Robert E. Feldman
Executive Secretary
Attn: Comments/OES
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
550 17th Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20429
Re: Proposed Regulation 12 C.F.R. § 303.14 "Being
Engaged in the Business of Receiving Deposits" RIN 3064-AC49
Dear Mr. Feldman:
On behalf of its low-income clients,
the National Consumer Law Center,1 and
the Consumer Federation of America,2 Consumers
Union,3 U.S. Public Interest Research
Group,4 and the National Association
of Consumer Advocates5 submit the
following comments regarding the proposed regulation defining what it means
for state chartered bank to be engaged in the business of receiving deposits
for purposes of eligibility for FDIC insurance.
Consumers have an interest in this
matter for several reasons. First, the integrity of the regulatory process
will be undermined if an agency involved in ongoing litigation can promulgate
a regulation to affect the outcome of that litigation. Second, where a regulation
conflicts with a statute, it should have no legal effect. If the FDIC continues
to pursue this course of action, the resulting regulation will only generate
more litigation, since it is at odds with the plain language of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA). Third, the public at large will be harmed if
the FDIC continues to grant insurance to institutions in violation of the
Act, since that status has significant consequences. One such result is that
the insured entity can preempt certain state laws intended to protect consumers.
These concerns will be addressed more fully below.
I. The Integrity of the Regulatory
Process Will be Undermined
The history of the litigation known
as Heaton v. Monogram Credit Card Bank of Georgia reveals a role taken by
the FDIC that can, at best, be described as questionable and, at worst, sordid.
Consumers sued Monogram, a state bank chartered in Georgia, in Louisiana
state court alleging that Monogram had violated Louisiana law by charging
excessive credit card late fees and interest. One of the defenses raised
by Monogram is that it is an FDIC-insured state bank and entitled to preempt
or avoid the applicability of Louisiana law. On that basis, Monogram removed
the case to federal court.
In the course of the litigation,
the FDIC "issued" a letter supporting Monogram's argument. However,
evidence presented by the consumer's attorney showed that Monogram participated
in drafting the contents of the FDIC letter. A federal court refused to give
any deference to a letter created in that obviously partisan manner. Next,
the FDIC issued General Counsel's Opinion No. 12 (GCO-12), an expanded version
of the letter rejected by the Court. The same judge was not persuaded by
GCO-12 for two reasons. First, it was merely an opinion letter, not a fully
dressed regulation. Second, the letter ignored the clear language of the
FDIA that requires the bank to be engaged in the business of receiving "deposits."6 Now,
the FDIC is attempting to promulgate a regulation whose genesis was a letter
drafted, at least in part, by the very bank who is trying to find a defense
to its behavior.
The federal district court remanded
the case to state court in 1999.7 Monogram
appealed that decision to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals. The appellate
court dismissed the appeal, sending the case back down to the district court.8 The
FDIC then moved to intervene in the litigation and to appeal the court's
most recent remand order entered on January 5, 2001.9 The
federal court was disturbed by this attempt since the FDIC had shunned involvement
in earlier stages of the case. At a hearing on December 20, 2000, the Court
stated:
To me I can only draw one logical
conclusion from all of this. This is simply a maneuver to avoid remand
of the case, pure and simple....I'm very disturbed I will say this about
the actions of the FDIC in this entire matter, and I thought the FDIC was
there to protect the public frankly and consumers and not to protect Monogram
Bank and similar companies. I thought they were to regulate these companies
and not to protect them and to the extent of even defending them in private
litigation.10
This case has attracted some interesting
press. One article reported that the FDIC worked intimately with GE Capital,
Monogram's parent, to help the credit company "circumvent state consumer
protection laws."11
This history seriously undermines
the integrity of the current rulemaking process.12 At
this point, the FDIC should bow out of the judicial and regulatory process
and let the courts apply the statute.
II. The Proposed Regulation Conflicts
with the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
The FDIC's proposal defines the "business
of receiving deposits" as maintaining "one or more non-trust deposit
accounts in the aggregate amount of $500,000 or more."13 The
agency argues that the statutory language is vague and that the court's decision
in the Heaton case creates
inconsistency. Thus, the agency says, it needs to step in and fix the situation.
Our response to this is threefold.
First, Congress said that state
banks must engage in the business of receiving deposits.14 The
word "business" means: "a commercial enterprise carried on
for profit."15 Thus, for a state
bank to qualify for insurance it must be a commercial enterprise that carries
on the activity of receiving deposits. The statutory language mandates ongoing
activity and the receipt of deposits. Where Congress is clear, the FDIC has
no authority to change the plain language of the law.
Second, the problem that has arisen
is one of the FDIC's own making. In the Supplementary Information, the agency
defends its actions by stating that it has issued insurance to single deposit
banks since 1969. It is interesting that the agency did not issue an opinion
letter or enact a regulation then, such as it is now proposing, to provide
support for its actions. Arguably, the FDIC has exceeded its authority for
32 years and is now blaming the decision in the Heaton case for what it has
wrought.
Third, the agency relies upon Meriden
Trust & Safe Deposit Co. v. FDIC,16 as
support for its actions. The FDIC could not have relied upon this case to
guide its behavior in granting insurance to single-deposit banks in 1969.
The case was decided in 1995. More importantly, Meriden bank was granted
insurance when it was an active commercial depository, accepting deposits
on a regular basis. Thus, the FDIC properly insured the bank at the outset.
In contrast to the concerns raised by the FDIC in this rulemaking process,
the issue in Meriden was whether the bank maintained its status of a state
bank for purposes of allowing the FDIC to attach its assets when a related
bank became insolvent. Meriden Bank had transferred most of its assets to
this sister bank before that bank became insolvent. However, Meriden maintained
two deposits, one of which was received after its sister bank went under.
Meriden argued that it was no longer a state bank in the business of receiving
deposits. Therefore, its assets could not be used to offset the losses of
its sister. The court disagreed, finding the bank maintained one deposit
for several years and accepted another after it transferred its assets to
its sister bank. The ruling was driven by the court's perception that Meriden:
...sought both to maintain its
insured status, thereby protecting its two deposits and its future ability
to re-enter the commercial banking market, and to avoid any liability for
a commonly owned bank. To interpret the cross-guarantee provision as Meriden
Trust urges would allow institutions to change their status on their own
volition, thereby permitting a bank (or its holding company) to transfer
its liabilities to an affiliated bank and then (if things go sour) to avoid
the cross-guarantee provision of responsibility for the loss.17
In contrast, the Heaton court squarely
dealt with the issue of what constitutes engaging in the business of receiving
deposits when a bank is created to conduct a credit card operation. Monogram
Bank has never been in the business of receiving deposits. Based on the plain
language of the FDIA, the court easily found that Monogram was not engaged
in the business of receiving deposits.
III. Harm to the Public
We agree that the marketplace and
the public need to rely upon consistent interpretations of the laws affecting
banking. However, the inconsistency that concerns the FDIC was created by
the FDIC, not by the courts. The FDIC chose to insure single-deposit state-chartered
banks, starting in 1969, despite the clear language of the FDIA. The proposed
regulation is subject to legal attack because it conflicts with the statute.
The litigation that the FDIC seeks to avoid will be triggered by enacting
the regulation in its present form.
In addition, the benefits of FDIC
insurance to a bank are enormous. The insurance itself attracts depositors
by assuring the public that its funds will be available upon demand. Further,
a state bank with FDIC insurance is entitled to preempt the interest rate
and other fee caps embodied in consumer protection usury laws of states,
other than the state in which the bank is chartered. This means that banks
can pick a state with no usury caps, charter in that state, and charge any
interest rate and certain fees without limit even when it does business in
another state.
Chartering banks that do not meet
the prerequisites set out in the FDIA expands the number of banks that can
ignore the law of 49 other states when it does business with the citizens
of those states. This harms consumers because we cannot rely upon the FDIC
to grant this special status only to banks intended by Congress to receive
it. Providing this status to unintended beneficiaries gives those entities
a superior competitive advantage over other lenders. The authority of states
to protect their citizens through consumer protections laws, such as usury
statutes, is further eroded. Finally, the sensitive balance between federal
and state regulation of state chartered banks is destroyed.
IV. Conclusion
We urge the FDIC to withdraw the
proposed regulation. Further, the agency should withdraw from pursuing its
appeal in the Fifth Circuit in the Heaton case. The FDIC should not grant
insurance to any single-deposit banks that are not engaging in the business
of receiving deposits. Any such banks presently insured should retain their
insured status for all deposits currently held. However, banks presently
operating in violation of the FDIA should be allowed to comply within an
appropriate period of time or risk losing FDIC insurance if they fail to
do so.
Sincerely,
Elizabeth Renuart
____________________________________________
1 The
National Consumer Law Center, Inc. (NCLC) is a non-profit Massachusetts
Corporation, founded in 1969, specializing in low-income consumer issues,
with an emphasis on consumer credit. On a daily basis, NCLC provides legal
and technical consulting and assistance on consumer law issues to legal
services, government, and private attorneys representing low-income consumers
across the country. NCLC publishes a series of eleven practice treatises
and annual supplements on consumer credit laws, including Truth In Lending,
(4th ed. 1999) and Cost of Credit (2d ed. 2000) as well as bimonthly newsletters
on a range of topics related to consumer credit issues and low-income consumers.
2 The
Consumer Federation of America is a nonprofit association of some 250 pro-consumer
groups, with a combined membership of 50 million people. CFA was founded
in 1968 to advance consumers' interests through advocacy and education.
3 Consumers
Union, the nonprofit publisher of Consumer Reports, is a nonprofit membership
organization chartered to provide consumers with information, education and
counsel about goods, services, health, and personal finance; and to initiate
and cooperate with individual and group efforts to maintain and enhance the
quality of life of consumers.
4 U.S.
Public Interest Research Group serves as the national lobbying office for
state Public Interest Research Groups. PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan
research and advocacy groups with offices around the country.
5 The
National Association of Consumer Advocates is a non-profit corporation whose
members are private and public sector attorneys, legal services attorneys,
law professors, and law students whose primary focus involves the protection
and representation of consumers.
6 Heaton
v. Monogram Credit Card Bank of Georgia, 2001 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 325 (E.D.
La. Jan. 8, 2001).
10 Heaton
v. Monogram Credit Card Bank of Georgia,, No. 98-1823-"J" (E.D.
La.), Transcript of 12/20/00 hearing, pp. 31-32.
11 Roger
Furman, Friends in High Places, U.S. Banker, March 2000 at 30.
12 The
FDIC should not claim comfort by comparing itself to the OCC when it promulgated
the regulation at issue in Smiley v. Citibank, N.A., 517 U.S. 735 (1996).
Though the OCC promulgated a regulation during the litigation that eliminated
the consumer's claim in that case, the OCC never attempted to intervene in
the case nor was a party to any other related litigation. Further, there
was no evidence presented to show that the bank defendant's assisted in the
drafting of the regulation or any earlier opinions letters. The OCC simply
filed an amicus brief in the case.