MONEY TRANSMISSION SERVICES S.B. 1393-1395: COMMITTEE SUMMARY
Senate Bills 1393, 1394, & 1395 (as introduced 9-21-04)
Sponsor: Senator Martha G. Scott
Committee: Banking and Financial Institutions
Date Completed: 9-30-04
CONTENT
Senate Bill 1393 would create the "Money Transmission Services Act" to do all of the following:
-- Prohibit a person from providing "money transmission services" without a license issued under the proposed Act, except as otherwise provided.
-- Specify requirements for applying for a money transmission services license.
-- Require the Commissioner of the Office of Financial and Insurance Services (OFIS) to establish a fee schedule for applicants and licensees.
-- Authorize the Commissioner to examine and investigate a licensee or any of its "authorized delegates".
-- Specify various filing, notice, reporting, and record-keeping requirements of a licensee.
-- Require a licensee to maintain a certain amount of permissible investments.
-- Regulate a licensee's authorized delegates.
-- Provide for various criminal, civil, and administrative sanctions against a licensee.
-- Provide for the confidentiality of information obtained by OFIS and its employees.
-- Authorize the Commissioner to promulgate rules to implement and enforce the proposed Act.
-- Repeal the Sale of Checks Act (MCL 487.901-487.916).
Senate Bill 1394 would amend the Code of Criminal Procedure to include in the sentencing guidelines felony offenses proposed by Senate Bill 1393. Intentionally making a false statement, misrepresentation, or certification in a record or document, and criminal fraud in the conduct of a money transmission services business each would be a Class E felony against the public trust, with a statutory maximum sentence of five years' imprisonment.
Senate Bill 1395 would amend the Consumer Financial Services Act to include the Money Transmission Services Act in the definition of "financial licensing acts".
Senate Bill 1393 would take effect 90 days after its enactment. Senate Bills 1394 and 1395 are tie-barred to Senate Bill 1393.
Under Senate Bill 1393, "money transmission services" would mean any of the following:
-- Selling or issuing payment instruments for a fee, commission, or other consideration
-- Receiving money in an amount of at least $3,000 in any period of seven consecutive calendar days for transmission or transmitting money within the United States or to locations abroad by any means, including payment instrument, wire transfer, electronic transfer, stored value device, facsimile, or otherwise, for a fee, commission, or other consideration.
"Authorized delegate" would mean a person whom a licensee designated to provide money transmission services in Michigan on behalf of the licensee.
A more detailed description of Senate Bill 1393 follows.
Exemptions
The proposed Act would not apply to any of the following:
-- The United States or a U.S. department, agency, or instrumentality.
-- Money transmission services provided by the U.S. Postal Services or by a contractor on behalf of the postal service.
-- A state, county, city, or other governmental subdivision of a state.
-- A depository financial institution, bank holding company, office of an international banking corporation, or branch of a foreign bank; a bank service company organized under the Federal Bank Service Company Act; or a corporation organized under the Federal Edge Act.
-- Electronic funds transfer of governmental benefits for a governmental agency by a contractor on behalf of the U.S. or a state or a governmental subdivision.
-- A board of trade designated as a contract market under the Federal Commodity Exchange Act, or a person who provides clearance and settlement services for a board of trade.
-- A registered futures commission merchant under the Federal commodities laws.
-- A person who provides clearance or settlement services under a registration as a clearing agency or an exemption from registration granted under the Federal securities laws.
-- An operator of a payment system, to the extent that it provides processing, clearing, or settlement services in connection with wire transfers, credit card transactions, debit card transactions, stored value transactions, automated clearinghouse transfers, or similar funds transfers.
-- A person registered as a securities broker-dealer under Federal or state securities laws.
Licensing Requirement; Application
Except as otherwise provided in the bill, a person could not provide money transmission services in Michigan on or after the bill's effective date, without a license issued under the proposed Act. A person licensed under the Sale of Checks Act on that date could provide money transmission services under that license until December 31, 2005, if the licensee applied for a license under the bill within 90 days after its effective date and otherwise met the proposed application and fee requirements.
A person applying for a license would have to use a form and a medium prescribed by the OFIS Commissioner. The application would have to include the applicant's legal name and residential and business addresses as well as any assumed or trade name used in conducting business, and all of the following:
-- A list of any criminal convictions and any material litigation involving the applicant in the 10 years before the application.
-- A description of any money transmission services previously provided and the services the applicant intended to provide in Michigan.
-- A list of the applicant's proposed authorized delegates and the locations where the applicant and the delegates proposed to provide money transmission services.
-- A list of all other states in which the applicant was licensed to provide money transmission services and any disciplinary action taken against the applicant in any other state.
-- Information about any bankruptcy or receivership proceedings affecting the applicant.
-- The name and address of any depository institution through which the applicant's payment instrument would be paid.
-- A description of the source of money and credit the applicant would use to provide money transmission services.
-- Any other information the OFIS Commissioner reasonably required.
If the applicant were not a natural person (an individual), the applicant also would have to provide information regarding its incorporation or formation, and its structure or organization; its name, assumed or trade names, and business addresses; information about each of the applicant's "control persons"; financial information about the applicant; the name and address of any registered agent of the applicant in Michigan; and any other information the Commissioner reasonably required. ("Control person" would mean a director, manager, or executive officer of a licensee or an individual who had the authority to participate in the direction, directly or indirectly through one or more other individuals, of the management or policies of a licensee.)
An applicant's financial statements would have to show that its net worth exceeded $100,000. If the applicant intended to provide money transmission services at more than one location or through authorized delegates, the statements would have to show that the applicant had a net worth equal to or greater than either the sum of $100,000 plus $25,000 for each location or authorized delegate, or $1 million, whichever was less. A licensee would have to maintain those net worth amounts at all times.
An application would have to include a surety bond issued by a bonding company or insurance company authorized to do business in Michigan. The surety bond would have to be in a principal amount of $1.5 million and could not expire before the money transmission services license expired. The surety bond would have to be payable to the Commissioner for the benefit of Michigan residents who were creditors or claimants of the applicant and its authorized delegates through purchase of a payment instrument from the applicant or a delegate. The bond would have to secure the faithful performance of the obligations of the applicant and its authorized delegates with respect to money received in connection with the money transmission services business.
The Commissioner would have to investigate the financial condition and responsibility, financial and business experience, character, and general fitness of the applicant and each shareholder and control person.
The Commissioner would have to approve or deny an application within 120 days after the date he or she determined the application was complete. If the Commissioner did not act within 120 days, he or she would have to issue the license, although the Commissioner could extend that time period for good cause. An applicant denied a license could appeal within 30 days of the notice of denial and request a hearing on the denial.
Fees & Expenses
The Commissioner annually would have to establish a schedule of fees to be paid by applicants and licensees during the next calendar year. A license would expire on December 31 each year unless earlier suspended, surrendered, or revoked. A licensee could renew a license by filing a renewal application in the form and medium prescribed by the Commissioner and paying a renewal fee by December 1.
In addition to fees established by the Commissioner, a licensee would have to pay the actual travel, lodging, and meal expenses incurred by OFIS personnel who traveled outside of Michigan to examine the licensee's records and investigate the licensee.
Fees and civil and administrative fines collected under the bill would have to be paid into the State Treasury to the credit of OFIS and could be used only for the operation of OFIS.
Examination & Investigation
The Commissioner could conduct an examination or investigation of a licensee or any of its authorized delegates. The Commissioner also could conduct an on-site examination or investigation of records, including a joint examination or investigation conducted with other departments or agencies of this State, another state, or the Federal government. Instead of conducting his or her own examination or investigation, the Commissioner could accept one done by a department or agency of this State, another state, or the Federal government or a report prepared by a certified public accountant.
Confidentiality
The bill would require the Commissioner, each former Commissioner, and each current and former deputy, agent, and employee of OFIS to keep secret all facts and information obtained in the course of their duties, unless the person was required by law to report on, take official action concerning, or testify in any proceedings regarding a licensee or a licensee's activities.
This requirement would not apply to, or prohibit the provision of information or documents to, any Federal, foreign, or out-of-State regulatory agency with jurisdiction over a licensee. The confidentiality requirement also would not apply to any disclosure the Commissioner made in the public interest, at his or her discretion.
Licensee Filings, Notices, & Reports
If there were a change in any information provided in a licensee's initial or renewal application, the licensee would have to file that information with the Commissioner before the change occurred.
Within 45 days after the end of each fiscal quarter, a licensee would have to file with the Commissioner a current list of each authorized delegate, control person, and location in Michigan where the licensee or delegate provided money transmission services.
A licensee would have to file a report with the Commissioner within one business day after the licensee had reason to know of the filing of a bankruptcy petition by or against the licensee; the filing of a petition by or against the licensee for receivership or any other judicial or administrative proceeding for dissolution, reorganization, or the making of a general assignment for the benefit of creditors; the commencement of a proceeding to revoke or suspend the licensee's license in Michigan or another state or country; or a charge or conviction of the licensee or an executive officer, manager, director, control person, or authorized delegate for a felony.
If there were a proposed change of control of a licensee, the licensee would have to give the Commissioner at least 30 days' written notice before the proposed change; request approval of the proposed change; and pay a nonrefundable fee with the notice, in an amount prescribed by the Commissioner.
If a licensee or authorized delegate filed a suspicious activity report with a Federal agency, the licensee or delegate would have to file a copy of that report with the Department of State Police within 24 hours.
Licensee Investments
A licensee would have to maintain at all times permissible investments with a market value computed in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles of not less than the aggregate amount of all of its outstanding payment instruments issued or sold and money transmitted by the licensee or its authorized delegates. The Commissioner could limit the extent to which a type of investment within a class of permissible investments was considered a permissible investment, except for money and certificates of deposit issued by a depository financial institution. The Commissioner could allow other types of investments that he or she determined had a safety substantially equivalent to other permissible investments.
Except as otherwise limited by the Commissioner, each of the following would be a permissible investment:
-- Cash, a certificate of deposit, or a senior debt obligation of a Federally insured depository financial institution.
-- A banker's acceptance or bill of exchange that was eligible for purchase upon endorsement by a member bank of the Federal Reserve system and was eligible for purchase by a Federal Reserve bank.
-- An investment bearing a rating of one of the three highest grades as defined by a nationally recognized organization that rates securities.
-- An investment security that was an obligation of the U.S. or a Federal department, agency, or instrumentality; an investment in an obligation that was guaranteed fully as to principal and interest by the U.S.; or an investment in an obligation of a state or a governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality of a state.
-- A receivable that was payable to a licensee from its authorized delegate, if the aggregate amount of receivables did not exceed 20% of the total permissible investments and the licensee did not hold at one time receivables in any one person aggregating more than 10% of the licensee's total permissible investments.
-- A share or a certificate issued by an open-end management investment company that was registered with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act and whose portfolio was restricted by the management company's investment policy to specified investments.
The bill also lists other investments that would be permissible under specified conditions. The aggregate of those investments could not exceed 50% of an applicant's total permissible investments.
Authorized Delegates
An agreement between a licensee and an authorized delegate would have to be in writing and require the delegate to operate in compliance with the proposed Act and other applicable law.
If a license were suspended or revoked, the Commissioner would have to notify the licensee and order the licensee to notify its authorized delegates, directing them to cease providing money transmission services on behalf of the licensee. The delegates immediately would have to cease providing those services.
All funds received by an authorized delegate from the sale of a payment instrument, less fees, would have to be held in escrow for the licensee from the time the funds were received until the time they were remitted to the licensee. If an authorized delegate commingled any of the funds received with any other funds or property it owned or controlled, all commingled funds and other property would have to be held in escrow for the licensee in an amount equal to the funds due the licensee.
Sanctions
License Sanctions. The Commissioner could deny, suspend, not renew, or revoke a license, place a licensee in receivership, or order a licensee to revoke the designation of an authorized delegate if any of the following occurred:
-- The licensee violated the proposed Act, a rule promulgated under it, an order or declaratory ruling issued under it, or any applicable State or Federal law.
-- The licensee did not grant access to its books and records during the course of an examination or investigation by the Commissioner.
-- The licensee engaged in fraud, intentional misrepresentation, or gross negligence.
-- An authorized delegate of the licensee was convicted of a violation of a State or Federal money laundering statute or violated a rule promulgated or an order or ruling issued under the proposed Act, as a result of the licensee's knowing or willful misconduct.
-- The experience, character, or general fitness of the licensee, authorized delegate, or control person indicated that it was not in the public interest to permit the person to provide money transmission services.
-- The licensee engaged in an unsafe or unsound practice.
-- The licensee failed to maintain the required minimum net worth or was insolvent, suspended payment of its obligations, or made a general assignment for the benefit of its creditors.
-- The licensee did not remove an authorized delegate after the Commissioner ordered it to do so after finding that the delegate had violated the proposed Act.
In determining whether a licensee was engaging in an unsafe or unsound practice, the Commissioner could consider the size and condition of the licensee's money transmission services business, the magnitude of the loss, the gravity of the violation, the previous conduct of the person involved, and other factors the Commissioner considered relevant.
After conducting an investigation or examination, the Commissioner could issue an order summarily suspending a license, based on an affidavit stating that an imminent threat of financial loss or to the public welfare existed.
Other Administrative Sanctions. If the Commissioner believed a person had engaged in fraud or had been convicted of a criminal violation involving money laundering, he or she could serve upon that person a written notice of intention to prohibit the person from being employed by, an agent of, or a control person of a licensee.
Criminal Violations. Intentionally making a false statement, misrepresentation, or false certification in any record or document filed or required to be maintained under the proposed Act, or intentionally making a false entry or omitting a material entry in a record, would be a felony punishable by up to five years' imprisonment and/or a maximum fine of $100,000.
Engaging in criminal fraud in the conduct of a money transmission services business also would be a felony punishable by up to five years' imprisonment and/or a maximum fine of $100,000.
Knowingly engaging in an activity for which a license would be required under the proposed Act, when not licensed under the Act, and receiving more than $500 in compensation from that activity within a 30-day period would be a misdemeanor punishable by up to 93 days' imprisonment and/or a maximum fine of $500.
Cease & Desist Order. The Commissioner could issue and serve on a licensee a cease and desist order if he or she believed the licensee was engaging in, had engaged in, or was about to engage in a practice that posed a threat of financial loss or threat to the public welfare or was violating, had violated, or was about to violate a law, rule, or order.
Civil Penalties. The Commissioner could assess a civil fine against a person who violated the proposed Act, a rule promulgated or an order or ruling issued by the Commissioner under it, or any applicable State or Federal law. The fine could be up to $10,000 per day for each day the violation continued, plus the State's costs and expenses for the investigation and prosecution of the matter, including reasonable attorney fees.
MCL 777.14p (S.B. 1394)
487.2052 (S.B. 1395)
Legislative Analyst: Patrick Affholter
FISCAL IMPACT
Senate Bill 1393
According to the Department of Labor and Economic Growth, this legislation would require the creation of a new regulatory division within the Office of Financial and Insurance Services. The cost of this new division is estimated to range from $277,000 to $325,000 and would include information technology costs, staffing, and operating expenses. These costs would be covered by a regulatory fee to be set by the Commissioner.
Criminal justice costs and fine revenue would depend on the number of convictions under the bill.
Senate Bill 1394
The bill would have an indeterminate State and local impact depending on the number of future convictions under the proposed Money Transmission Services Act.
Senate Bill 1395
The bill would have no fiscal impact on State or local government.
Fiscal Analyst: Maria Tyszkiewicz
Bill Bowerman
Analysis was prepared by nonpartisan Senate staff for use by the Senate in its deliberations and does not constitute an official statement of legislative intent. sb1393-1395/0304