR 210.31.) Finally collected funds
generally are received for an ACH credit transfer when they are
posted to the receiving bank's account on the settlement day. In
certain cases, the bank receiving ACH credit payments will not
receive the specific payment instructions indicating which accounts
to credit until after settlement day. In these cases, the payments
are not considered received until the information on the account
and amount to be credited is received.
3. This paragraph also establishes the extent to which an
electronic payment is considered made. Thus, if a participant on a
private network fails to settle and the receiving bank receives
finally settled funds representing only a partial amount of the
payment, it must make only the amount that it actually received
available for withdrawal.
4. The availability requirements of this regulation do not
preempt or invalidate other rules, regulations, or agreements which
require funds to be made available on a more prompt basis. For
example, the next-day availability requirement for ACH credits in
this section does not preempt ACH association rules and Treasury
regulations (31 CFR part 210), which provide that the proceeds of
these credit payments be available to the recipient for withdrawal
on the day the bank receives the funds.
D. 229.10(c) Certain Check Deposits
1. The EFA Act generally requires that funds be made available
on the business day following the banking day of deposit for
Treasury checks, state and local government checks, cashier's
checks, certified checks, teller's checks, and “on us” checks,
under specified conditions. (Treasury checks are checks drawn on
the Treasury of the United States and have a routing number
beginning with the digits “0000.”) This section also requires
next-day availability for additional types of checks not addressed
in the EFA Act. Checks drawn on a Federal Reserve Bank or a Federal
Home Loan Bank and U.S. Postal Service money orders also must be
made available on the first business day following the day of
deposit under specified conditions. For the purposes of this
section, all checks drawn on a Federal Reserve Bank or a Federal
Home Loan Bank that contain in the MICR line a routing number that
is listed in appendix A are subject to the next-day availability
requirement if they are deposited in an account held by a payee of
the check and in person to an employee of the depositary bank,
regardless of the purposes for which the checks were issued. For
all new accounts, even if the new account exception is not invoked,
traveler's checks must be included in the $5,525 aggregation of
checks deposited on any one banking day that are subject to the
next-day availability requirement. (See § 229.13(a).)
2. Deposit in Account of Payee. One statutory condition to
receipt of next-day availability of Treasury checks, state and
local government checks, cashier's checks, certified checks, and
teller's checks is that the check must be “endorsed only by the
person to whom it was issued.” The EFA Act could be interpreted to
include a check that has been indorsed in blank and deposited into
an account of a third party that is not named as payee. The Board
believes that such a check presents greater risks than a check
deposited by the payee and that Congress did not intend to require
next-day availability for such checks. The regulation, therefore,
provides that funds must be available on the business day following
deposit only if the check is deposited in an account held by a
payee of the check. For the purposes of this section, payee does
not include transferees other than named payees. The regulation
also applies this condition to Postal Service money orders and
checks drawn on Federal Reserve Banks and Federal Home Loan
Banks.
3. Deposits Made to an Employee of the Depositary Bank.
a. In most cases, next-day availability of the proceeds of
checks subject to this section is conditioned on the deposit of
these checks in person to an employee of the depositary bank. If
the deposit is not made to an employee of the depositary bank on
the premises of such bank, the proceeds of the deposit must be made
available for withdrawal by the start of business on the second
business day after deposit, under paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
For example, second-day availability rather than next-day
availability would be allowed for deposits of checks subject to
this section made at a proprietary ATM, night depository, through
the mail or a lock box, or at a teller station staffed by a person
who is not an employee of the depositary bank. Second-day
availability also may be allowed for deposits picked up by an
employee of the depositary bank at the customer's premises; such
deposits would be considered made upon receipt at the branch or
other location of the depositary bank. Employees of a contractual
branch would not be considered employees of the depositary bank for
the purposes of this regulation, and deposits at contractual
branches would be treated the same as deposits to a proprietary ATM
for the purposes of this regulation. (See also, Commentary to §
229.19(a).)
b. In the case of Treasury checks, the EFA Act and regulation do
not condition the receipt of next-day availability to deposits at
staffed teller stations. Therefore, Treasury checks deposited at a
proprietary ATM must be accorded next-day availability, if the
check is deposited to an account of a payee of the check.
4. “On Us” Checks. The EFA Act and regulation require next-day
availability for “on us” checks, i.e., checks deposited in a branch
of the depositary bank and drawn on the same or another branch of
the same bank, if both branches are located in the same state or
check processing region. Thus, checks deposited in one branch of a
bank and drawn on another branch of the same bank must receive
next-day availability even if the branch on which the checks are
drawn is located in another check processing region but in the same
state as the branch in which the check is deposited. For the
purposes of this requirement, deposits at facilities that are not
located on the premises of a brick-and-mortar branch of the bank,
such as off-premise ATMs and remote depositories, are not
considered deposits made at branches of the depositary bank.
5. First $225
a. The EFA Act and regulation also require that up to $225 of
the aggregate deposit by check or checks not subject to next-day
availability on any one banking day be made available on the next
business day. For example, if $70 were deposited in an account by
check(s) on a Monday, the entire $70 must be available for
withdrawal at the start of business on Tuesday. If $400 were
deposited by check(s) on a Monday, this section requires that $225
of the funds be available for withdrawal at the start of business
on Tuesday. The portion of the customer's deposit to which the $225
must be applied is at the discretion of the depositary bank, as
long as it is not applied to any checks subject to next-day
availability. The $225 next-day availability rule does not apply to
deposits at nonproprietary ATMs.
b. The $225 that must be made available under this rule is in
addition to the amount that must be made available for withdrawal
on the business day after deposit under other provisions of this
section. For example, if a customer deposits a $1,000 Treasury
check and a $1,000 local check in its account on Monday, $1,225
must be made available for withdrawal on Tuesday - the proceeds of
the $1,000 Treasury check, as well as the first $225 of the local
check.
c. A depositary bank may aggregate all local and nonlocal check
deposits made by a customer on a given banking day for the purposes
of the $225 next-day availability rule. Thus, if a customer has two
accounts at the depositary bank, and on a particular banking day
makes deposits to each account, $225 of the total deposited to the
two accounts must be made available on the business day after
deposit. Banks may aggregate deposits to individual and joint
accounts for the purposes of this provision.
d. If the customer deposits a $500 local check and gets $225
cash back at the time of deposit, the bank need not make an
additional $225 available for withdrawal on the following day.
Similarly, if the customer depositing the local check has a
negative book balance, or negative available balance in its account
at the time of deposit, the $225 that must be available on the next
business day may be made available by applying the $225 to the
negative balance, rather than making the $225 available for
withdrawal by cash or check on the following day.
6. Special Deposit Slips.
a. Under the EFA Act, a depositary bank may require the use of a
special deposit slip as a condition to providing next-day
availability for certain types of checks. This condition was
included in the EFA Act because many banks determine the
availability of their customers' check deposits in an automated
manner by reading the MICR-encoded routing number on the deposited
checks. Using these procedures, a bank can determine whether a
check is a local or nonlocal check, a check drawn on the Treasury,
a Federal Reserve Bank, a Federal Home Loan Bank, or a branch of
the depositary bank, or a U.S. Postal Service money order. Appendix
A includes the routing numbers of certain categories of checks that
are subject to next-day availability. The bank cannot require a
special deposit slip for these checks.
b. A bank cannot distinguish whether the check is a state or
local government check, cashier's check, certified check, or
teller's check by reading the MICR-encoded routing number, because
these checks bear the same routing number as other checks drawn on
the same bank that are not accorded next-day availability.
Therefore, a bank may require a special deposit slip for these
checks.
c. The regulation specifies that if a bank decides to require
the use of a special deposit slip (or a special deposit envelope in
the case of a deposit at an ATM or other unstaffed facility) as a
condition to granting next-day availability under paragraphs
(c)(1)(iv) or (c)(1)(v) of this section or second-day availability
under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, and if the deposit slip
that must be used is different from the bank's regular deposit
slips, the bank must either provide the special slips to its
customers or inform its customers how such slips may be obtained
and make the slips reasonably available to the customers.
d. A bank may meet this requirement by providing customers with
an order form for the special deposit slips and allowing sufficient
time for the customer to order and receive the slips before this
condition is imposed. If a bank provides deposit slips in its
branches for use by its customers, it also must provide the special
deposit slips in the branches. If special deposit envelopes are
required for deposits at an ATM, the bank must provide such
envelopes at the ATM.
e. Generally, a teller is not required to advise depositors of
the availability of special deposit slips merely because checks
requiring special deposit slips for next-day availability are
deposited without such slips. If a bank provides the special
deposit slips only upon the request of a depositor, however, the
teller must advise the depositor of the availability of the special
deposit slips, or the bank must post a notice advising customers
that the slips are available upon request. Such notice need not be
posted at each teller window, but the notice must be posted in a
place where consumers seeking to make deposits are likely to see it
before making their deposits. For example, the notice might be
posted at the point where the line forms for teller service in the
lobby. The notice is not required at any drive-through teller
windows nor is it required at night depository locations, or at
locations where consumer deposits are not accepted. If a bank
prepares a deposit for a depositor, it must use a special deposit
slip where appropriate. A bank may require the customer to
segregate the checks subject to next-day availability for which
special deposit slips could be required, and to indicate on a
regular deposit slip that such checks are being deposited, if the
bank so instructs its customers in its initial disclosure.
7. Dollar Amount Adjustment - See section 229.11 for the rules
regarding adjustments for inflation every five years to the dollar
amounts used in this section.
V. Section 229.11 Adjustment of Dollar Amounts
1. Example of a positive adjustment. If the CPI-W for July (and
released in August) of the base year and the adjustment year were
100 and 114.7, respectively, the aggregate percentage change for
the period would be 14.7%. If the applicable dollar amount was $200
for the prior period, then the adjusted figure would become $225,
as the change of $29.40 results in rounding to $25.
2. Example of no adjustment. If the CPI-W for July (and released
in August) of the base year and the adjustment year were 100 and
104, respectively, the aggregate percentage change would be 4.0%.
If the applicable dollar amount was $200 for the prior period, then
the adjusted figure would remain $200, as the change of $8.00 does
not result in rounding to $25.
3. Example of accounting for aggregate decrease in subsequent
period. If the CPI-W for July (and released in August) of the base
year and the adjustment year were 100 and 95, respectively, the
aggregate percentage change would be −5%, and no adjustment to the
dollar amounts would occur. The CPI-W for July (and released in
August) of the base year would be the starting point for
calculating any CPI-W increase across subsequent five-year periods.
Therefore, if the CPI-W in July (and released in August) of the
base year and the CPI-W in July (and released in August) of the
years at the end of the next two five-year periods were 100, 95,
and 109, respectively, the aggregate percentage change for the
entire period would be 9.0%. If the applicable dollar amount was
$5,000 for the prior period, then the adjusted figure would become
$5,450 as the change of $450 does not require rounding because it
is a multiple of $25.
4. Example of accounting for aggregate lack of dollar amount
change in subsequent period. If the CPI-W for July (and released in
August) of the base year and the year at the end of the subsequent
five-year period were 100 and 105, respectively, the aggregate
change over the five-year period would be 5%, and no adjustment to
the $200 amount would occur, as the change of $10 does not result
in rounding to $225. Nonetheless, the CPI-W for July (and released
in August) of the base year would be the starting point for
calculating any CPI-W percentage increase across the subsequent
five-year period. Therefore, if the CPI-W in July (and released in
August) of the base year and the CPI-W in July (and released in
August) of the years at the end of the next two five-year periods
were 100, 105, and 112.6, respectively, the aggregate percentage
change for the entire period would be 12.6%. If the applicable
dollar amount was $200 for the prior period, then the adjusted
figure would become $225 as the change of $25.20 results in
rounding to $225, the nearest multiple of $25.
VI. Section 229.12 Availability Schedule A. 229.12(a) Effective
Date
1. The availability schedule set forth in this section
supersedes the temporary schedule that was effective September 1,
1988, through August 31, 1990.
B. 229.12(b) Local Checks and Certain Other Checks
1. Local checks must be made available for withdrawal not later
than the second business day following the banking day on which the
checks were deposited.
2. In addition, the proceeds of Treasury checks and U.S. Postal
Service money orders not subject to next-day (or second-day)
availability under § 229.10(c), checks drawn on Federal Reserve
Banks and Federal Home Loan Banks, checks drawn by a state or unit
of general local government, cashier's checks, certified checks,
and teller's checks not subject to next-day (or second-day)
availability under § 229.10(c) and payable in the same check
processing region as the depositary bank, must be made available
for withdrawal by the second business day following deposit.
3. Exceptions are made for withdrawals by cash or similar means
and for deposits in banks located outside the 48 contiguous states.
Thus, the proceeds of a local check deposited on a Monday generally
must be made available for withdrawal on Wednesday.
4. Dollar Amount Adjustment - See section 229.11 for the rules
regarding adjustments for inflation every five years to the dollar
amounts in this section.
C. 229.12(c) Nonlocal Checks
1. Nonlocal checks must be made available for withdrawal not
later than the fifth business day following deposit, i.e., proceeds
of a nonlocal check deposited on a Monday must be made available
for withdrawal on the following Monday. In addition, a check
described in § 229.10(c) that does not meet the conditions for
next-day availability (or second-day availability) is treated as a
nonlocal check, if the check is drawn on or payable through or at a
nonlocal paying bank. Adjustments are made to the schedule for
withdrawals by cash or similar means and deposits in banks located
outside the 48 contiguous states.
2. Reduction in Schedules.
a. Section 603(d)(1) of the EFA Act (12 U.S.C. 4002(d)(1))
requires the Board to reduce the statutory schedules for any
category of checks where most of those checks would be returned in
a shorter period of time than provided in the schedules. The
conferees indicated that “if the new system makes it possible for
two-thirds of the items of a category of checks to meet this test
in a shorter period of time, then the Federal Reserve must shorten
the schedules accordingly.” H.R. Rep. No. 261, 100th Cong., 1st
Sess. at 179 (1987).
b. Reduced schedules are provided for certain nonlocal checks
where significant improvements can be made to the EFA Act's
schedules due to transportation arrangements or proximity between
the check processing regions of the depositary bank and the paying
bank, allowing for faster collection and return. Appendix B sets
forth the specific reduction of schedules applicable to banks
located in certain check processing regions.
c. A reduction in schedules may apply even in those cases where
the determination that the check is nonlocal cannot be made based
on the routing number on the check. For example, a nonlocal credit
union payable-through share draft may be subject to a reduction in
schedules if the routing number of the payable-through bank that
appears on the draft is included in appendix B, even though the
determination that the payable-through share draft is nonlocal is
based on the location of the credit union and not the routing
number on the draft.
D. 229.12(d) Time Period Adjustment for Withdrawal by Cash or
Similar Means
1. The EFA Act provides an adjustment to the availability rules
for cash withdrawals. Funds from local and nonlocal checks need not
be available for cash withdrawal until 5:00 p.m. on the day
specified in the schedule. At 5:00 p.m., $450 of the deposit must
be made available for cash withdrawal. This $450 is in addition to
the first $100 of a day's deposit, which must be made available for
withdrawal at the start of business on the first business day
following the banking day of deposit. If the proceeds of local and
nonlocal checks become available for withdrawal on the same
business day, the $450 withdrawal limitation applies to the
aggregate amount of the funds that became available for withdrawal
on that day. The remainder of the funds must be available for cash
withdrawal at the start of business on the business day following
the business day specified in the schedule.
2. The EFA Act recognizes that the $450 that must be provided on
the day specified in the schedule may exceed a bank's daily ATM
cash withdrawal limit, and explicitly provides that the EFA Act
does not supersede the bank's policy in this regard. The Board
believes that the rationale for accommodating a bank's ATM
withdrawal limit also applies to other cash withdrawal limits
established by that bank. Section 229.19(c)(4) of the regulation
addresses the relation between a bank's cash withdrawal limit (for
over-the-counter cash withdrawals as well as ATM cash withdrawals)
and the requirements of this subpart.
3. The Board believes that the Congress included this special
cash withdrawal rule to provide a depositary bank with additional
time to learn of the nonpayment of a check before it must make
funds available to its customer. If a customer deposits a local
check on a Monday, and that check is returned by the paying bank,
the depositary bank may not receive the returned check until
Thursday, the day after funds for a local check ordinarily must be
made available for withdrawal. The intent of the special cash
withdrawal rule is to minimize this risk to the depositary bank.
For this rule to minimize the depositary bank's risk, it must apply
not only to cash withdrawals, but also to withdrawals by other
means that result in an irrevocable debit to the customer's account
or commitment to pay by the bank on the customer's behalf during
the day. Thus, the cash withdrawal rule also includes withdrawals
by electronic payment, issuance of a cashier's or teller's check,
certification of a check, or other irrevocable commitment to pay,
such as authorization of an on-line point-of-sale debit. The rule
also would apply to checks presented over the counter for payment
on the day of presentment by the depositor or another person. Such
checks could not be dishonored for insufficient funds if an amount
sufficient to cover the check had became available for cash
withdrawal under this rule; however, payment of such checks would
be subject to the bank's cut-off hour established under U.C.C.
4-108. The cash withdrawal rule does not apply to checks and other
provisional debits presented to the bank for payment that the bank
has the right to return.
E. 229.12(e) Extension of Schedule for Certain Deposits in Alaska,
Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands
1. The EFA Act and regulation provide an extension of the
availability schedules for check deposits at a branch of a bank if
the branch is located in Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, American
Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Guam, or
the U.S. Virgin Islands. The schedules for local checks, nonlocal
checks (including nonlocal checks subject to the reduced schedules
of appendix B), and deposits at nonproprietary ATMs are extended by
one business day for checks deposited to accounts in banks located
in these jurisdictions that are drawn on or payable at or through a
paying bank not located in the same jurisdiction as the depositary
bank. For example, a check deposited in a bank in Hawaii and drawn
on a San Francisco paying bank must be made available for
withdrawal not later than the third business day following deposit.
This extension does not apply to deposits that must be made
available for withdrawal on the next business day.
2. The Congress did not provide this extension of the schedules
to checks drawn on a paying bank located in Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto
Rico, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, Guam, or the U.S. Virgin Islands and deposited in an
account at a depositary bank in the 48 contiguous states.
Therefore, a check deposited in a San Francisco bank drawn on a
Hawaii paying bank must be made available for withdrawal not later
than the second rather than the third business day following
deposit.
F. 229.12(f) Deposits at Nonproprietary ATMs
1. The EFA Act and regulation provide a special rule for
deposits made at nonproprietary ATMs. This paragraph does not apply
to deposits made at proprietary ATMs. All deposits at a
nonproprietary ATM must be made available for withdrawal by the
fifth business day following the banking day of deposit. For
example, a deposit made at a nonproprietary ATM on a Monday,
including any deposit by cash or checks that would otherwise be
subject to next-day (or second-day) availability, must be made
available for withdrawal not later than Monday of the following
week. The provisions of § 229.10(c)(1)(vii) requiring a depositary
bank to make up to $100 of an aggregate daily deposit available for
withdrawal on the first business day after the banking day of
deposit do not apply to deposits at a nonproprietary ATM.
VII. Section 229.13 Exceptions A. Introduction
1. While certain safeguard exceptions (such as those for new
accounts and checks the bank has reasonable cause to believe are
uncollectible) are established in the EFA Act, the Congress gave
the Board the discretion to determine whether certain other
exceptions should be included in its regulations. Specifically, the
EFA Act gives the Board the authority to establish exceptions to
the schedules for large or redeposited checks and for accounts that
have been repeatedly overdrawn. These exceptions apply to local and
nonlocal checks as well as to checks that must otherwise be
accorded next-day (or second-day) availability under §
229.10(c).
2. Many checks will not be returned to the depositary bank by
the time funds must be made available for withdrawal under the
next-day (or second-day), local, and nonlocal schedules. In order
to reduce risk to depositary banks, the Board has exercised its
statutory authority to adopt these exceptions to the schedules in
the regulation to allow the depositary bank to extend the time
within which it is required to make funds available.
3. The EFA Act also gives the Board the authority to suspend the
schedules for any classification of checks, if the schedules result
in an unacceptable level of fraud losses. The Board will adopt
regulations or issue orders to implement this statutory authority
if and when circumstances requiring its implementation arise.
B. 229.13(a) New Accounts
1. Definition of New Account.
a. The EFA Act provides an exception to the availability
schedule for new accounts. An account is defined as a new account
during the first 30 calendar days after the account is opened. An
account is opened when the first deposit is made to the account. An
account is not considered a new account, however, if each customer
on the account has a transaction account relationship with the
depositary bank, including a dormant account, that is at least 30
calendar days old or if each customer has had an established
transaction account with the depositary bank within the 30 calendar
days prior to opening the second account.
b. The following are examples of what constitutes, and does not
constitute, a new account:
i. If the customer has an established account with a bank and
opens a second account with the bank, the second account is not
subject to the new account exception.
ii. If a customer's account were closed and another account
opened as a successor to the original account (due, for example, to
the theft of checks or a debit card used to access the original
account), the successor account is not subject to the new account
exception, assuming the previous account relationship is at least
30 days old. Similarly, if a customer closes an established account
and opens a separate account within 30 days, the new account is not
subject to the new account exception.
iii. If a customer has a savings deposit or other deposit that
is not an account (as that term is defined in § 229.2(a)) at the
bank, and opens an account, the account is subject to the new
account exception.
iv. If a person that is authorized to sign on a corporate
account (but has no other relationship with the bank) opens a
personal account, the personal account is subject to the new
account exception.
v. If a customer has an established joint account at a bank, and
subsequently opens an individual account with that bank, the
individual account is not subject to the new account exception.
vi. If two customers that each have an established individual
account with the bank open a joint account, the joint account is
not subject to the new account exception. If one of the customers
on the account has no current or recent established account
relationship with the bank, however, the joint account is subject
to the new account exception, even if the other individual on the
account has an established account relationship with the bank.
2. Rules Applicable to New Accounts.
a. During the new account exception period, the schedules for
local and nonlocal checks do not apply, and, unlike the other
exceptions provided in this section, the regulation provides no
maximum time frames within which the proceeds of these deposits
must be made available for withdrawal. Maximum times within which
funds must be available for withdrawal during the new account
period are provided, however, for certain other deposits. Deposits
received by cash and electronic payments must be made available for
withdrawal in accordance with § 229.10.
b. Special rules also apply to deposits of Treasury checks, U.S.
Postal Service money orders, checks drawn on Federal Reserve Banks
and Federal Home Loan Banks, state and local government checks,
cashier's checks, certified checks, teller's checks, and, for the
purposes of the new account exception only, traveler's checks. The
first $5,000 of funds deposited to a new account on any one banking
day by these check deposits must be made available for withdrawal
in accordance with § 229.10(c). Thus, the first $5,525 of the
proceeds of these check deposits must be made available on the
first business day following deposit, if the deposit is made in
person to an employee of the depositary bank and the other
conditions of next-day availability are met. Funds must be made
available on the second business day after deposit for deposits
that are not made over the counter, in accordance with §
229.10(c)(2). (Proceeds of Treasury check deposits must be made
available on the first business day after deposit, even if the
check is not deposited in person to an employee of the depositary
bank.) Funds in excess of the first $5,000 deposited by these types
of checks on a banking day must be available for withdrawal not
later than the ninth business day following the banking day of
deposit. The requirements of § 229.10(c)(1)(vi) and (vii) that “on
us” checks and the first $100 of a day's deposit be made available
for withdrawal on the next business day do not apply during the new
account period.
3. Representation by Customer. The depositary bank may rely on
the representation of the customer that the customer has no
established account relationship with the bank, and has not had any
such account relationship within the past 30 days, to determine
whether an account is subject to the new account exception.
C. 229.13(b) Large Deposits
1. Under the large deposit exception, a depositary bank may
extend the hold placed on check deposits to the extent that the
amount of the aggregate deposit on any banking day exceeds $5,525.
This exception applies to local and nonlocal checks, as well as to
checks that otherwise would be made available on the next (or
second) business day after the day of deposit under § 229.10(c).
Although the first $5,525 of a day's deposit is subject to the
availability otherwise provided for checks, the amount in excess of
$5,525 may be held for an additional period of time as provided in
§ 229.13(h). When the large deposit exception is applied to
deposits composed of a mix of checks that would otherwise be
subject to differing availability schedules, the depositary bank
has the discretion to choose the portion of the deposit to which it
applies the exception. Deposits by cash or electronic payment are
not subject to this exception for large deposits.
2. The following example illustrates the operation of the
large-deposit exception. If a customer deposits $2,000 in cash and
a $9,000 local check on a Monday, $2,225 (the proceeds of the cash
deposit and $225 from the local-check deposit) must be made
available for withdrawal on Tuesday. An additional $5,300 of the
proceeds of the local check must be available for withdrawal on
Wednesday in accordance with the local schedule, and the remaining
$3,475 may be held for an additional period of time under the
large-deposit exception.
3. Where a customer has multiple accounts with a depositary
bank, the bank may apply the large deposit exception to the
aggregate deposits to all of the customer's accounts, even if the
customer is not the sole holder of the accounts and not all of the
holders of the customer's accounts are the same. Thus, a depositary
bank may aggregate the deposits made to two individual accounts in
the same name, to an individual and a joint account with one common
name, or to two joint accounts with at least one common name for
the purpose of applying the large deposit exception. Aggregation of
deposits to multiple accounts is permitted because the Board
believes that the risk to the depositary bank associated with large
deposits is similar regardless of how the deposits are allocated
among the customer's accounts.
4. Dollar Amount Adjustment - See section 229.11 for the rules
regarding adjustments for inflation every five years to the dollar
amounts in this section.
D. 229.13(c) Redeposited Checks
1. The EFA Act gives the Board the authority to promulgate an
exception to the schedule for checks that have been returned unpaid
and redeposited. Section 229.13(c) provides such an exception for
checks that have been returned unpaid and redeposited by the
customer or the depositary bank. This exception applies to local
and nonlocal checks, as well as to checks that would otherwise be
made available on the next (or second) business day after the day
of deposit under § 229.10(c).
2. This exception addresses the increased risk to the depositary
bank that checks that have been returned once will be uncollectible
when they are presented to the paying bank a second time. The
Board, however, does not believe that this increased risk is
present for checks that have been returned due to a missing
indorsement. Thus, the exception does not apply to checks returned
unpaid due to missing indorsements and redeposited after the
missing indorsement has been obtained, if the reason for return
indicated on the check (see § 229.30(d)) states that it was
returned due to a missing indorsement. For the same reason, this
exception does not apply to a check returned because it was
postdated (future dated), if the reason for return indicated on the
check states that it was returned because it was postdated, and if
it is no longer postdated when redeposited.
3. To determine when funds must be made available for
withdrawal, the banking day on which the check is redeposited is
considered to be the day of deposit. A depositary bank that made
$100 of a check available for withdrawal under § 229.10(c)(1)(vii)
can charge back the full amount of the check, including the $100,
if the check is returned unpaid, and the $100 need not be made
available again if the check is redeposited.
E. 229.13(d) Repeated Overdrafts
1. The EFA Act gives the Board the authority to establish an
exception for “deposit accounts which have been overdrawn
repeatedly.” This paragraph provides two tests to determine what
constitutes repeated overdrafts. Under the first test, a customer's
accounts are considered repeatedly overdrawn if, on six banking
days within the preceding six months, the available balance in any
account held by the customer is negative, or the balance would have
become negative if checks or other charges to the account had been
paid, rather than returned. This test can be met based on separate
occurrences (e.g., checks that are returned for insufficient funds
on six different days), or based on one occurrence (e.g., a
negative balance that remains on the customer's account for six
banking days). If the bank dishonors a check that otherwise would
have created a negative balance, however, the incident is
considered an overdraft only on that day.
2. The second test addresses substantial overdrafts. Such
overdrafts increase the risk to the depositary bank of dealing with
the repeated overdrafter. Under this test, a customer incurs
repeated overdrafts if, on two banking days within the preceding
six months, the available balance in any account held by the
customer is negative in an amount of $5,525 or more, or would have
become negative in an amount of $5,525 or more if checks or other
charges to the account had been paid.
3. The exception relates not only to overdrafts caused by checks
drawn on the account, but also overdrafts caused by other debit
charges (e.g. ACH debits, point-of-sale transactions, returned
checks, account fees, etc.). If the potential debit is in excess of
available funds, the exception applies regardless of whether the
items were paid or returned unpaid. An overdraft resulting from an
error on the part of the depositary bank, or from the imposition of
overdraft charges for which the customer is entitled to a refund
under §§ 229.13(e) or 229.16(c), cannot be considered in
determining whether the customer is a repeated overdrafter. The
exception excludes accounts with overdraft lines of credit, unless
the credit line has been exceeded or would have been exceeded if
the checks or other charges to the account had been paid.
4. This exception applies to local and nonlocal checks, as well
as to checks that otherwise would be made available on the next (or
second) business day after the day of deposit under § 229.10(c).
When a bank places or extends a hold under this exception, it need
not make the first $100 of a deposit available for withdrawal on
the next business day, as otherwise would be required by §
229.10(c)(1)(vii).
5. Dollar Amount Adjustment - See section 229.11 for the
calculation method used to adjust the dollar amounts in this
section every five years.
F. 229.13(e) Reasonable Cause To Doubt Collectibility
1. In the case of certain check deposits, if the bank has
reasonable cause to believe the check is uncollectible, it may
extend the time funds must be made available for withdrawal. This
exception applies to local and nonlocal checks, as well as to
checks that would otherwise be made available on the next (or
second) business day after the day of deposit under § 229.10(c).
When a bank places or extends a hold under this exception, it need
not make the first $100 of a deposit available for withdrawal on
the next business day, as otherwise would be required by §
229.10(c)(1)(vii). If the reasonable cause exception is invoked,
the bank must include in the notice to its customer, required by §
229.13(g), the reason that the bank believes that the check is
uncollectible.
2. The following are several examples of circumstances under
which the reasonable cause exception may be invoked:
a. If a bank received a notice from the paying bank that a check
was not paid and is being returned to the depositary bank, the
depositary bank could place a hold on the check or extend a hold
previously placed on that check, and notify the customer that the
bank had received notice that the check is being returned. The
exception could be invoked even if the notice were incomplete, if
the bank had reasonable cause to believe that the notice applied to
that particular check.
b. The depositary bank may have received information from the
paying bank, prior to the presentment of the check, that gives the
bank reasonable cause to believe that the check is uncollectible.
For example, the paying bank may have indicated that payment has
been stopped on the check, or that the drawer's account does not
currently have sufficient funds to honor the check. Such
information may provide sufficient basis to invoke this exception.
In these cases, the depositary bank could invoke the exception and
disclose as the reason the exception is being invoked the fact that
information from the paying bank indicates that the check may not
be paid.
c. The fact that a check is deposited more than six months after
the date on the check (i.e. a stale check) is a reasonable
indication that the check may be uncollectible, because under
U.C.C. 4-404 a bank has no duty to its customer to pay a check that
is more than six months old. Similarly, if a check being deposited
is postdated (future dated), the bank may have a reasonable cause
to believe the check is uncollectible, because the check may not be
properly payable under U.C.C. 4-401. The bank, in its notice,
should specify that the check is stale-dated or postdated.
d. There are reasons that may cause a bank to believe that a
check is uncollectible that are based on confidential information.
For example, a bank could conclude that a check being deposited is
uncollectible based on its reasonable belief that the depositor is
engaging in kiting activity. Reasonable belief as to the insolvency
or pending insolvency of the drawer of the check or the drawee bank
and that the checks will not be paid also may justify invoking this
exception. In these cases, the bank may indicate, as the reason it
is invoking the exception, that the bank has confidential
information that indicates that the check might not be paid.
3. The Board has included a reasonable cause exception notice as
a model notice in appendix C (C-13). The model notice includes
several reasons for which this exception may be invoked. The Board
does not intend to provide a comprehensive list of reasons for
which this exception may be invoked; another reason that does not
appear on the model notice may be used as the basis for extending a
hold, if the reason satisfies the conditions for invoking this
exception. A depositary bank may invoke the reasonable cause
exception based on a combination of factors that give rise to a
reasonable cause to doubt the collectibility of a check. In these
cases, the bank should disclose the primary reasons for which the
exception was invoked in accordance with paragraph (g) of this
section.
4. The regulation provides that the determination that a check
is uncollectible shall not be based on a class of checks or
persons. For example, a depositary bank cannot invoke this
exception simply because the check is drawn on a paying bank in a
rural area and the depositary bank knows it will not have the
opportunity to learn of nonpayment of that check before funds must
be made available under the availability schedules. Similarly, a
depositary bank cannot invoke the reasonable cause exception based
on the race or national origin of the depositor.
5. If a depositary bank invokes this exception with respect to a
particular check and does not provide a written notice to the
depositor at the time of deposit, the depositary bank may not
assess any overdraft fee (such as an “NSF” charge) or charge
interest for use of overdraft credit, if the check is paid by the
paying bank and these charges would not have occurred had the
exception not been invoked. A bank may assess an overdraft fee
under these circumstances, however, if it provides notice to the
customer, in the notice of exception required by paragraph (g) of
this section, that the fee may be subject to refund, and refunds
the charges upon the request of the customer. The notice must state
that the customer may be entitled to a refund of any overdraft fees
that are assessed if the check being held is paid, and indicate
where such requests for a refund of overdraft fees should be
directed.
G. 229.13(f) Emergency Conditions
1. Certain emergency conditions may arise that delay the
collection or return of checks, or delay the processing and
updating of customer accounts. In the circumstances specified in
this paragraph, the depositary bank may extend the holds that are
placed on deposits of checks that are affected by such delays, if
the bank exercises such diligence as the circumstances require. For
example, if a bank learns that a check has been delayed in the
process of collection due to severe weather conditions or other
causes beyond its control, an emergency condition covered by this
section may exist and the bank may place a hold on the check to
reflect the delay. This exception applies to local and nonlocal
checks, as well as checks that would otherwise be made available on
the next (or second) business day after the day of deposit under §
229.10(c). When a bank places or extends a hold under this
exception, it need not make the first $100 of a deposit available
for withdrawal on the next business day, as otherwise would be
required by § 229.10(c)(1)(vii). In cases where the emergency
conditions exception does not apply, as in the case of deposits of
cash or electronic payments under § 229.10 (a) and (b), the
depositary bank may not be liable for a delay in making funds
available for withdrawal if the delay is due to a bona fide error
such as an unavoidable computer malfunction.
H. 229.13(g) Notice of Exception
1. In general.
a. If a depositary bank invokes any of the safeguard exceptions
to the schedules listed above, other than the new account or
emergency conditions exception, and extends the hold on a deposit
beyond the time periods permitted in §§ 229.10(c) and 229.12, it
must provide a notice to its customer. Except in the cases
described in paragraphs (g)(2) and (g)(3) of this section, notices
must be given each time an exception hold is invoked and must state
the customer's account number, the date of deposit, the reason the
exception was invoked, and the time period within which funds will
be available for withdrawal. For a customer that is not a consumer,
a depositary bank satisfies the written-notice requirement by
sending an electronic notice that displays the text and is in a
form that the customer may keep, if the customer agrees to such
means of notice. Information is in a form that the customer may
keep if, for example, it can be downloaded or printed. For a
customer who is a consumer, a depositary bank satisfies the
written-notice requirement by sending an electronic notice in
compliance with the requirements of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.),
which include obtaining the consumer's affirmative consent to such
means of notice.
b. With respect to paragraph (g)(1), the requirement that the
notice state the time period within which the funds shall be made
available may be satisfied if the notice identifies the date the
deposit is received and information sufficient to indicate when
funds will be available and the amounts that will be available at
those times. For example, for a deposit involving more than one
check, the bank need not provide a notice that discloses when funds
from each individual check in the deposit will be available for
withdrawal; instead, the bank may provide a total dollar amount for
each of the time periods when funds will be available, or provide
the customer with an explanation of how to determine the amount of
the deposit that will be held and when the funds will be available
for deposit. Appendix C (C-12) contains a model notice.
c. For deposits made in person to an employee of the depositary
bank, the notice generally must be given to the person making the
deposit, i.e., the “depositor”, at the time of deposit. The
depositor need not be the customer holding the account. For other
deposits, such as deposits received at an ATM, lobby deposit box,
night depository, or through the mail, notice must be mailed to the
customer not later than the close of the business day following the
banking day on which the deposit was made.
d. Notice to the customer also may be provided at a later time,
if the facts upon which the determination to invoke the exception
do not become known to the depositary bank until after notice would
otherwise have to be given. In these cases, the bank must mail the
notice to the customer as soon as practicable, but not later than
the business day following the day the facts become known. A bank
is deemed to have knowledge when the facts are brought to the
attention of the person or persons in the bank responsible for
making the determination, or when the facts would have been brought
to their attention if the bank had exercised due diligence.
e. In those cases described in paragraphs (g)(2) and (g)(3), the
depositary bank need not provide a notice every time an exception
hold is applied to a deposit. When paragraph (g)(2) or (g)(3)
requires disclosure of the time period within which deposits
subject to the exception generally will be available for
withdrawal, the requirement may be satisfied if the one-time notice
states when “on us,” local, and nonlocal checks will be available
for withdrawal if an exception is invoked.
2. One-time exception notice.
a. Under paragraph (g)(2), if a nonconsumer account (see
Commentary to § 229.2(n)) is subject to the large deposit or
redeposited check exception, the depositary bank may give its
customer a single notice at or prior to the time notice must be
provided under paragraph (g)(1). Notices provided under paragraph
(g)(2) must contain the reason the exception may be invoked and the
time period within which deposits subject to the exception will be
available for withdrawal (see Model Notice C-14). A depositary bank
may provide a one-time notice to a nonconsumer customer under
paragraph (g)(2) only if each exception cited in the notice (the
large deposit and/or the redeposited check exception) will be
invoked for most check deposits to the customer's account to which
the exception could apply. A one-time notice may state that the
depositary bank will apply exception holds to certain subsets of
deposits to which the large deposit or redeposited check exception
may apply, and the notice should identify such subsets. For
example, the depositary bank may apply the redeposited check
exception only to checks that were redeposited automatically by the
depositary bank in accordance with an agreement with the customer,
rather than to all redeposited checks. In lieu of sending the
one-time notice, a depositary bank may send individual hold notices
for each deposit subject to the large deposit or redeposited check
exception in accordance with § 229.13(g)(1) (see Model Notice
C-12).
b. In the case of a deposit of multiple checks, the depositary
bank has the discretion to place an exception hold on any
combination of checks in excess of $5,525. The notice should enable
a customer to determine the availability of the deposit in the case
of a deposit of multiple checks. For example, if a customer
deposits a $5,525 local check and a $5,525 nonlocal check, under
the large-deposit exception, the depositary bank may make funds
available in the amount of (1) $225 on the first business day after
deposit, $5,300 on the second business day after deposit (local
check), and $5,525 on the eleventh business day after deposit
(nonlocal check with six-day exception hold), or (2) $225 on the
first business day after deposit, $5,300 on the fifth business day
after deposit (nonlocal check), and $5,525 on the seventh business
day after deposit (local check with five-day exception hold). The
notice should reflect the bank's priorities in placing exception
holds on next-day (or second-day), local, and nonlocal checks.
3. Notice of repeated overdraft exception. Under paragraph
(g)(3), if an account is subject to the repeated overdraft
exception, the depositary bank may provide one notice to its
customer for each time period during which the exception will
apply. Notices sent pursuant to paragraph (g)(3) must state the
customer's account number, the fact the exception was invoked under
the repeated overdraft exception, the time period within which
deposits subject to the exception will be made available for
withdrawal, and the time period during which the exception will
apply (see Model Notice C-15). A depositary bank may provide a
one-time notice to a customer under paragraph (g)(3) only if the
repeated overdraft exception will be invoked for most check
deposits to the customer's account.
4. Emergency conditions exception notice.
a. If an account is subject to the emergency conditions
exception under § 229.13(f), the depositary bank must provide
notice in a reasonable form within a reasonable time, depending on
the circumstances. For example, a depositary bank may learn of a
weather emergency or a power outage that affects the paying bank's
operations. Under these circumstances, it likely would be
reasonable for the depositary bank to provide an emergency
conditions exception notice in the same manner and within the same
time as required for other exception notices. On the other hand, if
a depositary bank experiences a weather or power outage emergency
that affects its own operations, it may be reasonable for the
depositary bank to provide a general notice to all depositors via
postings at branches and ATMs, or through newspaper, television, or
radio notices.
b. If the depositary bank extends the hold placed on a deposit
due to an emergency condition, the bank need not provide a notice
if the funds would be available for withdrawal before the notice
must be sent. For example, if on the last day of a hold period the
depositary bank experiences a computer failure and customer
accounts cannot be updated in a timely fashion to reflect the funds
as available balances, notices are not required if the funds are
made available before the notices must be sent.
5. Record retention. A depositary bank must retain a record of
each notice of a reasonable cause exception for a period of two
years, or such longer time as provided in the record retention
requirements of § 229.21. This record must contain a brief
description of the facts on which the depositary bank based its
judgment that there was reasonable cause to doubt the
collectibility of a check. In many cases, such as where the
exception was invoked on the basis of a notice of nonpayment
received, the record requirement may be met by retaining a copy of
the notice sent to the customer. In other cases, such as where the
exception was invoked on the basis of confidential information, a
further description to the facts, such as insolvency of drawer,
should be included in the record.
I. 229.13(h) Availability of Deposits Subject to Exceptions
1. If a depositary bank invokes any exception other than the new
account exception, the bank may extend the time within which funds
must be made available under the schedule by a reasonable period of
time. This provision establishes that an extension of up to one
business day for “on us” checks, five business days for local
checks, and six business days for nonlocal checks and checks
deposited in a nonproprietary ATM is reasonable. Under certain
circumstances, however, a longer extension of the schedules may be
reasonable. In these cases, the burden is placed on the depositary
bank to establish that a longer period is reasonable.
2. For example, assume a bank extended the hold on a local check
deposit by five business days based on its reasonable cause to
believe that the check is uncollectible. If, on the day before the
extended hold is scheduled to expire, the bank receives a
notification from the paying bank that the check is being returned
unpaid, the bank may determine that a longer hold is warranted, if
it decides not to charge back the customer's account based on the
notification. If the bank decides to extend the hold, the bank must
send a second notice, in accordance with paragraph (g) of this
section, indicating the new date that the funds will be available
for withdrawal.
3. With respect to Treasury checks, U.S. Postal Service money
orders, checks drawn on Federal Reserve Banks or Federal Home Loan
Banks, state and local government checks, cashier's checks,
certified checks, and teller's checks subject to the next-day (or
second-day) availability requirement, the depositary bank may
extend the time funds must be made available for withdrawal under
the large deposit, redeposited check, repeated overdraft, or
reasonable cause exception by a reasonable period beyond the delay
that would have been permitted under the regulation had the checks
not been subject to the next-day (or second-day) availability
requirement. The additional hold is added to the local or nonlocal
schedule that would apply based on the location of the paying
bank.
4. One business day for “on us” checks, five business days for
local checks, and six business days for nonlocal checks or checks
deposited in a nonproprietary ATM, in addition to the time period
provided in the schedule, should provide adequate time for the
depositary bank to learn of the nonpayment of virtually all checks
that are returned. For example, if a customer deposits a $7,000
cashier's check drawn on a nonlocal bank, and the depositary bank
applies the large deposit exception to that check, $5,000 must be
available for withdrawal on the first business day after the day of
deposit and the remaining $2,000 must be available for withdrawal
on the eleventh business day following the day of deposit (six
business days added to the five-day schedule for nonlocal checks),
unless the depositary bank establishes that a longer hold is
reasonable.
5. In the case of the application of the emergency conditions
exception, the depositary bank may extend the hold placed on a
check by not more than a reasonable period following the end of the
emergency or the time funds must be available for withdrawal under
§§ 229.10(c) or 229.12, whichever is later.
6. This provision does not apply to holds imposed under the new
account exception. Under that exception, the maximum time period
within which funds must be made available for withdrawal is
specified for deposits that generally must be accorded next-day
availability under § 229.10. This subpart does not specify the
maximum time period within which the proceeds of local and nonlocal
checks must be made available for withdrawal during the new account
period.
VIII. Section 229.14 Payment of Interest A. 229.14(a) In General
1. This section requires that a depositary bank begin accruing
interest on interest-bearing accounts not later than the day on
which the depositary bank receives credit for the funds deposited.
3 A depositary bank generally receives credit on checks within one
or two days following deposit. A bank receives credit on a cash
deposit, an electronic payment, and the deposit of a check that is
drawn on the depositary bank itself on the day the cash, electronic
payment, or check is received. In the case of a deposit at a
nonproprietary ATM, credit generally is received on the day the
bank that operates the ATM credits the depositary bank for the
amount of the deposit. In the case of a deposit at a contractual
branch, credit is received on the day the depositary bank receives
credit for the amount of the deposit, which may be different from
the day the contractual branch receives credit for the deposit.
3 This section implements section 606 of the EFA Act (12 U.S.C.
4005). The EFA Act keys the requirement to pay interest to the time
the depositary bank receives provisional credit for a check.
Provisional credit is a term used in the U.C.C. that is derived
from the Code's concept of provisional settlement. (See U.C.C.
4-214 and 4-215.) Provisional credit is credit that is subject to
charge-back if the check is returned unpaid; once the check is
finally paid, the right to charge back expires and the provisional
credit becomes final. Under Subpart C, a paying bank no longer has
an automatic right to charge back credits given in settlement of a
check, and the concept of provisional settlement is no longer
useful and has been eliminated by the regulation. Accordingly, this
section uses the term credit rather than provisional credit, and
this section applies regardless of whether a credit would be
provisional or final under the U.C.C. Credit does not include a
bookkeeping entry (sometimes referred to as deferred credit) that
does not represent funds actually available for the bank's use.
2. Because account includes only transaction accounts, other
interest-bearing accounts of the depositary bank, such as money
market deposit accounts, savings deposits, and time deposits, are
not subject to this requirement; however, a bank may accrue
interest on such deposits in the same way that it accrues interest
under this paragraph for simplicity of operation. The Board intends
the term interest to refer to payments to or for the account of any
customer as compensation for the use of funds, but to exclude the
absorption of expenses incident to providing a normal banking
function or a bank's forbearance from charging a fee in connection
with such a service. (See 12 CFR 217.2(d).) Thus, earnings credits
often applied to corporate accounts are not interest payments for
the purposes of this section.
3. It may be difficult for a depositary bank to track which day
the depositary bank receives credit for specific checks in order to
accrue interest properly on the account to which the check is
deposited. This difficulty may be pronounced if the bank uses
different means of collecting checks based on the time of day the
check is received, the dollar amount of the check, and/or the
paying bank to which it must be sent. Thus, for the purpose of the
interest accrual requirement, a bank may rely on an availability
schedule from its Federal Reserve Bank, Federal Home Loan Bank, or
correspondent to determine when the depositary bank receives
credit. If availability is delayed beyond that specified in the
availability schedule, a bank may charge back interest erroneously
accrued or paid on the basis of that schedule.
4. This paragraph also permits a depositary bank to accrue
interest on checks deposited to all of its interest-bearing
accounts based on when the bank receives credit on all checks sent
for payment or collection. For example, if a bank receives credit
on 20 percent of the funds deposited in the bank by check as of the
business day of deposit (e.g., “on us” checks), 70 percent as of
the business day following deposit, and 10 percent on the second
business day following deposit, the bank can apply these
percentages to determine the day interest must begin to accrue on
check deposits to all interest-bearing accounts, regardless of when
the bank received credit on the funds deposited in any particular
account. Thus, a bank may begin accruing interest on a uniform
basis for all interest-bearing accounts, without the need to track
the type of check deposited to each account.
5. This section is not intended to limit a policy of a
depositary bank that provides that interest accrues only on
balances that exceed a specified amount, or on the minimum balance
maintained in the account during a given period, provided that the
balance is determined based on the date that the depositary bank
receives credit for the funds. This section also is not intended to
limit any policy providing that interest accrues sooner than
required by this paragraph.
B. 229.14(b) Special Rule for Credit Unions
1. This provision implements a requirement in section 606(b) of
the EFA Act, and provides an exemption from the payment-of-interest
requirements for credit unions that do not begin to accrue interest
or dividends on their customer accounts until a later date than the
day the credit union receives credit for those deposits, including
cash deposits. These credit unions are exempt from the
payment-of-interest requirements, as long as they provide notice of
their interest accrual policies in accordance with § 229.16(d). For
example, if a credit union has a policy of computing interest on
all deposits received by the 10th of the month from the first of
that month, and on all deposits received after the 10th of the
month from the first of the next month, that policy is not
superseded by this regulation, if the credit union provides proper
disclosure of this policy to its customers.
2. The EFA Act limits this exemption to credit unions; other
types of banks must comply with the payment-of-interest
requirements. In addition, credit unions that compute interest from
the day of deposit or day of credit should not change their
existing practices in order to avoid compliance with the
requirement that interest accrue from the day the credit union
receives credit.
C. 229.14(c) Exception for Checks Returned Unpaid
1. This provision is based on section 606(c) of the EFA Act (12
U.S.C. 4005(c)) and provides that interest need not be paid on
funds deposited in an interest-bearing account by check that has
been returned unpaid, regardless of the reason for return.
IX. Section 229.15 General Disclosure Requirements A. 229.15(a)
Form of Disclosures
1. This paragraph sets forth the general requirements for the
disclosures required under Subpart B. All of the disclosures must
be given in a clear and conspicuous manner, must be in writing,
and, in most cases, must be in a form the customer may keep. A
disclosure is in a form that the customer may keep if, for example,
it can be downloaded or printed. For a customer that is not a
consumer, a depositary bank satisfies the written-disclosure
requirement by sending an electronic disclosure that displays the
text and is in a form that the customer may keep, if the customer
agrees to such means of disclosure. For a customer who is a
consumer, a depositary bank satisfies the written-notice
requirement by sending an electronic notice in compliance with the
requirements of the Electronic Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act (12 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.), which include
obtaining the consumer's affirmative consent to such means of
notice. Disclosures posted at locations where employees accept
consumer deposits, at ATMs, and on preprinted deposit slips need
not be in a form that the customer may keep. Appendix C of the
regulation contains model forms, clauses, and notices to assist
banks in preparing disclosures.
2. Disclosures concerning availability must be grouped together
and may not contain any information that is not related to the
disclosures required by this subpart. Therefore, banks may not
intersperse the required disclosures with other account
disclosures, and may not include other account information that is
not related to their availability policy within the text of the
required disclosures. Banks may, however, include information that
is related to their availability policies. For example, a bank may
inform its customers that, even when the bank has already made
funds available for withdrawal, the customer is responsible for any
problem with the deposit, such as the return of a deposited
check.
3. The regulation does not require that the disclosures be
segregated from other account terms and conditions. For example,
banks may include the disclosure of their specific availability
policy in a booklet or pamphlet that sets out all of the terms and
conditions of the bank's accounts. The required disclosures must,
however, be grouped together and highlighted or identified in some
manner, for example, by use of a separate heading for the
disclosures, such as “When Deposits are Available for
Withdrawal.”
4. A bank may, by agreement or at the consumer's request,
provide any disclosure or notice required by subpart B in a
language other than English, provided that the bank makes a
complete disclosure available in English at the customer's
request.
B. 229.15(b) Uniform Reference to Day of Availability
1. This paragraph requires banks to disclose in a uniform manner
when deposited funds will be available for withdrawal. Banks must
disclose when deposited funds are available for withdrawal by
stating the business day on which the customer may begin to
withdraw funds. The business day funds will be available must be
disclosed as “the ________ business day after” the day of deposit,
or substantially similar language. The business day of availability
is determined by counting the number of business days starting with
the business day following the banking day on which the deposit is
received, as determined under § 229.19(a), and ending with the
business day on which the customer may begin to withdraw funds. For
example, a bank that imposes delays of four intervening business
days for nonlocal checks must describe those checks as being
available on “the fifth business day after” the day of the
deposit.
C. 229.15(c) Multiple Accounts and Multiple Account Holders
1. This paragraph clarifies that banks need not provide multiple
disclosures under the regulation. A single disclosure to a customer
that holds multiple accounts, or a single disclosure to one of the
account holders of a jointly held account, satisfies the disclosure
requirements of the regulation.
D. 229.15(d) Dormant or Inactive Accounts
1. This paragraph makes clear that banks need not provide
disclosure of their specific availability policies to customers
that hold accounts that are either dormant or inactive. The
determination that certain accounts are dormant or inactive must be
made by the bank. If a bank considers an account dormant or
inactive for purposes other than this regulation and no longer
provides statements and other mailings to an account for this
reason, such an account is considered dormant or inactive for
purposes of this regulation.
X. Section 229.16 Specific Availability Policy Disclosure A.
229.16(a) General
1. This section describes the information that must be disclosed
by banks to comply with §§ 229.17 and 229.18(d), which require that
banks furnish notices of their specific policy regarding
availability of deposited funds. The disclosure provided by a bank
must reflect the availability policy followed by the bank in most
cases, even though a bank may in some cases make funds available
sooner or impose a longer delay.
2. The disclosure must reflect the policy and practice of the
bank regarding availability as to most accounts and most deposits
into those accounts. In disclosing the availability policy that it
follows in most cases, a bank may provide a single disclosure that
reflects one policy to all its transaction account customers, even
though some of its customers may receive faster availability than
that reflected in the policy disclosure. Thus, a bank need not
disclose to some customers that they receive faster availability
than indicated in the disclosure. If, however, a bank has a policy
of imposing delays in availability on any customers longer than
those specified in its disclosure, those customers must receive
disclosures that reflect the longer applicable availability
periods. A bank may establish different availability policies for
different groups of customers, such as customers in a particular
geographic area or customers of a particular branch. For purposes
of providing a specific availability policy, the bank may allocate
customers among groups through good faith use of a reasonable
method. A bank may also establish different availability policies
for deposits at different locations, such as deposits at a
contractual branch.
3. A bank may disclose that funds are available for withdrawal
on a given day notwithstanding the fact that the bank uses the
funds to pay checks received before that day. For example, a bank
may disclose that its policy is to make funds available from
deposits of local checks on the second business day following the
day of deposit, even though it may use the deposited funds to pay
checks prior to the second business day; the funds used to pay
checks in this example are not available for withdrawal until the
second business day after deposit because the funds are not
available for all uses until the second business day. (See the
definition of available for withdrawal in § 229.2(d).)
B. 229.16(b) Content of Specific Policy Disclosure
1. This paragraph sets forth the items that must be included, as
applicable, in a bank's specific availability policy disclosure.
The information that must be disclosed by a particular bank will
vary considerably depending upon the bank's availability policy.
For example, a bank that makes deposited funds available for
withdrawal on the business day following the day of deposit need
simply disclose that deposited funds will be available for
withdrawal on the first business day after the day of deposit, the
bank's business days, and when deposits are considered
received.
2. On the other hand, a bank that has a policy of routinely
delaying on a blanket basis the time when deposited funds are
available for withdrawal would have a more detailed disclosure.
Such blanket hold policies might be for the maximum time allowed
under the federal law or might be for shorter periods. These banks
must disclose the types of deposits that will be subject to delays,
how the customer can determine the type of deposit being made, and
the day that funds from each type of deposit will be available for
withdrawal.
3. Some banks may have a combination of next-day availability
and blanket delays. For example, a bank may provide next-day
availability for all deposits except for one or two categories,
such as deposits at nonproprietary ATMs and nonlocal personal
checks over a specified dollar amount. The bank would describe the
categories that are subject to delays in availability and tell the
customer when each category would be available for withdrawal, and
state that other deposits will be available for withdrawal on the
first business day after the day of deposit. Similarly, a bank that
provides availability on the second business day for most of its
deposits would need to identify the categories of deposits which,
under the regulation, are subject to next-day availability and
state that all other deposits will be available on the second
business day.
4. Because many banks' availability policies may be complex, a
bank must give a brief summary of its policy at the beginning of
the disclosure. In addition, the bank must describe any
circumstances when actual availability may be longer than the
schedules disclosed. Such circumstances would arise, for example,
when the bank invokes one of the exceptions set forth in § 229.13
of the regulation, or when the bank delays or extends the time when
deposited funds are available for withdrawal up to the time periods
allowed by the regulation on a case-by-case basis. Also, a bank
that must make certain checks available faster under appendix B
(reduction of schedules for certain nonlocal checks) must state
that some check deposits will be available for withdrawal sooner
because of special rules and that a list of the pertinent routing
numbers is available upon request.
5. Generally, a bank that distinguishes in its disclosure
between local and nonlocal checks based on the routing number on
the check must disclose to its customers that certain checks, such
as some credit union payable-through drafts, will be treated as
local or nonlocal based on the location of the bank by which they
are payable (e.g., the credit union), and not on the basis of the
location of the bank whose routing number appears on the check. A
bank is not required to provide this disclosure, however, if it
makes the proceeds of both local and nonlocal checks available for
withdrawal within the time periods required for local checks in §§
229.12 and 229.13.
6. The business day cut-off time used by the bank must be
disclosed and if some locations have different cut-off times the
bank must note this in the disclosure and state the earliest time
that might apply. A bank need not list all of the different cut-off
times that might apply. If a bank does not have a cut-off time
prior to its closing time, the bank need not disclose a cut-off
time.
7. A bank taking advantage of the extended time period for
making deposits at nonproprietary ATMs available for withdrawal
under § 229.12(f) must explain this in the initial disclosure. In
addition, the bank must provide a list (on or with the initial
disclosure) of either the bank's proprietary ATMs or those ATMs
that are nonproprietary at which customers may make deposits. As an
alternative to providing such a list, the bank may label all of its
proprietary ATMs with the bank's name and state in the initial
disclosure that this has been done. Similarly, a bank taking
advantage of the cash withdrawal limitations of § 229.12(d), or the
provision in § 229.19(e) allowing holds to be placed on other
deposits when a deposit is made or a check is cashed, must explain
this in the initial disclosure.
8. A bank that provides availability based on when the bank
generally receives credit for deposited checks need not disclose
the time when a check drawn on a specific bank will be available
for withdrawal. Instead, the bank may disclose the categories of
deposits that must be available on the first business day after the
day of deposit (deposits subject to § 229.10) and state the other
categories of deposits and the time periods that will be applicable
to those deposits. For example, a bank might disclose the
four-digit Federal Reserve routing symbol for local checks and
indicate that such checks as well as certain nonlocal checks will
be available for withdrawal on the first or second business day
following the day of deposit, depending on the location of the
particular bank on which the check is drawn, and disclose that
funds from all other checks will be available on the second or
third business day. The bank must also disclose that the customer
may request a copy of the bank's detailed schedule that would
enable the customer to determine the availability of any check and
must provide such schedule upon request. A change in the bank's
detailed schedule would not trigger the change in policy disclosure
requirement of § 229.18(e).
C. 229.16(c) Longer Delays on a Case-by-Case Basis
1. Notice in specific policy disclosure.
a. Banks that make deposited funds available for withdrawal
sooner than required by the regulation - for example, providing
their customers with immediate or next-day availability for
deposited funds - and delay the time when funds are available for
withdrawal only from time to time determined on a case-by-case
basis, must provide notice of this in their specific availability
policy disclosure. This paragraph outlines the requirements for
that notice.
b. In addition to stating what their specific availability
policy is in most cases, banks that may delay or extend the time
when deposits are available on a case-by-case basis must: state
that from time to time funds may be available for withdrawal later
than the time periods in their specific policy disclosure, disclose
the latest time that a customer may have to wait for deposited
funds to be available for withdrawal when a case-by-case hold is
placed, state that customers will be notified when availability of
a deposit is delayed on a case-by-case basis, and advise customers
to ask if they need to be sure of the availability of a particular
deposit.
c. A bank that imposes delays on a case-by-case basis is still
subject to the availability requirements of this regulation. If the
bank imposes a delay on a particular deposit that is not longer
than the availability required by § 229.12 for local and nonlocal
checks, the reason for the delay need not be based on the
exceptions provided in § 229.13. If the delay exceeds the time
periods permitted under § 229.12, however, then it must be based on
an exception provided in § 229.13, and the bank must comply with
the § 229.13 notice requirements. A bank that imposes delays on a
case-by-case basis may avail itself of the one-time notice
provisions in § 229.13(g)(2) and (3) for deposits to which those
provisions apply.
2. Notice at time of case-by-case delay.
a. In addition to including the disclosures required by
paragraph (c)(1) of this section in their specific availability
policy disclosure, banks that delay or extend the time period when
funds are available for withdrawal on a case-by-case basis must
give customers a notice when availability of funds from a
particular deposit will be delayed or extended beyond the time when
deposited funds are generally available for withdrawal. The notice
must state that a delay is being imposed and indicate when the
funds will be available. In addition, the notice must include the
account number, the date of the deposit, and the amount of the
deposit being delayed.
b. If notice of the delay was not given at the time the deposit
was made and the bank assesses overdraft or returned check fees on
accounts when a case-by-case hold has been placed, the case-by-case
hold notice provided to the customer must include a notice
concerning overdraft or returned check fees. The notice must state
that the customer may be entitled to a refund of any overdraft or
returned check fees that result from the deposited funds not being
available if the check that was deposited was in fact paid by the
payor bank, and explain how to request a refund of any fees. (See §
229.16(c)(3).)
c. The requirement that the case-by-case hold notice state the
day that funds will be made available for withdrawal may be met by
stating the date or the number of business days after deposit that
the funds will be made available. This requirement is satisfied if
the notice provides information sufficient to indicate when funds
will be available and the amounts that will be available at those
times. For example, for a deposit involving more than one check,
the bank need not provide a notice that discloses when funds from
each individual item in the deposit will be available for
withdrawal. Instead, the bank may provide a total dollar amount for
each of the time periods when funds will be available, or provide
the customer with an explanation of how to determine the amount of
the deposit that will be held and when the held funds will be
available for withdrawal.
d. For deposits made in person to an employee of the depositary
bank, the notice generally must be given at the time of the
deposit. The notice at the time of the deposit must be given to the
person making the deposit, that is, the “depositor.” The depositor
need not be the customer holding the account. For other deposits,
such as deposits received at an ATM, lobby deposit box, night
depository, through the mail, or by armored car, notice must be
mailed to the customer not later than the close of the business day
following the banking day on which the deposit was made. Notice to
the customer also may be provided not later than the close of the
business day following the banking day on which the deposit was
made if the decision to delay availability is made after the time
of the deposit.
3. Overdraft and returned check fees. If a depositary bank
delays or extends the time when funds from a deposited check are
available for withdrawal on a case-by-case basis and does not
provide a written notice to its depositor at the time of deposit,
the depositary bank may not assess any overdraft or returned check
fees (such as an insufficient funds charge) or charge interest for
use of an overdraft line of credit, if the deposited check is paid
by the paying bank and these fees would not have occurred had the
additional case-by-case delay not been imposed. A bank may assess
an overdraft or returned check fee under these circumstances,
however, if it provides notice to the customer in the notice
required by paragraph (c)(2) of this section that the fee may be
subject to refund, and refunds the fee upon the request of the
customer when required to do so. The notice must state that the
customer may be entitled to a refund of any overdraft or returned
check fees that are assessed if the deposited check is paid, and
indicate where such requests for a refund of overdraft fees should
be directed. Paragraph (c)(3) applies when a bank provides a
case-by-case notice in accordance with paragraph (c)(2) and does
not apply if the bank has provided an exception hold notice in
accordance with § 229.13.
D. 229.16(d) Credit Union Notice of Interest Payment Policy
1. This paragraph sets forth the special disclosure requirement
for credit unions that delay accrual of interest or dividends for
all cash and check deposits beyond the date of receiving
provisional credit for checks being deposited. (The interest
payment requirement is set forth in § 229.14(a).) Such credit
unions are required to describe their policy with respect to
accrual of interest or dividends on deposits in their specific
availability policy disclosure.
XI. Section 229.17 Initial Disclosures
A. This paragraph requires banks to provide a notice of their
availability policy to all potential customers prior to opening an
account. The requirement of a notice prior to opening an account
requires banks to provide disclosures prior to accepting a deposit
to open an account. Disclosures must be given at the time the bank
accepts an initial deposit regardless of whether the bank has
opened the account yet for the customer. If a bank, however,
receives a written request by mail from a person asking that an
account be opened and the request includes an initial deposit, the
bank may open the account with the deposit, provided the bank mails
the required disclosures to the customer not later than the
business day following the banking day on which the bank receives
the deposit. Similarly, if a bank receives a telephone request from
a customer asking that an account be opened with a transfer from a
separate account of the customer's at the bank, the disclosure may
be mailed not later than the business day following the banking day
of the request.
XII. Section 229.18 Additional Disclosure Requirements A. 229.18(a)
Deposit Slips
1. This paragraph requires banks to include a notice on all
preprinted deposit slips. The deposit slip notice need only state,
somewhere on the front of the deposit slip, that deposits may not
be available for immediate withdrawal. The notice is required only
on preprinted deposit slips - those printed with the customer's
account number and name and furnished by the bank in response to a
customer's order to the bank. A bank need not include the notice on
deposit slips that are not preprinted and supplied to the customer
- such as counter deposit slips - or on those special deposit slips
provided to the customer under § 229.10(c). A bank is not
responsible for ensuring that the notice appear on deposit slips
that the customer does not obtain from or through the bank. This
paragraph applies to preprinted deposit slips furnished to
customers on or after September 1, 1988.
B. 229.18(b) Locations Where Employees Accept Consumer Deposits
1. This paragraph describes the statutory requirement that a
bank post in each location where its employees accept consumer
deposits a notice of its availability policy pertaining to consumer
accounts. The notice that is required must specifically state the
availability periods for the various deposits that may be made to
consumer accounts. The notice need not be posted at each teller
window, but the notice must be posted in a place where consumers
seeking to make deposits are likely to see it before making their
deposits. For example, the notice might be posted at the point
where the line forms for teller service in the lobby. The notice is
not required at any drive-through teller windows nor is it required
at night depository locations, or at locations where consumer
deposits are not accepted. A bank that acts as a contractual branch
at a particular location must include the availability policy that
applies to its own customers but need not include the policy that
applies to the customers of the bank for which it is acting as a
contractual branch.
C. 229.18(c) Automated Teller Machines
1. This paragraph sets forth the required notices for ATMs.
Paragraph (c)(1) provides that the depositary bank is responsible
for posting a notice on all ATMs at which deposits can be made to
accounts at the depositary bank. The depositary bank may arrange
for a third party, such as the owner or operator of the ATM, to
post the notice and indemnify the depositary bank from liability if
the depositary bank is liable under § 229.21 for the owner or
operator failing to provide the required notice.
2. The notice may be posted on a sign, shown on the screen, or
included on deposit envelopes provided at the ATM. This disclosure
must be given before the customer has made the deposit. Therefore,
a notice provided on the customer's deposit receipt or appearing on
the ATM's screen after the customer has made the deposit would not
satisfy this requirement.
3. Paragraph (c)(2) requires a depositary bank that operates an
off-premise ATM from which deposits are removed not more than two
times a week to make a disclosure of this fact on the off-premise
ATM. The notice must disclose to the customer the days on which
deposits made at the ATM will be considered received.
D. 229.18(d) Upon Request
1. This paragraph requires banks to provide written notice of
their specific availability policy to any person upon that person's
oral or written request. The notice must be sent within a
reasonable period of time following receipt of the request.
E. 229.18(e) Changes in Policy
1. This paragraph requires banks to send notices to their
customers when the banks change their availability policies with
regard to consumer accounts. A notice may be given in any form as
long as it is clear and conspicuous. If the bank gives notice of a
change by sending the customer a complete new availability
disclosure, the bank must direct the customer to the changed terms
in the disclosure by use of a letter or insert, or by highlighting
the changed terms in the disclosure.
2. Generally, a bank must send a notice at least 30 calendar
days before implementing any change in its availability policy. If
the change results in faster availability of deposits - for
example, if the bank changes its availability for nonlocal checks
from the fifth business day after deposit to the fourth business
day after deposit - the bank need not send advance notice. The bank
must, however, send notice of the change no later than 30 calendar
days after the change is implemented. A bank is not required to
give a notice when there is a change in appendix B (reduction of
schedules for certain nonlocal checks).
3. A bank that has provided its customers with a list of ATMs
under § 229.16(b)(5) shall provide its customers with an updated
list of ATMs once a year if there are changes in the list of ATMs
previously disclosed to the customers.
XIII. Section 229.19 Miscellaneous A. 229.19(a) When Funds Are
Considered Deposited
1. The time funds must be made available for withdrawal under
this subpart is determined by the day the deposit is made. This
paragraph provides rules to determine the day funds are considered
deposited in various circumstances.
2. Staffed facilities and ATMs. Funds received at a staffed
teller station or ATM are considered deposited when received by the
teller or placed in the ATM. Funds received at a contractual branch
are considered deposited when received by a teller at the
contractual branch or deposited into a proprietary ATM of the
contractual branch. (See also, Commentary to § 229.10(c) on
deposits made to an employee of the depositary bank.) Funds
deposited to a deposit box in a bank lobby that is accessible to
customers only during regular business hours generally are
considered deposited when placed in the lobby box; a bank may,
however, treat deposits to lobby boxes the same as deposits to
night depositories (as provided in § 229.19(a)(3)), provided a
notice appears on the lobby box informing the customer when such
funds will be considered deposited.
3. Mail. Funds mailed to the depositary bank are considered
deposited on the banking day they are received by the depositary
bank. The funds are received by the depositary bank at the time the
mail is delivered to the bank, even if it is initially delivered to
a mail room, rather than the check processing area.
4. Other facilities.
a. In addition to deposits at staffed facilities, at ATMs, and
by mail, funds may be deposited at a facility such as a night
depository or a lock box. A night depository is a receptacle for
receipt of deposits, typically used by corporate depositors when
the branch is closed. Funds deposited at a night depository are
considered deposited on the banking day the deposit is removed, and
the contents of the deposit are accessible to the depositary bank
for processing. For example, some businesses deposit their funds in
a locked bag at the night depository late in the evening, and
return to the bank the following day to open the bag. Other
depositors may have an agreement with their bank that the deposit
bag must be opened under the dual control of the bank and the
depositor. In these cases, the funds are considered deposited when
the customer returns to the bank and opens the deposit bag.
b. A lock box is a post office box used by a corporation for the
collection of bill payments or other check receipts. The depositary
bank generally assumes the responsibility for collecting the mail
from the lock box, processing the checks, and crediting the
corporation for the amount of the deposit. Funds deposited through
a lock box arrangement are considered deposited on the day the
deposit is removed from the lock box and are accessible to the
depositary bank for processing.
5. Certain off-premise ATMs. A special provision is made for
certain off-premise ATMs that are not serviced daily. Funds
deposited at such an ATM are considered deposited on the day they
are removed from the ATM, if the ATM is not serviced more than two
times each week. This provision is intended to address the
practices of some banks of servicing certain remote ATMs
infrequently. If a depositary bank applies this provision with
respect to an ATM, a notice must be posted at the ATM informing
depositors that funds deposited at the ATM may not be considered
deposited until a future day, in accordance with § 229.18.
6. Banking day of deposit.
a. This paragraph also provides that a deposit received on a day
that the depositary bank is closed, or after the bank's cut-off
hour, may be considered made on the next banking day. Generally,
for purposes of the availability schedules of this subpart, a bank
may establish a cut-off hour of 2 p.m. or later for receipt of
deposits at its head office or branch offices. For receipt of
deposits at ATMs, contractual branches, or other off-premise
facilities, such as night depositories or lock boxes, the
depositary bank may establish a cut-off hour of 12:00 noon or later
(either local time of the branch or other location of the
depositary bank at which the account is maintained or local time of
the ATM, contractual branch, or other off-premise facility). The
depositary bank must use the same timing method for establishing
the cut-off hour for all ATMs, contractual branches, and other
off-premise facilities used by its customers. The choice of cut-off
hour must be reflected in the bank's internal procedures, and the
bank must inform its customers of the cut-off hour upon request.
This earlier cut-off for ATM, contractual branch, or other
off-premise deposits is intended to provide greater flexibility in
the servicing of these facilities.
b. Different cut-off hours may be established for different
types of deposits. For example, a bank may establish a 2 p.m.
cut-off for the receipt of check deposits, but a later cut-off for
the receipt of wire transfers. Different cut-off hours also may be
established for deposits received at different locations. For
example, a different cut-off may be established for ATM deposits
than for over-the-counter deposits, or for different teller
stations at the same branch. With the exception of the 12 noon
cut-off for deposits at ATMs and off-premise facilities, no cut-off
hour for receipt of deposits for purposes of this subpart can be
established earlier than 2 p.m.
c. A bank is not required to remain open until 2 p.m. If a bank
closes before 2 p.m., deposits received after the closing may be
considered deposited on the next banking day. Further, as §
229.2(f) defines the term banking day as the portion of a business
day on which a bank is open to the public for substantially all of
its banking functions, a day, or a portion of a day, is not
necessarily a banking day merely because the bank is open for only
limited functions, such as keeping drive-in or walk-up teller
windows open, when the rest of the bank is closed to the public.
For example, a banking office that usually provides a full range of
banking services may close at 12 noon but leave a drive-in teller
window open for the limited purpose of receiving deposits and
making cash withdrawals. Under those circumstances, the bank is
considered closed and may consider deposits received after 12 noon
as having been received on the next banking day. The fact that a
bank may reopen for substantially all of its banking functions
after 2 p.m., or that it continues its back office operations
throughout the day, would not affect this result. A bank may not,
however, close individual teller stations and reopen them for
next-day's business before 2 p.m. during a banking day.
B. 229.19(b) Availability at Start of Business Day
1. If funds must be made available for withdrawal on a business
day, the funds must be available for withdrawal by the later of 9
a.m. or the time the depositary bank's teller facilities, including
ATMs, are available for customer account withdrawals, except under
the special rule for cash withdrawals set forth in § 229.12(d).
Thus, if a bank has no ATMs and its branch facilities are available
for customer transactions beginning at 10 a.m., funds must be
available for customer withdrawal beginning at 10 a.m. If the bank
has ATMs that are available 24 hours a day, rather than
establishing 12:01 a.m. as the start of the business day, this
paragraph sets 9 a.m. as the start of the day with respect to ATM
withdrawals. The Board believes that this rule provides banks with
sufficient time to update their accounting systems to reflect the
available funds in customer accounts for that day.
2. The start of business is determined by the local time of the
branch or other location of the depositary bank at which the
account is maintained. For example, if funds in a customer's
account at a west coast bank are first made available for
withdrawal at the start of business on a given day, and the
customer attempts to withdraw the funds at an east coast ATM, the
depositary bank is not required to make the funds available until 9
a.m. west coast time (12 noon east coast time).
C. 229.19(c) Effect on Policies of Depositary Bank
1. This subpart establishes the maximum hold that may be placed
on customer deposits. A depositary bank may provide availability to
its customers in a shorter time than prescribed in this subpart. A
depositary bank also may adopt different funds availability
policies for different segments of its customer base, as long as
each policy meets the schedules in the regulation. For example, a
bank may differentiate between its corporate and consumer
customers, or may adopt different policies for its consumer
customers based on whether a customer has an overdraft line of
credit associated with the account.
2. This regulation does not affect a depositary bank's right to
accept or reject a check for deposit, to charge back the customer's
account based on a returned check or notice of nonpayment, or to
claim a refund for any credit provided to the customer. For
example, even if a check is returned or a notice of nonpayment is
received after the time by which funds must be made available for
withdrawal in accordance with this regulation, the depositary bank
may charge back the customer's account for the full amount of the
check. (See § 229.33(d) and Commentary.)
3. Nothing in the regulation requires a depositary bank to have
facilities open for customers to make withdrawals at specified
times or on specified days. For example, even though the special
cash withdrawal rule set forth in § 229.12(d) states that a bank
must make up to $400 available for cash withdrawals no later than 5
p.m. on specific business days, if a bank does not participate in
an ATM system and does not have any teller windows open at or after
5 p.m., the bank need not join an ATM system or keep offices open.
In this case, the bank complies with this rule if the funds that
are required to be available for cash withdrawal at 5 p.m. on a
particular day are available for withdrawal at the start of
business on the following day. Similarly, if a depositary bank is
closed for customer transactions, including ATMs, on a day funds
must be made available for withdrawal, the regulation does not
require the bank to open.
4. The special cash withdrawal rule in the EFA Act recognizes
that the $400 that must be made available for cash withdrawal by 5
p.m. on the day specified in the schedule may exceed a bank's daily
ATM cash withdrawal limit and explicitly provides that the EFA Act
does not supersede a bank's policy in this regard. As a result, if
a bank has a policy of limiting cash withdrawals from automated
teller machines to $250 per day, the regulation would not require
that the bank dispense $400 of the proceeds of the customer's
deposit that must be made available for cash withdrawal on that
day.
5. Even though the EFA Act clearly provides that the bank's ATM
withdrawal limit is not superseded by the federal availability
rules on the day funds must first be made available, the EFA Act
does not specifically permit banks to limit cash withdrawals at
ATMs on subsequent days when the entire amount of the deposit must
be made available for withdrawal. The Board believes that the
rationale behind the EFA Act's provision that a bank's ATM
withdrawal limit is not superseded by the requirement that funds be
made available for cash withdrawal applies on subsequent days.
Nothing in the regulation prohibits a depositary bank from
establishing ATM cash withdrawal limits that vary among customers
of the bank, as long as the limit is not dependent on the length of
time funds have been in the customer's account (provided that the
permissible hold has expired).
6. Some small banks, particularly credit unions, due to lack of
secure facilities, keep no cash on their premises and hence offer
no cash withdrawal capability to their customers. Other banks limit
the amount of cash on their premises due to bonding requirements or
cost factors, and consequently reserve the right to limit the
amount of cash each customer can withdraw over-the-counter on a
given day. For example, some banks require advance notice for large
cash withdrawals in order to limit the amount of cash needed to be
maintained on hand at any time.
7. Nothing in the regulation is intended to prohibit a bank from
limiting the amount of cash that may be withdrawn at a staffed
teller station if the bank has a policy limiting the amount of cash
that may be withdrawn, and if that policy is applied equally to all
customers of the bank, is based on security, operating, or bonding
requirements, and is not dependent on the length of time the funds
have been in the customer's account (as long as the permissible
hold has expired). The regulation, however, does not authorize such
policies if they are otherwise prohibited by statutory, regulatory,
or common law.
D. 229.19(d) Use of Calculated Availability
1. A depositary bank may provide availability to its nonconsumer
accounts on a calculated availability basis. Under calculated
availability, a specified percentage of funds from check deposits
may be made available to the customer on the next business day,
with the remaining percentage deferred until subsequent days. The
determination of the percentage of deposited funds that will be
made available each day is based on the customer's typical deposit
mix as determined by a sample of the customer's deposits. Use of
calculated availability is permitted only if, on average, the
availability terms that result from the sample are equivalent to or
more prompt than the requirements of this subpart.
E. 229.19(e) Holds on Other Funds
1. Section 607(d) of the EFA Act (12 U.S.C. 4006(d)) provides
that once funds are available for withdrawal under the EFA Act,
such funds shall not be frozen solely due to the subsequent deposit
of additional checks that are not yet available for withdrawal.
This provision of the EFA Act is designed to prevent evasion of the
EFA Act's availability requirements.
2. This paragraph clarifies that if a customer deposits a check
in an account (as defined in § 229.2(a)), the bank may not place a
hold on any of the customer's funds so that the funds that are held
exceed the amount of the check deposited or the total amount of
funds held are not made available for withdrawal within the times
required in this subpart. For example, if a bank places a hold on
funds in a customer's non transaction account, rather than a
transaction account, for deposits made to the customer's
transaction account, the bank may place such a hold only to the
extent that the funds held do not exceed the amount of the deposit
and the length of the hold does not exceed the time periods
permitted by this regulation.
3. These restrictions also apply to holds placed on funds in a
customer's account (as defined in § 229.2(a)) if a customer cashes
a check at a bank (other than a check drawn on that bank) over the
counter. The regulation does not prohibit holds that may be placed
on other funds of the customer for checks cashed over the counter,
to the extent that the transaction does not involve a deposit to an
account. A bank may not, however, place a hold on any account when
an “on us” check is cashed over the counter. “On us” checks are
considered finally paid when cashed (see U.C.C. 4-215(a)(1)). When
a customer cashes a check over the counter and the bank places a
hold on an account of the customer, the bank must give whatever
notice would have been required under §§ 229.13 or 229.16 had the
check been deposited in the account.
F. 229.19(f) Employee Training and Compliance
1. The EFA Act requires banks to take such actions as may be
necessary to inform fully each employee that performs duties
subject to the EFA Act of the requirements of the EFA Act, and to
establish and maintain procedures reasonably designed to assure and
monitor employee compliance with such requirements.
2. This paragraph requires a bank to establish procedures to
ensure compliance with these requirements and provide these
procedures to the employees responsible for carrying them out.
G. 229.19(g) Effect of Merger Transaction
1. After banks merge, there is often a period of adjustment
before their operations are consolidated. This paragraph
accommodates this adjustment period by allowing merged banks to be
treated as separate banks for purposes of this subpart for a period
of up to one year after consummation of the merger transaction,
except that a customer of any bank that is a party to the
transaction that has an established account with that bank may not
be treated as a new account holder for any other party to the
transaction for purposes of the new account exception of §
229.13(a), and a deposit in any branch of the merged bank is
considered deposited in the bank for purposes of the availability
schedules in accordance with § 229.19(a).
2. This rule affects the status of the combined entity in
several areas. For example, this rule would affect when an ATM is a
proprietary ATM (§ 229.2(aa) and § 229.12(b)) and when a check is
considered drawn on a branch of the depositary bank (§
229.10(c)(1)(vi)).
3. Merger transaction is defined in § 229.2(t).
XIV. Section 229.20 Relation to State Law A. 229.20(a) In General
1. Several states have enacted laws that govern when banks in
those states must make funds available to their customers. The EFA
Act provides that any state law in effect on September 1, 1989,
that provides that funds be made available in a shorter period of
time than provided in this regulation, will supersede the time
periods in the EFA Act and the regulation. The Conference Report on
the EFA Act clarifies this provision by stating that any state law
enacted on or before September 1, 1989, may supersede federal law
to the extent that the law relates to the time funds must be made
available for withdrawal. H.R. Rep. No. 261, 100th Cong. 1st Sess.
at 182 (1987).
2. Thus, if a state had wished to adopt a law governing funds
availability, it had to have made that law effective on or before
September 1, 1989. Laws adopted after that date do not supersede
federal law, even if they provide for shorter availability periods
than are provided under federal law. If a state that had a law
governing funds availability in effect before September 1, 1989,
amended its law after that date, the amendment would not supersede
federal law, but an amendment deleting a state requirement would be
effective.
3. If a state provides for a shorter hold for a certain category
of checks than is provided for under federal law, that state
requirement will supersede the federal provision. For example, most
state laws base some hold periods on whether the check being
deposited is drawn on an in-state or out-of-state bank. If a state
contains more than one check processing region, the state's hold
period for in-state checks may be shorter than the federal maximum
hold period for nonlocal checks. Thus, the state schedule would
supersede the federal schedule to the extent that it applies to
in-state, nonlocal checks.
4. The EFA Act also provides that any state law that provides
for availability in a shorter period of time than required by
federal law is applicable to all federally insured institutions in
that state, including federally chartered institutions. If a state
law provides shorter availability only for deposits in accounts in
certain categories of banks, such as commercial banks, the
superseding state law continues to apply only to those categories
of banks, rather than to all federally insured banks in the
state.
B. 229.20(b) Preemption of Inconsistent Law
1. This paragraph reflects the statutory provision that other
provisions of state law that are inconsistent with federal law are
preempted. Preemption does not require a determination by the Board
to be effective.
C. 229.20(c) Standards for Preemption
1. This section describes the standards the Board uses in making
determinations on whether federal law will preempt state laws
governing funds availability. A provision of state law is
considered inconsistent with federal law if it permits a depositary
bank to make funds available to a customer in a longer period of
time than the maximum period permitted by the EFA Act and this
regulation. For example, a state law that permits a hold of four
business days or longer for local checks permits a hold that is
longer than that permitted under the EFA Act and this regulation,
and therefore is inconsistent and preempted. State availability
schedules that provide for availability in a shorter period of time
than required under Regulation CC supersede the federal
schedule.
2. Under a state law, some categories of deposits could be
available for withdrawal sooner or later than the time required by
this subpart, depending on the composition of the deposit. For
example, the EFA Act and this regulation (§ 229.10(c)(1)(vii))
require next-day availability for the first $225 of the aggregate
deposit of local or nonlocal checks on any day, and a state law
could require next-day availability for any check of $200 or less
that is deposited. Under the EFA Act and this regulation, if either
one $300 check or three $100 checks are deposited on a given day,
$225 must be made available for withdrawal on the next business
day, and $75 must be made available in accordance with the local or
nonlocal schedule. Under the state law, however, the two deposits
would be subject to different availability rules. In the first
case, none of the proceeds of the deposit would be subject to
next-day availability; in the second case, the entire proceeds of
the deposit would be subject to next-day availability. In this
example, because the state law would, in some situations, permit a
hold longer than the maximum permitted by the EFA Act, this
provision of state law is inconsistent and preempted in its
entirety.
3. In addition to the differences between state and federal
availability schedules, a number of state laws contain exceptions
to the state availability schedules that are different from those
provided under the EFA Act and this regulation. The state
exceptions continue to apply only in those cases where the state
schedule is shorter than or equal to the federal schedule, and then
only up to the limit permitted by the Regulation CC schedule. Where
a deposit is subject to a state exception under a state schedule
that is not preempted by Regulation CC and is also subject to a
federal exception, the hold on the deposit cannot exceed the hold
permissible under the federal exception in accordance with
Regulation CC. In such cases, only one exception notice is
required, in accordance with § 229.13(g). This notice need only
include the applicable federal exception as the reason the
exception was invoked. For those categories of checks for which the
state schedule is preempted by the federal schedule, only the
federal exceptions may be used.
4. State laws that provide maximum availability periods for
categories of deposits that are not covered by the EFA Act would
not be preempted. Thus, state funds availability laws that apply to
funds in time and savings deposits are not affected by the EFA Act
or this regulation. In addition, the availability schedules of
several states apply to “items” deposited to an account. The term
items may encompass deposits, such as nonnegotiable instruments,
that are not subject to the Regulation CC availability schedules.
Deposits that are not covered by Regulation CC continue to be
subject to the state availability schedules. State laws that
provide maximum availability periods for categories of institutions
that are not covered by the EFA Act also would not be preempted.
For example, a state law that governs money market mutual funds
would not be affected by the EFA Act or this regulation.
5. Generally, state rules governing the disclosure or notice of
availability policies applicable to accounts also are preempted, if
they are different from the federal rules. Nevertheless, a state
law requiring disclosure of funds availability policies that apply
to deposits other than “accounts,” such as savings or time
deposits, are not inconsistent with the EFA Act and this subpart.
Banks in these states would have to follow the state disclosure
rules for these deposits.
D. 229.20(d) Preemption Determinations
1. The Board may issue preemption determinations upon the
request of an interested party in a state. The determinations will
relate only to the provisions of Subparts A and B; generally the
Board will not issue individual preemption determinations regarding
the relation of state U.C.C. provisions to the requirements of
Subpart C.
E. 229.20(e) Procedures for Preemption Determinations
1. This provision sets forth the information that must be
included in a request by an interested party for a preemption
determination by the Board.
XV. Section 229.21 Civil Liability A. 229.21(a) Civil Liability
1. This paragraph sets forth the statutory penalties for failure
to comply with the requirements of this subpart. These penalties
apply to provisions of state law that supersede provisions of this
regulation, such as requirements that funds deposited in accounts
at banks be made available more promptly than required by this
regulation, but they do not apply to other provisions of state law.
(See Commentary to § 229.20.)
2. Dollar Amount Adjustment - See section 229.11 for the rules
regarding adjustments for inflation every five years to the dollar
amounts in this section.
B. 229.21(b) Class Action Awards
1. This paragraph sets forth the provision in the EFA Act
concerning the factors that should be considered by the court in
establishing the amount of a class action award.
C. 229.21(c) Bona Fide Errors
1. A bank is shielded from liability under this section for a
violation of a requirement of this subpart if it can demonstrate,
by a preponderance of the evidence, that the violation resulted
from a bona fide error and that it maintains procedures designed to
avoid such errors. For example, a bank may make a bona fide error
if it fails to give next-day availability on a check drawn on the
Treasury because the bank's computer system malfunctions in a way
that prevents the bank from updating its customer's account; or if
it fails to identify whether a payable-through check is a local or
nonlocal check despite procedures designed to make this
determination accurately.
D. 229.21(d) Jurisdiction
1. The EFA Act confers subject matter jurisdiction on courts of
competent jurisdiction and provides a time limit for civil actions
for violations of this subpart.
E. 229.21(e) Reliance on Board Rulings
1. This provision shields banks from civil liability if they act
in good faith in reliance on any rule, regulation, model form,
notice, or clause (if the disclosure actually corresponds to the
bank's availability policy), or interpretation of the Board, even
if it were subsequently determined to be invalid. Banks may rely on
this Commentary, which is issued as an official Board
interpretation, as well as on the regulation itself.
F. 229.21(f) Exclusions
1. This provision clarifies that liability under this section
does not apply to violations of the requirements of Subpart C of
this regulation, or to actions for wrongful dishonor of a check by
a paying bank's customer.
G. 229.21(g) Record Retention
1. Banks must keep records to show compliance with the
requirements of this subpart for at least two years. This record
retention period is extended in the case of civil actions and
enforcement proceedings. Generally, a bank is not required to
retain records showing that it actually has given disclosures or
notices required by this subpart to each customer, but it must
retain evidence demonstrating that its procedures reasonably ensure
the customers' receipt of the required disclosures and notices. A
bank must, however, retain a copy of each notice provided pursuant
to its use of the reasonable cause exception under § 229.13(g) as
well as a brief description of the facts giving rise to the
availability of that exception.
XVI. Section 229.30 Electronic Checks and Electronic Information A.
229.30(a) Checks Under This Subpart
1. A bank may agree to receive an electronic check or electronic
returned check from another bank instead of a paper check or
returned check. (See § 229.2(bbb) and commentary thereto). Section
229.30(a) does not give a bank the right to send an electronic
check or electronic returned check absent an agreement to do so
with the receiving bank.
2. Electronic checks and electronic returned checks are subject
to subpart C of this part as if they were checks or returned
checks, unless otherwise provided in subpart C. For example, §
229.31(c), which requires a paying bank to provide a notice of
nonpayment if the paying bank determines not to pay a check in the
amount of $5,000 or more, also applies when a paying bank
determines not to pay an electronic check in the amount of $5,000
or more. A depositary bank's obligation to pay for a returned check
(§ 229.33(e)) also applies with respect to an electronic returned
check.
Additionally, §§ 229.33(b) and 229.36(a) specify that the
parties' agreements govern the receipt of electronic returned
checks and electronic written notices of nonpayment, and electronic
checks, respectively. Section 229.34(a) sets forth warranties that
are given only with respect to electronic checks and electronic
returned checks and section 229.34(f) sets forth an indemnity given
only with respect to remote deposit capture. Warranties that apply
to paper checks or paper returned checks also apply to electronic
checks and electronic returned checks, including § 229.34(b)
(transfer and presentment warranties with respect to remotely
created checks), § 229.34(c) (settlement amount, encoding, and
offset warranties), § 229.34(d) (returned check warranties), and §
229.34(e) (notice of nonpayment warranties). The parties may, by
agreement, vary the effect of the provisions in subpart C of this
part as they apply to electronic checks and electronic returned
checks, except that as set forth in § 229.37, no agreement can
disclaim the responsibility of a bank for its own lack of good
faith or failure to exercise ordinary care. (See § 229.37 and
commentary thereto).
3. Certain provisions of subpart C relate solely to paper checks
or paper returned checks, as specified, such as § 229.33(c)
(acceptance of paper returned checks) and § 229.36(d) (same-day
settlement).
B. 229.30(b) Writings
1. Provisions in subpart C of this part require that a paying
bank or returning bank send information in writing. For example, §
229.31(f) requires that a notice in lieu be either a copy of the
check or a written notice of nonpayment. A bank may send
information required to be in writing in electronic form if the
bank sending the information has an agreement with the bank
receiving the information to do so.
XVII. Section 229.31 Paying Bank's Responsibility for Return of
Checks and Notices of Nonpayment A. 229.31(a) Return of Checks
1. Routing of returned checks.
a. This subsection is subject to the requirements of expeditious
return provided in § 229.31(b).
b. The paying bank acts, in effect, as an agent or subagent of
the depositary bank in selecting a means of return. Under §
229.31(a), a paying bank is authorized to route the returned check
in a variety of ways:
i. It may send the returned check directly to the depositary
bank by sending an electronic returned check directly to the
depositary bank if the paying bank has an agreement with the
depositary bank to do so, or by using a courier or other means of
delivery, bypassing returning banks; or
ii. It may send the returned check or electronic returned check
to any returning bank agreeing to handle the returned check or
electronic returned check, regardless of whether or not the
returning bank handled the check for forward collection.
c. If the paying bank elects to return the check directly to the
depositary bank, it is not necessarily required to return the check
to the branch of first deposit. A paper check may be returned to
the depositary bank at any physical location permitted under §
229.33(c).
2. a. In some cases, a paying bank will be unable to identify
the depositary bank through the use of ordinary care and good
faith. These cases are now rare as depositary banks generally apply
their indorsements electronically. A paying bank, for example,
would be unable to identify the depositary bank if the depositary
bank's indorsement is neither in an addenda record nor within the
image of the check that was presented electronically. A paying
bank, however, would not be “unable” to identify the depositary
bank merely because the depositary bank's indorsement is available
within the image rather than attached as an addenda record.
b. In cases where the paying bank is unable to identify the
depositary bank, the paying bank may send the returned check to a
returning bank that agrees to handle the returned check. The
returning bank may be better able to identify the depositary
bank.
c. In the alternative, the paying bank may send the check back
up the path used for forward collection of the check. The
presenting bank and prior collecting banks normally will be able to
trace the collection path of the check through the use of their
internal records in conjunction with the indorsements on the
returned check. In these limited cases, the presenting bank or a
prior collecting bank is required to accept the returned check and
send it to another prior collecting bank in the path used for
forward collection or to the depositary bank. If the paying bank
has an agreement to send electronic returned checks to a bank that
handled the check for forward collection, the paying bank may send
the electronic returned check to that bank.
d. A paying bank returning a check to a prior collecting bank
because it is unable to identify the depositary bank must advise
that bank that it is unable to identify the depositary bank. This
advice must be conspicuous, such as a stamp on each check for which
the depositary bank is unknown if such checks are commingled with
other returned checks, or, if such checks are sent in a separate
cash letter, by one notice on the cash letter. In the case of an
electronic returned check, the advice requirement may be satisfied
as agreed to by the parties. The advice will warn the bank that
this check will require special research and handling in accordance
with § 229.32(a)(2). The returned check may not be prepared as a
qualified return.
e. A paying bank also may send a check to a prior collecting
bank to make a claim against that bank under § 229.35(b) where the
depositary bank is insolvent or in other cases as provided in §
229.35(b). Finally, a paying bank may make a claim against a prior
collecting bank based on a breach of warranty under UCC 4-208.
3. Midnight deadline. Except for the extension permitted by §
229.31(g), discussed below, this section does not relieve a paying
bank from the requirement for timely return (i.e., midnight
deadline) under UCC 4-301 and 4-302, which continue to apply. Under
UCC 4-302, a paying bank is “accountable” for the amount of a
demand item, other than a documentary draft, if it does not pay or
return the item or send notice of dishonor by its midnight
deadline. Under UCC 3-418(c) and 4-215(a), late return constitutes
payment and would be final in favor of a holder in due course or a
person who has in good faith changed his position in reliance on
the payment. Thus, the UCC midnight deadline gives the paying bank
an incentive to make a prompt return.
4. UCC provisions affected. This paragraph directly affects the
following provisions of the UCC, and may affect other sections or
provisions:
a. Section 4-301(d), in that instead of returning a check
through a clearinghouse or to the presenting bank, a paying bank
may send a returned check to the depositary bank or to a returning
bank.
b. Section 4-301(a), in that settlement for returned checks is
made under § 229.32(e), not by revocation of settlement.
B. 229.31(b) Expeditious Return of Checks
1. This section requires a paying bank (which, for purposes of
subpart C, may include a payable-through and payable-at bank (see §
229.2(z)) that determines not to pay a check to return the check
expeditiously. Section 229.31(d) sets forth exceptions to this
general rule. If a paying bank is not subject to the requirement
for expeditious return under § 229.31(b), the paying bank,
nonetheless, must return the check within its deadlines under the
UCC, Regulation J (12 CFR part 210) or §§ 229.36(d)(3) and (f)(4),
as extended by § 229.31(g), for returning the item or sending
notice.
2. Two-Day Test
a. A returned check, including the original check, substitute
check, or electronic returned check, is returned expeditiously if a
paying bank sends the returned check in a manner such that the
returned check would normally be received by the depositary bank
not later than 2 p.m. (local time of the depositary bank) on the
second business day following the banking day on which the check
was presented to the paying bank.
b. A paying bank may satisfy its expeditious return requirement
by returning either an electronic returned check or a paper check.
For example, a paying bank could meet the expeditious return test
by sending an electronic returned check directly to the depositary
bank, if the paying bank has an agreement with the depositary bank
to do so, such that it normally would reach the depositary bank by
the specified deadline, or sending an electronic returned check to
a returning bank, if the paying bank has an agreement with the
returning bank to do so, within the returning bank's timeframe for
delivering electronic returned checks to the depositary bank within
the return deadline. A paying bank that sends a returned check in
paper form would typically need a highly expeditious means of
delivery to meet the expeditious return test.
c. This test does not require actual receipt of the returned
check by the depositary bank within the specified deadline. In
determining whether an electronic returned check would normally
reach a depositary bank within the specified deadline, a paying
bank may rely on a returning bank's return deadlines and
availability schedules for electronic returned checks and returned
checks destined for the depositary bank. A paying bank may not rely
on the availability schedules if the paying bank has reason to
believe that these schedules do not reflect the actual time for
return of an electronic returned check to the depositary bank to
which the paying bank is returning the check. The paying bank is
not responsible for unforeseeable delays in the return of the
check, such as communication failures or transportation delays.
d. Where the second business day following presentment of the
check to the paying bank is not a banking day for the depositary
bank, the depositary bank might not process checks on that day.
Consequently, if the last day of the time limit is not a banking
day for the depositary bank, the check may be delivered to the
depositary bank not later than 2 p.m. (local time of the depositary
bank) on the depositary bank's next banking day and the return will
still be considered expeditious.
e. Paying banks and returning banks are subject to the
expeditious return rule, however, under section 229.33(a) a paying
or returning bank may be liable to a depositary bank for failing to
return a check in an expeditious manner only if the depositary bank
has arrangements in place such that the paying or returning bank
could return a returned check to the depositary bank electronically
by commercially reasonable means. The depositary bank has the
burden of proof for demonstrating that its arrangements are
commercially reasonable.
3. Examples
a. The paying bank and depositary bank have a bilateral
agreement under which the depositary bank agrees to receive
electronic returned checks directly from the paying bank. If a
check is presented to a paying bank on Monday, the paying bank
should send the returned check such that an electronic returned
check normally would be received by the depositary bank by 2 p.m.
(local time of the depositary bank) on Wednesday. This result is
the same if, instead of a bilateral agreement, the paying bank and
depositary bank are members of the same clearinghouse and agree to
exchange electronic returned checks under clearinghouse rules.
b. The depositary bank has an agreement to receive electronic
returned checks from Returning Bank A but not from the paying bank.
The paying bank, however, has an agreement with Returning Bank A to
send electronic returned checks to Returning Bank A. If a check is
presented to the paying bank on Monday, the paying bank should send
the returned check such that the depositary bank normally would
receive the returned check by 2 p.m. (local time of the depositary
bank) on Wednesday. A paying bank may satisfy this requirement by
sending either an electronic returned check or a paper returned
check to Returning Bank A in a manner that permits Returning Bank A
to send an electronic returned check to the depositary bank by 2
p.m. on Wednesday. The paying bank may also send a paper returned
check to the depositary bank if a paper returned check would
normally be received by the depositary bank by 2 p.m. on
Wednesday.
c. The paying bank has an agreement to send electronic returned
checks to Returning Bank A. The depositary bank has an agreement to
receive electronic returned checks from Returning Bank B. The
paying bank does not have an agreement to send electronic returned
checks to Returning Bank B. Returning Bank A, however, has an
agreement to send electronic returned checks to Returning Bank B.
If a check is presented to the paying bank on Monday, the paying
bank should send the returned check such that the depositary bank
normally would receive the returned check by 2 p.m. (local time of
the depositary bank) on Wednesday.
C. 229.31(c) Notice of Nonpayment 1. Requirement
a. The paying bank must send a notice of nonpayment if it
decides not to pay a check in the amount of $5,000 or more. Except
in the case where the returned check or a notice in lieu of return
serves as the notice of nonpayment, the notice of nonpayment
carries no value, and the check or substitute check must be
returned in addition to the notice of nonpayment. The paying bank
must send the notice of nonpayment such that it would normally be
received by the depositary bank not later than 2 p.m. (local time
of the depositary bank) on the second business day following
presentment. In determining whether the notice requirement is
satisfied, the paying bank may rely on the availability schedules
of a third party that provides the notice on behalf of the paying
bank as the time that the notice is expected to be delivered to the
depositary bank, unless the paying bank has reason to know the
availability schedules are inaccurate.
b. A bank identified by routing number as the paying bank is
considered the paying bank under this subpart and would be required
to provide a notice of nonpayment even though that bank determined
that the check was not drawn by a customer of that bank. (See
commentary to the definition of paying bank in § 229.2(z)). A bank
designated as a payable-through or payable-at bank and to which the
check is sent for payment or collection is responsible for the
notice of nonpayment requirement. The payable-through or payable-at
bank may contract with the payor with respect to its liability in
discharging these responsibilities.
c. The paying bank should not send a notice of nonpayment until
it has finally determined not to pay the check. Under § 229.34(e),
by sending the notice the paying bank warrants that it has returned
or will return the check. If a paying bank sends a notice and
subsequently decides to pay the check, the paying bank may mitigate
its liability on this warranty by notifying the depositary bank
that the check has been paid.
d. The return of the check itself may serve as the required
notice of nonpayment. In some cases, the returned check may be
received by the depositary bank within the time requirements of §
229.31(c)(1) and no notice other than the return of the check will
be necessary. If the check is not received by the depositary bank
within the time limits for notice, the return of the check may not
satisfy the notice requirement. In determining whether the returned
check will satisfy the notice requirement, the paying bank may rely
on the availability schedules of returning banks as the time that
the returned check is expected to be delivered to the depositary
bank, unless the paying bank has reason to know the availability
schedules are inaccurate.
e. The requirement for notice does not affect the requirements
for return of the check under the UCC (or § 229.31(b)). A paying
bank is not responsible for failure to give notice of nonpayment to
a party that has breached a presentment warranty under UCC 4-208,
notwithstanding that the paying bank may have returned the check.
(See UCC 4-208 and 4-302).
2. Content of Notices
a. This paragraph provides that, to the extent the information
is available to the paying bank, the notice must at a minimum
contain the information contained in the check's MICR line when the
check was received by the paying bank. The MICR line information
includes the paying bank's routing number, the account number of
the paying bank's customer, the check number, and auxiliary on-us
fields for corporate checks, and may include the amount of the
check.
b. Although it has no duty to do so, a paying bank that cannot
identify the depositary bank from the check itself may wish to send
the notice to the earliest collecting bank it can identify and
indicate that the notice is not being sent to the depositary bank.
The collecting bank may be able to identify the depositary bank and
forward the notice, but is under no duty to do so. In addition, the
collecting bank may actually be the depositary bank.
c. A bank must identify an item of information if the bank is
uncertain as to that item's accuracy. A bank may make this
identification in accordance with general industry practices, or by
other reasonable means. For example, where the paying bank receives
a handwritten check with a payee name that the paying bank cannot
decipher using a good faith effort, the paying bank could include a
“?” symbol in the payee's name field of the notice to indicate its
uncertainty as to that particular element.
D. 229.31(d) Exceptions to the Expeditious Return of Checks and
Notice of Nonpayment 1. Depositary Banks Not Subject to Subpart B
of This Part
a. Subpart B of this part applies only to “checks” deposited in
transaction “accounts.” A depositary bank with only time or savings
accounts or credit card accounts need not comply with the
availability requirements of subpart B of Regulation CC. Thus, the
expeditious return requirement of § 229.31(b) and the notice of
nonpayment requirement of § 229.31(c) do not apply to checks being
returned to banks that do not hold accounts. The paying bank's
midnight deadline in UCC 4-301 and 4-302 and § 210.12 of Regulation
J (12 CFR 210.12), and the extension in § 229.31(g), would continue
to apply to these checks.
b. The expeditious return requirement and the notice of
nonpayment requirement apply only to “checks” deposited in a bank
that is a “depository institution” under the EFA Act. Federal
Reserve Banks, Federal Home Loan Banks, private bankers, and
possibly certain industrial banks are not “depository institutions”
within the meaning of the EFA Act and therefore are not subject to
the expedited-availability requirements of subpart B of this
regulation. Thus, the expeditious return and notice of nonpayment
requirements of this section would not apply to a paying bank
returning a check that was deposited in one of these banks.
2. Unidentifiable Depositary Banks
a. A paying bank that sends a check to a bank that handled the
check for forward collection because the paying bank is unable to
identify the depositary bank is not subject to the requirement for
expeditious return by the paying bank or to the requirement for
notice of nonpayment. Although the lack of requirement for notice
of nonpayment under this paragraph will create risks for the
depositary bank, the inability to identify the depositary bank will
generally be due to the depositary bank's, or a collecting bank's,
failure to indorse as required by § 229.35(a). If the depositary
bank failed to use the proper indorsement, it should bear the risks
of less- than-expeditious return or not receiving notice of
nonpayment in a timely manner. Similarly, where the inability to
identify the depositary bank is due to indorsements or other
information placed on the back of the check by the depositary
bank's customer or other prior indorser, the depositary bank should
bear the risk that it cannot charge a returned check back to that
customer.
b. This paragraph does not relieve a paying bank from the
liability for the lack of expeditious return or not providing
notice of nonpayment in cases where the paying bank is itself
responsible for the inability to identify the depositary bank, such
as when the paying bank's customer has used a check with printing
or other material on the back in the area reserved for the
depositary bank's indorsement, and the depositary bank placed its
indorsement on the original check making the indorsement
unreadable. (See § 229.38(c)).
c. A paying bank's return of a check to an unidentifiable
depositary bank is subject to its midnight deadline under UCC
4-301, Regulation J (if the check is returned through a Federal
Reserve Bank), and the extension provided in § 229.31(g).
E. 229.31(e) Identification of Returned Check
1. The reason for the return must be clearly indicated. A check
is identified as a returned check if the front of that check
indicates the reason for return, even though it does not
specifically state that the check is a returned check. A reason
such as “Refer to Maker” may be appropriate in certain cases, such
as when a drawer with a positive pay arrangement instructs the bank
to return the check. By contrast, a reason such as “Refer to Maker”
would be inappropriate in cases where a check is being returned due
to the paying bank having already paid the item, where a check has
been altered, or where a check is unauthorized. In such cases, the
payee and not the drawer would generally have more information as
to why the check is being returned.
2. If the returned check is a substitute check or electronic
returned check, the reason for return information must be included
such that it is retained on any subsequent substitute check. For
substitute checks, this requirement could be met by placing the
information (1) in the location on the front of the substitute
check that is specified by ANS X9.100-140 or (2) within the image
of the original check that appears on the front of the substitute
check so that the information is retained on any subsequent
substitute check. For electronic returned checks, this requirement
could be met by including the reason for return in accordance with
ANS X9.100-187. If the paying bank places the returned check in a
carrier envelope, the carrier envelope should indicate that it is a
returned check but need not repeat the reason for return stated on
the check if it in fact appears on the check.
F. 229.31(f) Notice in Lieu of Return
1. A notice in lieu of return may be used by a bank handling a
returned check that has been lost or destroyed, including when the
original returned check has been charged back as lost or destroyed
as provided in § 229.35(b). Notice in lieu of return is permitted
only when a bank does not have and cannot obtain possession of the
check (or must retain possession of the check for protest) and does
not have sufficient information to create a substitute check. For
example, a bank that does not have the original check may have an
image of both sides of the check, but the image may be insufficient
or may not be in the proper format such that the bank cannot create
a substitute check or provide required substitute check warranties.
In that case, the check would be unavailable for return. A bank
using a notice in lieu of return gives a warranty under §
229.34(d)(1)(iv) that the check, in any form, has not been and will
not be returned.
2. A notice in lieu of return must be in writing (either in
paper form, or if agreed to by the parties electronic form), but
not provided by telephone or other oral transmission. The
requirement for a writing and the indication that the notice is a
substitute for the returned check is necessary so that any
returning bank and the depositary bank are informed that the notice
carries value. A check that is lost or otherwise unavailable for
return may be returned by sending a legible copy of both sides of
the check or, if such a copy is not available to the paying bank, a
written notice of nonpayment containing the information specified
in § 229.31(c)(2). The copy or written notice must clearly indicate
it is a notice in lieu of return. Notice by a legible facsimile of
both sides of the check may satisfy the requirements for a notice
in lieu of return.
The paying bank may send an electronic image of both sides of
the check as a notice in lieu of return only if it has an agreement
to do so with the receiving bank. (See § 229.30(b)).
3. The requirement of this paragraph supersedes the requirement
of UCC 4-301(a) as to the form and information required of a notice
of dishonor or nonpayment.
4. The notice in lieu of return is subject to the provisions of
this subpart relating to returned checks and is treated like a
returned check for purposes of this subpart. Reference in the
regulation and this commentary to a returned check includes a
notice in lieu of return unless the context indicates
otherwise.
5. If not all of the information required by § 229.31(c)(2) is
available, the paying bank may make a claim against any prior bank
handling the check as provided in § 229.35(b).
G. 229.31(g) Extension of Deadline
1. This paragraph permits extension of the deadlines in the UCC,
Regulation J (12 CFR part 210), and § 229.36(d)(3) and (4) for
returning a check for which the paying bank previously has settled
(generally midnight of the banking day following the banking day on
which the check is received by the paying bank) and for returning a
check without settling for it (generally midnight of the banking
day on which the check is received by the paying bank, or such
other time provided by § 210.9 of Regulation J (12 CFR part 210),
or § 229.36(d)(3) or (4)), in two circumstances:
a. A paying bank may, by agreement, send an electronic returned
check instead of a paper returned check or may have a courier that
leaves after midnight (or after any other applicable deadline) to
deliver its forward-collection checks. This paragraph removes the
constraint of the midnight deadline for returned checks if the
returned check reaches the depositary bank (or receiving bank, if
the depositary bank is unidentifiable) on or before the depositary
bank's (or receiving bank's) next banking day following the
otherwise applicable deadline by the earlier of the close of that
banking day or a cutoff hour of 2 p.m. (local time of the
depositary bank or receiving bank) or later set by the depositary
bank (or receiving bank) under UCC 4-108. This paragraph applies to
the extension of all midnight deadlines except Saturday midnight
deadlines (see the following paragraph).
b. A paying bank may observe a banking day, as defined in the
applicable UCC, on a Saturday, which is not a business day and
therefore not a banking day under Regulation CC. In such a case,
the UCC deadline for returning checks received and settled for on
Friday, or for returning checks received on Saturday without
settling for them, might require the bank to return the checks by
midnight Saturday. However, the bank may not have its back-office
operations staff available on Saturday to prepare and send the
electronic returned checks, and the returning bank or depositary
bank that would be receiving this electronic information may not
have staff available to process it until Sunday night or Monday
morning. This paragraph extends the midnight deadline if the
returned checks reach the returning bank by a cut-off hour (usually
on Sunday night or Monday morning) that permits processing during
its next processing cycle or reach the depositary bank (or
receiving bank) by the cut-off hour on its next banking day
following the Saturday midnight deadline. This paragraph applies
exclusively to the extension of Saturday midnight deadlines.
2. The time limits that are extended in each case are the paying
bank's midnight deadline for returning a check for which it has
already settled and the paying bank's deadline for returning a
check without settling for it in UCC 4-301 and 4-302, §§ 210.9 and
210.12 of Regulation J (12 CFR 210.9 and 210.12), and §
229.36(d)(3) and (4).
3. If the paying bank has an agreement to do so with the
receiving bank (such as through bilateral agreements, clearinghouse
rules, or operating circular), the paying bank may satisfy its
midnight or other return deadline by sending an electronic returned
check prior to the expiration of the deadline. The time when the
electronic returned check is considered to be received by the
depositary bank is determined by the agreement. The paying bank
satisfies its midnight or other return deadline by dispatching
paper returned checks to another bank by courier, including a
courier under contract with the paying bank, prior to expiration of
the deadline.
4. This paragraph directly affects UCC 4-301 and 4-302 and §§
210.9 and 210.12 of Regulation J (12 CFR 210.9 and 210.12) to the
extent that this paragraph applies by its terms, and may affect
other provisions.
H. 229.31(h) Payable Through and Payable at Checks
1. For purposes of subpart C of this part, the regulation
defines a payable-through or payable-at bank (which could be
designated the collectible-through or collectible-at bank) as a
paying bank. The requirements of subpart C are imposed on a
payable-through or payable-at bank and are based on the time of
receipt of the forward collection check by the payable-through or
payable-at bank. This provision is intended to speed the return of
checks and receipt of notices of nonpayment for checks that are
payable through or at a bank to the depositary bank.
2. A check sent for payment or collection to a payable-through
or payable-at bank is not considered to be drawn on that bank for
purposes of the midnight deadline provision of UCC 4-301.
I. 229.31(i) Reliance on Routing Number
1. Although § 229.35 requires that the depositary bank
indorsement contain its nine-digit routing number, it is possible
that a returned check will bear the routing number of the
depositary bank in fractional, nine-digit, or other form. This
paragraph permits a paying bank to rely on the routing number of
the depositary bank as it appears on the check (in the depositary
bank's indorsement) or in the electronic check sent pursuant to an
agreement when the check, or electronic check, is received by the
paying bank.
2. If there are inconsistent routing numbers, the paying bank
may rely on any routing number designating the depositary bank. The
paying bank is not required to resolve the inconsistency prior to
processing the check. The paying bank remains subject to the
requirement to act in good faith and use ordinary care under §
229.38(a).
XVIII. Section 229.32 Returning Bank's Responsibility for Returned
Checks A. 229.32(a) Return of Checks 1. Routing of Returned Check
a. Under § 229.32(a), the returning bank is authorized to route
the returned check in a variety of ways:
i. It may send the returned check directly to the depositary
bank by sending an electronic returned check directly to the
depositary bank if the returning bank has an agreement with the
depositary bank to do so, or by using a courier or other means of
delivery; or
ii. It may send the returned check or electronic returned check
to any returning bank agreeing to handle the returned check
regardless of whether or not the returning bank handled the check
for forward collection.
b. If the returning bank elects to send the returned check
directly to the depositary bank, it is not required to send the
check to the branch of the depositary bank that first handled the
check. A paper returned check may be sent to the depositary bank at
any physical location permitted under § 229.33(b).
2. Unidentifiable Depositary Bank
a. Returning banks agreeing to handle checks for return to
depositary banks under § 229.32(a) are expected to be expert in
identifying depositary bank indorsements. In the limited cases
where the returning bank cannot identify the depositary bank, if
the returning bank did not handle the check for forward collection,
it may send the returned check to any collecting bank that handled
the check for forward collection.
b. If, on the other hand, the returning bank itself handled the
check for forward collection, it may send the returned check to a
collecting bank that was prior to it in the forward-collection
process, which will be better able to identify the depositary bank.
If there are no prior collecting banks, the returning bank must
research the collection of the check and identify the depositary
bank.
c. The returning bank's return of a check under this paragraph
is subject to the requirement to use ordinary care under UCC
4-202(b). (See definition of returning bank in § 229.2(cc)).
d. As in the case of a paying bank returning a check under §
229.31(a)(2), a returning bank returning a check under §
229.32(a)(2) must advise the bank to which it sends the returned
check that it is unable to identify the depositary bank. This
advice must be conspicuous, such as a stamp on the check or a
notice on the cash letter. The returned check may not be prepared
as a qualified return. In the case of an electronic returned check,
the advice requirement may be satisfied as agreed to by the
parties.
3. A returning bank agrees to handle a returned check if it
-
a. Publishes or distributes availability schedules for the
return of returned checks and accepts the returned check for
return;
b. Handles a returned check for return that it did not handle
for forward collection;
c. Agrees with the paying bank or returning bank to handle
electronic returned checks sent by that bank; or
d. Otherwise agrees to handle a returned check.
4. Cut-off hours. A returning bank may establish earlier
cut-off hours for receipt of returned checks than for receipt of
forward collection checks, but, unless the sending bank and
returning bank agree otherwise, the cut-off hour for returned
checks may not be earlier than 2 p.m. (local time of the returning
bank). The returning bank also may set different sorting
requirements for returned checks than those applicable to other
checks. Thus, a returning bank may allow itself more processing
time for returns than for forward collection checks.
5. Qualified returned checks. A qualified returned check
will be handled by subsequent returning banks more efficiently than
a raw return. The qualified returned check must include the routing
number of the depositary bank, the amount of the check, and a
return identifier encoded on the check in magnetic ink. A check
that is converted to a qualified returned check must be encoded in
accordance with ANS X9.13 for original checks or ANS X9.100-140 for
substitute checks. If the returning bank makes an encoding error in
creating a qualified returned check, it may be liable under §
229.38 for losses caused by any negligence or under § 229.34(c)(3)
for breach of an encoding warranty.
6. Responsibilities of returning bank. In meeting the
requirements of this section, the returning bank is responsible for
its own actions, but not those of the paying bank, other returning
banks, or the depositary bank. (See UCC 4-202(c) regarding the
responsibility of collecting banks).
7. UCC sections affected. Section 229.32 directly affects
UCC Section 4-214(a) and may affect other sections or provisions.
(See UCC 4-202(b)). Section 4-214(a) is affected in that settlement
for returned checks is made under § 229.32(e) and not by
charge-back of provisional credit.
B. 229.32(b) Expeditious Return of Checks
1. The standards for return of checks established by this
section are similar to those for paying banks in § 229.31(b). This
section requires a returning bank to return a returned check
expeditiously, subject to the exceptions set forth in § 229.32(c).
In effect, the returning bank is an agent or subagent of the paying
bank and a subagent of the depositary bank for the purposes of
returning the check.
2. A returning bank that agrees to handle a returned check (see
commentary to § 229.32(a)) is subject to the expeditious return
requirement with respect to the returned check except as provided
in § 229.32(c)).
3. Two-day test. As in the case of a paying bank, a
returning bank's return of a returned check is expeditious if it is
sent in a manner such that the depositary bank would normally
receive the returned check by 2 p.m. (local time of the depositary
bank) of the second business day after the banking day on which the
check was presented to the paying bank. Although a returning bank
will not have firsthand knowledge of the day on which a check was
presented to the paying bank, returning banks may, by agreement,
allocate with paying banks liability for late return based on the
delays caused by each. Paying banks and returning banks are subject
to the expeditious return rule, however, under section 229.33(a) a
paying or returning bank may be liable to a depositary bank for
failing to return a check in an expeditious manner only if the
depositary bank has arrangements in place such that the paying bank
or returning bank could return a returned check to the depositary
bank electronically by commercially reasonable means. The
depositary bank has the burden of proof for demonstrating that its
arrangements are commercially reasonable.
4. Example. Returning Bank A does not have an agreement
to send electronic returned checks to the depositary bank but has
an agreement to send electronic returned checks to Returning Bank
B, which, in turn, has an agreement to send electronic returned
checks to the depositary bank. If a check is presented to the
paying bank on Monday, each returning bank would need to send the
returned check in a manner such that the depositary bank normally
would receive the returned check by 2 p.m. (local time of the
depositary bank) on Wednesday.
C. 229.32(c) Exceptions to the Expeditious Return of Checks
1. This paragraph sets forth the circumstances under which a
returning bank is not required to return the check to the
depositary bank in accordance with § 229.32(b).
2. Depositary bank not subject to subpart B. This paragraph is
similar to § 229.31(d)(1) and relieves a returning bank of its
obligation to make expeditious return to a depositary bank that
does not hold “accounts” under subpart B of this regulation or is
not a “depository institution” within the meaning of the EFA Act.
(See commentary to § 229.31(d)).
3. Unidentifiable depositary bank. A returning bank is not
subject to the expeditious return requirements of § 229.32(b) in
handling a returned check for which the paying bank cannot identify
the depositary bank.
4. Misrouted returned check. A returning bank is not subject to
the expeditious return requirements of § 229.32(b) in handling a
misrouted returned check pursuant to § 229.33(f). A bank acting as
a returning bank because it received a returned check on the basis
that it was the depositary bank and sends the misrouted returned
check to the correct depositary bank, directly or through
subsequent returning banks, is similarly not subject to the
expeditious return requirements of § 229.32(b). (See commentary to
§ 229.33(f)).
D. 229.32(d) Notice in Lieu of Return
1. This paragraph is similar to § 229.31(f) and authorizes a
returning bank to originate a notice in lieu of return if the
returned check is unavailable for return. Notice in lieu of return
is permitted only when a bank does not have and cannot obtain
possession of the check (or when the bank must retain possession of
the check for protest) and does not have sufficient information to
create a substitute check. (See commentary to § 229.31(f)).
E. 229.32(e) Settlement
1. Under the UCC, a paying bank settles with a presenting bank
after the check is presented to the paying bank. The paying bank
may recover the settlement when the paying bank returns the check
to the presenting bank. Under this regulation, however, the paying
bank may return the check directly to the depositary bank or
through returning banks that did not handle the check for forward
collection. On these more efficient return paths, the paying bank
does not recover the settlement made to the presenting bank. Thus,
this paragraph requires the returning bank to settle for a returned
check (either with the paying bank or another returning bank) in
the same way that it would settle for a similar check for forward
collection. To achieve uniformity, this paragraph applies even if
the returning bank handled the check for forward collection.
2. Any returning bank, including one that handled the check for
forward collection, may provide availability for returned checks
pursuant to an availability schedule as it does for forward
collection checks. These settlements by returning banks, as well as
settlements between banks made during the forward collection of a
check, are considered final when made subject to any deferment of
availability. (See § 229.36(c) and commentary to § 229.35(b)).
3. A returning bank may vary the settlement method it uses by
agreement with paying banks or other returning banks. Special rules
apply in the case of insolvency of banks. (See § 229.39). If
payment cannot be obtained from a depositary bank or returning bank
because of its insolvency or otherwise, recovery can be had by
returning banks, paying banks, and collecting banks from prior
banks on this basis of the liability of prior banks under §
229.35(b).
4. This paragraph affects UCC 4-214(a) in that a paying bank or
collecting bank does not ordinarily have a right to charge back
against the bank from which it received the returned check,
although it is entitled to settlement if it returns the returned
check to that bank, and may affect other sections or provisions.
Under § 229.36(c), a bank collecting a check remains liable to
prior collecting banks and the depositary bank's customer under the
UCC.
F. 229.32(f) Charges
1. This paragraph permits any returning bank, even one that
handled the check for forward collection, to impose a fee on the
paying bank or other returning bank for its service in handling a
returned check. Where a claim is made under § 229.35(b), the bank
on which the claim is made is not authorized by this paragraph to
impose a charge for taking up a check. This paragraph preempts
state laws to the extent that these laws prevent returning banks
from charging fees for handling returned checks.
G. 229.32(g) Reliance on Routing Number
1. This paragraph is similar to § 229.31(i) and permits a
returning bank to rely on routing numbers appearing on a returned
check such as routing numbers in the depositary bank's indorsement,
or in the electronic returned check received by the returning bank
pursuant to an agreement, or on qualified returned checks. (See
commentary to § 229.31(i)).
XIX. Section 229.33 Depositary Bank's Responsibility for Returned
Checks and Notices of Nonpayment A. 229.33(a) Right To Assert Claim
1. This paragraph sets forth the circumstances under which a
paying bank or returning bank may be liable to a depositary bank
for failing to return a check in an expeditious manner in
accordance with §§ 229.31(b) and 229.32(b) respectively.
2. This paragraph does not require a depositary bank to
establish arrangements to accept returned checks electronically,
either directly from the paying bank or indirectly from a returning
bank. Most depositary banks, however, have arrangements in place to
accept returned checks electronically. (See commentary to §§
229.31(b) and 229.32(b) for examples of direct and indirect
arrangements).
3. The depositary bank has the burden of proof for demonstrating
that its arrangements for accepting returned checks electronically
are commercially reasonable. The standard allows for case-by-case
flexibility and can change over time to reflect market practices.
The standard is intended to prevent a depositary bank from
establishing electronic return arrangements that are very limited
in scope or that provide unreasonable barriers to return such that,
in practice, the depositary bank would accept only a small
proportion of its returns electronically.
B. 229.33(b) Acceptance of Electronic Returned Checks and
Electronic Notices of Nonpayment
1. A depositary bank may agree directly with a returning bank or
a paying bank (or through clearinghouse rules) to accept electronic
returned checks. Likewise, a depositary bank may agree directly
with a paying bank (or through clearinghouse rules) to accept
electronic written notices of nonpayment. (See §§ 229.2(ggg),
229.30(b), and 229.31(c) and commentary thereto). The depositary
bank's acceptance of electronic returned checks and electronic
written notices of nonpayment is governed by the depositary bank's
agreement with the banks sending the electronic returned check or
electronic written notice of nonpayment to the depositary bank (or
through the applicable clearinghouse rules). The agreement normally
would specify the electronic address or receipt point at which the
depositary bank accepts returned checks and written notices of
nonpayment electronically, as well as what constitutes receipt of
the returned checks and written notices of nonpayment. The
agreement also may specify whether electronic returned checks must
be separated from electronic checks sent for forward
collection.
C. 229.33(c) Acceptance of Paper Returned Checks and Paper Notices
of Nonpayment
1. This paragraph states where the depositary bank is required
to accept paper returned checks and paper notices of nonpayment
during its banking day. (These locations differ from locations at
which a depositary bank must accept oral notices or electronic
notices. (See § 229.33(b) and (d) and commentary thereto). This
paragraph is derived from UCC 3-111, which specifies that
presentment for payment may be made at the place specified in the
instrument or, if there is none, at the place of business of the
party to pay. In the case of returned checks, the depositary bank
does not print the check and can only specify the place of
“payment” of the returned check in its indorsement.
2. The paragraph specifies four locations at which the
depositary bank must accept paper returned checks and paper notices
of nonpayment:
a. The depositary bank must accept paper returned checks and
paper notices of nonpayment at any location at which it requests
presentment of forward collection paper checks, such as a
processing center. A depositary bank does not request presentment
of forward collection checks at a branch of the bank merely by
paying checks presented over the counter.
b. i. If the depositary bank indorsement states the name and
address of the depositary bank, it must accept paper returned
checks and paper notices of nonpayment at the branch, head office,
or other location, such as a processing center, indicated by the
address. If the address is too general to identify a particular
location, then the depositary bank must accept paper returned
checks and paper notices of nonpayment at any branch or head office
consistent with the address. If, for example, the address is “New
York, New York,” each branch in New York City must accept paper
returned checks and paper notices of nonpayment. Accordingly, a
depositary bank may limit the locations at which it must accept
paper returned checks and paper notices of nonpayment by specifying
a branch or head office in its indorsement.
ii. If no address appears in the depositary bank's indorsement,
the depositary bank must accept paper returned checks and paper
notices of nonpayment at any branch or head office associated with
the depositary bank's routing number. The offices associated with
the routing number of a bank are found in American Bankers
Association Key to Routing Numbers, published by an agent of
the American Bankers Association, which lists a city and state
address for each routing number.
iii. If no routing number or address appears in its indorsement,
the depositary bank must accept a paper returned check at any
branch or head office of the bank. Section 229.35 and applicable
industry standards require that the indorsement contain a routing
number, a name, and a location. Consequently paragraphs
(c)(1)(ii)(B) and (C) of this section apply only where the
depositary bank has failed to comply with the indorsement
requirement.
3. For ease of processing, a depositary bank may require that
returning banks or paying banks returning checks to it separate
returned checks from forward collection checks being presented.
D. 229.33(d) Acceptance Oral Notices of Nonpayment
In the case of telephone notices, the depositary bank may not
refuse to accept notices at the telephone numbers identified in
this section, but may transfer calls or use a recording device.
E. 229.33(e) Payment
1. As discussed in the commentary to § 229.32(e), under this
regulation a paying bank or returning bank does not obtain credit
for a returned check by charge-back but by, in effect, “presenting”
the returned check to the depositary bank. This paragraph imposes
an obligation to “pay” a returned check that is similar to the
obligation to pay a forward collection check by a paying bank,
except that the depositary bank may not return a returned check for
which it is the depositary bank. Also, certain means of payment,
such as remittance drafts, may be used only by agreement.
2. The depositary bank must pay for a returned check by the
close of the banking day on which it received the returned check.
The day on which a returned check is received is determined
pursuant to UCC 4-108, which permits the bank to establish a
cut-off hour, generally not earlier than 2 p.m. (local time of the
depositary bank), and treat checks received after that hour as
being received on the next banking day. If the depositary bank is
unable to make payment to a returning bank or paying bank on the
banking day that it receives the returned check, because the
returning bank or paying bank is closed for a holiday or because
the time when the depositary bank received the check is after the
close of Fedwire, e.g., west coast banks with late cut-off hours,
payment may be made on the next banking day of the bank receiving
payment.
3. Payment must be made so that the funds are available for use
by the bank returning the check to the depositary bank on the day
the check is received by the depositary bank. For example, a
depositary bank meets this requirement if it sends a wire transfer
to the returning bank or paying bank on the day it receives the
returned check, even if the returning bank or paying bank has
closed for the day. A wire transfer should indicate the purpose of
the payment.
4. The depositary bank may use a net settlement arrangement to
settle for a returned check. Banks with net settlement agreements
could net the appropriate credits and debits for returned checks
with the accounting entries for forward collection checks if they
so desired. If, for purposes of establishing additional controls or
for other reasons, the banks involved desired a separate settlement
for returned checks, a separate net settlement agreement could be
established.
5. The bank sending the returned check to the depositary bank
may agree to accept payment at a later date if, for example, it
does not believe that the amount of the returned check or checks
warrants the costs of same-day payment. Thus, a returning bank or
paying bank may agree to accept payment through an ACH credit or
debit transfer that settles the day after the returned check is
received instead of a wire transfer that settles on the same
day.
6. This paragraph and this subpart do not affect the depositary
bank's right to recover a provisional settlement with its nonbank
customer for a check that is returned. (See also §§
229.19(c)(2)(ii), 229.33(h), and 229.35(b)).
F. 229.33(f) Misrouted Returned Checks and Written Notices of
Nonpayment
1. This paragraph permits a bank receiving a check or written
notice of nonpayment (either in paper form or electronic form) on
the basis that it is the depositary bank to send the misrouted
returned check or written notice of nonpayment to the correct
depositary bank, if it can identify the correct depositary bank,
either directly or through a returning bank agreeing to handle the
check or written notice of nonpayment. When sending a returned
check under this paragraph, the bank receiving the misrouted check
is acting as a returning bank. Alternatively, the bank receiving
the misrouted returned check or written notice of nonpayment must
send the check or notice back to the bank from which it was
received.
2. In sending a misrouted returned check, the bank to which the
returned check was misrouted (the incorrect depositary bank) could
receive settlement from the bank to which it sends the misrouted
check under § 229.33(f) (the correct depositary bank, a returning
bank that agrees to handle it, or the bank from which the misrouted
check was received). The correct depositary bank would be required
to pay for the returned check under § 229.33(e), and any other bank
to which the check is sent under this paragraph would be required
to settle for the check as a returning bank under § 229.32(e). The
bank to which the returned check was misrouted is required to act
promptly, i.e., within its midnight deadline. This paragraph
does not affect a bank's duties under § 229.35(b).
G. 229.33(g) Charges
1. This paragraph prohibits a depositary bank from charging the
equivalent of a presentment fee for returned checks. A returning
bank, however, may charge a fee for handling returned checks. If
the returning bank receives a mixed cash letter of returned checks,
which includes some checks for which the returning bank also is the
depositary bank, the fee may be applied to all the returned checks
in the cash letter. In the case of a sorted cash letter containing
only returned checks for which the returning bank is the depositary
bank, however, no fee may be charged.
H. 229.33(h) Notification to Customer
1. This paragraph requires a depositary bank to notify its
customer of nonpayment upon receipt of a returned check or notice
of nonpayment. Notice also must be given if a depositary bank
receives a notice of recovery under § 229.35(b). A bank that
chooses to provide the notice required by § 229.33(h) in writing
may send the notice by email or facsimile if the bank sends the
notice to the email address or facsimile number specified by the
customer for that purpose. The notice to the customer required
under this paragraph also may satisfy the notice requirement of §
229.13(g) if the depositary bank invokes the reasonable-cause
exception of § 229.13(e) due to the receipt of a notice of
nonpayment, provided the notice meets all the requirements of §
229.13(g).
XX. Section 229.34 Warranties and Indemnities A. Introduction
1. Unless otherwise specified, warranties that apply to checks
or returned checks also apply to electronic checks and electronic
returned checks, including under paragraphs (b) (transfer and
presentment warranties with respect to remotely created checks),
(c) (settlement amount, encoding, and offset warranties), (d)
(returned check warranties), and (e) (notice of nonpayment
warranties). (See § 229.30(a) and commentary thereto). Paragraph
(f), however, sets forth remote deposit capture indemnities
provided to banks that accept an original check for deposit for
losses incurred by that depositary bank if the loss is due to the
check having already been paid. Paragraph (a) sets forth warranties
that are given only with respect to electronic checks and
electronic returned checks. Paragraph (g) sets forth indemnities
with respect to electronically created items.
B. 229.34(a) Warranties With Respect to Electronic Checks and
Electronic Returned Checks
1. Paragraph (a) of § 229.34 sets forth the warranties that a
bank makes when transferring or presenting an electronic check or
electronic returned check and receiving settlement or other
consideration for it. Electronic checks and electronic returned
checks sent pursuant to an agreement with the receiving bank are
treated as checks subject to subpart C. Therefore, the warranties
in § 229.34(a) are in addition to any warranties a bank makes under
paragraphs (b), (c), (d), and (e) with respect to an electronic
check or electronic returned check. For example, a bank that
transfers and receives consideration for an electronic check that
is derived from a remotely created check warrants that the remotely
created check, from which the electronic check is derived, is
authorized by the person on whose account the check is drawn.
2. The warranties in § 229.34(a)(1) relate to a subsequent
bank's ability to create a substitute check. This paragraph
provides a bank that creates a substitute check from an electronic
check or electronic returned check with a warranty claim against
any prior bank that transferred the electronic check or electronic
returned check. The warranties in this paragraph correspond to the
warranties made by a bank that transfers, presents, or returns a
substitute check (a paper or electronic representation of a
substitute check) for which it receives consideration. (See §
229.52 and commentary thereto). A bank that transfers an electronic
check or electronic returned check that is an electronic
representation of a substitute check also makes the warranties and
indemnities in §§ 229.52 and 229.53.
3. By agreement, a sending and receiving bank may vary the
warranties the sending bank makes to the receiving bank for
electronic images of or electronic information related to checks,
for example, to provide that the bank transferring the check does
not warrant that the electronic image or information is sufficient
for creating a substitute check. (See § 229.37(a)). The variation
by agreement, however, would not affect the rights of banks and
persons that are not bound by the agreement.
C. 229.34(b) Transfer and Presentment Warranties With Respect to a
Remotely Created Check
1. A bank that transfers or presents a remotely created check
and receives a settlement or other consideration warrants that the
person on whose account the check is drawn authorized the issuance
of the check in the amount stated on the check and to the payee
stated on the check. The warranties are given only by banks and
only to subsequent banks in the collection chain. The warranties
ultimately shift liability for the loss created by an unauthorized
remotely created check to the depositary bank. The depositary bank
cannot assert the transfer and presentment warranties against a
depositor. However, a depositary bank may, by agreement, allocate
liability for such an item to the depositor and also may have a
claim under other laws against that person. The Federal Trade
Commission's Telemarketing Sales Rule (16 CFR part 310) contains
further regulatory provisions regarding remotely created
checks.
2. The scope of the transfer and presentment warranties for
remotely created checks differs from that of the corresponding UCC
warranty provisions in two respects. The UCC warranties are given
by any person, including a nonbank depositor, that transfers a
remotely created check and not just to a bank, as is the case under
§ 229.34(b). In addition, the UCC warranties state that the person
on whose account the item is drawn authorized the issuance of the
item in the amount for which the item is drawn. The § 229.34(b)
warranties specifically cover the amount as well as the payee
stated on the check. Neither the UCC warranties, nor the §
229.34(b) warranties, apply to the date stated on the remotely
created check.
3. A bank making the § 229.34(b) warranties may defend a claim
asserting violation of the warranties by proving that the customer
of the paying bank is precluded by UCC 4-406 from making a claim
against the paying bank. This may be the case, for example, if the
customer failed to discover the unauthorized remotely created check
in a timely manner.
4. The transfer and presentment warranties for a remotely
created check apply to a remotely created check that has been
converted to an electronic check or reconverted to a substitute
check.
D. 229.34(c) Settlement Amount, Encoding, and Offset Warranties
1. Paragraph (c)(1) provides that a bank that presents and
receives settlement for checks warrants to the paying bank that the
settlement it demands (e.g., as noted on the cash letter or in the
electronic cash letter file) equals the total amount of the checks
it presents. This paragraph gives the paying bank a warranty claim
against the presenting bank for the amount of any excess settlement
made on the basis of the amount demanded, plus expenses. If the
amount demanded is understated, a paying bank discharges its
settlement obligation under UCC 4-301 by paying the amount
demanded, but remains liable for the amount by which the demand is
understated; the presenting bank is nevertheless liable for
expenses in resolving the adjustment.
2. When checks or returned checks are transferred to a
collecting bank, returning bank, or depositary bank, the transferor
bank is not required to demand settlement, as is required upon
presentment to the paying bank. However, often the checks or
returned checks will be accompanied by information (such as a cash
letter listing or cash letter control record) that will indicate
the total of the checks or returned checks. Paragraph (c)(2)
provides that if the transferor bank includes information
indicating the total amount of checks or returned checks
transferred, it warrants that the information is correct
(i.e., equals the actual total of the items).
3. Paragraph (c)(3) provides that a bank that presents or
transfers a check or returned check warrants the accuracy of
information encoded regarding the check after issue, and that
exists at the time of presentment or transfer, to any bank that
subsequently handles the check or returned check. Paragraph (c)(3)
applies to all MICR-line encoding on a paper check, substitute
check, or contained in an electronic check or electronic returned
check. Under UCC 4-209(a), only the encoder (or the encoder and the
depositary bank, if the encoder is a customer of the depositary
bank) warrants the encoding accuracy, thus any claims on the
warranty must be directed to the encoder. Paragraph (c)(3) expands
on the UCC by providing that all banks that transfer or present a
check or returned check make the encoding warranty. In addition,
under the UCC, the encoder makes the warranty to subsequent
collecting banks and the paying bank, while paragraph (c)(3)
provides that the warranty is made to banks in the return chain as
well.
4. A paying bank that settles for an overstated cash letter
because of a misencoded check may make a warranty claim against the
presenting bank under paragraph (c)(1) (which would require the
paying bank to show that the check was part of the overstated cash
letter) or an encoding warranty claim under paragraph (c)(3)
against the presenting bank or any preceding bank that handled the
misencoded check.
5. Paragraph (c)(4) provides that a paying bank or a depositary
bank may set off excess settlement paid to another bank against
settlement owed to that bank for checks presented or returned
checks received (for which it is the depositary bank) subsequent to
the excess settlement.
E. 229.34(d) Returned Check Warranties
1. This paragraph includes warranties that a returned check,
including a notice in lieu of return or an electronic returned
check, was returned by the paying bank, or in the case of a check
payable by a bank and payable through another bank, the bank by
which the check is payable, within the deadline under the UCC
(subject to any claims or defenses under the UCC, such as breach of
a presentment warranty) or § 229.31(g); that the paying bank or
returning bank is authorized to return the check; that the returned
check has not been materially altered; and that, in the case of a
notice in lieu of return, the check has not been and will not be
returned for payment. (See commentary to § 229.31(f)). The warranty
does not include a warranty that the bank complied with the
expeditious return requirements of §§ 229.31(b) and 229.32(b).
These warranties do not apply to checks drawn on the United States
Treasury, to U.S. Postal Service money orders, or to checks drawn
on a state or a unit of general local government that are not
payable through or at a bank. (See § 229.42).
F. 229.34(e) Notice of Nonpayment Warranties
1. This paragraph sets forth warranties for notices of
nonpayment. This warranty does not include a warranty that the
notice is accurate and timely under § 229.31(c). The requirements
of § 229.31(c) that are not covered by the warranty are subject to
the liability provisions of § 229.38. These warranties are designed
to protect depositary banks that rely on notices of nonpayment.
This paragraph imposes liability on a paying bank that gives notice
of nonpayment and then subsequently does not return the check. (See
commentary to § 229.31(c)).
G. 229.34(f) Remote Deposit Capture Indemnity
1. This indemnity provides for a depositary bank's potential
liability when it permits a customer to deposit checks by remote
deposit capture (i.e., to truncate checks and deposit an
electronic image of the original check instead of the original
check). Because the depositary bank's customer retains the original
check, that customer might, intentionally or mistakenly, deposit
the original check in another depositary bank. The depositary bank
that accepts the original check, in turn, may make funds available
to the customer before it learns that the check is being returned
unpaid and, in some cases, may be unable to recover the funds from
its customer. Section 229.34(f) provides the depositary bank that
accepts the original check for deposit with a claim against the
depositary bank that did not receive the original check because it
permitted its customer to truncate it, received settlement or other
consideration for the check, and did not receive a return of the
check unpaid. This claim exists only if the check is returned to
the depositary bank that accepted the original check due to the
fact that the check had already been paid.
2. Examples
a. Depositary Bank A offers its customers a remote deposit
capture service that permits customers to take pictures of the
front and back of their checks and send the image to the bank for
deposit. Depositary Bank A accepts an image of the check from its
customer and sends an electronic check for collection to Paying
Bank. Paying Bank, in turn, pays the check. Depositary Bank A
receives settlement for the check. The same customer who sent
Depositary Bank A the electronic image of the check then deposits
the original check in Depositary Bank B. There is no restrictive
indorsement on the check. Depositary Bank B sends the original
check (or a substitute check or electronic check) for collection
and makes funds from the deposited check available to its customer.
The customer withdraws the funds. Paying Bank returns the check to
Depositary Bank B indicating that the check already had been paid.
Depositary Bank B may be unable to charge back funds from its
customer's account. Depositary Bank B may make an indemnity claim
against Depositary Bank A for the amount of the funds Depositary
Bank B is unable to recover from its customer.
b. The facts are the same as above with respect to Depositary
Bank A and B; however, the original check deposited in Depositary
Bank B bears a restrictive indorsement “for mobile deposit at
Depositary Bank A only” and the customer's account number at
Depositary Bank A. Depositary Bank B may not make an indemnity
claim against Depositary Bank A because Depositary Bank B accepted
the original check bearing a restrictive indorsement inconsistent
with the means of deposit.
c. The facts are the same as above with respect to Depositary
Bank A; however, Depositary Bank B also offers a remote deposit
capture service to its customer. The customer uses Depositary Bank
B's remote deposit capture service to send an electronic image of
the front and back of the check, after sending the same image to
Depositary Bank A. The customer deposits the original check into
Depositary Bank C without a restrictive indorsement. Paying Bank
pays the check based on the image presented by Depositary Bank A,
and Depositary Bank A receives settlement for the check without the
check being returned unpaid to it. Paying Bank returns the checks
presented by Depositary Bank B and Depositary Bank C. Neither
Depositary Bank B nor Depositary Bank C can recover the funds from
the deposited check from the customer. Depositary Bank B does not
have an indemnity claim against Depositary Bank A because
Depositary Bank B did not receive the original check for deposit.
Depositary Bank C, however, would be able to bring an indemnity
claim against Depositary Bank A.
3. A depositary bank may, by agreement, allocate liability for
loss incurred from subsequent deposit of the original check to its
customer that sent the electronic check related to the original
check to the depositary bank.
H. 229.34(g) Indemnities With Respect to Electronically-Created
Items
1. As a practical matter a bank receiving an electronic image
generally cannot distinguish an image that is derived from a paper
check from an electronically-created item. Nonetheless, the bank
receiving the electronically-created item often handles the
electronically-created image as if it were derived from a paper
check.
2. Paragraph (g) of § 229.34 sets forth the indemnities that a
bank provides when transferring or presenting an
electronically-created item and receiving settlement or other
consideration for it. The indemnities set forth in § 229.34(g) are
provided only by banks and only to subsequent banks in the
collection chain. The indemnities ultimately shift liability for
losses to the depositary bank due to the fact the electronically
created item is not derived from a paper check, was unauthorized,
or was transferred or presented for payment more than once. (See §
229.34(i) and commentary thereto). The depositary bank cannot
assert the indemnities set forth in § 229.34(g) against a
depositor. However, a depositary bank may, by agreement, allocate
liability for such an item to the depositor and also may have a
claim under other laws against that person.
2. The paying bank's losses in paragraph (g)(1) of this section
include losses arising from Regulation E non-compliance caused by
the receipt of an electronically-created item.
3. Under paragraphs (g)(2) and (3), indemnified banks have a
claim for damages pursuant to § 229.34(i) regardless of whether the
damages would have occurred if the item transferred had been
derived from a paper check.
3. Examples
a. A paying bank pays an electronically-created item, which the
paying bank's customer subsequently claims is unauthorized. The
paying bank may incur liability on the item due to the fact the
item is electronically created and not derived from a paper check.
For example, the paying bank may have no means of disputing the
customer's claim without examining the physical check, which does
not exist. The indemnity in § 229.34(g) enables the paying bank to
recover from the presenting bank or any prior transferor bank for
the amount of its loss, as permitted under § 229.34(i), due to
receiving the electronically-created item.
b. A bank receives an electronic image of and electronic
information related to an electronically-created item and, in turn,
produces a paper item that is indistinguishable from a substitute
check. The paper item is not a substitute check because the item is
not derived from an original, paper check. That bank may incur a
loss because it cannot produce the legal equivalent of a check (See
§ 229.53 and commentary thereto). The indemnity in § 229.34(g)
enables a bank that received the electronically-created item to
recover from the bank sending the check for the amount of the loss
permitted under § 229.34(i).
c. A paying bank is not required by § 229.31(b) to return an
electronically-created item expeditiously. The depositary bank
incurs a loss because it receives the return of the
electronically-created item unexpeditiously and is unable to
recover funds previously made available to its customer. The
depositary bank is not an indemnified party under § 229.34(g) and
therefore cannot recover its loss pursuant to that indemnity.
I. 229.34(h) Damages
1. This paragraph adopts for the warranties in § 229.34(a), (b),
(c), (d), and (e) the damages provided in UCC 4-207(c) and
4A-506(b). (See definition of interest compensation in §
229.2(oo)).
J. 229.34(i) Indemnity Amounts
1. This paragraph adopts for the amount of the indemnities
provided for in § 229.34(f)(2) and (g) an amount comparable to the
damages provided in § 229.53(b)(1)(ii) of subpart D of this
regulation.
2. The amount of an indemnity would be reduced in proportion to
the amount of any loss attributable to the indemnified person's
negligence or bad faith. This comparative-negligence standard is
intended to allocate liability in the same manner as the
comparative negligence provision of § 229.38(c).
3. An indemnified bank may be able to make an indemnity claim
against more than one indemnifying depositary bank. However, an
indemnified bank may not recover in the aggregate across all
indemnifying banks more than the amount described in this
paragraph. Therefore, an indemnified bank that recovers the amount
of its the loss from one indemnifying depositary bank under this
paragraph no longer has a loss that it can collect from a different
indemnifying depositary bank.
K. 229.34(j) Tender of Defense
1. This paragraph adopts for this regulation the vouching-in
provisions of UCC 3-119.
L. 229.34(k) Notice of Claim
1. This paragraph adopts the notice provisions of UCC sections
4-207(d) and 4-208(e) and applies them to this section's
indemnities and warranties. The time limit set forth in this
paragraph applies to notices of claims for warranty breaches and
for indemnities. As provided in § 229.38(g), all actions under this
section must be brought within one year after the date of the
occurrence of the violation involved.
XXI. Section 229.35 Indorsements A. 229.35(a) Indorsement Standards
1. This section requires banks to use a standard form of
indorsement when indorsing checks during the forward collection and
return process. It is designed to facilitate the identification of
the depositary bank and the prompt return of checks. The
indorsement standard a bank must use depends on the type of check
being indorsed. Paper checks must be indorsed in accordance with
ANS X9.100-111. Substitute checks must be indorsed in accordance
with ANS X9.100-140. Electronic checks must be indorsed in
accordance ANS X9.100-187. The Board, however, may by rule or order
determine that different standards apply.
2. The parties sending and receiving a check may agree that
different indorsement standards will apply to such checks. For
example, although ANS X9.100-187 is an industry standard for banks'
exchange of electronic checks, the parties may agree to send and
receive electronic checks that conform to a different standard.
3. Banks generally apply indorsements to a paper check in one of
two ways: (1) In accordance with ANS X9.100-111, banks print or
“spray” indorsements onto a paper check when the check is processed
through the banks' automated check sorters (regardless of whether
the checks are original checks or substitute checks), and (2) in
accordance with ANS X9.100-140, reconverting banks print or
“overlay” previously applied electronic indorsements and their own
indorsements and identifications onto a substitute check at the
time that the substitute check is created. If a subsequent
substitute check is created in the course of collection or return,
that substitute check will contain, in its image of the back of the
previous substitute check, reproductions of indorsements that were
sprayed or overlaid onto the previous item.
4. A bank might use check-processing equipment that captures an
image of a check prior to spraying an indorsement onto that item.
If the bank truncates that item, it should ensure that it also
applies an indorsement to the item electronically. A reconverting
bank satisfies its obligation to preserve all previously applied
indorsements by overlaying a bank's indorsement that previously was
applied electronically onto a substitute check that the
reconverting bank creates. (See commentary to § 229.51(b)).
5. A depositary bank may want to include an address in its
indorsement in order to limit the number of locations at which it
must receive paper returned checks and paper notices of nonpayment.
Banks should note, however, that § 229.33(c) requires a depositary
bank to receive paper returned checks at the location(s) at which
it receives paper forward-collection checks, as well as the other
locations enumerated in § 229.33(c). (See § 229.33(c) and
commentary thereto).
6. Under the UCC, a specific guarantee of prior indorsement is
not necessary. (See UCC 4-207(a) and 4-208(a)). Use of guarantee
language in indorsements of paper checks, such as “P.E.G.” (“prior
endorsements guaranteed”), may result in reducing the type size
used in bank indorsements, thereby making them more difficult to
read. Use of this language may make it more difficult for other
banks to identify the depositary bank.
7. If the bank maintaining the account into which a check is
deposited agrees with another bank (a correspondent, ATM operator,
or lock box operator) to have the other bank accept returns and
notices of nonpayment for the bank of account, the indorsement
placed on the check as the depositary bank indorsement may be the
indorsement of the bank that acts as correspondent, ATM operator,
or lock box operator as provided in paragraph (d) of § 229.35.
8. In general, paper checks will be handled more efficiently if
depositary banks place their indorsement so that the nine-digit
routing number is not obscured by pre-existing matter on the back
of the check. Indorsing parties other than banks, e.g.,
corporations, will benefit from the faster return of checks if they
protect the identifiability and legibility of the depositary bank
indorsement by staying clear of the area on the back of the paper
check reserved for the depositary bank indorsement.
9. A paying bank is not required to indorse the check; however,
if a paying bank does indorse a check that is returned, it should
follow the indorsement standards for collecting banks and returning
banks. Collecting banks and returning banks are required to indorse
the check for tracing purposes. With respect to the identification
of a paying bank that is also a reconverting bank, see commentary
to § 229.51(b)(2).
B. 229.35(b) Liability of Bank Handling Check
1. When a check is sent for forward collection, the collection
process results in a chain of indorsements extending from the
depositary bank through any subsequent collecting banks to the
paying bank. This paragraph extends the indorsement chain through
the paying bank to the returning banks, and would permit each bank
to recover from any prior indorser if the claimant bank does not
receive payment for the check from a subsequent bank in the
collection or return chain. For example, if a returning bank
returned a check to an insolvent depositary bank, and did not
receive the full amount of the check from the failed bank, the
returning bank could obtain the unrecovered amount of the check
from any bank prior to it in the collection and return chain
including the paying bank. Because each bank in the collection and
return chain could recover from a prior bank, any loss would fall
on the first intermediary collecting bank that received the check
from the depositary bank. To avoid circuity of actions, the
returning bank could recover directly from the first collecting
bank. Under the UCC, the first collecting bank might ultimately
recover from the depositary bank's customer or from the other
parties on the check.
2. Where a check is returned through the same banks used for the
forward collection of the check, priority during the forward
collection process controls over priority in the return process for
the purpose of determining prior and subsequent banks under this
regulation.
3. Where a returning bank is insolvent and fails to pay the
paying bank or a prior returning bank for a returned check, §
229.39(a) requires the receiver of the failed bank to return the
check to the bank that transferred the check to the failed bank.
That bank then either could continue the return to the depositary
bank or recover based on this paragraph. Where the paying bank is
insolvent, and fails to pay the collecting bank, the collecting
bank also could recover from a prior collecting bank under this
paragraph, and the bank from which it recovered could in turn
recover from its prior collecting bank until the loss settled on
the depositary bank (which could recover from its customer).
4. A bank is not required to make a claim against an insolvent
bank before exercising its right to recovery under this paragraph.
Recovery may be made by charge-back or by other means. This right
of recovery also is permitted even where nonpayment of the check is
the result of the claiming bank's negligence such as failure to
make expeditious return, but the claiming bank remains liable for
its negligence under § 229.38.
5. This liability to a bank that subsequently handles the check
and does not receive payment for the check is imposed on a bank
handling a check for collection or return regardless of whether the
bank's indorsement appears on the check. Notice must be sent under
this paragraph to a prior bank from which recovery is sought
reasonably promptly after a bank learns that it did not receive
payment from another bank, and learns the identity of the prior
bank. Written notice reasonably identifying the check and the basis
for recovery is sufficient if the check is not available. Receipt
of notice by the bank against which the claim is made is not a
precondition to recovery by charge-back or other means; however, a
bank may be liable for negligence for failure to provide timely
notice. A paying bank or returning bank also may recover from a
prior collecting bank as provided in §§ 229.31(a) and 229.32(b) (in
those cases where the paying bank is unable to identify the
depositary bank). This paragraph does not affect a paying bank's
accountability for a check under UCC 4-215(a) and 4-302. Nor does
this paragraph affect a collecting bank's accountability under UCC
4-214 and 4-215(d). A collecting bank becomes accountable upon
receipt of final settlement as provided in the foregoing UCC
sections. Final settlement in §§ 229.32(e), 229.33(e), and
229.36(c) is intended to be consistent with final settlement in the
UCC (e.g., UCC 4-213, 4-214, and 4-215). (See also § 229.2(cc)
(definition of returning bank) and commentary thereto).
6. This paragraph also provides that a bank may have the rights
of a holder based on the handling of a check for collection or
return. A bank may become a holder or a holder in due course
regardless of whether prior banks have complied with the
indorsement standard in § 229.35(a).
7. This paragraph affects the following provisions of the UCC,
and may affect other provisions depending on circumstance:
a. Section 4-214(a), in that the right to recovery is not based
on provisional settlement, and recovery may be had from any prior
bank. Section 4-214(a) would continue to permit a depositary bank
to recover a provisional settlement from its customer. (See §
229.33(h)).
b. Section 3-415 and related provisions (such as section 3-503),
in that such provisions would not apply as between banks, or as
between the depositary bank and its customer.
C. 229.35(c) Indorsement by Bank
1. This section protects the rights of a customer depositing a
check in a bank without requiring the words “pay any bank,” as
required by the UCC (See UCC 4-201(b)). Use of this language in a
depositary bank's indorsement will make it more difficult for other
banks to identify the depositary bank. The applicable industry
standard prohibits such material in subsequent collecting bank
indorsements. The existence of a bank indorsement provides notice
of the restrictive indorsement without any additional words.
D. 229.35(d) Indorsement for Depositary Bank
1. This section permits a depositary bank to arrange with
another bank to indorse checks. This practice may occur when a
correspondent indorses for a respondent, or when the bank servicing
an ATM or lock box indorses for the bank maintaining the account in
which the check is deposited - i.e., the depositary bank. If
the indorsing bank applies the depositary bank's indorsement,
checks will be returned to the depositary bank. An indorsing bank
may by agreement with the depositary bank apply its own indorsement
as the depositary bank indorsement. In that case, the actual
depositary bank's own indorsement on the check (if any) should
avoid the location reserved for the depositary bank. The actual
depositary bank remains responsible for the availability and other
requirements of subpart B, but the bank indorsing as depositary
bank is considered the depositary bank for purposes of subpart C
(e.g., for purposes of determining the right to assert a claim
under § 229.33(a) for failure to return a check expeditiously and
accepting paper checks under § 229.33(c)). The check will be
returned, and notice of nonpayment will be given, to the bank
indorsing as depositary bank.
2. Because the depositary bank for subpart B purposes will
desire prompt notice of nonpayment, its arrangement with the
indorsing bank should provide for prompt notice of nonpayment. The
bank indorsing as depositary bank may require the depositary bank
to agree to take up the check if the check is not paid even if the
depositary bank's indorsement does not appear on the check and it
did not handle the check. The arrangement between the banks may
constitute an agreement varying the effect of provisions of subpart
C under § 229.37.
XXII. Section 229.36 Presentment and Issuance of Checks A.
229.36(a) Receipt of Electronic Checks
1. A paying bank may agree to accept presentment of electronic
checks. (See § 229.2(ggg) and commentary thereto). The paying
bank's acceptance of such electronic checks is governed by the
paying bank's agreement with the bank sending the electronic check
to the paying bank. The terms of these agreements are determined by
the parties and may include, for example, the electronic address or
electronic receipt point at which the paying bank agrees to accept
electronic checks, as well as when presentment occurs. The
agreement also may specify whether electronic checks sent for
forward collection must be separated from electronic returned
checks.
B. 229.36(b) Receipt of Paper Checks
1. The paragraph specifies four locations at which the paying
bank must accept presentment of paper checks. Where the check is
payable through a bank and the check is sent to that bank, the
payable-through bank is the paying bank for purposes of this
subpart, regardless of whether the paying bank must present the
check to another bank or to a nonbank payor for payment.
a. Delivery of paper checks may be made, and presentment is
considered to occur, at a location (including a processing center)
requested by the paying bank. This provision adopts the common law
rule that the processing center acts as the agent of the paying
bank to accept presentment and to begin the time for processing of
the check. (See also UCC 4-204(c)). If a bank designates different
locations for the presentment of forward collection paper checks
bearing different routing numbers, for purposes of this paragraph
it requests presentment of paper checks bearing a particular
routing number only at the location designated for receipt of
forward collection paper checks bearing that routing number.
b. If the check specifies the name and address of a branch or
head office, or other location (such as a processing center), the
paper check may be delivered to that office or other location. If
the address is too general to identify a particular office,
delivery may be made at any office consistent with the address. For
example, if the address is “San Francisco, California,” each office
in San Francisco must accept presentment of paper checks. The
designation of an address on the check generally is in the control
of the paying bank.
c. i. Delivery of a paper check may be made at an office of the
bank associated with the routing number on the check. In the case
of a substitute check, delivery may be made at an office of the
bank associated with the routing number in the electronic check
from which it was derived. The office associated with the routing
number of a bank is found in American Bankers Association Key to
Routing Numbers, published by an agent of the American Bankers
Association, which lists a city and state address for each routing
number. Paper checks generally are handled by collecting banks on
the basis of the nine-digit routing number contained in the MICR
line (or on the basis of the fractional form routing number if the
MICR line is obliterated) on the check, rather than the printed
name or address. The definition of a paying bank in § 229.2(z)
includes a bank designated by routing number, whether or not there
is a name on the check, and whether or not any name is consistent
with the routing number. Where a check is payable by one bank, but
payable through another, the routing number is that of the
payable-through bank, not that of the payor bank. In these cases,
the payor bank has selected the payable-through bank as the point
through which presentment of paper checks is to be made.
ii. There is no requirement in the regulation that the name and
address on the check agree with the address associated with the
routing number on the check. A bank generally may control the use
of its routing number, just as it does the use of its name. The
address associated with the routing number may be a processing
center.
iii. In some cases, a paying bank may have several offices in
the city associated with the routing number. In such case, it would
not be reasonable or efficient to require the presenting bank to
sort paper checks by more specific branch addresses that might be
printed on the checks, and to deliver paper checks to each branch.
A collecting bank normally would deliver all paper checks to one
location. In cases where paper checks are delivered to a branch
other than the branch on which they may be drawn, computer and
courier communication among branches should permit the paying bank
to determine quickly whether to pay the check.
d. If the paper check specifies the name of the paying bank but
no address, the bank must accept delivery at any office. Where
delivery is made by a person other than a bank, or where the
routing number is not readable, delivery will be made based on the
name and address of the paying bank on the check. If there is no
address, delivery may be made at any office of the paying bank.
This provision is consistent with UCC 3-111, which states that
presentment for payment may be made at the place specified in the
instrument, or, if there is none, at the place of business of the
party to pay.
2. This paragraph may affect UCC 3-111 to the extent that the
UCC requires presentment to occur at a place specified in the
instrument.
C. 229.36(c) Liability of Bank During Forward Collection
1. This paragraph makes settlement between banks during forward
collection final when made, subject to any deferment of credit,
just as settlements between banks during the return of checks are
final. In addition, this paragraph clarifies that this change does
not affect the liability scheme under UCC 4-201 during forward
collection of a check. That UCC section provides that, unless a
contrary intent clearly appears, a bank is an agent or subagent of
the owner of a check, but that Article 4 of the UCC applies even
though a bank may have purchased an item and is the owner of it.
This paragraph preserves the liability of a collecting bank to
prior collecting banks and the depositary bank's customer for
negligence during the forward collection of a check under the UCC,
even though this paragraph provides that settlement between banks
during forward collection is final rather than provisional.
Settlement by a paying bank is not considered to be final payment
for the purposes of UCC 4-215(a)(2) or (3), because a paying bank
has the right to recover settlement from a returning bank or
depositary bank to which it returns a check under this subpart.
Other provisions of the UCC not superseded by this subpart, such as
section 4-202, also continue to apply to the forward collection of
a check and may apply to the return of a check. (See definition of
returning bank in § 229.2(cc)).
D. 229.36(d) Same-Day Settlement
1. This paragraph governs settlement for presentment of paper
checks. Settlement for presentment of electronic checks is governed
by the agreement of the parties. (See § 229.36(a) and commentary
thereto). This paragraph provides that, under certain conditions, a
paying bank must settle with a presenting bank for a paper check on
the same day the paper check is presented in order to avail itself
of the ability to return the paper check on its next banking day
under UCC 4-301 and 4-302. This paragraph does not apply to paper
checks presented for immediate payment over the counter. Settling
for a paper check under this paragraph does not constitute final
payment of the paper check under the UCC. This paragraph does not
supersede or limit the rules governing collection and return of
paper checks through Federal Reserve Banks that are contained in
subpart A of Regulation J (12 CFR part 210).
2. Presentment Requirements a. Location and Time
i. For presented paper checks to qualify for mandatory same-day
settlement, information accompanying the paper checks must indicate
that presentment is being made under this paragraph - e.g., “these
checks are being presented for same-day settlement” - and must
include a demand for payment of the total amount of the checks
together with appropriate payment instructions in order to enable
the paying bank to discharge its settlement responsibilities under
this paragraph. In addition, the paper check or checks must be
presented at a location designated by the paying bank for receipt
of paper checks for same-day settlement by 8 a.m. local time of
that location. The designated presentment location must be a
location at which the paying bank would be considered to have
received a paper check under § 229.36(b). The paying bank may not
designate a location solely for presentment of paper checks subject
to settlement under this paragraph; by designating a location for
the purposes of § 229.36(d), the paying bank agrees to accept paper
checks at that location for the purposes of § 229.36(b).
ii. If the paying bank does not designate a presentment
location, it must accept presentment of paper check for same-day
settlement at any location identified in § 229.36(b), i.e.,
at an address of the bank associated with the routing number on the
check, at any branch or head office if the bank is identified on
the check by name without address, or at a branch, head office, or
other location consistent with the name and address of the bank on
the check if the bank is identified on the check by name and
address. A paying bank and a presenting bank may agree that paper
checks will be accepted for same-day settlement at an alternative
location or that the cut-off time for same-day settlement be
earlier or later than 8 a.m. local time of the presentment
location.
iii. In the case of a paper check payable through a bank but
payable by another bank, this paragraph does not authorize direct
presentment to the bank by which the paper check is payable. The
requirements of same-day settlement under this paragraph would
apply to a payable-through or payable-at bank to which the paper
check is sent for payment or collection.
b. Reasonable delivery requirements. A paper check is considered
presented when it is delivered to and payment is demanded at a
location specified in paragraph (d)(1). Ordinarily, a presenting
bank will find it necessary to contact the paying bank to determine
the appropriate presentment location and any delivery instructions.
Further, because presentment might not take place during the paying
bank's banking day, a paying bank may establish reasonable delivery
requirements to safeguard the paper checks presented, such as use
of a night depository. If a presenting bank fails to follow
reasonable delivery requirements established by the paying bank, it
runs the risk that it will not have presented the paper checks.
However, if no reasonable delivery requirements are established or
if the paying bank does not make provisions for accepting delivery
of checks during its non-business hours, leaving the paper checks
at the presentment location constitutes effective presentment.
c. Sorting of checks. A paying bank may require that paper
checks presented to it for same-day settlement be sorted separately
from other forward collection paper checks it receives as a
collecting bank or paper returned checks it receives as a returning
bank or depositary bank. For example, if a bank provides
correspondent check collection services and receives unsorted paper
checks from a respondent bank that include paper checks for which
it is the paying bank and that would otherwise meet the
requirements for same-day settlement under this section, the
collecting bank need not make settlement in accordance with
paragraph (d)(3). If the collecting bank receives sorted paper
checks from its respondent bank, consisting only of paper checks
for which the collecting bank is the paying bank and that meet the
requirements for same-day settlement under this paragraph, the
collecting bank may not charge a fee for handling those paper
checks and must make settlement in accordance with this
paragraph.
3. Settlement
a. If a bank presents a paper check in accordance with the time
and location requirements for presentment under paragraph (d)(1),
the paying bank either must settle for the paper check on the
business day it receives the paper check without charging a
presentment fee or return the paper check prior to the time for
settlement. (This return deadline is subject to extension under §
229.31(g).) The settlement must be in the form of a credit to an
account designated by the presenting bank at a Federal Reserve Bank
(e.g., a Fedwire transfer), unless the presenting bank agrees with
the paying bank to accept settlement in another form (e.g., credit
to an account of the presenting bank at the paying bank or debit to
an account of the paying bank at the presenting bank). The
settlement must occur by the close of Fedwire on the business day
the paper check is received by the paying bank. Under the
provisions of § 229.34(c), a settlement owed to a presenting bank
may be set off by adjustments for previous settlements with the
presenting bank. (See also § 229.39(d)).
b. Paper checks that are presented after the 8 a.m. (local time
of the location at which the paper checks are presented)
presentment deadline for same-day settlement and before the paying
bank's cut-off hour are treated as if they were presented under
other applicable law and settled for or returned accordingly.
However, for purposes of settlement only, the presenting bank may
require the paying bank to treat such paper checks as presented for
same-day settlement on the next business day in lieu of accepting
settlement by cash or other means on the business day the paper
checks are presented to the paying bank. Paper checks presented
after the paying bank's cut-off hour or on non-business days, but
otherwise in accordance with this paragraph, are considered
presented for same-day settlement on the next business day.
4. Closed Paying Bank
a. There may be certain business days that are not banking days
for the paying bank. Some paying banks may continue to settle for
paper checks presented on these days (e.g., by opening their back
office operations). In other cases, a paying bank may be unable to
settle for paper checks presented on a day it is closed. If the
paying bank closes on a business day and paper checks are presented
to the paying bank in accordance with paragraph (d)(1), the paying
bank is accountable for the paper checks unless it settles for or
returns the paper checks by the close of Fedwire on its next
banking day. In addition, paper checks presented on a business day
on which the paying bank is closed are considered received on the
paying bank's next banking day for purposes of the UCC midnight
deadline (UCC 4-301 and 4-302) and this regulation's expeditious
return and notice of nonpayment provisions.
b. If the paying bank is closed on a business day voluntarily,
the paying bank must pay interest compensation, as defined in §
229.2(oo), to the presenting bank for the value of the float
associated with the paper check from the day of the voluntary
closing until the day of settlement. Interest compensation is not
required in the case of an involuntary closing on a business day,
such as a closing required by state law. In addition, if the paying
bank is closed on a business day due to emergency conditions,
settlement delays and interest compensation may be excused under §
229.38(e) or UCC 4-109(b).
5. Good faith. Under § 229.38(a), both the presenting bank and
paying bank are held to a standard of good faith, defined in §
229.2(nn) to mean honesty in fact and the observance of reasonable
commercial standards of fair dealing. For example, designating a
presentment location or changing presentment locations for the
primary purpose of discouraging banks from presenting paper checks
for same-day settlement might not be considered good faith on the
part of the paying bank. Similarly, presenting a large volume of
paper checks without prior notice could be viewed as not meeting
reasonable commercial standards of fair dealing and therefore may
not constitute presentment in good faith. In addition, if banks, in
the general course of business, regularly agree to certain
practices related to same-day settlement, it might not be
considered consistent with reasonable commercial standards of fair
dealing, and therefore might not be considered good faith, for a
bank to refuse to agree to those practices if agreeing would not
cause it harm.
6. UCC sections affected. This paragraph directly affects the
following provisions of the UCC and may affect other sections or
provisions:
a. Section 4-204(b)(1), in that a presenting bank may not send a
paper check for same-day settlement directly to the paying bank, if
the paying bank designates a different location in accordance with
paragraph (d)(1).
b. Section 4-213(a), in that the medium of settlement for paper
checks presented under this paragraph is limited to a credit to an
account at a Federal Reserve Bank and that, for paper checks
presented after the deadline for same-day settlement and before the
paying bank's cut-off hour, the presenting bank may require
settlement on the next business day in accordance with this
paragraph rather than accept settlement on the business day of
presentment by cash.
c. Section 4-301(a), in that, to preserve the ability to
exercise deferred posting, the time limit specified in that section
for settlement or return by a paying bank on the banking day a
paper check is received is superseded by the requirement to settle
for paper checks presented under this paragraph by the close of
Fedwire.
d. Section 4-302(a), in that, to avoid accountability, the time
limit specified in that section for settlement or return by a
paying bank on the banking day a paper check is received is
superseded by the requirement to settle for paper checks presented
under this paragraph by the close of Fedwire.
XXIII. Section 229.37 Variations by Agreement
A. This section is similar to UCC 4-103, and permits consistent
treatment of agreements varying Article 4 or Subpart C, given the
substantial interrelationship of the two documents. To achieve
consistency, the official comment to UCC 4-103(a) (which in turn
follows UCC 1-201(3)) should be followed in construing this
section. For example, as stated in Official Comment 2 to UCC 4-103,
owners of items and other interested parties are not affected by
agreements under this section unless they are parties to the
agreement or are bound by adoption, ratification, estoppel, or the
like. In particular, agreements varying this subpart that delay the
return of a check beyond the times required by this subpart may
result in liability under § 229.38 to entities not party to the
agreement.
B. The Board has not followed UCC 4-103(b), which permits
Federal Reserve regulations and operating letters, clearinghouse
rules, and the like to apply to parties that have not specifically
assented. Nevertheless, this section does not affect the status of
such agreements under the UCC.
C. The following are examples of situations where variation by
agreement is permissible, subject to the limitations of this
section:
1. A depositary bank may authorize another bank to apply the
other bank's indorsement to a check as the depositary bank. (See §
229.35(d)).
2. A depositary bank may authorize returning banks to commingle
paper qualified returned checks with paper forward collection
checks. (See § 229.33(c)).
3. A depositary bank may limit its liability to its customer in
connection with the late return of a deposited check where the
lateness is caused by markings on the check by the depositary
bank's customer or prior indorser in the area of the depositary
bank indorsement. (See § 229.38(d)).
4. A paying bank may require its customer to assume the paying
bank's liability for delayed or missent checks where the delay or
missending is caused by markings placed on the check by the paying
bank's customer that obscured a properly placed indorsement of the
depositary bank. (See § 229.38(d)).
5. A collecting bank or paying bank may agree to accept forward
collection checks without the indorsement of a prior intermediary
collecting bank. (See § 229.35(a)).
6. A bank may agree to accept returned checks without the
indorsement of a prior bank. (See § 229.35(a)).
7. A presenting bank may agree with a paying bank to present
paper checks for same-day settlement by a deadline earlier or later
than 8 a.m. (See § 229.36(d)(1)(ii)).
8. A presenting bank and a paying bank may agree that
presentment takes place when the paying bank receives an electronic
transmission of information describing the check rather than upon
delivery of the physical check. (See § 229.36(b)).
9. A depositary bank may agree with a paying bank or returning
bank to accept an image or other notice in lieu of a returned check
even when the check is available for return under this part. Except
to the extent that other parties interested in the check assent to
or are bound by the variation of the notice-in-lieu provisions of
this part, a depositary bank entering into such an agreement may be
responsible under this part or other applicable law to other
interested parties for any losses caused by the acceptance of an
image or notice in lieu of a returned check. (See §§ 229.31(f) and
229.38(a)).
D. The Board expects to review the types of variation by
agreement that develop under this section and will consider whether
it is necessary to limit certain variations.
XXIV. Section 229.38 Liability A. 229.38(a) Standard of Care;
Liability; Measure of Damages
1. The standard of care established by this section applies to
any bank covered by the requirements of subpart C of the
regulation. Thus, the standard of care applies to a paying bank
under §§ 229.31, to a returning bank under § 229.32, to a
depositary bank under §§ 229.33, to a bank erroneously receiving a
returned check or written notice of nonpayment as depositary bank
under § 229.33(f), and to a bank indorsing a check under § 229.35.
The standard of care is similar to the standard imposed by UCC
1-203 and 4-103(a) and includes a duty to act in good faith, as
defined in § 229.2(nn) of this regulation.
2. A bank not meeting this standard of care is liable to the
depositary bank, the depositary bank's customer, the owner of the
check, or another party to the check. The depositary bank's
customer is usually a depositor of a check in the depositary bank
(but see § 229.35(d)). The measure of damages provided in this
section (loss incurred up to amount of check, less amount of loss
party would have incurred even if bank had exercised ordinary care)
is based on UCC 4-103(e) (amount of the item reduced by an amount
that could not have been realized by the exercise of ordinary
care), as limited by 4-202(c) (bank is liable only for its own
negligence and not for actions of subsequent banks in chain of
collection). This subpart does not absolve a collecting bank of
liability to prior collecting banks under UCC 4-201.
3. Under this measure of damages, a depositary bank or other
person must show that the damage incurred results from the
negligence proved. For example, the depositary bank may not simply
claim that its customer will not accept a charge-back of a returned
check, but must prove that it could not charge back when it
received the returned check and could have charged back if no
negligence had occurred, and must first attempt to collect from its
customer. (See Marcoux v. Van Wyk, 572 F.2d 651 (8th
Cir. 1978); Appliance Buyers Credit Corp. v. Prospect
Nat'l Bank, 708 F.2d 290 (7th Cir. 1983)). Generally, a paying
or returning bank's liability would not be reduced because the
depositary bank did not place a hold on its customer's deposit
before it learned of nonpayment of the check.
4. This paragraph also states that it does not affect a paying
bank's liability to its customer. Under UCC 4-402, for example, a
paying bank is liable to its customer for wrongful dishonor, which
is different from failure to exercise ordinary care and has a
different measure of damages.
B. 229.38(b) Paying Bank's Failure To Make Timely Return
1. Section 229.31(b) imposes requirements on the paying bank for
expeditious return of a check and leaves in place the UCC deadlines
(as they may be modified by § 229.31(g)), which may allow return at
a different time. This paragraph clarifies that the paying bank
could be liable for failure to meet either standard, but not for
failure to meet both. The regulation intends to preserve the paying
bank's accountability for missing its midnight or other deadline
under the UCC (e.g., sections 4-215 and 4-302), provisions that are
not incorporated in this regulation, but may be useful in
establishing the time of final payment by the paying bank.
C. 229.38(c) Comparative Negligence
1. This paragraph establishes a “pure” comparative negligence
standard for liability under subpart C of this regulation. This
comparative negligence rule may have particular application where a
paying bank or returning bank delays in returning a check because
of difficulty in identifying the depositary bank, where the
depositary bank has failed to exercise ordinary care in applying
its indorsement.
D. 229.38(d) Responsibility for Certain Aspects of Checks
1. ANS X9.100-140 provides that an image of an original check
must be reduced in size when placed on the first substitute check
associated with that original check. (The image thereafter would be
constant in size on any subsequent substitute check that might be
created.) Because of this size reduction, the location of an
indorsement, particularly a depositary bank indorsement, applied to
an original paper check likely will change when the first
reconverting bank creates a substitute check that contains that
indorsement within the image of the original paper check. If the
indorsement was applied to the original paper check in accordance
with ANS X9.100-111's location requirements for indorsements
applied to existing paper checks, and if the size reduction of the
image causes the placement of the indorsement to no longer be
consistent with ANS X9.100-111's requirements, then the
reconverting bank bears the liability for any loss that results
from the shift in the placement of the indorsement. Such a loss
could result either because the original indorsement applied in
accordance with ANS X9.100-111 is rendered illegible by a
subsequent indorsement that a reconverting bank later applies to
the substitute check in accordance with ANS X9.100-140, or because
a subsequent bank receiving a substitute check cannot apply its
indorsement to the substitute check legibly in accordance with ANS
X9.100-111 as a result of the shift in the previous
indorsement.
2. Responsibility under paragraph (d)(1) is treated as
negligence for comparative negligence purposes, and the
contribution to damages under paragraph (d)(1) is treated in the
same way as the degree of negligence under paragraph (c) of this
section.
E through H [Reserved] I. 229.38(i) Presumption of Alteration
1. This paragraph applies to disputes between banks where one
bank has sent an electronic check or a substitute check for
collection to the other bank. The presumption of alteration does
not apply to a dispute between banks where one bank sent the
original check to the other bank, even if that check is
subsequently truncated and destroyed. The presumption of alteration
applies with respect to claims that the original check or to the
electronic check or substitute check was altered or contained an
unauthorized signature.
2. The presumption of alteration applies when the original check
is unavailable for review by the banks in context of the dispute.
If the original check is produced, through discovery or other
means, and is made available for examination by all the parties,
the presumption no longer applies.
3. This paragraph does not alter the transfer and presentment
warranties under the UCC that allocate liability among the parties
to a check transaction with respect to an item that has been
altered or that was issued with an unauthorized signature of the
drawer. The UCC or other applicable check law continues to apply
with respect to other rights, duties, and obligations related to
altered or unauthorized checks. In addition, the presumption does
not apply if it is contrary to another Federal statute or
regulation, such as the U.S. Treasury's rules regarding U.S.
Treasury checks. The presumption of alteration may be varied by
agreement to the extent permitted under § 229.37.
4. As stated in § 229.2, terms that are not defined in that
section have the meanings set forth in the Uniform Commercial Code.
“Alteration” is defined in UCC 3-407 and includes both (i) an
unauthorized change in a check that purports to modify in any
respect the obligation of a party, and (ii) an unauthorized
addition of words or numbers or other change to an incomplete check
relating to the obligation of a party. Alterations could include,
for example, an unauthorized change to a payee name or a change to
the date on a post-dated check that purports to make the check
currently payable. “Unauthorized signature” is defined in UCC 1-201
and further discussed in UCC 3-403. An unauthorized signature could
include a forgery as well as a signature made without actual or
apparent authority.
XXV. Section 229.39 Insolvency of Bank A. Introduction
1. These provisions cover situations where a bank becomes
insolvent during collection or return of a check. Paragraphs (a),
(b), and (d) of § 229.39 are derived from UCC 4-216. They are
intended to apply to all banks. Like UCC 4-216, paragraphs (a),
(b), and (d) of § 229.39 are intended to establish the point in the
collection process at which collection or return of a check should
be either stopped or continued when a particular bank suspends
payments. Section 229.39(a) sets forth the circumstances under
which the receiver must stop collection or return and, instead,
send the check back to the bank or customer that transferred the
check. Section 229.39(b) sets forth the circumstances under which
the collection or return of the check should continue. Paragraphs
(a) and (b) of § 229.39 are not intended to confer upon banks
preferential positions in the event of bank failures over general
depositors or any other creditor of the failed bank. (See UCC
4-216, cmt. 1).
B. 229.39(a) Duty of Receiver To Return Unpaid Checks
1. This paragraph requires a receiver of a closed bank to return
a check to the prior bank if the paying bank or the receiver did
not pay for the check. This permits the prior bank, as holder, to
pursue its claims against the closed bank or prior indorsers on the
check.
C. 229.39(b) Claims Against Banks for Checks Not Returned by the
Receiver
1. This section sets forth the claims available to banks in
situations in which a receiver does not return a check under §
229.39(a). In those situations, the prior bank would not be a
holder of the check and would be unable to pursue claims as a
holder.
2. Paragraph (b)(1) of § 229.39 gives a bank a claim against a
closed paying bank that finally pays a check without settling for
it or a closed depositary bank that becomes obligated to pay a
returned check without settling for it. If the bank with a claim
under this paragraph recovers from a prior bank or other party to
the check, the prior bank or other party to the check is subrogated
to the claim.
3. Paragraph (b)(2) of § 229.39 gives a bank a claim against a
closed collecting bank, paying bank, or returning bank that
receives settlement for but does not make settlement for a check.
(See commentary to § 229.35(b) for discussion of prior and
subsequent banks). As in the case of § 229.39(b)(1), if the bank
with a claim under this paragraph recovers from a prior bank or
other party to the check, the prior bank or other party to the
check is subrogated to the claim.
D. 229.39(c) Preferred Claim Against Presenting Bank for Breach of
Warranty
1. This paragraph gives a paying bank a preferred claim against
a closed presenting bank in the event that the presenting bank
breaches an amount or encoding warranty as provided in §
229.34(c)(1) or (3) and does not reimburse the paying bank for
adjustments for a settlement made by the paying bank in excess of
the value of the checks presented. This preferred claim is intended
to have the effect of a perfected security interest and is intended
to put the paying bank in the position of a secured creditor for
purposes of the receivership provisions of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act and similar provisions of state law.
E. 229.39(d) Finality of Settlement
1. This paragraph provides that insolvency does not interfere
with the finality of a settlement, such as a settlement by a paying
bank that becomes final by expiration of the midnight deadline.
XXVI. Section 229.40 Effect on Merger Transaction
A. When banks merge, there is normally a period of adjustment
before their operations are consolidated. To allow for this
adjustment period, the regulation provides that the merged banks
may be treated as separate banks for a period of up to one year
after the consummation of the transaction. The term merger
transaction is defined in § 229.2(t). This rule affects the status
of the combined entity in a number of areas in this subpart, such
as the following:
1. The paying bank's responsibility for notice of nonpayment (§
229.31(c)).
2. Where the depositary bank must accept returned checks (§
229.33(b) and (c)).
3. Where the depositary bank must accept notice of nonpayment (§
229.33(b) and (c)).
4. Where a paying bank must accept presentment of paper checks
(§ 229.36(b)).
XXVII. Section 229.41 Relation to State Law
A. This section specifies that state law relating to the
collection of checks is preempted only to the extent that it is
inconsistent with this regulation. Thus, this regulation is not a
complete replacement for state laws relating to the collection or
return of checks.
XXVIII. Section 229.42 Exclusions
A. Checks drawn on the United States Treasury, U.S. Postal
Service money orders, and checks drawn on states and units of
general local government that are presented directly to the state
or unit of general local government and that are not payable
through or at a bank are excluded from the coverage of the
expeditious-return, notice-of-nonpayment, and same-day settlement
requirements of subpart C of this part. Other provisions of this
subpart continue to apply to the checks. This exclusion does not
apply to checks drawn by the U.S. government on banks.
XXIX. [Reserved] XXX. § 229.51 General provisions governing
substitute checks A. § 229.51(a) Legal Equivalence
1. Section 229.51(a) states that a substitute check for which a
bank has provided the substitute check warranties is the legal
equivalent of the original check for all purposes and all persons
if it meets the accuracy and legend requirements. Where the law (or
a contract) requires production of the original check, production
of a legally equivalent substitute check would satisfy that
requirement. A person that receives a substitute check cannot be
assessed costs associated with the creation of the substitute
check, absent agreement to the contrary.
Examples.
a. A presenting bank presents a substitute check that meets the
legal equivalence requirements to a paying bank. The paying bank
cannot refuse presentment of the substitute check on the basis that
it is a substitute check, because the substitute check is the legal
equivalent of the original check.
b. A depositor's account agreement with a bank provides that the
depositor is entitled to receive original cancelled checks back
with his or her periodic account statement. The bank may honor that
agreement by providing original checks, substitute checks, or a
combination thereof. However, a bank may not honor such an
agreement by providing something other than an original check or a
substitute check.
c. A mortgage company argues that a consumer missed a monthly
mortgage payment that the consumer believes she made. A legally
equivalent substitute check concerning that mortgage payment could
be used in the same manner as the original check to prove the
payment.
2. A person other than a bank that creates a substitute check
could transfer, present, or return that check only by agreement
unless and until a bank provided the substitute check
warranties.
3. To be the legal equivalent of the original check, a
substitute check must accurately represent all the information on
the front and back of the check as of the time the original check
was truncated. An accurate representation of information that was
illegible on the original check would satisfy this requirement. The
payment instructions placed on the check by, or as authorized by,
the drawer, such as the amount of the check, the payee, and the
drawer's signature, must be accurately represented, because that
information is an essential element of a negotiable instrument.
Other information that must be accurately represented includes (1)
the information identifying the drawer and the paying bank that is
preprinted on the check, including the MICR line; and (2) other
information placed on the check prior to the time an image of the
check is captured, such as any required identification written on
the front of the check and any indorsements applied to the back of
the check. A substitute check need not capture other
characteristics of the check, such as watermarks, microprinting, or
other physical security features that cannot survive the imaging
process or decorative images, in order to meet the accuracy
requirement. Conversely, some security features that are latent on
the original check might become visible as a result of the check
imaging process. For example, the original check might have a faint
representation of the word “void” that will appear more clearly on
a photocopied or electronic image of the check. Provided the
inclusion of the clearer version of the word on the image used to
create a substitute check did not obscure the required information
listed above, a substitute check that contained such information
could be the legal equivalent of an original check under §
229.51(a). However, if a person suffered a loss due to receipt of
such a substitute check instead of the original check, that person
could have an indemnity claim under § 229.53 and, in the case of a
consumer, an expedited recredit claim under § 229.54.
4. To be the legal equivalent of the original check, a
substitute check must bear the legal equivalence legend described
in § 229.51(a)(2). A bank may not vary the language of the legal
equivalence legend and must place the legend on the substitute
check as specified by generally applicable industry standards for
substitute checks contained in ANS X9.100-140.
5. In some cases, the original check used to create a substitute
check could be forged or otherwise fraudulent. A substitute check
created from a fraudulent original check would have the same status
under Regulation CC and the U.C.C. as the original fraudulent
check. For example, a substitute check of a fraudulent original
check would not be properly payable under U.C.C. 4-401 and would be
subject to the transfer and presentment warranties in U.C.C. 4-207
and 4-208.
B. 229.51(b) Reconverting Bank Duties
1. In accordance with ANS X9.100-140, a reconverting bank must
indorse (or, if it is a paying bank with respect to the check or a
bank that rejected a check submitted for deposit, identify itself
on) the back of a substitute check in a manner that preserves all
indorsements applied, whether physically or electronically, by
persons that previously handled the check in any form for forward
collection or return. Indorsements applied physically to the
original check before an image of the check was captured would be
preserved through the image of the back of the original check that
a substitute check must contain. If a bank sprays an indorsement
onto a paper check after it captures an image of the check,
it should ensure that it applies an indorsement to the item
electronically, if it transfers the check as an electronic check or
electronic returned check. (See paragraph 4 of commentary to
section 229.35(a)). A reconverting bank satisfies its obligation to
preserve all previously applied indorsements by physically applying
(overlaying) electronic indorsements onto a substitute check that
the reconverting bank creates. A reconverting bank is not
responsible for obtaining indorsements that persons that previously
handled the check in any form should have applied but did not
apply.
2. A reconverting bank must identify itself and the truncating
bank by applying its routing number and the routing number of the
truncating bank to the front of a substitute check in accordance
with ANS X9.100-140.
3. If the reconverting bank is the paying bank or a bank that
rejected a check submitted for deposit, it also must identify
itself by applying its routing number to the back of the check. A
reconverting bank also must preserve on the back of the substitute
check, in accordance with ANS X9.100-140, the identifications of
any previous reconverting banks. The reconverting-bank and
truncating-bank routing numbers on the front of a substitute check
and, if the reconverting bank is the paying bank or a bank that
rejected a check submitted for deposit, the reconverting bank's
routing number on the back of a substitute check are for
identification only and are not indorsements or acceptances.
Example. A bank's customer, which is a nonbank business,
receives checks for payment and by agreement deposits substitute
checks instead of the original checks with its depositary bank. The
depositary bank is the reconverting bank with respect to the
substitute checks and the truncating bank with respect to the
original checks. In accordance with ANS X9.100-140, the bank must
therefore be identified on the front of the substitute checks as a
reconverting bank and as the truncating bank, and on the back of
the substitute checks as the depositary bank and a reconverting
bank.
4. The location of an indorsement applied to a paper check in
accordance with ANS X9.100-111 may shift if that check is truncated
and later reconverted to a substitute check. If an indorsement
applied to an original check in accordance with ANS X9.100-111 is
overwritten by a subsequent indorsement applied to a substitute
check in accordance with industry standards, then one or both of
those indorsements could be rendered illegible. As explained in §
229.38(c) and the commentary thereto, a reconverting bank is liable
for losses associated with indorsements that are rendered illegible
as a result of check substitution.
C. 229.51(c) Applicable Law
1. A substitute check that meets the requirements for legal
equivalence set forth in this section is subject to any provision
of federal or state law that applies to original checks, except to
the extent such provision is inconsistent with the Check 21 Act or
subpart D. A legally equivalent substitute check is subject to all
laws that are not preempted by the Check 21 Act in the same manner
and to the same extent as is an original check. Thus, any person
could satisfy a law that requires production of an original check
by producing a substitute check that is derived from the relevant
original check and that meets the legal equivalence requirements of
§ 229.51(a).
2. A law is not inconsistent with the Check 21 Act or subpart D
merely because it allows for the recovery of a greater amount of
damages.
Example.
A drawer that suffers a loss with respect to a substitute check
that was improperly charged to its account and for which the drawer
has an indemnity claim but not a warranty claim would be limited
under the Check 21 Act to recovery of the amount of the substitute
check plus interest and expenses. However, if the drawer also
suffered damages that were proximately caused because the bank
wrongfully dishonored subsequently presented checks as a result of
the improper substitute check charge, the drawer could recover
those losses under U.C.C. 4-402.
XXXI. Section 229.52 Substitute Check Warranties A. 229.52(a)
Warranty Content and Provision
1. The responsibility for providing the substitute-check
warranties begins with the reconverting bank. In the case of a
substitute check created by a bank, the reconverting bank starts
the flow of warranties when it transfers, presents, or returns a
substitute check for which it receives consideration or when it
rejects a check submitted for deposit and returns to its customer a
substitute check. A bank that receives a substitute check created
by a nonbank starts the flow of warranties when it transfers,
presents, or returns for consideration either the substitute check
it received or an electronic or paper representation of that
substitute check.
2. To ensure that warranty protections flow all the way through
to the ultimate recipient of a substitute check or paper or
electronic representation thereof, any subsequent bank that
transfers, presents, or returns for consideration either the
substitute check or a paper or electronic representation of the
substitute check is responsible to subsequent transferees for the
warranties. Any warranty recipient could bring a claim for a breach
of a substitute-check warranty if it received either the actual
substitute check or a paper or electronic representation of a
substitute check.
3. The substitute-check warranties and indemnity are not given
under sections 229.52 and 229.53 by a bank that truncates the
original check and by agreement transfers an electronic check to a
subsequent bank for consideration. However, the warranties in §
229.34(a) would apply to the transfer of an electronic check, and
those warranties may be varied by agreement between the parties. A
bank that is a truncating bank under § 229.2(eee)(2) because it
accepts a deposit of a check electronically might be subject to a
claim by another depositary bank that accepts the original check
for deposit. (See § 229.34(f) and commentary thereto).
Example. A bank that receives an electronic check and
uses it to create substitute checks is the reconverting bank and,
when it transfers, presents, or returns that substitute check,
becomes the first warrantor with respect to the substitute check
warranties. That bank, however, may have similar warranty claims
with respect to the electronic check under § 229.34(a) against the
bank that transferred the electronic check.
4. A bank need not affirmatively make the warranties because
they attach automatically when a bank transfers, presents, or
returns the substitute check (or a representation thereof) for
which it receives consideration. Because a substitute check
transferred, presented, or returned for consideration is warranted
to be the legal equivalent of the original check and thereby
subject to existing laws as if it were the original check, all UCC
and other Regulation CC warranties that apply to the original check
also apply to the substitute check.
5. The legal-equivalence warranty by definition must be linked
to a particular substitute check. When an original check is
truncated, the check may move from electronic form to
substitute-check form and then back again, such that there would be
multiple substitute checks associated with one original check. When
a check changes form multiple times in the collection or return
process, the first reconverting bank and subsequent banks that
transfer, present, or return the first substitute check (or a paper
or electronic representation of the first substitute check) warrant
the legal equivalence of only the first substitute check. If a bank
receives an electronic representation of a substitute check and
uses that representation to create a second substitute check, the
second reconverting bank and subsequent transferees of the second
substitute check (or a representation thereof) warrant the legal
equivalence of both the first and second substitute checks. A
reconverting bank would not be liable for a warranty breach under
section 229.52 if the legal-equivalence defect is the fault of a
subsequent bank that handled the substitute check, either as a
substitute check or in other paper or electronic form.
6. The warranty in § 229.52(a)(1)(ii), which addresses multiple
payment requests for the same check, is not linked to a particular
substitute check but rather is given by each bank handling the
substitute check, an electronic representation of a substitute
check, or a subsequent substitute check created from an electronic
representation of a substitute check. All banks that transfer,
present, or return a substitute check (or a paper or electronic
representation thereof) therefore provide the warranty regardless
of whether the ultimate demand for double payment is based on the
original check, the substitute check, or some other electronic or
paper representation of the substitute or original check, and
regardless of the order in which the duplicative payment requests
occur. This warranty is given by the banks that transfer, present,
or return a substitute check even if the demand for duplicative
payment results from a fraudulent substitute check about which the
warranting bank had no knowledge. (See also §
229.34(a)(1)(ii)).
Example. A nonbank depositor truncates a check and in
lieu of the check sends an electronic check to both Bank A and Bank
B. Bank A and Bank B each use the check information that it
received electronically to create a substitute check, which it
presents to Bank C for payment. Bank A and Bank B are both
reconverting banks and each made the substitute-check warranties
when it presented a substitute check to and received payment from
Bank C. Bank C could pursue a warranty claim for the loss it
suffered as a result of the duplicative payment against either Bank
A or Bank B.
7. A bank that rejects a check submitted for deposit and,
instead of the original check, provides its customer with a
substitute check makes the warranties in § 229.52(a)(1). As noted
in the commentary to § 229.2(ccc), the Check 21 Act contemplates
that nonbank persons that receive substitute checks (or
representations thereof) from a bank will receive warranties and
indemnities with respect to the checks. A reconverting bank that
provides a substitute check to its depositor after it has rejected
the check submitted for deposit may not have received consideration
for the substitute check. In order to prevent banks from being able
to transfer a check the bank truncated and then reconverted without
providing substitute check warranties, the regulation provides that
a bank that rejects a check submitted for deposit but provides its
customer with a substitute check (or a paper or electronic
representation of a substitute check) makes the warranties set
forth in § 229.52(a)(1) regardless of whether the bank received
consideration.
Example. A bank's customer submits a check for deposit at
an ATM that captures an image of the check and sends the image
electronically to the bank. After reviewing the item, the bank
rejects the item submitted for deposit. Instead of providing the
original check to its customer, the bank provides a substitute
check to its customer. This bank is the reconverting bank with
respect to the substitute check and makes the warranties described
in § 229.52(a)(1) regardless of whether the bank previously
extended credit to its customer. (See commentary to §
229.2(ccc)).
B. 229.52(b) Warranty Recipients
1. A reconverting bank makes the warranties to the person to
which it transfers, presents, or returns the substitute check for
consideration and to any subsequent recipient that receives either
the substitute check or a paper or electronic representation
derived from the substitute check. These subsequent recipients
could include a subsequent collecting or returning bank, the
depositary bank, the drawer, the drawee, the payee, the depositor,
and any indorser. The paying bank would be included as a warranty
recipient, for example because it would be the drawee of a check or
a transferee of a check that is payable through it.
2. The warranties flow with the substitute check to persons that
receive a substitute check or a paper or electronic representation
of a substitute check. The warranties do not flow to a person that
receives only the original check or a representation of an original
check that was not derived from a substitute check. However, a
person that initially handled only the original check could become
a warranty recipient if that person later receives a returned
substitute check or a paper or electronic representation of a
substitute check that was derived from that original check. (See §
229.34(f) regarding claims by a depositary bank that accepts
deposit of an original check).
3. A reconverting bank also makes the warranties to a person to
whom the bank transfers a substitute check that the bank has
rejected for deposit regardless of whether the bank received
consideration.
XXXII. § 229.53 Substitute Check Indemnity A. 229.53(a) Scope of
Indemnity
1. Each bank that for consideration transfers, presents, or
returns a substitute check or a paper or electronic representation
of a substitute check is responsible for providing the
substitute-check indemnity.
2. The indemnity covers losses due to any subsequent recipient's
receipt of the substitute check instead of the original check. The
indemnity therefore covers the loss caused by receipt of the
substitute check as well as the loss that a bank incurs because it
pays an indemnity to another person. A bank that pays an indemnity
would in turn have an indemnity claim regardless of whether it
received the substitute check or a paper or electronic
representation of the substitute check. The indemnity would not
apply to a person that handled only the original check or a paper
or electronic image of the original check that was not derived from
a substitute check.
3. A reconverting bank also provides the substitute check
indemnity to a person to whom the bank transfers a substitute check
(or a paper or electronic representation of a substitute check)
derived from a check that the bank has rejected for deposit
regardless of whether the bank providing the indemnity has received
consideration.
B. 229.53(b) Indemnity Amount
1. If a recipient of a substitute check is making an indemnity
claim because a bank has breached one of the substitute-check
warranties, the recipient can recover any losses proximately caused
by that warranty breach.
Examples
a. A drawer discovers that its account has been charged for two
different substitute checks that were provided to the drawer and
that were associated with the same original check. As a result of
this duplicative charge, the paying bank dishonored several
subsequently presented checks that it otherwise would have paid and
charged the drawer returned-check fees. The payees of the returned
checks also charged the drawer returned-check fees. The drawer
would have a warranty claim against any of the warranting banks,
including its bank, for breach of the warranty described in §
229.52(a)(1)(ii). The drawer also could assert an indemnity claim.
Because there is only one original check for any payment
transaction, if the collecting bank and presenting bank had
collected the original check instead of using a substitute check
the bank would have been asked to make only one payment. The drawer
could assert its warranty and indemnity claims against the paying
bank, because that is the bank with which the drawer has a customer
relationship and the drawer has received an indemnity from that
bank. The drawer could recover from the indemnifying bank the
amount of the erroneous charge, as well as the amount of the
returned-check fees charged by both the paying bank and the payees
of the returned checks. If the drawer's account were an
interest-bearing account, the drawer also could recover any
interest lost on the erroneously debited amount and the erroneous
returned-check fees. The drawer also could recover its expenditures
for representation in connection with the claim. Finally, the
drawer could recover any other losses that were proximately caused
by the warranty breach.
b. In the example above, the paying bank that received the
duplicate substitute checks also would have a warranty claim
against the previous transferor(s) of those substitute checks and
could seek an indemnity from that bank (or either of those banks).
The indemnifying bank would be responsible for compensating the
paying bank for all the losses proximately caused by the warranty
breach, including representation expenses and other costs incurred
by the paying bank in settling the drawer's claim.
2. If the recipient of the substitute check does not have a
substitute check warranty claim with respect to the substitute
check, the amount of the loss the recipient may recover under §
229.53 is limited to the amount of the substitute check, plus
interest and expenses. However, the indemnified person might be
entitled to additional damages under some other provision of
law.
Examples.
a. A drawer received a substitute check that met all the legal
equivalence requirements and for which the drawer was only charged
once, but the drawer believed that the underlying original check
was a forgery. If the drawer suffered a loss because it could not
prove the forgery based on the substitute check, for example
because proving the forgery required analysis of pen pressure that
could be determined only from the original check, the drawer would
have an indemnity claim. However, the drawer would not have a
substitute check warranty claim because the substitute check was
the legal equivalent of the original check and no person was asked
to pay the substitute check more than once. In that case, the
amount of the drawer's indemnity under § 229.53 would be limited to
the amount of the substitute check, plus interest and expenses.
However, the drawer could attempt to recover additional losses, if
any, under other law.
b. As described more fully in the commentary to § 229.53(a)
regarding the scope of the indemnity, a paying bank could have an
indemnity claim if it paid a legally equivalent substitute check
that was created from a fraudulent cashier's check that the paying
bank's fraud detection procedures would have caught and that the
bank would have returned by its midnight deadline had it received
the original check. However, if the substitute check was not
subject to a warranty claim (because it met the legal equivalence
requirements and there was only one payment request) the paying
bank's indemnity would be limited to the amount of the substitute
check plus interest and expenses.
3. The amount of an indemnity would be reduced in proportion to
the amount of any loss attributable to the indemnified person's
negligence or bad faith. This comparative-negligence standard is
intended to allocate liability in the same manner as the
comparative-negligence provision of section 229.38(c).
4. An indemnifying bank may limit the losses for which it is
responsible under § 229.53 by producing the original check or a
sufficient copy. However, production of the original check or a
sufficient copy does not absolve the indemnifying bank from
liability claims relating to a warranty the bank has provided under
§ 229.52 or any other law, including but not limited to subpart C
of this part or the U.C.C.
C. 229.53(c) Subrogation of Rights
1. A bank that pays an indemnity claim is subrogated to the
rights of the person it indemnified, to the extent of the indemnity
it provided, so that it may attempt to recover that amount from
another person based on an indemnity, warranty, or other claim. The
person that the bank indemnified must comply with reasonable
requests from the indemnifying bank for assistance with respect to
the subrogated claim.
Example.
A paying bank indemnifies a drawer for a substitute check that
the drawer alleged was a forgery that would have been detected had
the original check instead been presented. The bank that provided
the indemnity could pursue its own indemnity claim against the bank
that presented the substitute check, could attempt to recover from
the forger, or could pursue any claim that it might have under
other law. The bank also could request from the drawer any
information that the drawer might possess regarding the possible
identity of the forger.
XXXIII. § 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 § 229.52 or U.C.C.
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 § 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 U.C.C. 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 U.C.C.
4-401 if the item was not properly payable.
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 U.C.C. 4-401, or
a claim for wrongful dishonor under U.C.C. 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 § 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 § 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 § 229.54(b) is not a claim for
purposes of § 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 § 229.54 and identify what information is
missing.
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.
D. 229.54(d) Availability of Recredit
1. The availability of a recredit provided by a bank under §
229.54(c) is governed solely by § 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 § 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 § 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 § 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 §
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 § 229.54(d)(2) is the
amount that the bank recredits under § 229.54(c)(3)(i) (including
the interest component, if any) pending its investigation of a
claim.
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 § 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, §
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 § 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 § 229.54(e).
F. 229.54(f) Recredit Does Not Abrogate Other Liabilities
1. The amount that a consumer may recover under § 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 § 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 § 229.54's limitation on
recovery, he or she could attempt to recover additional amounts
under U.C.C. 4-402.
XXXIV. § 229.55 Expedited Recredit Procedures for Banks A.
229.55(a) Circumstances Giving Rise to a Claim
1. This section allows a bank to make an expedited recredit
claim under two sets of circumstances: first, because it is
obligated to provide a recredit, either to the consumer or to
another bank that is obligated to provide a recredit in connection
with the consumer's claim; and second, because the bank detected a
problem with the substitute check that, if uncaught, could have
given rise to a consumer claim.
2. The loss giving rise to an interbank recredit claim could be
the recredit that the claimant bank provided directly to its
consumer customer under § 229.54 or a loss incurred because the
claimant bank was required to indemnify another bank that provided
an expedited recredit to either a consumer or a bank.
Examples.
a. A paying bank charged a consumer's account based on a
substitute check that contained a blurry image of a legible
original check, and the consumer whose account was charged made an
expedited recredit claim against the paying bank because the
consumer suffered a loss and needed the original check or a
sufficient copy to determine the validity of his or her claim. The
paying bank would have a warranty claim against the presenting bank
that transferred the defective substitute check to it and against
any previous transferring bank(s) that handled that substitute
check or another paper or electronic representation of the check.
The paying bank therefore would meet each of the requirements
necessary to bring an interbank expedited recredit claim.
b. Continuing with the example in paragraph a, if the presenting
bank determined that the paying bank's claim was valid and provided
a recredit, the presenting bank would have suffered a loss in the
amount of the recredit it provided and could, in turn, make an
expedited recredit claim against the bank that transferred the
defective substitute check to it.
B. 229.55(b) Procedures for Making Claims
1. An interbank recredit claim under this section must be
brought within 120 calendar days of the transaction giving rise to
the claim. For purposes of computing this period, the transaction
giving rise to the claim is the claimant bank's settlement for the
substitute check in question.
2. When estimating the amount of its loss, § 229.55(b)(2)(ii)
states that the claimant bank should include “interest if
applicable.” The quoted phrase refers to any interest that the
claimant bank or a bank that the claimant bank indemnified paid to
a consumer who has an interest-bearing account in connection with
an expedited recredit under § 229.54.
3. The information that the claimant bank is required to provide
under § 229.55(b)(2)(iv) to facilitate investigation of the claim
could include, for example, a copy of any written claim that a
consumer submitted under § 229.54 or any written record the bank
may have of a claim the consumer submitted orally. The information
also could include a copy of the defective substitute check or
information relating to that check, such as the number, amount, and
payee of the check. However, a claimant bank that provides a copy
of the substitute check must take reasonable steps to ensure that
the copy is not mistaken for a legal equivalent of the original
check or handled for forward collection or return.
4. The indemnifying bank's right to require a claimant bank to
submit a claim in writing and the computation of time from the date
of the written submission parallel the corresponding provision in
the consumer recredit section (§ 229.54(b)(3)). However, the
indemnifying bank also may require the claimant bank to submit a
copy of the written or electronic claim submitted by the consumer
under that section, if any.
C. 229.55(c) Action on Claims
1. An indemnifying bank that responds to an interbank expedited
recredit claim by providing the original check or a sufficient copy
of the original check need not demonstrate why that claim or the
underlying consumer expedited recredit claim is or is not
valid.
XXXV. § 229.56 Liability A. 229.56(a) Measure of Damages
1. In general, a person's recovery under this section is limited
to the amount of the loss up to the amount of the substitute check
that is the subject of the claim, plus interest and expenses
(including costs and reasonable attorney's fees and other expenses
of representation) related to that substitute check. However, a
person that is entitled to an indemnity under § 229.53 because of a
breach of a substitute check warranty also may recover under §
229.53 any losses proximately caused by the warranty breach,
including interest, costs, wrongfully-charged fees imposed as a
result of the warranty breach, reasonable attorney's fees, and
other expenses of representation.
2. A reconverting bank also may be liable under § 229.38 for
damages associated with the illegibility of indorsements applied to
substitute checks if that illegibility results because the
reduction of the original check image and its placement on the
substitute check shifted a previously-applied indorsement that,
when applied, complied with appendix D. For more detailed
discussion of this topic, see § 229.38 and the accompanying
commentary.
B. 229.56(b) Timeliness of Action
1. A bank's delay beyond the time limits prescribed or permitted
by any provision of subpart D is excused if the delay is caused by
certain circumstances beyond the bank's control. This parallels the
standard of U.C.C. 4-109(b).
C. 229.56(c) Jurisdiction
1. The Check 21 Act confers subject matter jurisdiction on
courts of competent jurisdiction and provides a time limit for
civil actions for violations of subpart D.
D. 229.56(d) Notice of Claims
1. This paragraph is designed to adopt the notice of claim
provisions of U.C.C. 4-207(d) and 4-208(e), with an added provision
that a timely § 229.54 expedited recredit claim satisfies the
generally-applicable notice requirement. The time limit described
in this paragraph applies only to notices of warranty and indemnity
claims. As provided in § 229.56(c), all actions under § 229.56 must
be brought within one year of the date that the cause of action
accrues.
XXXVI. Consumer Awareness A. 229.57(a) General Disclosure
Requirement and Content
1. A bank must provide the disclosure required by § 229.57 under
two circumstances. First, each bank must provide the disclosure to
each of its consumer customers who receives paid checks with his or
her account statement. This requirement does not apply if the bank
provides with the account statement something other than paid
original checks, paid substitute checks, or a combination thereof.
For example, this requirement would not apply if a bank provided
with the account statement only a document that contained multiple
check images per page. Second, a bank also must provide the
disclosure when it (a) provides a substitute check to a consumer in
response to that consumer's request for a check or check copy or
(b) returns a substitute check to a consumer depositor. A bank must
provide the disclosure each time it provides a substitute check to
a consumer on an occasional basis, regardless of whether the bank
previously provided the disclosure to that consumer.
2. A bank may, but is not required to, use the model disclosure
in appendix C-5A to satisfy the disclosure content requirements of
this section. A bank that uses the model language is deemed to
comply with the disclosure content requirement(s) for which it uses
the model language, provided the information in the disclosure
accurately describes the bank's policies and practices. A bank also
may include in its disclosure additional information relating to
substitute checks that is not required by this section.
3. A bank may, by agreement or at the consumer's request,
provide the disclosure required by this section in a language other
than English, provided that the bank makes a complete English
notice available at the consumer's request.
B. 229.57(b) Distribution
1. A consumer may request a check or a copy of a check on an
occasional basis, such as to prove that he or she made a particular
payment. A bank that responds to the consumer's request by
providing a substitute check must provide the required disclosure
at the time of the consumer's request if feasible. Otherwise, the
bank must provide the disclosure no later than the time at which
the bank provides a substitute check in response to the consumer's
request. It would not be feasible for a bank to provide notice to
the consumer at the time of the request if, for example, the bank
did not know at the time of the request whether it would provide a
substitute check in response to that request, regardless of the
form of the consumer's request. It also would not be feasible for a
bank to provide notice at the time of the request if the consumer's
request was mailed to the bank or made by telephone, even if the
bank knew when it received the request that it would provide a
substitute check in response. A bank's provision to the consumer of
something other a substitute check, such as a photocopy of a check
or a statement containing images of multiple substitute checks per
page, does not trigger the notice requirement.
2. A consumer who does not routinely receive paid checks might
receive a returned substitute check. For example, a consumer
deposits an original check that is payable to him or her into his
or her deposit account. The paying bank returns the check unpaid
and the depositary bank returns the check to the depositor in the
form of a substitute check. A depositary bank that provides a
returned substitute check to a consumer depositor must provide the
substitute check disclosure at that time.
XXXVII. Variation by Agreement
Section 229.60 provides that banks involved in an interbank
expedited recredit claim under § 229.55 may vary the terms of that
section by agreement, but otherwise no person may vary the terms of
subpart D by agreement. A bank's decision to provide more generous
protections for consumers than this subpart requires, such as by
providing consumers additional time to submit expedited claims
under § 229.54 under non-exigent circumstances, would not be a
variation prohibited by § 229.60.
XXXVIII. Appendix C - Model Availability Policy Disclosures,
Clauses, and Notices; and Model Substitute Check Policy Disclosure
and Notices A. Introduction
1. Appendix C contains model disclosure, clauses, and notices
that may be used by banks to meet their disclosure and notice
responsibilities under the regulation. Banks using the models
(except models C-22 through C-25) properly will be deemed in
compliance with the regulation's disclosure requirements.
2. Information that must be inserted by a bank using the models
is italicized within parentheses in the text of the models.
Optional information is enclosed in brackets.
3. Banks may make certain changes to the format or content of
the models, including deleting material that is inapplicable,
without losing the EFA Act's protection from liability for banks
that use the models properly. For example, if a bank does not have
a cut-off hour prior to it's closing time, or if a bank does not
take advantage of the § 229.13 exceptions, it may delete the
references to those provisions. Changes to the models may not be so
extensive as to affect the substance, clarity, or meaningful
sequence of the models. Acceptable changes include, for
example:
a. Using “customer” and “bank” instead of pronouns.
b. Changing the typeface or size.
c. Incorporating certain state law “plain English”
requirements.
4. Shorter time periods for availability may always be
substituted for time periods used in the models.
5. Banks may also add related information. For example, a bank
may indicate that although funds have been made available to a
customer and the customer has withdrawn them, the customer is still
responsible for problems with the deposit, such as checks that were
deposited being returned unpaid. Or a bank could include a
telephone number to be used if a customer has an inquiry regarding
a deposit.
6. Banks are cautioned against using the models without
reviewing their own policies and practices, as well as state and
federal laws regarding the time periods for availability of
specific types of checks. A bank using the models will be in
compliance with the EFA Act and the regulation only if the bank's
disclosures correspond to its availability policy.
7. Banks that have used earlier versions of the models (such as
those models that gave Social Security benefits and payroll
payments as examples of preauthorized credits available the day
after deposit, or that did not address the cash withdrawal
limitation) are protected from civil liability under § 229.21(e).
Banks are encouraged, however, to use current versions of the
models when reordering or reprinting supplies.
B. Model Availability Policy and Substitute Check Policy
Disclosures, Models C-1 through C-5A
1. Models C-1 through C-5 generally.
a. Models C-1 through C-5A are models for the availability
policy disclosures described in § 229.16 and substitute check
policy disclosure described in § 229.57. The models accommodate a
variety of availability policies, ranging from next-day
availability to holds to statutory limits on all deposits. Model
C-3 reflects the additional disclosures discussed in §§ 229.16 (b)
and (c) for banks that have a policy of extending availability
times on a case-by-case basis.
b. As already noted, there are several places in the models
where information must be inserted. This information includes the
bank's cut-off times, limitations relating to next-day
availability, and the first four digits of routing numbers for
local banks. In disclosing when funds will be available for
withdrawal, the bank must insert the ordinal number (such as first,
second, etc.) of the business day after deposit that the funds will
become available.
c. Models C-1 through C-5A generally do not reflect any optional
provisions of the regulation, or those that apply only to certain
banks. Instead, disclosures for these provisions are included in
Models C-6 through C-11A. A bank using one of the model
availability policy disclosures should also consider whether it
must incorporate one or more of Models C-6 through C-11A.
d. While § 229.10(b) requires next-day availability for
electronic payments, Treasury regulations (31 CFR part 210) and ACH
association rules require that preauthorized credits (”direct
deposits”) be made available on the day the bank receives the
funds. Models C-1 through C-5 reflect these rules. Wire transfers,
however, are not governed by Treasury or ACH rules, but banks
generally make funds from wire transfers available on the day
received or on the business day following receipt. Banks should
ensure that their disclosures reflect the availability given in
most cases for wire transfers.
2. Model C-1 Next-day availability. A bank may use this
model when its policy is to make funds from all deposits available
on the first business day after a deposit is made. This model may
also be used by banks that provide immediate availability by
substituting the word “immediately” in place of “on the first
business day after the day we receive your deposit.”
3. Model C-2 Next-day availability and § 229.13
exceptions. A bank may use this model when its policy is to
make funds from all deposits available to its customers on the
first business day after the deposit is made, and to reserve the
right to invoke the new account and other exceptions in § 229.13.
In disclosing that a longer delay may apply, a bank may disclose
when funds will generally be available based on when the funds
would be available if the deposit were of a nonlocal check.
4. Model C-3 Next-day availability, case-by-case holds to
statutory limits, and § 229.13 exceptions. A bank may use this
model when its policy, in most cases, is to make funds from all
types of deposits available the day after the deposit is made, but
to delay availability on some deposits on a case-by-case basis up
to the maximum time periods allowed under the regulation. A bank
using this model also reserves the right to invoke the exceptions
listed in § 229.13. In disclosing that a longer delay may apply, a
bank may disclose when funds will generally be available based on
when the funds would be available if the deposit were of a nonlocal
check.
5. Model C-4 Holds to statutory limits on all deposits. A
bank may use this model when its policy is to impose delays to the
full extent allowed under § 229.12 and to reserve the right to
invoke the § 229.13 exceptions. In disclosing that a longer delay
may apply, a bank may disclose when funds will generally be
available based on when the funds would be available if the deposit
were of a nonlocal check. Model C-4 uses a chart to show the bank's
availability policy for local and nonlocal checks and Model C-5
uses a narrative description.
6. Model C-5 Holds to statutory limits on all deposits. A
bank may use this model when its policy is to impose delays to the
full extent allowed under § 229.12 and to reserve the right to
invoke the § 229.13 exceptions. In disclosing that a longer delay
may apply, a bank may disclose when funds will generally be
available based on when the funds would be available if the deposit
were of a nonlocal check.
7. Model C-5A A bank may use this form when it is
providing the disclosure to its consumers required by § 229.57
explaining that a substitute check is the legal equivalent of an
original check and the circumstances under which the consumer may
make a claim for expedited recredit.
C. Model Clauses, Models C-6 Through C-11A
1. Models C-6 through C-11A generally. Certain clauses
like those in the models must be incorporated into a bank's
availability policy disclosure under certain circumstances. The
commentary to each clause indicates when a clause similar to the
model clause is required.
2. Model C-6 Holds on other funds (check cashing). A bank
that reserves the right to place a hold on funds already on deposit
when it cashes a check for a customer, as addressed in § 229.19(e),
must incorporate this type of clause in its availability policy
disclosure.
3. Model C-7 Holds on other funds (other account). A bank
that reserves the right to place a hold on funds in an account of
the customer other than the account into which the deposit is made,
as addressed in § 229.19(e), must incorporate this type of clause
in its availability policy disclosure.
4. Model C-8 Appendix B availability (nonlocal checks). A
bank in a check processing region where the availability schedules
for certain nonlocal checks have been reduced, as described in
appendix B of Regulation CC, must incorporate this type of clause
in its availability policy disclosure. Banks using Model C-5 may
insert this clause at the conclusion of the discussion titled
“Nonlocal checks.”
5. Model C-9 Automated teller machine deposits (extended
holds). A bank that reserves the right to delay availability of
deposits at nonproprietary ATMs until the fifth business day
following the date of deposit, as permitted by § 229.12(f), must
incorporate this type of clause in its availability policy
disclosure. A bank must choose among the alternative language based
on how it chooses to differentiate between proprietary and
nonproprietary ATMs, as required under § 229.16(b)(5).
6. Model C-10 Cash withdrawal limitation. A bank that
imposes cash withdrawal limitations under § 229.12 must incorporate
this type of clause in its availability policy disclosure. Banks
reserving the right to impose the cash withdrawal limitation and
using Model C-3 should disclose that funds may not be available
until the sixth (rather than fifth) business day in the first
paragraph under the heading “Longer Delays May Apply.”
7. Model C-11 Credit union interest payment policy. A
credit union subject to the notice requirement of § 229.14(b)(2)
must incorporate this type of clause in its availability policy
disclosure. This model clause is only an example of a hypothetical
policy. Credit unions may follow any policy for accrual provided
the method of accruing interest is the same for cash and check
deposits.
8. Model C-11A Availability of funds deposited at other
locations. A clause similar to Model C-11A should be used if a
bank bases the availability of funds on the location where the
funds are deposited (for example, at a contractual or other branch
located in a different check processing region). Similarly, a
clause similar to Model C-11A should be used if a bank
distinguishes between local and non-local checks (for example, a
bank using model availability policy disclosure C-4 or C-5), and
accepts deposits in more than one check processing region.
D. Model Notices, Models C-12 through C-25
1. Models C-12 through C-25 generally. Models C-12
through C-25 provide models of the various notices required by the
regulation. A bank that cashes a check and places a hold on funds
in an account of the customer (see § 229.19(e)) should modify the
model hold notice accordingly. For example, the bank could replace
the word “deposit” with the word “transaction” and could add the
phrase “or cashed” after the word “deposited.”
2. Model C-12 Exception hold notice. This model satisfies
the written notice required under § 229.13(g) when a bank places a
hold based on a § 229.13 exception. If a hold is being placed on
more than one check in a deposit, each check need not be described,
but if different reasons apply, each reason must be indicated. A
bank may use the actual date when funds will be available for
withdrawal rather than the number of the business day following the
day of deposit. A bank must incorporate in the notice the material
set out in brackets if it imposes overdraft or returned check fees
after invoking the reasonable cause exception under §
229.13(e).
3. Model C-13 Reasonable cause hold notice. This notice
satisfies the written notice required under § 229.13(g) when a bank
invokes the reasonable cause exception under § 229.13(e). The
notice provides the bank with a list of specific reasons that may
be given for invoking the exception. If a hold is being placed on
more than one check in a deposit, each check must be described
separately, and if different reasons apply, each reason must be
indicated. A bank may disclose its reason for doubting
collectibility by checking the appropriate reason on the model. If
the “Other” category is checked, the reason must be given. A bank
may use the actual date when funds will be available for withdrawal
rather than the number of the business day following the day of
deposit. A bank must incorporate in the notice the material set out
in brackets if it imposes overdraft or returned check fees after
invoking the reasonable cause exception under § 229.13(e).
4. Model C-14 One-time notice for large deposit and
redeposited check exception holds. This model satisfies the
notice requirements of § 229.13(g)(2) concerning nonconsumer
accounts.
5. Model C-15 One-time notice for repeated overdraft
exception hold. This model satisfies the notice requirements of
§ 229.13(g)(3).
6. Model C-16 Case-by-case hold notice. This model
satisfies the notice required under § 229.16(c)(2) when a bank with
a case-by-case hold policy imposes a hold on a deposit. This notice
does not require a statement of the specific reason for the hold,
as is the case when a § 229.13 exception hold is placed. A bank may
specify the actual date when funds will be available for withdrawal
rather than the number of the business day following the day of
deposit when funds will be available. A bank must incorporate in
the notice the material set out in brackets if it imposes overdraft
fees after invoking a case-by-case hold.
7. Model C-17 Notice at locations where employees accept
consumer deposits and Model C-18 Notice at locations where
employees accept consumer deposits (case-by-case holds). These
models satisfy the notice requirement of § 229.18(b). Model C-17
reflects an availability policy of holds to statutory limits on all
deposits, and Model C-18 reflects a case-by-case availability
policy.
8. Model C-19 Notice at automated teller machines. This
model satisfies the ATM notice requirement of § 229.18(c)(1).
9. Model C-20 Notice at automated teller machines (delayed
receipt). This model satisfies the ATM notice requirement of §
229.18(c)(2) when receipt of deposits at off-premises ATMs is
delayed under § 229.19(a)(4). It is based on collection of deposits
once a week. If collections occur more or less frequently, the
description of when deposits are received must be adjusted
accordingly.
10. Model C-21 Deposit slip notice. This model satisfies
the notice requirements of § 229.18(a) for deposit slips.
11. Models C-22 through C-25 generally. Models C-22
through C-25 provide models for the various notices required when a
consumer who receives substitute checks makes an expedited recredit
claim under § 229.54 for a loss related to a substitute check. 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 § 229.54(e).
12. Model C-22 Valid Claim Refund Notice. A bank may use
this model when crediting the entire amount or the remaining amount
of a consumer's expedited recredit claim after determining that the
consumer's claim is valid. This notice could be used when the bank
provides the consumer a full recredit based on a valid claim
determination within ten days of the receipt of the consumer's
claim or when the bank recredits the remaining amount of a
consumer's expedited recredit claim by the 45th calendar day after
receiving the consumer's claim, as required under §
229.54(e)(1).
13. Model C-23 Provisional Refund Notice. A bank may use
this model when providing a full or partial expedited recredit to a
consumer pending further investigation of the consumer's claim, as
required under § 229.54(e)(1).
14. Model C-24 Denial Notice. A bank may use this model
when denying a claim for an expedited recredit under §
229.54(e)(2).
15. Model C-25 Reversal Notice. A bank may use this model
when reversing an expedited recredit that was credited to a
consumer's account under § 229.54(e)(3).
[Reg. CC, 60 FR 51672, Oct. 3, 1995, as amended by Reg. CC, 62 FR
13816, Mar. 24, 1997; 64 FR 59613, Nov. 3, 1999; 68 FR 52078, Sept.
2, 2003; 68 FR 53672, Sept. 12, 2003; 69 FR 47317, Aug. 4, 2004; 70
FR 71225, Nov. 28, 2005; 82 FR 27585, June 15, 2017; 83 FR 46853,
Sept. 17, 2018; 84 FR 31697, July 3, 2019]