Texas Administrative Code
Title 7 - BANKING AND SECURITIES
Part 6 - CREDIT UNION DEPARTMENT
Chapter 91 - CHARTERING, OPERATIONS, MERGERS, LIQUIDATIONS
Subchapter B - ORGANIZATION PROCEDURES
Section 91.205 - Credit Union Name
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) Unless a name change or assumed name has been approved by the commissioner in accordance with the Act and these rules, a credit union shall do business under the name in which its certificate of incorporation was issued.
(b) Subject to the requirements of this rule, a credit union may adopt an assumed name. The credit union's official name, however, must be used in all official or legal communications or documents, which includes account and membership agreements, loan contracts, title documents (except for vehicle titles, which may also be under the credit union's assumed name), account statements, checks, drafts, and correspondence with the Department or the National Credit Union Administration. The assumed name may also be used in those materials so long as it is identified as such (e.g. Generic Credit Union dba GCU). Further, a credit union using an assumed name shall clearly disclose the credit union's official name when the assumed name is used on any signs, advertising, mailings, or similar materials.
(c) A credit union shall not use any name other than its official name until it has received a certificate of authority to use an assumed business name from the commissioner and has registered the designation with the Secretary of State and the appropriate county clerk.
(d) The commissioner shall not issue a certificate of authority to use an assumed business name if the designation might confuse or mislead the public, or if it is not readily distinguishable from, or is deceptively similar to, a name of another credit union lawfully doing business with an office in this state.
(e) Credit union officials are responsible for complying with state and federal law applicable to corporate and assumed names. The Department does not have the power to determine or settle competing claims to a name under other statutes or under common law. Even though the Department may have issued a certificate of authority (based on the above criteria), a credit union could still be infringing on the naming rights of other parties. In particular, if the name a credit union selects is similar to a name already protected by state or federal trademark, a credit union could be forced to stop using the name. This can also be the case if another entity is already using a similar name in a related field, even if the entity does not own a state or federal registration.
(f) Before using an assumed name, a credit union shall take reasonable steps to ensure that use of the name will not cause a reasonable person to believe the credit union's different facilities are different credit unions or to believe that shares or deposits in one facility are separately insured from those of another of its facilities.