97-24405. Collection of Checks and Other Items by Federal Reserve Banks and Funds Transfers Through Fedwire  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 178 (Monday, September 15, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 48166-48174]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-24405]
    
    
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    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    12 CFR Part 210
    
    [Regulation J; Docket No. R-0972]
    
    
    Collection of Checks and Other Items by Federal Reserve Banks and 
    Funds Transfers Through Fedwire
    
    AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: Effective January 2, 1998, the Reserve Banks will begin to 
    implement a policy under which each depository institution may maintain 
    only a single funds account with the Federal Reserve. A single account 
    will establish a single debtor-creditor relationship between each 
    institution and a Federal Reserve Bank and will make account management 
    more efficient for banks with interstate branches. The Board is 
    adopting amendments to subpart A of Regulation J to conform the Federal 
    Reserve check collection rules to the single account structure.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: January 2, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Oliver Ireland, Associate General 
    Counsel, (202/452-3625), Stephanie Martin, Senior Attorney (202/452-
    3198), or Heatherun Allison, Attorney (202/452-3565), Legal Division. 
    For the hearing impaired only, contact Diane Jenkins, 
    Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) (202/452-3544), Board of 
    Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, N.W., 
    Washington, D.C. 20551.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Overview
    
        The Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 
    1994 (Pub. L. 103-328) made significant changes to various banking laws 
    to authorize and facilitate interstate banking. Consequently, the 
    number of depository institutions that operate branches in more than 
    one Federal Reserve District is expected to increase. On January 2, 
    1998, the Federal Reserve Banks will begin to implement a new account 
    structure that will provide a single Federal Reserve account for each 
    institution. 1 A primary objective of the single account 
    structure is to establish a single debtor-creditor relationship
    
    [[Page 48167]]
    
    between each chartered entity and the Federal Reserve. A single debtor-
    creditor relationship is the most effective means for Reserve Banks to 
    manage their affairs with a depository institution. A single account 
    structure also may allow depository institutions to manage their 
    overall position with the Reserve Banks more efficiently.
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        \1\  A foreign bank's U.S. branches and agencies and an Edge or 
    agreement corporation's offices will not be required to adopt a 
    single account structure. The Board has proposed amendments to 
    Regulation D to allow such institutions with offices in multiple 
    Federal Reserve Districts to choose whether to adopt a single-
    account structure or retain multiple accounts as they do currently 
    [62 FR 42708, August 8, 1997].
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        The Board is adopting amendments to subpart A of Regulation J, 
    governing the collection of checks and other items by Federal Reserve 
    Banks, to conform the Federal Reserve check collection rules to the 
    single account structure. The Board does not believe it is necessary to 
    amend subpart B of Regulation J, which governs funds transfers through 
    Fedwire, to accommodate the single account structure. The Reserve Banks 
    will, however, issue revised operating circulars governing collection 
    of cash items, Fedwire funds transfers, and other Reserve Bank services 
    to reflect the new account structure.
        Under the Regulation J amendments, all of an institution's check 
    collection and return transactions through the Federal Reserve Banks 
    will be reflected in a single account held at that institution's 
    ``Administrative Reserve Bank'' (or in a correspondent's account at a 
    Reserve Bank). Recent amendments to Regulation D provide a means to 
    determine the location of an institution's reserve account.2 
    The final amendments to Regulation J provide that the account location 
    for an institution that sends items to a Reserve Bank for collection 
    (and the identity of its Administrative Reserve Bank) will be 
    determined in accordance with the provisions of Regulation D, even if 
    the institution is not otherwise subject to that regulation.
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        \2\ Regulation D provides that a depository institution is 
    considered to be located in the Federal Reserve District specified 
    in the institution's charter or organizing certificate, or, if no 
    such location is specified, the location of its head office. If that 
    location, in the Board's judgment, is ambiguous, would impede the 
    ability of the Board or the Federal Reserve Banks to perform their 
    functions under the Federal Reserve Act, or would impede the ability 
    of the institution to operate efficiently, the Board could make 
    exceptions to the general rule for a particular institution after 
    considering certain criteria. [62 FR 34613, June 27, 1997].
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        Under the amendments, an institution generally is permitted to send 
    an item to any Reserve Bank for collection, but the item is deemed to 
    have been sent first to that institution's Administrative Reserve Bank. 
    The amendments designate the parties that are deemed to handle the item 
    and the order in which they are deemed to have handled it. (Although 
    the Administrative Reserve Bank is deemed to handle the check, it would 
    not be considered to have ``received'' the check as that term is used 
    in subpart A of Regulation J if the check is initially sent to another 
    Reserve Bank.) The amendments require a paying bank to settle for an 
    item with its Administrative Reserve Bank (regardless of whether the 
    institution received the item from its Administrative Reserve Bank) and 
    specify the time and manner in which the paying bank is to make 
    settlement. The amendments also make changes in the rules governing the 
    handling of and settlement for returned checks parallel to those 
    proposed for cash items.
    
    Section-by-Section Analysis and Summary of Public Comments
    
        The Board received nine comments on the proposed amendments to 
    Regulation J from two bank holding companies, two trade associations, 
    two clearing houses, two Federal Reserve Banks, and a financial 
    services company. Overall, the commenters supported the changes and 
    agreed that the single-account structure as implemented by the 
    Regulation J proposal would promote operational efficiency, speed the 
    collection of checks, and facilitate account management.
    
    Section 210.2  Definitions
    
        The Board proposed to add two new definitions to Regulation J. 
    Under the new account structure, all of an institution's transactions 
    will be reflected in a single account held at the institution's 
    Administrative Reserve Bank. The Board proposed to add a definition of 
    ``account'' to mean an account with reserve or clearing balances held 
    on the books of a Federal Reserve Bank. The proposed definition stated 
    that a subaccount is an informational record of a subset of 
    transactions that affect an account and is not a separate account. (If 
    a depository institution desires, the Reserve Banks will keep records 
    of certain transactions in ``subaccounts,'' such as the transactions 
    performed by a branch of a bank that may be in another District from 
    the Administrative Reserve Bank.) The Board proposed to define 
    ``Administrative Reserve Bank'' as the Reserve Bank in whose District 
    the entity in question is located, as determined in the same way as 
    location is determined for purposes of reserve accounts under the 
    Board's Regulation D. The Board also proposed to amend the definition 
    of ``bank'' to conform to the Uniform Commercial Code (U.C.C.) sections 
    4-105 and 4-107). Finally, the Board proposed to amend the definition 
    of ``cash item'' to provide that, under the new single-account system, 
    the Reserve Bank that initially receives an item for deposit, rather 
    than the Reserve Bank in whose District the item is payable, is the 
    Reserve Bank that decides whether to accept the item as a cash item.
        The Board received one comment on the definition of ``account,'' 
    specifically, on the discussion of a subaccount. The commenter noted 
    that, due to recent bank mergers and for other reasons, certain banks 
    may have several routing numbers within the same District for a period 
    of time. The commenter suggested that the Board clarify that 
    subaccounts could be established based on a bank's routing numbers 
    presently in use. The Board anticipates that banks will be able to 
    establish subaccounts based on routing numbers in use immediately prior 
    to a merger. The Board also believes that a broad definition of 
    subaccount is desirable to encompass transaction subsets based on 
    routing numbers or on other criteria and has adopted the definition as 
    proposed.
        The Board received one comment on the proposed definition of 
    ``Administrative Reserve Bank.'' The commenter stated that a depository 
    institution should have more flexibility in choosing where its account 
    will be located, that is, the depository institution should be allowed 
    to hold its account at any Reserve Bank in whose District it operates, 
    which may not be the Reserve Bank where the institution is located 
    under Regulation D. The commenter argued that the proposed definition 
    unnecessarily tied priced service offerings and account relationship 
    issues to regulatory oversight issues. The theory behind the single-
    account structure, however, is that each depository institution will 
    have a debtor-creditor relationship with a single Reserve Bank. 
    Allowing an institution to choose to hold a clearing account for 
    payment-related purposes at a Reserve Bank other than the Reserve Bank 
    where its reserve account is located would result in debtor-creditor 
    relationships with at least two Reserve Banks. If a depository 
    institution wishes to have an account relationship with a Reserve Bank 
    other than the Reserve Bank whose District encompasses its charter 
    location, it may request a location determination under the procedure 
    described in Regulation D. Moreover, the location of a depository 
    institution's account for check collection and return purposes should 
    not matter to the institution under the Regulation J amendments; the 
    institution will be able to send checks to any Reserve Bank for 
    collection with settlement through its Federal Reserve account 
    regardless of the account's
    
    [[Page 48168]]
    
    location. The Board, therefore, has adopted the proposed definition of 
    ``Administrative Reserve Bank,'' as well as the other proposed changes 
    to Sec. 210.2.
    
    Section 210.3(a)  General Provisions
    
        This paragraph provides that the Reserve Banks may issue operating 
    circulars governing the details of their check collection services and 
    related matters. The Board proposed to specify that the operating 
    circulars may allow an Administrative Reserve Bank to give instructions 
    to other Reserve Banks, such as instructions regarding the handling of 
    items that would affect an account on its books. The Board received no 
    comments on this amendment and has adopted it as proposed.
    
    Section 210.4  Sending Items to Reserve Banks
    
        The Board proposed to amend this section to provide that a sender 
    (other than a Reserve Bank sender) may send an item to any Reserve Bank 
    for collection, regardless of where the sender or the paying bank is 
    located, but that the sender's Administrative Reserve Bank may override 
    this rule and require the sender to send the item to a particular 
    Reserve Bank. The Board provided an example of a bank in financial 
    difficulty, in which case the Administrative Reserve Bank may want to 
    require the bank to deposit all of its items directly with a particular 
    Reserve Bank in order to retain closer control over the bank's account.
        Three commenters objected to the broad powers that this section 
    gives to the Administrative Reserve Bank to require that checks be sent 
    to a specific Reserve Bank. One commenter expressed concern that such 
    an action could introduce inefficiencies into the payments system, 
    increase return item risk, and provide the Administrative Reserve Bank 
    with open-ended power over its private-sector competitors and 
    customers. This commenter suggested that the Board remove the 
    Administrative Reserve Bank's override power or, alternatively, clearly 
    define the circumstances under which the Administrative Reserve Bank 
    has this authority. The other commenters suggested that the Board limit 
    the Administrative Reserve Bank's override authority to cases where the 
    depositing institution is in financial difficulty or where the override 
    is necessary to protect the safety and soundness of the payments 
    system.
        The Board believes this provision is necessary to address isolated 
    emergency situations that may arise. The Board expects that an 
    Administrative Reserve Bank would direct a bank to send checks to a 
    specific Reserve Bank only under extreme and unusual circumstances. 
    These circumstances might be caused by different situations, including 
    a severe operational problem at a Reserve Bank. Consequently, the Board 
    does not believe that it is feasible or appropriate to attempt to 
    specify all such circumstances in advance. The Board, therefore, has 
    adopted the provision as proposed.
        The Board received no other specific comments on Sec. 210.4. Three 
    commenters generally supported giving depository institutions the 
    flexibility to deposit checks with any Reserve Bank. The Board, 
    therefore, has adopted the Sec. 210.4 as proposed. The following 
    discussion describes the amendments to this section in more detail:
        Section 13(1) of the Federal Reserve Act (FRA) 3 
    authorizes a Reserve Bank to accept deposits of checks and other items 
    from its member banks or from other depository institutions and to 
    accept from other Reserve Banks checks and other items payable within 
    its District. Under the Regulation J amendment, if a sender sends a 
    check to a Reserve Bank other than its Administrative Reserve Bank or 
    the Reserve Bank in whose District the check is payable, the receiving 
    Reserve Bank is deemed to be acting as agent of the Administrative 
    Reserve Bank. Regulation J requires, however, that such a receiving 
    Reserve Bank take on additional rights, duties, and liabilities in its 
    own name that it would not necessarily have as a common law agent of 
    the Administrative Reserve Bank. For example, the receiving Reserve 
    Bank is considered an indorser on the check and makes warranties on the 
    check under Sec. 210.6, Regulation CC, and the U.C.C. in its own name. 
    The Board believes that requiring such a receiving Reserve Bank to take 
    on these rights, duties, and liabilities is necessary to preserve a 
    clear chain of warranties and other claims in the check collection and 
    return system. Currently, in those limited situations where a Reserve 
    Bank accepts deposits from institutions other than those located in its 
    District, it does so under a special agency agreement with the 
    institution's home Reserve Bank. Rather than perpetuating these special 
    agreements, the new Regulation J amendments establish the terms under 
    which the receiving Reserve Bank will handle items on behalf of an 
    Administrative Reserve Bank.
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        \3\ 12 U.S.C. 360.
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        Specifically, the amendments to Sec. 210.4 designate the parties 
    that are deemed to handle an item and the order in which they are 
    deemed to have handled the item. These amendments establish the chain 
    of indorsements on an item under Regulation J, Regulation CC, and the 
    U.C.C., as well as the order in which the parties are agents or 
    subagents of the owner of an item, as provided in Sec. 210.6(a). As 
    noted above, the rule provides that the sender is deemed to send the 
    item to its Administrative Reserve Bank, regardless of whether that 
    Reserve Bank actually receives the item first. The Administrative 
    Reserve Bank is deemed to send the item to the Reserve Bank that 
    actually receives the item from the sender (if different from the 
    Administrative Reserve Bank). Any subsequent Reserve Bank that receives 
    the item from another Reserve Bank is deemed to handle the item in 
    turn.
        If, for example, an Iowa branch of a Richmond bank, with an account 
    at the Richmond Reserve Bank, sends a check to the Chicago Reserve Bank 
    for collection, the check is deemed handled in the following order: the 
    initial sender, the Richmond Reserve Bank (the Administrative Reserve 
    Bank), and the Chicago Reserve Bank (the first Reserve Bank to receive 
    the item). If the check in this example were drawn on a banking office 
    in New York, the Chicago Reserve Bank would send the check to the 
    Federal Reserve Bank of New York, in which case the New York Reserve 
    Bank would be the last Reserve Bank to handle the check and would 
    present the check to the paying bank. No other Reserve Bank would 
    handle or would be deemed to handle the item. In the example, if the 
    paying bank's Administrative Reserve Bank is the Federal Reserve Bank 
    of Boston (which might be the case if the check is payable by a New 
    York office of a bank headquartered in Boston), the Boston Reserve Bank 
    is not a party to the check, even though settlement for the check will 
    ultimately take place by a debit to an account on the Boston Reserve 
    Bank's books. (See Table 1.)
    
    Table 1.
    
        This table illustrates the following example:
        A Richmond-based bank has its account at the Federal Reserve 
    Bank of Richmond (Richmond Fed), its Administrative Reserve Bank. An 
    Iowa branch of the bank sends a check to the Federal Reserve Bank of 
    Chicago (Chicago Fed) for collection. The check is payable by a New 
    York office of a Boston-based bank, which has an account at the 
    Federal Reserve Bank of Boston (Boston Fed). The Chicago Fed sends 
    the check to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (NY Fed), which 
    presents the check to the New York office of the paying bank.
    
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    Path of Physical Check
    
    Initial sender  Chicago Fed  NY Fed  
    Paying Bank
    
    Parties Deemed To Have Handled the Check (Chain of Indorsements)
    
        Initial sender  Richmond Fed  Chicago Fed 
     NY Fed  Paying Bank
    
    Section 210.5  Sender's Agreement; Recovery by Reserve Bank
    
        Paragraph (a) of Sec. 210.5 sets forth the terms and warranties to 
    which a sender agrees when it sends an item to a Reserve Bank. The 
    Board proposed to amend this paragraph to conform with the provisions 
    of Sec. 210.4. Specifically, a sender would authorize its 
    Administrative Reserve Bank, as well as any other Reserve Bank to which 
    the item is sent, to handle an item and would authorize the Reserve 
    Banks to make the appropriate accounting entries in settlement for the 
    item. The Board proposed to make minor amendments to paragraph (c) (and 
    parallel amendments to Sec. 210.12(f)) to simplify the provisions 
    describing how settlements occur between Reserve Banks. The Board also 
    proposed to redesignate the paragraph numbers in paragraph (c). 
    Paragraph (d) of Sec. 210.5 requires a sender to grant a security 
    interest in all its assets held by a Reserve Bank to secure any of its 
    obligations related to items collected through the Reserve Banks. The 
    Board proposed to amend this section to provide that the security 
    interest is granted to the sender's Administrative Reserve Bank. The 
    Board received no comments on the amendments to this section and has 
    adopted them as proposed.
    
    Section 210.6  Status, Warranties, and Liability of Reserve Bank
    
        Paragraph (a) of this section provides that Reserve Banks act as 
    agents or subagents of the owner of an item. The Board proposed to 
    modify the reference to a Reserve Bank in the first sentence with the 
    phrase ``that handles an item'' to clarify that this paragraph refers 
    to the Reserve Banks that are identified in Sec. 210.4. The current 
    language provides that the agency terminates when a Reserve Bank 
    receives final payment for the item and makes the proceeds available 
    for use by the sender. The Board proposed to amend this provision by 
    stating that the agency status will not end unless the time for 
    commencing all actions against the Reserve Bank has expired. This 
    amendment would ensure that the agency and subagency relationships 
    between Reserve Banks regarding a particular item, as set forth in 
    Sec. 210.4, will continue until the statute of limitations has run on 
    claims regarding any dispute concerning the item. The Board also 
    proposed to reorganize the numbering in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this 
    section.
        The Board received one comment that specifically supported the 
    amendments to this section. Another commenter asked why the agency 
    status of a Reserve Bank should continue for an open-ended period of 
    time. The commenter believed that the Reserve Bank's agency status 
    should continue for the same period of time as the agency status of a 
    private-sector collecting bank (until the settlement received for the 
    item becomes final, as provided in U.C.C. section 4-201(a)), absent a 
    compelling reason. The Board intended this provision to provide a 
    theoretical basis for an Administrative Reserve Bank's right to 
    instruct another Reserve Bank relating to risk, even after settlement 
    is final. (Under Regulation CC, 12 CFR 229.36(d), settlements between 
    banks are final when made.) For example, the Administrative Reserve 
    Bank may wish to instruct another Reserve Bank about possible warranty 
    claims and returns. The agency status is necessary for the Reserve 
    Banks because they are separate corporations. Private-sector collecting 
    banks can also extend the agency period by agreement. The Board has 
    adopted Sec. 210.6 as proposed.
    
    Section 210.7  Presenting Items for Payment
    
        This section provides rules regarding the presentment of items for 
    payment. The Board proposed to make minor changes to paragraphs (c) and 
    (d). Rather than referring to an item that is ``payable'' in a certain 
    Federal Reserve District, the Board proposed to improve the precision 
    of these provisions by referring to items that may be ``sent to the 
    paying bank or nonbank payor'' in a certain Federal Reserve District. 
    The Board received no comments on these amendments and has adopted them 
    as proposed.
    
    Section 210.8  Presenting Noncash Items for Acceptance
    
        Similar to the changes to Sec. 210.7, the Board proposed to replace 
    the term ``payable elsewhere'' with the term ``may be presented 
    elsewhere.'' The Board also proposed to reorganize the paragraph 
    numbering in this section. The Board received no comments on these 
    amendments and has adopted them as proposed.
    
    Section 210.9  Settlement and Payment
    
        This section sets forth the time and manner by which a paying bank 
    must settle for items it receives from a Reserve Bank. The Board 
    proposed to add a new paragraph (a) (and to redesignate the following 
    paragraphs accordingly) to provide that a paying bank must settle for 
    an item with its Administrative Reserve Bank, whether or not the paying 
    bank actually receives the item from that Reserve Bank. By settling 
    with its Administrative Reserve Bank, the paying bank would meet any 
    settlement obligation it may have under Regulation CC and the U.C.C. 
    For example, the U.C.C. (sections 4-301 and 4-302) requires a paying 
    bank to settle with the presenting bank by midnight on the day of 
    presentment if it wants to preserve its right to return the check by 
    its midnight deadline on its next banking day. By settling with its 
    Administrative Reserve Bank, a paying bank would satisfy this 
    obligation to a presenting Reserve Bank.
        The new paragraph (a) would also provide that a paying bank may 
    settle through a correspondent account, with the agreement of its 
    Administrative Reserve Bank, the Reserve Bank (if different) that holds 
    the correspondent's account, and the correspondent. The paying bank 
    would remain responsible for settlement if for some reason settlement 
    does not occur through the correspondent account. The Board proposed to 
    make a conforming change to paragraph (c) (as redesignated) related to 
    payment for noncash items.
        Currently, Regulation J requires the paying bank to settle so that 
    funds are available to the presenting Reserve Bank by the close of 
    Fedwire on the day of presentment. The Board proposed: (1) amendments 
    to paragraph (b) (as redesignated) of Sec. 210.9 to clarify that 
    settlement funds must be made available to the paying bank's 
    Administrative Reserve Bank, rather than the presenting Reserve Bank; 
    (2) to change the references to a Reserve Bank's operating circular to 
    include all of the Reserve Banks' operating circulars, as those 
    circulars will be uniform as of January 1, 1998; (3) to clarify 
    paragraph (b)(3) to refer to days the paying bank is closed voluntarily 
    ``so that it does not receive a cash item'' (the provisions of this 
    paragraph would not apply if the paying bank's head office were closed 
    for business but a branch still received presentment of cash items from 
    the Reserve Banks); (4) to replace references to ``one hour after the 
    scheduled opening of Fedwire'' with ``9:30 a.m. Eastern Time'' so that 
    this time will remain unchanged when the Fedwire opening hour is moved 
    to 12:30 a.m. in December 1997; (5) to add paragraph headings 
    throughout paragraph (b); and (6) to make conforming changes to cross-
    references
    
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    throughout Sec. 210.9 in light of the paragraph redesignations. The 
    Board received one comment that specifically supported the amendments 
    to this section and has adopted the amendments as proposed.
    
    Section 210.10  Time Schedule and Availability of Credits for Cash 
    Items and Returned Checks
    
        This paragraph provides that a Reserve Bank shall make proceeds 
    available for cash items and returned checks according to its published 
    time schedules. The Board proposed to clarify that the Reserve Bank 
    that holds the settlement account will make credit available according 
    to the time schedule of the Reserve Bank that first receives the cash 
    item (or returned check) from the sender (or the paying or returning 
    bank). The Board also proposed a conforming amendment to Sec. 210.11(b) 
    regarding credit for noncash items. The Board received no comments on 
    these amendments and has adopted them as proposed.
    
    Section 210.12  Return of Cash Items and Handling of Returned Checks
    
        This section sets forth the rules governing handling of and 
    settlement for returned checks. The rules for returned checks are 
    generally parallel to the rules for cash items, and the Board proposed 
    amendments that are parallel to the amendments for cash items discussed 
    above. Under the proposal, a paying bank or returning bank may send a 
    returned check to any Reserve Bank, unless its Administrative Reserve 
    Bank directs it to send the returned check to a specific Reserve Bank. 
    As with cash items, the paying or returning bank's Administrative 
    Reserve Bank would be deemed to have handled the item first, prior to 
    the Reserve Bank that actually received the item, for purposes of 
    determining the relationships, rights, and liabilities of the parties 
    (see discussion of Sec. 210.4). Also similar to cash items, a paying or 
    returning bank would authorize the handling of a returned check by its 
    Administrative Reserve Bank, as well as by any other Reserve Bank to 
    which a returned check is sent, and would authorize the Reserve Banks 
    to make the appropriate accounting entries in settlement for the 
    returned check (see discussion of Sec. 210.5). A subsequent returning 
    bank or depositary bank would be required to settle for a returned 
    check with its Administrative Reserve Bank, whether or not the bank 
    actually receives the returned check from that Reserve Bank. By 
    settling with its Administrative Reserve Bank, the subsequent returning 
    bank or depositary bank would meet its settlement obligations under 
    Regulation CC and the U.C.C. (see discussion of Sec. 210.9(a)). 
    Finally, a paying or returning bank would grant a security interest in 
    all its assets held by its Administrative Reserve Bank to secure any of 
    its obligations related to returned checks it sends to a Reserve Bank 
    (see discussion of Sec. 210.5(d)). The Board received no comments on 
    these amendments and has adopted them as proposed.
    
    Transition Issues
    
        One commenter expressed concern that the proposal may not make 
    adequate provision for post-merger situations, when a depository 
    institution may have a temporary transition account at a Reserve Bank 
    other than its Administrative Reserve Bank. The commenter stated that, 
    when some of an institution's checks will settle in a transition 
    account, the Reserve Bank holding the transition account should have 
    rights, privileges, and duties comparable to those of the 
    Administrative Reserve Bank with respect to settlement, check 
    warranties, control over direct-sends, instructions to other Reserve 
    Banks with respect to items that affect the account on its books, and 
    security interests in assets held at other Reserve Banks.
        The Board believes that Regulation J as proposed adequately covers 
    transition situations. For example, in the case of a bank merger, the 
    surviving bank will have an account at its Administrative Reserve Bank 
    while other offices may still have transition accounts at other Reserve 
    Banks. Those transition accounts would operate similarly to 
    correspondent settlement accounts. Checks that are deposited by the 
    bank will be deemed to be handled first by the Administrative Reserve 
    Bank and then by other Reserve Banks in the order set forth in 
    Sec. 210.4. The Reserve Bank that holds the transition account will not 
    be considered a party to a check unless it actually handles the check 
    and therefore should be considered more like a correspondent bank than 
    an Administrative Reserve Bank. If the bank settles for checks 
    presented by a Reserve Bank through a transition account, it will be 
    deemed to have settled with its Administrative Reserve Bank for those 
    checks under Sec. 210.9(a).
    
    Competitive Impact
    
        One commenter stated that the Board should review the competitive 
    equity issues that arise from the combination of the proposed 
    Regulation J amendments and the Board's proposed enhanced net 
    settlement service for depository institutions [62 FR 32118, June 12, 
    1997]. The commenter believed that private-sector clearing houses would 
    be at a disadvantage vis-a-vis the Reserve Banks if the Reserve Banks 
    are able to accommodate interstate banking starting on January 2, 1998, 
    and the private-sector clearing houses are unable to avail themselves 
    of the proposed net settlement services until late 1998. The commenter 
    suggested that the Board analyze issues such as the risks that the 
    Regulation J proposal is designed to address, the benefits that the 
    proposal will provide to depository institutions, any cost savings that 
    will accrue to Reserve Banks under the proposal, as well as other 
    issues related to account monitoring and troubled banks. The commenter 
    also asked that the Board consider allowing check clearing houses to 
    have interim access to interdistrict net settlement services while the 
    Board develops service enhancements.
        The Regulation J proposal is driven by both operational and risk 
    concerns. The structural changes in the banking business brought about 
    by the increase in the number of banks with interstate branches have 
    necessitated a new account structure in the Federal Reserve Banks to 
    handle interstate banking. The Regulation J changes are necessary to 
    set forth the rules that will govern Federal Reserve check collection 
    under the new account structure. Depository institutions will benefit 
    from the efficiencies of having to manage only a single Federal Reserve 
    account and the ability to deposit checks for collection at any Reserve 
    Bank.
        In practical terms, the Regulation J proposal would likely have 
    little immediate effect on current check collection patterns through 
    the Reserve Banks. The proposal would allow branches of interstate 
    banks to continue to deposits checks at the same Reserve Banks that 
    they use today, irrespective of where their accounts are located. 
    Eventually, these banks could benefit from price competition between 
    Reserve Banks, which could result in volume shifts. Private-sector 
    collecting banks could establish nationwide check collection or 
    exchange systems as well. The Board does not believe that the 
    Regulation J proposal, on its own, provides the Reserve Banks with any 
    greater advantages in the check collection business than they already 
    have today due to their nationwide presence and their ability to settle 
    directly through Federal Reserve accounts.
        For private-sector check clearing arrangements that wish to settle 
    on a net basis on the books of a Reserve Bank, there are currently two 
    net settlement services available, as set forth in the
    
    [[Page 48171]]
    
    notice for the proposed service enhancement. The traditional 
    settlement-sheet-based service provides next-day finality, and the 
    Fedwire-based service provides same-day finality. The Board proposed an 
    enhanced settlement-sheet-based service that would provide same-day 
    finality and establish more effective risk controls than exist under 
    the current traditional service, which was designed to handle 
    intradistrict clearing. In the interim, the Board recognizes that some 
    clearing arrangements that receive traditional net settlement services 
    from the Reserve Banks may have participants with an interstate 
    presence. The Board will not require that such participants be excluded 
    from such arrangements while the Board is developing the enhanced 
    service.
    
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        Two of the three requirements of a final regulatory flexibility 
    analysis (5 U.S.C. 604), (1) a succinct statement of the need for and 
    the objectives of the rule and (2) a summary of the issues raised by 
    the public comments, the agency's assessment of the issues, and a 
    statement of the changes made in the final rule in response to the 
    comments, are discussed above. The third requirement of a final 
    regulatory flexibility analysis is a description of significant 
    alternatives to the rule that would minimize the rule's economic impact 
    on small entities and reasons why the alternatives were rejected.
        The rule will apply to all institutions, regardless of size, that 
    send checks, returned checks, or other items to a Reserve Bank or 
    receive items from a Reserve Bank. The rule sets out the terms under 
    which the Reserve Banks handle items and does not impose significant 
    burdens on small institutions, therefore no alternatives were 
    considered for small institutions.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
    3506; 5 CFR 1320 Appendix A.1), the Board reviewed the rule under the 
    authority delegated to the Board by the Office of Management and 
    Budget. No collections of information pursuant to the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act are contained in the rule.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 210
    
        Banks, banking, Federal Reserve System.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Board is amending part 
    210 of chapter II of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set 
    forth below:
    
    PART 210--COLLECTION OF CHECKS AND OTHER ITEMS BY FEDERAL RESERVE 
    BANKS AND FUNDS TRANSFERS THROUGH FEDWIRE (REGULATION J)
    
        1. The authority citation for part 210 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(i), (j), and (o), 342, 360, 464, and 
    4001-4010.
    
        2. Section 210.2 is amended by redesignating paragraph (a) and 
    paragraphs (b) through (p) as paragraph (b) and paragraphs (d) through 
    (r), respectively; adding new paragraphs (a) and (c); and revising 
    newly redesignated paragraphs (d), (g) introductory text, and (g)(2) to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.2  Definitions.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) Account means an account with reserve or clearing balances on 
    the books of a Federal Reserve Bank. A subaccount is an informational 
    record of a subset of transactions that affect an account and is not a 
    separate account.
    * * * * *
        (c) Administrative Reserve Bank with respect to an entity means the 
    Reserve Bank in whose District the entity is located, as determined 
    under the procedure described in Sec. 204.3(b)(2) of this chapter 
    (Regulation D), even if the entity is not otherwise subject to that 
    section.
        (d) Bank means any person engaged in the business of banking. A 
    branch or separate office of a bank is a separate bank to the extent 
    provided in the Uniform Commercial Code.
    * * * * *
        (g) Cash item means --
    * * * * *
        (2) Any other item payable on demand and collectible at par that 
    the Reserve Bank that receives the item is willing to accept as a cash 
    item. Cash item does not include a returned check.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 210.3, the last sentence of paragraph (a) is revised to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.3  General provisions.
    
        (a) General. * * * The circulars may, among other things, classify 
    cash items and noncash items, require separate sorts and letters, 
    provide different closing times for the receipt of different classes or 
    types of items, provide for instructions by an Administrative Reserve 
    Bank to other Reserve Banks, set forth terms of services, and establish 
    procedures for adjustments on a Reserve Bank's books, including 
    amounts, waiver of expenses, and payment of interest by as-of 
    adjustment.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 210.4 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.4  Sending items to Reserve Banks.
    
        (a) Sending of items. A sender, other than a Reserve Bank, may send 
    any item to any Reserve Bank, whether or not the item is payable within 
    the Reserve Bank's District, unless the sender's Administrative Reserve 
    Bank directs the sender to send the item to a specific Reserve Bank.
        (b) Handling of items. (1) The following parties, in the following 
    order, are deemed to have handled an item that is sent to a Reserve 
    Bank for collection--
        (i) The initial sender
        (ii) The initial sender's Administrative Reserve Bank
        (iii) The Reserve Bank that receives the item from the initial 
    sender (if different from the initial sender's Administrative Reserve 
    Bank); and
        (iv) Another Reserve Bank, if any, that receives the item from a 
    Reserve Bank.
        (2) A Reserve Bank that is not described in paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section is not a party that handles an item and is not a 
    collecting bank with respect to an item.
        (3) The identity and order of the parties under paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section determine the relationships and the rights and liabilities 
    of the parties under this subpart, part 229 of this chapter (Regulation 
    CC), and the Uniform Commercial Code. An initial sender's 
    Administrative Reserve Bank that is deemed to handle an item is also 
    deemed to be a sender with respect to that item. The Reserve Banks that 
    are deemed to handle an item are deemed to be agents or subagents of 
    the owner of the item, as provided in Sec. 210.6(a) of this subpart.
        (c) Checks received at par. The Reserve Banks shall receive cash 
    items and other checks at par.
        5. In Sec. 210.5, paragraphs (a)(1) and (c) and the first sentence 
    of paragraph (d) are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.5  Sender's agreement; recovery by Reserve Bank.
    
        (a) * * *
        (1) Authorizes the sender's Administrative Reserve Bank and any 
    other Reserve Bank or collecting bank to which the item is sent to 
    handle the item (and authorizes any Reserve Bank that handles 
    settlement for the item to make accounting entries), subject to this 
    subpart and to the Reserve Banks'
    
    [[Page 48172]]
    
    operating circulars, and warrants its authority to give this 
    authorization;
    * * * * *
        (c) Methods of recovery. (1) The Reserve Bank may recover the 
    amount stated in paragraph (b) of this section by charging any account 
    on its books that is maintained or used by the sender (or by charging a 
    Reserve Bank sender), if--
        (i) The Reserve Bank made seasonable written demand on the sender 
    to assume defense of the action or proceeding; and
        (ii) The sender has not made any other arrangement for payment that 
    is acceptable to the Reserve Bank.
        (2) The Reserve Bank is not responsible for defending the action or 
    proceeding before using this method of recovery. A Reserve Bank that 
    has been charged under this paragraph (c) may recover from its sender 
    in the manner and under the circumstances set forth in this paragraph 
    (c). A Reserve Bank's failure to avail itself of the remedy provided in 
    this paragraph (c) does not prejudice its enforcement in any other 
    manner of the indemnity agreement referred to in paragraph (a)(3) of 
    this section.
        (d) Security interest. When a sender sends an item to a Reserve 
    Bank, the sender and any prior collecting bank grant to the sender's 
    Administrative Reserve Bank a security interest in all of their 
    respective assets in the possession of, or held for the account of, any 
    Reserve Bank to secure their respective obligations due or to become 
    due to the Administrative Reserve Bank under this subpart or subpart C 
    of part 229 of this chapter (Regulation CC). * * *
        6. In Sec. 210.6, paragraphs (a)(1) and (b) are revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.6  Status, warranties, and liability of Reserve Bank.
    
        (a)(1) Status and liability. A Reserve Bank that handles an item 
    shall act as agent or subagent of the owner with respect to the item. 
    This agency terminates when a Reserve Bank receives final payment for 
    the item in actually and finally collected funds, a Reserve Bank makes 
    the proceeds available for use by the sender, and the time for 
    commencing all actions against the Reserve Bank has expired. A Reserve 
    Bank shall not have or assume any liability with respect to an item or 
    its proceeds except--
        (i) For the Reserve Bank's own lack of good faith or failure to 
    exercise ordinary care;
        (ii) As provided in paragraph (b) of this section; and
        (iii) As provided in subpart C of part 229 of this chapter 
    (Regulation CC).
    * * * * *
        (b) Warranties and liability. (1) By presenting or sending an item, 
    a Reserve Bank warrants to a subsequent collecting bank and to the 
    paying bank and any other payor--
        (i) That the Reserve Bank is a person entitled to enforce the item 
    (or is authorized to obtain payment of the item on behalf of a person 
    who is either entitled to enforce the item or authorized to obtain 
    payment on behalf of a person entitled to enforce the item); and
        (ii) That the item has not been altered.
        (2) The Reserve Bank also makes the warranties set forth in 
    Sec. 229.34(c) of this chapter, subject to the terms of part 229 of 
    this chapter (Regulation CC). The Reserve Bank shall not have or assume 
    any other liability to the paying bank or other payor, except for the 
    Reserve Bank's own lack of good faith or failure to exercise ordinary 
    care.
    * * * * *
        7. In Sec. 210.7, paragraph (c) introductory text and paragraph (d) 
    are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.7  Presenting items for payment.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Presenting or sending direct. A Reserve Bank or subsequent 
    collecting bank may, with respect to an item that may be sent to the 
    paying bank or nonbank payor in the Reserve Bank's District--
    * * * * *
        (d) Item sent to another district. A Reserve Bank receiving an item 
    that may be sent to a paying bank or nonbank payor in another District 
    ordinarily sends the item to the Reserve Bank of the other District, 
    but with the agreement of the other Reserve Bank, may present or send 
    the item as if it were sent to a paying bank or nonbank payor in its 
    own District.
        8. Section 210.8 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.8  Presenting noncash items for acceptance.
    
        (a) A Reserve Bank or a subsequent collecting bank may, if 
    instructed by the sender, present a noncash item for acceptance in any 
    manner authorized by law if--
        (1) The item provides that it must be presented for acceptance;
        (2) The item may be presented elsewhere than at the residence or 
    place of business of the payor; or
        (3) The date of payment of the item depends on presentment for 
    acceptance.
        (b) Documents accompanying a noncash item shall not be delivered to 
    the payor upon acceptance of the item unless the sender specifically 
    authorizes delivery. A Reserve Bank shall not have or assume any other 
    obligation to present or to send for presentment for acceptance any 
    noncash item.
        9. Section 210.9 is amended by redesignating paragraphs (a) through 
    (e) as paragraphs (b) through (f); adding a new paragraph (a); revising 
    newly redesignated paragraphs (b) and (c); and in newly redesignated 
    paragraph (f) removing the references ``paragraphs (a), (b), and (c)'' 
    and adding in their place ``paragraphs (b), (c), and (d)'' to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.9  Settlement and payment.
    
        (a) Settlement through Administrative Reserve Bank. A paying bank 
    shall settle for an item under this subpart with its Administrative 
    Reserve Bank, whether or not the paying bank received the item from 
    that Reserve Bank. A paying bank's settlement with its Administrative 
    Reserve Bank is deemed to be settlement with the Reserve Bank from 
    which the paying bank received the item. A paying bank may settle for 
    an item using any account on a Reserve Bank's books by agreement with 
    its Administrative Reserve Bank, any other Reserve Bank holding the 
    settlement account, and the account-holder. The paying bank remains 
    responsible for settlement if the Reserve Bank holding the settlement 
    account does not, for any reason, obtain settlement in that account.
        (b) Cash items--(1) Settlement obligation. On the day a paying bank 
    receives 2 a cash item from a Reserve Bank, it shall settle 
    for the item such that the proceeds of the settlement are available to 
    its Administrative Reserve Bank by the close of Fedwire on that day, or 
    it shall return the item by the later of the close of its banking day 
    or the close of Fedwire. If the paying bank fails to settle for or 
    return a cash item in accordance with this paragraph (b)(1), it is 
    accountable for the amount of the item as of the close of its banking 
    day or the close of Fedwire on the day it receives the item, whichever 
    is earlier.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \2\ A paying bank is deemed to receive a cash item on its next 
    banking day if it receives the item--
        (1) On a day other than a banking day for it; or
        (2) On a banking day for it, but after a ``cut-off hour'' 
    established by it in accordance with state law.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (2) Time of settlement. (i) On the day a paying bank receives a 
    cash item from a Reserve Bank, it shall settle for the item so that the 
    proceeds of the settlement are available to its Administrative Reserve 
    Bank, or return the item, by the latest of--
        (A) The next clock hour that is at least one hour after the paying 
    bank receives the item;
        (B) 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time; or
    
    [[Page 48173]]
    
        (C) Such later time as provided in the Reserve Banks' operating 
    circulars.
        (ii) If the paying bank fails to settle for or return a cash item 
    in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, it shall be 
    subject to any applicable overdraft charges. Settlement under paragraph 
    (b)(2)(i) of this section satisfies the settlement requirements of 
    paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
        (3) Paying bank closes voluntarily. (i) If a paying bank closes 
    voluntarily so that it does not receive a cash item on a day that is a 
    banking day for a Reserve Bank, and the Reserve Bank makes the cash 
    item available to the paying bank on that day, the paying bank shall 
    either--
        (A) On that day, settle for the item so that the proceeds of the 
    settlement are available to its Administrative Reserve Bank, or return 
    the item, by the latest of the next clock hour that is at least one 
    hour after it ordinarily would have received the item, 9:30 a.m. 
    Eastern Time, or such later time as provided in the Reserve Banks' 
    operating circulars; or
        (B) On the next day that is a banking day for both the paying bank 
    and the Reserve Bank, settle for the item so that the proceeds of the 
    settlement are available to its Administrative Reserve Bank by 9:30 
    a.m. Eastern Time on that day or such later time as provided in the 
    Reserve Banks' operating circulars and compensate the Reserve Bank for 
    the value of the float associated with the item in accordance with 
    procedures provided in the Reserve Bank's operating circular.
        (ii) If a paying bank closes voluntarily so that it does not 
    receive a cash item on a day that is a banking day for a Reserve Bank, 
    and the Reserve Bank makes the cash item available to the paying bank 
    on that day, the paying bank is not considered to have received the 
    item until its next banking day, but it shall be subject to any 
    applicable overdraft charges if it fails to settle for or return the 
    item in accordance with paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section. The 
    settlement requirements of paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of this section 
    do not apply to a paying bank that settles in accordance with paragraph 
    (b)(3)(i) of this section.
        (4) Reserve Bank closed. (i) If a paying bank receives a cash item 
    from a Reserve Bank on a banking day that is not a banking day for the 
    Reserve Bank, the paying bank shall--
        (A) Settle for the item so that the proceeds of the settlement are 
    available to its Administrative Reserve Bank by the close of Fedwire on 
    the Reserve Bank's next banking day, or return the item by midnight of 
    the day it receives the item (if the paying bank fails to settle for or 
    return a cash item in accordance with this paragraph (b)(4)(i)(A), it 
    shall become accountable for the amount of the item as of the close of 
    its banking day on the day it receives the item); and
        (B) Settle for the item so that the proceeds of the settlement are 
    available to its Administrative Reserve Bank by 9:30 a.m. Eastern Time 
    on the Reserve Bank's next banking day or such later time as provided 
    in the Reserve Bank's operating circular, or return the item by 
    midnight of the day it receives the item. If the paying bank fails to 
    settle for or return a cash item in accordance with this paragraph 
    (b)(4)(i)(B), it shall be subject to any applicable overdraft charges. 
    Settlement under this paragraph (b)(4)(i)(B) satisfies the settlement 
    requirements of paragraph (b)(4)(i)(A) of this section.
        (ii) The settlement requirements of paragraphs (b)(1) and (b)(2) of 
    this section do not apply to a paying bank that settles in accordance 
    with paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section.
        (5) Manner of settlement. Settlement with a Reserve Bank under 
    paragraphs (b) (1) through (4) of this section shall be made by debit 
    to an account on the Reserve Bank's books, cash, or other form of 
    settlement to which the Reserve Bank agrees, except that the Reserve 
    Bank may, in its discretion, obtain settlement by charging the paying 
    bank's account. A paying bank may not set off against the amount of a 
    settlement under this section the amount of a claim with respect to 
    another cash item, cash letter, or other claim under Sec. 229.34(c) of 
    this chapter (Regulation CC) or other law.
        (6) Notice in lieu of return. If a cash item is unavailable for 
    return, the paying bank may send a notice in lieu of return as provided 
    in Sec. 229.30(f) of this chapter (Regulation CC).
        (c) Noncash items. A Reserve Bank may require the paying or 
    collecting bank to which it has presented or sent a noncash item to pay 
    for the item in cash, but the Reserve Bank may permit payment by a 
    debit to an account maintained or used by the paying or collecting bank 
    on a Reserve Bank's books or by any of the following that is in a form 
    acceptable to the collecting Reserve Bank: bank draft, transfer of 
    funds or bank credit, or any other form of payment authorized by State 
    law.
    * * * * *
        10. Section 210.10 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.10  Time schedule and availability of credits for cash items 
    and returned checks.
    
        (a) Each Reserve Bank shall include in its operating circulars a 
    time schedule for each of its offices indicating when the amount of any 
    cash item or returned check received by it is counted as reserves for 
    purposes of part 204 of this chapter (Regulation D) and becomes 
    available for use by the sender or paying or returning bank. The 
    Reserve Bank that holds the settlement account shall give either 
    immediate or deferred credit to a sender, a paying bank, or a returning 
    bank (other than a foreign correspondent) in accordance with the time 
    schedule of the receiving Reserve Bank. A Reserve Bank ordinarily gives 
    credit to a foreign correspondent only when the Reserve Bank receives 
    payment of the item in actually and finally collected funds, but, in 
    its discretion, a Reserve Bank may give immediate or deferred credit in 
    accordance with its time schedule.
        (b) Notwithstanding its time schedule, a Reserve Bank may refuse at 
    any time to permit the use of credit given by it for any cash item or 
    returned check, and may defer availability after credit is received by 
    the Reserve Bank for a period of time that is reasonable under the 
    circumstances.
        11. In Sec. 210.11, the last sentence of paragraph (b) is revised 
    to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.11  Availability of proceeds of noncash items; time schedule.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * * A Reserve Bank may, however, refuse at any time to permit 
    the use of credit given by it for a noncash item for which the Reserve 
    Bank has not yet received payment in actually and finally collected 
    funds.
    * * * * *
        12. Section 210.12 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b), and 
    (c)(1), the first sentence of paragraph (d), paragraphs (f) and (h), 
    and the first sentence of paragraph (i); and by removing the last 
    sentence of paragraph (g) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 210.12  Return of cash items and handling of returned checks.
    
        (a) Return of items--(1) Return of cash items handled by Reserve 
    Banks. A paying bank that receives a cash item from a Reserve Bank, 
    other than for immediate payment over the counter, and that settles for 
    the item as provided in Sec. 210.9(b) of this subpart, may, before it 
    has finally paid the item, return the item to any Reserve Bank (unless 
    its Administrative Reserve Bank directs it to return the item to a 
    specific Reserve Bank) in accordance with subpart C of
    
    [[Page 48174]]
    
    part 229 of this chapter (Regulation CC), the Uniform Commercial Code, 
    and the Reserve Banks' operating circulars. A paying bank that receives 
    a cash item from a Reserve Bank also may return the item prior to 
    settlement, in accordance with Sec. 210.9(b) of this subpart and the 
    Reserve Banks' operating circulars. The rules or practices of a 
    clearinghouse through which the item was presented, or a special 
    collection agreement under which the item was presented, may not extend 
    these return times, but may provide for a shorter return time.
        (2) Return of checks not handled by Reserve Banks. A paying bank 
    that receives a check as defined in Sec. 229.2(k) of this chapter 
    (Regulation CC), other than from a Reserve Bank, and that determines 
    not to pay the check, may send the returned check to any Reserve Bank 
    (unless its Administrative Reserve Bank directs it to send the returned 
    check to a specific Reserve Bank) in accordance with subpart C of part 
    229 of this chapter (Regulation CC), the Uniform Commercial Code, and 
    the Reserve Banks' operating circulars. A returning bank may send a 
    returned check to any Reserve Bank (unless its Administrative Reserve 
    Bank directs it to send the returned check to a specific Reserve Bank) 
    in accordance with subpart C of part 229 of this chapter (Regulation 
    CC), the Uniform Commercial Code, and the Reserve Banks' operating 
    circulars.
        (b) Handling of returned checks. (1) The following parties, in the 
    following order, are deemed to have handled a returned check sent to a 
    Reserve Bank under paragraph (a) of this section----
        (i) The paying or returning bank;
        (ii) The paying bank's or returning bank's Administrative Reserve 
    Bank;
        (iii) The Reserve Bank that receives the returned check from the 
    paying or returning bank (if different from the paying bank's or 
    returning bank's Administrative Reserve Bank); and
        (iv) Another Reserve Bank, if any, that receives the returned check 
    from a Reserve Bank.
        (2) A Reserve Bank that is not described in paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section is not a party that handles a returned check and is not a 
    returning bank with respect to a returned check.
        (3) The identity and order of the parties under paragraph (b)(1) of 
    this section determine the relationships and the rights and liabilities 
    of the parties under this subpart, part 229 of this chapter (Regulation 
    CC), and the Uniform Commercial Code.
        (c) Paying bank's and returning bank's agreement. * * *
        (1) Authorizes the paying or returning bank's Administrative 
    Reserve Bank, and any other Reserve Bank or returning bank to which the 
    returned check is sent, to handle the returned check (and authorizes 
    any Reserve Bank that handles settlement for the returned check to make 
    accounting entries) subject to this subpart and to the Reserve Banks' 
    operating circulars;
    * * * * *
        (d) Warranties by Reserve Bank. By handling a returned check under 
    this subpart, a Reserve Bank makes the returning bank warranties as set 
    forth in Sec. 229.34 of this chapter, subject to the terms of part 229 
    of this chapter (Regulation CC). * * *
    * * * * *
        (f) Methods of recovery. (1) The Reserve Bank may recover the 
    amount stated in paragraph (d) of this section by charging any account 
    on its books that is maintained or used by the paying or returning bank 
    (or by charging another returning Reserve Bank), if----
        (i) The Reserve Bank made seasonable written demand on the paying 
    or returning bank to assume defense of the action or proceeding; and
        (ii) The paying or returning bank has not made any other 
    arrangement for payment that is acceptable to the Reserve Bank.
        (2) The Reserve Bank is not responsible for defending the action or 
    proceeding before using this method of recovery. A Reserve Bank that 
    has been charged under this paragraph (f) may recover from the paying 
    or returning bank in the manner and under the circumstances set forth 
    in this paragraph (f). A Reserve Bank's failure to avail itself of the 
    remedy provided in this paragraph (f) does not prejudice its 
    enforcement in any other manner of the indemnity agreement referred to 
    in paragraph (c)(3) of this section.
    * * * * *
        (h) Settlement. A subsequent returning bank or depositary bank 
    shall settle with its Administrative Reserve Bank for returned checks 
    in the same manner and by the same time as for cash items presented for 
    payment under this subpart. Settlement with its Administrative Reserve 
    Bank is deemed to be settlement with the Reserve Bank from which the 
    returning bank or depositary bank received the item.
        (i) Security interest. When a paying or returning bank sends a 
    returned check to a Reserve Bank, the paying bank, returning bank, and 
    any prior returning bank grant to the paying bank's or returning bank's 
    Administrative Reserve Bank a security interest in all of their 
    respective assets in the possession of, or held for the account of, any 
    Reserve Bank, to secure their respective obligations due or to become 
    due to the Administrative Reserve Bank under this subpart or subpart C 
    of part 229 of this chapter (Regulation CC). * * *
    
        By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, September 10, 1997.
    William W. Wiles,
    Secretary of the Board.
    [FR Doc. 97-24405 Filed 9-12-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
1/2/1998
Published:
09/15/1997
Department:
Federal Reserve System
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-24405
Dates:
January 2, 1998.
Pages:
48166-48174 (9 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Regulation J, Docket No. R-0972
PDF File:
97-24405.pdf
CFR: (12)
12 CFR 229.34(c)
12 CFR 210.2
12 CFR 210.3
12 CFR 210.4
12 CFR 210.5
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