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Relationship to Electronic Fund Transfer Act [1] (2013)

handle is hein.ali/rvuccsec0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Sec.4A-108. Relationship to Electronic Fund  Transfer Act.


    (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), this Article does not apply to a funds transfer any
part of which is governed by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act of 1978 (Title XX, Public Law
95-630, 92 Stat. 3728, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693 et. seq.) as amended from time to time.

    (b) This Article applies to a funds transfer that is a remittance transfer as defined in the
Electronic Fund Transfer Act (15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693o-1) as amended from time to time, unless the
remittance transfer is an electronic fund transfer as defined in the Electronic Fund Transfer Act
(15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693a) as amended from time to time.

    (c) In a funds transfer to which this Article applies, in the event of an inconsistency between
an applicable provision of this Article and an applicable provision of the Electronic Fund
Transfer Act, the provision of the Electronic Fund Transfer Act governs to the extent of the
inconsistency.
                                     Official Comment

    1. The Electronic Fund Transfer Act (EFTA), implemented by Regulation E, 12 C.F.R. Part
1005, is a federal statute that covers aspects of electronic fund transfers involving consumers.
EFTA   also governs remittance transfers, defined in 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693o-1, which involve
transfers of funds through electronic means by consumers to recipients in another country
through persons or financial institutions that provide such transfers in the normal course of their
business. Not all remittance transfers as defined in EFTA, however, qualify as electronic
fund transfers as defined under the EFTA, 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693a(7). While Section 4A-108(a)
broadly states that Article 4A does not apply to any funds transfer that is governed in any part by
EFTA,  subsection (b) provides an exception. The purpose of Section 4A- 108(b) is to allow this
Article to apply to a funds transfer as defined in Section 4A-104(a) (see Section 4A-102) that
also is a remittance transfer as defined in EFTA, so long as that remittance transfer is not an
electronic fund transfer as defined in EFTA. If the resulting application of this Article to an
EFTA-defined  remittance transfer that is not an EFTA-defined electronic fund transfer
creates an inconsistency between an applicable provision of this Article and an applicable
provision of EFTA, then, as a matter of federal supremacy, the provision of EFTA governs to the
extent of the inconsistency. Section 4A-108(c). Of course, in the case of a funds transfer that
also relates to another jurisdiction, the forum's conflict of laws principles determine whether it
will apply the law in effect in this State (including this Article and EFTA) or the law of another
jurisdiction to all or any part of the funds transfer. See Section 4A-507.
    2. The following cases illustrate the relationship between EFTA and this Article pursuant to
Section 4A-108.
    Case #1. A commercial  customer of Bank A sends a payment order to Bank A, instructing
Bank  A to transfer funds from its account at Bank A to the account of a consumer at Bank B.
The funds transfer is executed by a payment order from Bank A to an intermediary bank and is
executed by the intermediary bank by means of an automated clearinghouse credit entry to the
consumer's  account at Bank B (the beneficiary's bank). The transfer into the consumer's
account is an electronic fund transfer as defined in 15 U.S.C. Sec. 1693a(7). Pursuant to
Section 4A-108(a), Article 4A does not apply to any part of the funds transfer because EFTA
governs part of the funds transfer. The transfer is not a remittance transfer as defined in 15

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