Appendix to Part 745 - Examples of Insurance Coverage Afforded Accounts in Credit Unions Insured by the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund
12:7.0.2.3.27.2.11.4.26 :
Appendix to Part 745 - Examples of Insurance Coverage Afforded
Accounts in Credit Unions Insured by the National Credit Union
Share Insurance Fund What Is the Purpose of This Appendix?
The following examples illustrate insurance coverage on accounts
maintained in the same federally insured credit union. They are
intended to cover various types of ownership interests and
combinations of accounts which may occur in connection with funds
invested in insured credit unions. These examples interpret the
rules for insurance of accounts contained in 12 CFR part 745 and
focus on those accounts for which examples are not provided in the
regulatory text.
The examples, as well as the rules which they interpret, are
predicated upon the assumption that: (1) Invested funds are
actually owned in the manner indicated on the credit union's
records and (2) the owner of funds in an account is a credit union
member or otherwise eligible to maintain an insured account in a
credit union. If available evidence shows that ownership is
different from that on the institution's records, the National
Credit Union Share Insurance Fund may pay claims for insured
accounts on the basis of actual rather than ostensible ownership.
Further, the examples and the rules which they interpret do not
extend insurance coverage to persons otherwise not entitled to
maintain an insured account or to account relationships that have
not been approved by the NCUA Board as an insured account.
A. How Are Single Ownership Accounts Insured?
All funds owned by an individual member (or, in a community
property state, by the husband-wife community of which the
individual is a member) and invested in one or more individual
accounts are added together and insured to the $250,000 maximum.
This is true whether the accounts are maintained in the name of the
individual member owning the funds or in the name of the member's
agent or nominee. (§ 745.3(a)(1) and (2).) All such accounts are
added together and insured as one individual account. Funds held in
one or more accounts in the name of a guardian, custodian, or
conservator for the benefit of a ward or minor are added together
and insured up to $250,000. However, such an account or accounts
will not be added to any other individual accounts of the guardian,
custodian, conservator, ward, or minor for purposes of determining
insurance coverage. (§ 745.3(b).) A mortgage servicing account
maintained by a mortgage servicer, in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity, comprised of payments by a mortgagor of
principal and interest is insured for the cumulative balance paid
into the account by the mortgagor, up to $250,000 for the mortgagor
separately from other individual accounts of the mortgagor. A
mortgage servicing account maintained by a mortgage servicer, in a
custodial or other fiduciary capacity, comprised of payments by a
mortgagor of taxes and insurance premiums shall be added together
with the mortgagor's other individual accounts and insured up to
$250,000. (§ 745.3(a)(3).)
Example 1.Question: Members A and B, husband and wife, each
maintain an individual account containing $250,000. What is the
insurance coverage?
Answer: Each account is separately insured up to $250,000, for a
total coverage of $500,000. The coverage would be the same whether
the individual accounts contain funds owned as community property
or as individual property of the spouses (§ 745.3(a)(1)).
Example 2.Question: Members H and W, husband and wife, reside in a
community property state. H maintains a $250,000 account consisting
of his separately-owned funds and invests $250,000 of community
property funds in another account, both of which are in his name
alone. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The two accounts are added together and insured to a
total of $250,000. $250,000 is uninsured (§ 745.3(a)(1)).
Example 3.Question: Member A has $192,500 invested in an individual
account, and his agent, Member B, invests $125,000 of A's funds in
a properly designated agency account. B also holds a $250,000
individual account. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: A's individual account and the agency account are added
together and insured to the $250,000 maximum, leaving $67,500
uninsured. The investment of funds through an agent does not result
in additional insurance coverage for the principal (§ 745.3(a)(2)).
B's individual account is insured separately from the agency
account (§ 745.3(a)(1)). However, if the account records of the
credit union do not show the agency relationship under which the
funds in the $125,000 account are held, the $250,000 in B's name
could, at the option of the NCUSIF, be added to his individual
account and insured to $250,000 in the aggregate, leaving $125,000
uninsured (§ 745.2(c)).
Example 4.Question: Member A holds a $250,000 individual account.
Member B holds two accounts in his own name, the first containing
$125,000 and the second containing $192,500. In processing the
claims for payment of insurance on these accounts, the NCUSIF
discovers that the funds in the $125,000 account actually belong to
A and that B had invested these funds as agent for A, his
undisclosed principal. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Since the available evidence shows that A is the actual
owner of the funds in the $125,000 account, those funds would be
added to the $250,000 individual account held by A (rather than to
B's $192,500 account) and insured to the $250,000 maximum, leaving
$125,000 uninsured. (§ 745.3(a)(2).) B's $192,500 individual
account would be separately insured.
Example 5.Question: Member C, a minor, maintains an individual
account of $750. C's grandfather makes a gift to him of $250,000,
which is invested in another account by C's father, designated on
the credit union's records as custodian under a Uniform Gift to
Minors Act. C's father, also a member, maintains an individual
account of $250,000. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: C's individual account and the custodian account held
for him by his father are each separately insured: The $250,000
maximum on the custodian account, and $750 on his individual
account. The individual account held by C's father is also
separately insured to the $250,000 maximum. (§ 745.3 (a)(1) and
(b).)
Example 6.Question: Member G, a court-appointed guardian, invests
in a properly designated account $250,000 of funds in his custody
which belong to member W, his ward. W and G each maintain $25,000
individual accounts. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: W's individual account and the guardianship account in
G's name are each insured to $250,000 providing W with $275,000 in
insured funds. G's individual account is also separately insured.
(§ 745.3 (a)(1) and (b).)
Example 7.Question: Member A has three individual accounts at the
same NCUA-insured credit union. Account #1 is a $250,000 individual
account. Account #2 is a mortgage servicing account maintained by a
mortgage servicer, in a custodial or other fiduciary capacity,
comprised of payments by Member A of principal and interest in the
amount of $3,000. Account #3 is a mortgage servicing account
maintained by a mortgage servicer, in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity, comprised of payments by Member A of taxes and
insurance premiums in the amount of $1,500. What is the insurance
coverage?
Answer: Accounts # 1 and #3 are added together and insured up to
$250,000, leaving $1,500 uninsured. Account #2 is separately
insured up to $250,000.
B. How Are Accounts Held by Executors or Administrators Insured?
All funds belonging to a decedent and invested in one or more
accounts, whether held in the name of the decedent or in the name
of his executor or administrator, are added together and insured to
the $250,000 maximum. Such funds are insured separately from the
individual accounts of any of the beneficiaries of the estate or of
the executor or administrator.
Example 1.Question: Member A, administrator of Member D's estate,
sells D's automobile and invests the proceeds of $12,500 in an
account entitled “A Administrator of the estate of D.” A has an
individual account in that same credit union containing $250,000.
Prior to his death, D had opened an individual account of $250,000.
What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The $12,500 is added to D's individual account and
insured to $250,000, leaving $12,500 uninsured. A's individual
account is separately insured for $250,000 (§ 745.5).
C. How Are Accounts Held by a Corporation, Partnership or
Unincorporated Association Insured?
All funds invested in an account or accounts by a corporation, a
partnership or an unincorporated association engaged in any
independent activity are added together and insured to the $250,000
maximum. The term “independent activity” means any activity other
than the one directed solely at increasing coverage. If the
corporation, partnership or unincorporated association is not
engaged in an independent activity, any account held by the entity
is insured as if owned by the persons owning or comprising the
entity, and the imputed interest of each such person is added for
insurance purposes to any individual account which he
maintains.
Example 1.Question: Member X Corporation maintains a $250,000
account. The stock of the corporation is owned by members A, B, C,
and D in equal shares. Each of these stockholders also maintains an
individual account of $250,000 with the same credit union. What is
the insurance coverage?
Answer: Each of the five accounts would be separately insured to
$250,000 if the corporation is engaged in an independent activity
and has not been established merely for the purpose of increasing
insurance coverage. The same would be true if the business were
operated as a bona fide partnership instead of as a corporation (§
745.6). However, if X corporation was not engaged in an independent
activity, then $62,500 ( 1/4 interest) would be added to each
account of A, B, C, and D. The accounts of A, B, C, and D would
then each be insured to $250,000, leaving $62,500 in each account
uninsured.
Example 2.Question: Member C College maintains three separate
accounts with the same credit union under the titles: “General
Operating Fund,” “Teachers Salaries,” and “Building Fund.” What is
the insurance coverage?
Answer: Since all of the funds are the property of the college,
the three accounts are added together and insured only to the
$250,000 maximum (§ 745.6).
Example 3.Question: The men's club of X Church carries on various
social activities in addition to holding several fund-raising
campaigns for the church each year. The club is supported by
membership dues. Both the club and X Church maintain member
accounts in the same credit union. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The men's club is an unincorporated association engaged
in an independent activity. If the club funds are, in fact, legally
owned by the club itself and not the church, each account is
separately insured to the $250,000 maximum (§ 745.6).
Example 4.Question: The PQR Union, a member of the ABC Federal
Credit Union, has three locals in a certain city. Each of the
locals maintains an account containing funds belonging to the
parent organization. All three accounts are in the same insured
credit union. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The three accounts are added together and insured up to
the $250,000 maximum (§ 745.6).
D. How Are Accounts Held by Government Depositors Insured?
For insurance purposes, the official custodian of funds
belonging to a public unit, rather than the public unit itself, is
insured as the account holder. All funds belonging to a public unit
and invested by the same custodian in a federally insured credit
union are categorized as either share draft accounts or share
certificate and regular share accounts. If these accounts are
invested in a federally insured credit union located in the
jurisdiction from which the official custodian derives his
authority, then the share draft accounts will be insured separately
from the share certificate and regular share accounts. Under this
circumstance, all share draft accounts are added together and
insured to the $250,000 maximum and all share certificate and
regular share accounts are also added together and separately
insured up to the $250,000 maximum. If, however, these accounts are
invested in a federally insured credit union located outside of the
jurisdiction from which the official custodian derives his
authority, then insurance coverage is limited to $250,000 for all
accounts regardless of whether they are share draft, share
certificate or regular share accounts. If there is more than one
official custodian for the same public unit, the funds invested by
each custodian are separately insured. If the same person is
custodian of funds for more than one public unit, he is separately
insured with respect to the funds of each unit held by him in
properly designated accounts.
For insurance purposes, a “political subdivision” is entitled to
the same insurance coverage as any other public unit. “Political
subdivision” includes any subdivision of a public unit or any
principal department of such unit: (1) The creation of which has
been expressly authorized by state statute, (2) to which some
functions of government have been allocated by state statute, and
(3) to which funds have been allocated by statute or ordinance for
its exclusive use and control.
Example 1.Question: As Comptroller of Y Consolidated School
District, A maintains a $275,000 account in the credit union
containing school district funds. He also maintains his own
$250,000 member account in the same credit union. What is the
insurance coverage?
Answer: The two accounts will be separately insured, assuming
the credit union's records indicate that the account containing the
school district funds is held by A in a fiduciary capacity. Thus,
$250,000 of the school's funds and the entire $250,000 in A's
personal account will be insured (§§ 745.10(a)(2) and 754.3).
Example 2.Question: A, as city treasurer, and B, as chief of the
city police department, each have $250,000 in city funds invested
in custodial accounts. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Assuming that both A and B have official custody of the
city funds, each account is separately insured to the $250,000
maximum (§ 745.10(a)(2)).
Example 3.Question: A is Treasurer of X County and collects certain
tax assessments, a portion of which must be paid to the state under
statutory requirement. A maintains an account for general funds of
the county and establishes a separate account for the funds which
belong to the State Treasurer. The credit union's records indicate
that the separate account contains funds held for the State. What
is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Since two public units own the funds held by A, the
accounts would each be separately insured to the $250,000 maximum
(§ 745.10(a)(2)).
Example 4.Question: A city treasurer invests city funds in each of
the following accounts: “General Operating Account,” “School
Transportation Fund,” “Local Maintenance Fund,” and “Payroll Fund.”
Each account is available to the custodian upon demand. By
administrative direction, the city treasurer has allocated the
funds for the use of and control by separate departments of the
city. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: All of the accounts are added together and insured in
the aggregate to $250,000. Because the allocation of the city's
funds is not by statute or ordinance for the specific use of and
control by separate departments of the city, separate insurance
coverage to the maximum of $250,000 is not afforded to each account
(§§ 745.1(d) and 745.10(a)(2)).
Example 5.Question: A, the custodian of retirement funds of a
military exchange, invests $2,500,000 in an account in an insured
credit union. The military exchange, a non-appropriated fund
instrumentality of the United States, is deemed to be a public
unit. The employees of the exchange are the beneficiaries of the
retirement funds but are not members of the credit union. What is
the insurance coverage?
Answer: Because A invested the funds on behalf of a public unit,
in his capacity as custodian, those funds qualify for $250,000
share insurance even though A and the public unit are not within
the credit union's field of membership. Since the beneficiaries are
neither public units nor members of the credit union they are not
entitled to separate share insurance. Therefore, $2,250,000 is
uninsured (§ 745.10(a)(1)).
Example 6.Question: A is the custodian of the County's employee
retirement funds. He deposits $2,500,000 in retirement funds in an
account in an insured credit union. The “beneficiaries” of the
retirement fund are not themselves public units nor are they within
the credit union's field of membership. What is the insurance
coverage?
Answer: Because A invested the funds on behalf of a public unit,
in his capacity as custodian, those funds qualify for $250,000
share insurance even though A and the public unit are not within
the credit union's field of membership. Since the beneficiaries are
neither public units nor members of the credit union they are not
entitled to separate share insurance. Therefore, $2,250,000 is
uninsured (§ 745.10(a)(2)).
Example 7.Question: A county treasurer establishes the following
share draft accounts in an insured credit union each with $250,000:
“General Operating Fund” “County Roads Department Fund” “County
Water District Fund” “County Public Improvement District Fund”
“County Emergency Fund” What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The “County Roads Department,” “County Water District”
and “County Public Improvement District” accounts would each be
separately insured to $250,000 if the funds in each such account
have been allocated by law for the exclusive use of a separate
county department or subdivision expressly authorized by State
statute. Funds in the “General Operating” and “Emergency Fund”
accounts would be added together and insured in the aggregate to
$250,000, if such funds are for countywide use and not for the
exclusive use of any subdivision or principal department of the
county, expressly authorized by State statute (§§ 745.1(d) and
745.10(a)(2)).
Example 8.Question: A, the custodian of Indian tribal funds,
lawfully invests $2,500,000 in an account in an insured credit
union on behalf of 15 different tribes; the records of the credit
union show that no tribe's interest exceeds $250,000. A, as
official custodian, also invests $2,500,000 in the same credit
union on behalf of 100 individual Indians, who are not members;
each Indian's interest is $10,000. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Because each tribe is considered a separate public unit,
the custodian of each tribe, even though the same person, is
entitled to separate insurance for each tribe (§ 745.10(a)(5)).
Since the credit union's records indicate no tribe has more than
$250,000 in the account, the $2,500,000 would be fully insured as
15 separate tribal accounts. If anyone tribe had more than a
$250,000 interest in the funds, it would be insured only to
$250,000 and any excess would be uninsured.
However, the $2,500,000 invested on behalf of the individual
Indians would not be insured since the individual Indians are
neither public units nor, in the example, members of the credit
union. If A is the custodian of the funds in his capacity as an
official of a governmental body that qualified as a public unit,
then the account would be insured for $250,000, leaving $2,250,000
uninsured.
Example 9.Question: A, an official custodian of funds of a state of
the United States, lawfully invests $500,000 of state funds in a
federally insured credit union located in the state from which he
derives his authority as an official custodian. What is the
insurance coverage?
Answer: If A invested the entire $500,000 in a share draft
account, then $250,000 would be insured and $250,000 would be
uninsured. If A invested $250,000 in share draft accounts and
another $250,000 in share certificate and regular share accounts,
then A would be insured for $250,000 for the share draft accounts
and $250,000 for the share certificate and regular share accounts
leaving nothing uninsured (§ 745.10(a)(2)). If A had invested the
$500,000 in a federally insured credit union located outside the
state from which he derives his authority as an official custodian,
then $250,000 would be insured for all accounts regardless of
whether they were share draft, share certificate or regular share
accounts, leaving $250,000 uninsured (§ 745.10(b)).
E. How Are Trust Accounts and Retirement Accounts Insured?
A trust estate is the interest of a beneficiary in an
irrevocable express trust, whether created by trust instrument or
statute, which is valid under state law. Thus, funds invested in an
account by a trustee under an irrevocable express trust are insured
on the basis of the beneficial interests under such trust. The
interest of each beneficiary in an account (or accounts)
established under such a trust arrangement is insured to $250,000
separately from other accounts held by the trustee, the settlor
(grantor), or the beneficiary. However, in cases where a
beneficiary has an interest in more than one trust arrangement
created by the same settlor, the interests of the beneficiary in
all accounts established under such trusts are added together for
insurance purposes, and the beneficiary's aggregate interest
derived from the same settlor is separately insured to the $250,000
maximum.
A beneficiary's interest in an account established pursuant to
an irrevocable express trust arrangement is insured separately from
other beneficial interests (trust estates) invested in the same
account if the value of the beneficiary's interest (trust estate)
can be determined (as of the date of a credit union's insolvency)
without evaluation of contingencies except for those covered by the
present worth tables and rules of calculation for their use set
forth in § 20.2031-10 of the Federal Estate Tax Regulations (26 CFR
20.2031-10). If any trust estates in such an account cannot be so
determined, the insurance with respect to all such trust estates
together shall not exceed $250,000.
In order for insurance coverage of trust accounts to be
effective in accordance with the foregoing rules, certain
recordkeeping requirements must be met. In connection with each
trust account, the credit union's records must indicate the name of
both the settlor and the trustee of the trust and must contain an
account signature card executed by the trustee indicating the
fiduciary capacity of the trustee. In addition, the interests of
the beneficiaries under the trust must be ascertainable from the
records of either the credit union or the trustee, and the settlor
or beneficiary must be a member of the credit union. If there are
two or more settlors or beneficiaries, then either all the settlors
or all the beneficiaries must be members of the credit union.
Although each ascertainable trust estate is separately insured,
it should be noted that in short-term trusts the insurable interest
or interests may be very small, since the interests are computed
only for the duration of the trust. Thus, if a trust is made
irrevocable for a specified period of time, the beneficial interest
will be calculated in terms of the length of time stated. A
reversionary interest retained by the settlor is treated in the
same manner as an individual account of the settlor.
As stated, the trust must be valid under local law. A trust
which does not meet local requirements, such as one imposing no
duties on the trustee or conveying no interest to the beneficiary,
is of no effect for insurance purposes. An account in which such
funds are invested is considered to be an individual account.
IRA and Keogh accounts are separately insured, each up to
$250,000. Although credit unions may serve as trustees or
custodians for self-directed IRA, Roth IRA and Keogh accounts, once
the funds in those accounts are taken out of the credit union, they
are no longer insured.
In the case of an employee retirement fund where only a portion
of the fund is placed in a credit union account, the amount of
insurance available to an individual participant on his interest in
the account will be in proportion to his interest in the entire
employee retirement fund. If, for example, the member's interest
represents 10% of the entire plan funds, then he is presumed to
have only a 10% interest in the plan account. Said another way, if
a member has a vested interest of $10,000 in a municipal employees
retirement plan and the trustee invests 25% of the total plan funds
in a credit union, the member would be insured for only $2,500 on
that credit union account. There is an exception, however. The
member would be insured for $10,000 if the trustee can document,
through records maintained in the ordinary course of business, that
individual beneficiary's interests are segregated and the total
vested interest of the member was, in fact, invested in that
account.
Example 1.Question: Member S invests $250,000 in trust for B, the
beneficiary. S also has an individual account containing $250,000
in the same credit union. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Both accounts are fully insured. The trust account is
separately insured from the individual account of S (§§ 745.3(a)(1)
and 745.9-1).
Example 2.Question: S invests funds in trust for A, B, C, D, and E.
A, B, and C are members of the credit union, D, E and S are not.
What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: This is an uninsurable account. Where there is more than
one settlor or more than one beneficiary, all the settlors or all
the beneficiaries must be members to establish this type of
account. Since D, E and S are not members, this account cannot
legally be established or insured.
Example 3(a).Question: Member T invests $5,000,000 in trust for ABC
Employees Retirement Fund. Some of the participants are members and
some are not. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: The account is insured as to the determinable interests
of each participant to a maximum of $250,000 per participant
regardless of credit union member status. T's member status is also
irrelevant. Participant interests not capable of evaluation shall
be added together and insured to a maximum of $250,000 in the
aggregate (§ 745.9-2).
Example 3(b).Question: T is trustee for the ABC Employees
Retirement Fund containing $1,000,000. Fund participant A has a
determinable interest of $90,000 in the Fund (9% of the total). T
invests $500,000 of the Fund in an insured credit union and the
remaining $500,000 elsewhere. Some of the participants of the Fund
are members of the credit union and some are not. T does not
segregate each participant's interest in the Fund. What is the
insurance coverage?
Answer: The account is insured as to the determinable interest
of each participant, adjusted in proportion to the Fund's
investment in the credit union, regardless of the membership status
of the participants or trustee. A's insured interest in the account
is $45,000, or 9% of $500,000. This reflects the fact that only 50%
of the Fund is in the account and A's interest in the account is in
the same proportion as his interest in the overall plan. All other
participants would be similarly insured. Participants' interests
not capable of evaluation are added together and insured to a
maximum of $250,000 in the aggregate (§ 745.9-2).
Example 4.Question: Member A has an individual account of $250,000
and establishes an IRA account and accumulates $250,000 in that
account. Subsequently, A becomes self-employed and establishes a
Keogh account in the same credit union and accumulates $250,000 in
that account. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Each of A's accounts would be separately insured as
follows: the individual account for $250,000, the maximum for that
type of account; the IRA account for $250,000, the maximum for that
type of account; and the Keogh account for $250,000, the maximum
for that type of account. (§§ 745.3(a)(1) and 745.9-2).
Example 5.Question: Member A has a self-directed IRA account with
$70,000 in it. The FCU is the trustee of the account. Member
transfers $40,000 into a blue chip stock; $30,000 remains in the
FCU. What is the insurance coverage?
Answer: Originally, the full $70,000 in A's IRA account is
insured. The $40,000 is no longer insured once it is moved out of
the FCU. The $30,000 remaining in the FCU is insured (§
745.9-2).
[74 FR 55751, Oct. 29, 2009, as amended at 75 FR 34622, June 18,
2010]