Sunshine Act Meeting Notice, 24391 [2013-09925]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 80 / Thursday, April 25, 2013 / Notices
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liability to consumers for the property,
the effect of this provision is to permit
cards and their underlying funds to
expire sooner than is permitted under
the EFTA and Regulation E. Section 66–
29–116 of the Tennessee Act thus
permits an act or practice that is
prohibited by the Federal law.
In reaching this conclusion, the
Bureau has considered whether § 66–
29–116 of the Tennessee Act, as applied
to gift cards, is more protective of
consumers than Federal law. The
Bureau has concluded that it is not,
because the Bureau has not identified
any consumer benefit flowing from an
issuer’s ability to decline a gift card at
the point-of-sale sooner than the card
and its underlying funds are permitted
to expire under Federal law. The Bureau
notes that any benefits a consumer
might experience from having a gift card
treated as abandoned property would
result from the transfer of the unused
gift card value to the State, not from an
issuer’s declining to honor the card.35
For the reasons stated above, the
Bureau finds that the Tennessee Act is
inconsistent with the EFTA and
Regulation E and therefore is preempted
to the extent that it permits issuers to
refuse to honor gift cards sooner than
the gift cards and their underlying funds
are permitted to expire under Federal
law.36 In reaching this determination,
the Bureau acknowledges commenters’
35 Similarly, the Bureau concludes that its
determination that § 66–29–116 of the Tennessee
Act is not more protective of consumers than the
EFTA and Regulation is not inconsistent with the
judicial decision discussed in the Bureau’s Notice.
That case, in which the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit upheld a decision by the U.S.
District Court for the District of New Jersey that
declined to preliminarily enjoin the application to
gift cards of New Jersey’s unclaimed property law,
weighed the benefits to consumers of New Jersey’s
unclaimed property scheme for gift cards. In finding
that the plaintiffs were unlikely to prove that
Federal law preempted New Jersey’s unclaimed gift
card law, the court emphasized several possible
benefits to consumers of having their unused gift
card value transfer to the State that, in the court’s
view, weighed in favor of a conclusion that New
Jersey law was more protective of consumers than
the EFTA and Regulation E. See N.J. Retail
Merchants Ass’n v. Sidamon-Eristoff, 669 F.3d 374
(3d Cir. 2012), reh’g denied (3d Cir. Feb. 24, 2012).
Because the Bureau’s preemption determination
with respect to Tennessee law applies to the
provision of Tennessee law that permits issuers to
decline to honor abandoned gift cards at the pointof-sale, rather than to the provision that requires
unused gift card value to be transferred to the State,
the purported benefits of any such transfer are not
germane to the Bureau’s decision.
36 The Bureau’s determination with respect to the
Tennessee Act reflects the Bureau’s understanding
of how the Tennessee Act currently operates and is
based in part on communications with the
Tennessee Department of Treasury’s Unclaimed
Property Division. If legislative, judicial, or other
official action effected a relevant change in how
Tennessee law applied to gift cards, the Bureau
could revisit its determination.
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concerns that the requirement both to
transfer the unused value from
abandoned gift cards to the State while
at the same time complying with the
EFTA and Regulation E imposes
possibly burdensome obligations on gift
card issuers. However, the primary
concern of the relevant provision of the
EFTA is to ensure that consumers will
be able to use their gift cards for the
prescribed periods of time. So long as
consumers can continue to use their
cards at the point-of-sale for as long as
Federal law guarantees, the fact that
issuers may face an increased burden or
cost to comply with both Federal law
and the Tennessee Act—at least to the
degree of burden the commenters
discussed—does not change the
Bureau’s conclusion. Also, as with
Maine, the Bureau expresses no opinion
on the constitutional due process
concerns raised by certain commenters,
because the Bureau’s role is solely to
determine whether State law
inconsistent with the requirements of
the EFTA and Regulation E, not to
determine whether State law is
constitutional. In this regard, the Bureau
notes that its determination is limited to
the conclusion that § 66–29–116 of the
Tennessee Act, as applied to gift cards,
is preempted, and the Bureau does not
otherwise opine on how the Tennessee
Act should apply to gift cards in light
of this determination.
This is an official staff interpretation
of Regulation E, issued pursuant to
§ 1005.12(b) of Regulation E. The
Bureau believes that the nuances of
States’ unclaimed property laws warrant
independent consideration of whether a
particular State’s unclaimed property
law as applied to gift cards is
inconsistent with and preempted by the
EFTA and Regulation E. Thus,
notwithstanding certain commenters’
requests that the Bureau set forth a
uniform, national standard, this
determination is limited to the facts and
issues discussed above and does not
constitute a determination with respect
to the laws of any other States.
24391
Order
Pursuant to § 1639q of the Electronic
Fund Transfers Act (EFTA) and
§ 1005.12(b) of Regulation E, the Bureau
has determined that § 66–29–116 of
Tennessee’s Uniform Disposition of
Unclaimed (Personal) Property Act (the
Tennessee Act) is preempted by the
EFTA and Regulation E to the extent
that the Tennessee Act permits gift
certificates to be declined at the pointof-sale sooner than the gift certificates
and their underlying funds are
permitted to expire under § 1005.20(e)
of Regulation E. The Bureau’s
determination applies only with respect
to those devices that are gift certificates,
store gift cards, and stored-value cards,
as defined in 12 CFR 1005.20(a), and are
also covered by the Tennessee Act.
Dated: April 19, 2013.
Richard Cordray,
Director, Bureau of Consumer Financial
Protection.
[FR Doc. 2013–09751 Filed 4–24–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–AM–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting Notice
Wednesday, May 1,
2013, 10:00 a.m.–11:00 a.m.
TIME AND DATE:
Room 420, Bethesda Towers,
4330 East West Highway, Bethesda,
Maryland.
PLACE:
Commission Meeting—Open to
the Public.
STATUS:
List of Subjects
Decisional
Matter: Section 1110 Certificates of
Compliance—Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking.
A live webcast of the Meeting can be
viewed at www.cpsc.gov/live.
For a recorded message containing the
latest agenda information, call (301)
504–7948.
12 CFR Part 1005
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Banking, Banks, Consumer protection,
Credit unions, Electronic fund transfers,
National banks, Remittance transfers,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations.
Todd A. Stevenson, Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, (301)
504–7923.
Preemption Determination
Dated: April 23, 2013.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary.
The following order sets forth the
preemption determination, which also
will be reflected in Supplement I to Part
1005—Official Interpretations.
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MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
[FR Doc. 2013–09925 Filed 4–23–13; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 80 (Thursday, April 25, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Page 24391]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-09925]
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CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
Sunshine Act Meeting Notice
TIME AND DATE: Wednesday, May 1, 2013, 10:00 a.m.-11:00 a.m.
PLACE: Room 420, Bethesda Towers, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda,
Maryland.
STATUS: Commission Meeting--Open to the Public.
Matters To Be Considered: Decisional Matter: Section 1110 Certificates
of Compliance--Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
A live webcast of the Meeting can be viewed at www.cpsc.gov/live.
For a recorded message containing the latest agenda information,
call (301) 504-7948.
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION: Todd A. Stevenson, Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, (301) 504-7923.
Dated: April 23, 2013.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013-09925 Filed 4-23-13; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P