[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 247 (Thursday, December 24, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 80258-80265]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-32488]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Fiscal Service

31 CFR Parts 315, 353, and 360

[Docket No.: FISCAL-2015-0002]
RIN 1530-AA11


Regulations Governing United States Savings Bonds

AGENCY: Bureau of the Fiscal Service, Fiscal Service, Treasury.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The United States Department of the Treasury, Bureau of the 
Fiscal Service, is issuing a final rule amending regulations governing 
United States savings bonds to address certain state escheat claims.

DATES: Effective December 24, 2015.

ADDRESSES: You can download this final rule at the following Internet 
address: http://www.regulations.gov, http://www.gpo.gov, or http://www.fiscal.treasury.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Theodore C. Simms II, Senior Counsel, 
202-504-3710 or [email protected].

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

    The United States Department of the Treasury has issued savings 
bonds since 1935 on the credit of the United States to raise funds for 
federal programs and operations. Article 8, Section 8, Clause 2 of the 
Constitution authorizes the federal government to ``borrow money on the 
credit of the United States.'' Under this grant of power, ``the 
Congress authorized the Secretary of the Treasury, with the approval of 
the President, to issue savings bonds in such form and under such 
conditions as he may from time to time prescribe. . . .'' Free v. 
Bland, 369 U.S. 663, 667 (1962) (citing the predecessor to 31 U.S.C. 
3105). Congress provided that the proceeds of savings bonds may be used 
by the federal government for any expenditures authorized by law. See 
31 U.S.C. 3105(a).
    Congress expressly authorized the Secretary of the Treasury to 
establish the terms and conditions that govern the savings bond 
program. 31 U.S.C. 3105(c). Treasury's savings bond regulations 
implement this authority, setting forth a contract between the United 
States and savings bond purchasers. This contract gives purchasers 
confidence that the United States will honor its debts when a purchaser 
surrenders a savings bond for payment. The contract also protects the 
public fisc by ensuring that Treasury does not face multiple claims for 
payment on a single savings bond.
    Under Treasury regulations, savings bonds have always been 
registered securities. The regulations authorize several forms of 
registration, including registration to individuals who are owners, co-
owners, and beneficiaries, as well as to fiduciaries and institutions. 
See 31 CFR 315.7, 353.7, and 360.6. The regulations also provide that 
savings bonds are not transferrable and are payable only to the 
registered owner, except as described in Treasury regulations. See 31 
CFR 315.15, 353.15, and 360.15. Detailed regulations describe when 
payment will be made to a person or entity that is not the registered 
owner.
    To redeem a paper savings bond, the registered owner or a successor 
specified in the regulations must surrender the physical bond. Although 
there are exceptions to the requirement that the bond be surrendered, 
the exceptions are carefully drawn to protect the owner's rights and to 
protect Treasury against competing claims. For example, if a claimant 
cannot surrender the bond, the claimant must provide satisfactory 
evidence of the loss, theft, or destruction of the bond, or a 
satisfactory explanation of the mutilation or defacement, as well as 
sufficient information to identify the bond by serial number. See, 
e.g., 31 CFR parts 315 and 353, subpart F. An owner's right to payment 
continues indefinitely. Pursuant to statutory authority, Treasury 
regulations allow owners to keep their bonds indefinitely and to 
surrender them for payment even years after the bonds mature. See 31 
U.S.C. 3105(b) and 31 CFR parts 315 and 353, subpart H.

II. State Escheat Claims for the Custody of Savings Bonds

    Many state escheat laws allow states to take custody of unclaimed 
or abandoned property. Treasury's savings bond regulations do not 
explicitly address the topic of abandoned savings bonds, or the effect 
of custody escheat statutes on the rights of savings bond owners. 
Treasury has addressed the topic in guidance and in litigation.
    In 1952, Treasury issued a bulletin to the Federal Reserve Banks 
providing guidance on custody escheat claims. The bulletin addressed a 
state claim to the custody of four savings bonds in the state's 
possession, which had belonged to a ward of the state who died without 
heirs.\1\ In this context, Treasury stated that it will not recognize a 
state claim to the custody of savings bonds, but will recognize an 
escheat judgment that confers title on a state because ``in escheat the 
state is `the ultimate heir.' '' \2\ The 1952 bulletin does not 
identify a specific regulation authorizing state escheat claims, the 
full criteria under which they will be considered, or a process for 
submitting them. Because the state did not claim title over the bonds, 
this kind of detail was unnecessary.
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    \1\ Public Debt Bulletin No. 111, Subject: State Statutes 
Concerning Abandoned Property (Feb. 27, 1952) at 1.
    \2\ Id. at 3.
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    Treasury addressed a new, broader custody escheat claim in 2004 and 
2006,

[[Page 80259]]

when several states attempted to claim the proceeds of all matured, 
unredeemed bonds registered to residents in their state. Unlike the 
claim addressed by the 1952 bulletin, these states did not possess the 
bonds they sought to redeem, which presumably were still held by their 
owners. Treasury rejected these claims. Noting that Treasury has a 
contract with the savings bond owners, and is obligated to pay these 
owners in perpetuity when the bonds are presented for payment, Treasury 
informed the states that they must obtain title to the bonds and then 
apply to Treasury for payment under existing procedures. These 
procedures require claimants to surrender the physical bond or provide 
evidence that the bond has been lost, stolen, or destroyed. Treasury's 
2004 letters specifically said that the states must possess the bonds 
they seek to redeem.\3\
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    \3\ In 2004, Treasury sent nearly identical letters to 
Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Kentucky, New 
Hampshire, North Carolina and South Dakota rejecting their claims to 
a class of bonds they did not possess. In 2006, Treasury sent a 
similar letter to Florida. These letters are available in the docket 
for this rule at www.regulations.gov.
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    Several of these states sued Treasury to claim the proceeds of all 
matured, unredeemed bonds registered to persons with addresses in their 
states. See New Jersey v. United States Treasury, 684 F.3d 382 (3rd 
Cir. 2012). In New Jersey, the United States Court of Appeals for the 
Third Circuit considered the validity of state statutes that deemed 
savings bonds to be ``abandoned'' if the owners did not redeem their 
bonds by a certain time after maturity. Relying on their own statutes, 
the states argued that they were entitled to take custody of the 
proceeds of the unredeemed bonds, and upon taking custody the states 
would become the entity responsible for paying the bond owners.
    The Third Circuit rejected the states' argument, explaining that 
the state unclaimed property statutes conflict with federal law in many 
ways. See New Jersey, 684 F.3d at 407-408. The court emphasized that, 
in advancing the goal of making the bonds ``attractive to savers and 
investors,'' Free, 369 U.S. at 669, Congress had authorized Treasury to 
implement regulations specifying that ``owners of savings bonds may 
keep the bonds after maturity.'' 31 U.S.C. 3105(b)(2)(A). The states' 
unclaimed property laws, by contrast, specified that matured bonds are 
abandoned and their proceeds are subject to the laws if not redeemed 
within a time period as short as one year after maturity. New Jersey, 
684 F.3d at 407-408. Declaring the laws preempted, the Third Circuit 
observed that the state laws purported to alter the terms of the 
contracts between the United States and the bond owners, and 
potentially could make the United States subject to multiple 
obligations on a single bond. Id. at 408-409.

III. State Escheat Claims for the Title of Savings Bonds

    Beginning in 2000, certain states enacted title escheat laws 
specifically for savings bonds that the states deemed to be 
``unclaimed'' or ``abandoned.'' Pursuant to these title escheat laws, 
states have attempted to claim title to bonds in their possession, as 
well as to a broad class of bonds the states do not possess. Kansas 
enacted the first statute in 2000. Other states enacted their laws more 
recently. Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North 
Carolina, and South Dakota enacted their statutes in 2014. Arkansas, 
Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Maine, New Hampshire, Ohio, and South 
Carolina enacted their statutes in 2015.
    These title escheat statutes raise similar concerns to the custody 
escheat statutes that the Third Circuit declared preempted in New 
Jersey. Under the title escheat statutes, states presume a savings bond 
to be abandoned if it has not been redeemed by a certain time. The 
bonds are presumed abandoned even if they have not matured and are in 
the owner's possession, without regard to the owner's intention to 
redeem them later or to pass them along to a registered beneficiary or 
heir. In Louisiana, for example, the state presumes that a bond is 
abandoned if it has not been redeemed between eight and eighteen years 
after issuance (depending on the bond series), long before the bond 
even matures.
    Under many of these laws, states may initiate an escheat proceeding 
to claim any bonds that are presumed abandoned; for bonds that a state 
does not possess, the state often publishes a statement in local 
newspapers of its intention to claim title to bonds of a particular 
description, and requires bond owners to respond to the escheat 
proceeding in order to protect their ownership of the bonds. Bond 
owners are not parties to the escheat proceeding, and may never learn 
that the state is attempting to claim title over their bonds, 
especially if they live out-of-state. To avoid escheat, savings bond 
owners would need to monitor state laws, newspapers, and judicial 
proceedings in states where they may not live in order to protect their 
rights.
    Despite the broad reach of these title escheat statutes, state law 
can only affect savings bond ownership to the extent allowed by federal 
regulation. Treasury's savings bond regulations determine ownership, 
describing in detail the rights of registered owners and their 
successors, including the right to hold paper bonds indefinitely. 
States do not have any explicit rights under these federal regulations 
to obtain title to savings bonds through a state escheat proceeding. To 
the extent that state escheat statutes purport to convey title to 
savings bonds in conflict with federal law, the escheat statutes would 
be preempted. See, e.g., Free v. Bland, 369 U.S. 663 (1962); New Jersey 
v. U.S. Dept. of Treasury, 684 F.3d 382, 407-408 (3rd Cir. 2012) (state 
unclaimed property laws preempted by federal statutes and savings bond 
regulations).
    The new title escheat statutes also frustrate the objectives and 
operations of the federal savings bond program by creating the 
potential for multiple claims over the same bonds. Under these state 
statutes, a state may attempt to claim bonds that are still in the 
possession of registered owners, who can submit them for payment at any 
time. A state may also attempt to claim bonds that are in the 
possession of another state, where both states have a claim to title 
under their own state laws. State laws may define ``abandonment'' in 
different ways, with an advantage going to the state that can claim 
escheat title soonest. The potential for competing claims exposes 
Treasury to the risk of double-payment and costly litigation, as well 
as threatens the vested rights of bond owners.
    Under the current savings bond regulations, Treasury has informed 
several states by letter that their title escheat claims will not be 
honored for bonds they do not possess. Given the recent increase in 
escheat laws specifically addressing savings bonds, the time is ripe 
for Treasury to clarify its prior statements on escheat and to describe 
more formally the criteria Treasury will use to evaluate escheat 
claims. Through a uniform federal rule governing title escheat claims, 
Treasury will provide formal notice to all states about the escheat 
claims it will recognize and how it will protect the rights of bond 
owners still in possession of their savings bonds.

IV. Public Comments and Treasury Responses

    Treasury voluntarily sought public comment on the proposed rule for 
45 days to assist the agency in giving full consideration to the 
matters discussed in the proposed rule. We received comments on behalf 
of six state officials and associations:
    1. National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators.

[[Page 80260]]

    2. National Association of State Treasurers.
    3. Joint comments from state officials in Kansas, Louisiana, South 
Dakota, Pennsylvania, Mississippi, Kentucky, North Dakota, Iowa, South 
Carolina, and Maine.
    4. The Treasurer of North Carolina.
    5. The Treasurer of Missouri.
    6. The State Auditor of Arkansas.
The commenters offered a range of observations, primarily opposing the 
proposed rule.
    Comment: Several commenters urged Treasury to withdraw the proposed 
rule because it would hinder states' efforts to ``reunite'' bondholders 
with their unredeemed, matured savings bonds. In the commenters' view, 
bonds that have not been redeemed for some period after maturity are 
forgotten, abandoned, or lost. States should have the role of locating 
bond owners, according to the commenters, in part because states 
already have effective unclaimed property programs and in part because 
the United States does not have an incentive to locate bond owners. 
Because the proposed rule does not allow states to take title to bonds 
they do not possess, the commenters contend that states cannot assist 
in locating most owners of matured, unredeemed bonds. This 
disadvantages bond owners and discourages the public from purchasing 
new savings bonds, according to the commenters.
    Response: The proposed rule is designed to protect the rights of 
savings bond owners, which are safeguarded by Treasury regulations and 
the savings bond contract. Under these regulations, bond owners have 
the contractual right to retain their bonds indefinitely, to pass them 
along to registered co-owners, beneficiaries, heirs, and other 
successors, and to present them for payment by the United States 
government. The proposed rule protects these rights by explicitly 
limiting states' ability to claim title and the right to payment for 
themselves. Contrary to the assertion of the commenters, there is no 
need to ``reunite'' the bond owners with their U.S. savings bonds, 
which remain in the hands of their registered owners; the regulation 
clarifies that Treasury will not consider a state's request to redeem a 
bond that the state does not possess.
    Additionally, the commenters emphasized that state unclaimed 
property programs will attempt to locate savings bond owners after a 
state claims title to their bonds. The rigor of state efforts to locate 
bond owners, however, would be outside federal control. Once in 
possession of bond proceeds, states have little incentive to locate a 
bond's former owner, particularly if that owner lives in another state. 
In addition, states may impose burdensome processes on former owners 
who seek payment, and may not pay former owners in full. The law in 
Arkansas, for example, only provides that a state ``may'' pay a claim 
from a former bond owner after deducting certain expenses from the 
payment. Ark. Code Ann. Sec.  18-28-231(g)(2)(A). A person who owns a 
savings bond expects to be paid in full by the federal government, not 
by a state that has taken title to the owner's unredeemed bond.
    Treasury recognizes that savings bonds can be abandoned, with no 
one eligible under Treasury regulations to redeem them. States are 
encouraged to assist in locating the owners of bonds in the states' 
possession, and through advertising and other methods to persuade their 
citizens to redeem savings bonds that have matured. These efforts can 
continue without impairing a bond owner's title and rights under the 
savings bond contract. The commenters did not offer any evidence, 
however, to support their claim that matured, unredeemed bonds are 
necessarily lost or abandoned. Based on its contact with tens of 
thousands of bond owners, Treasury has learned that many bond owners 
choose to retain their bonds after maturity for a variety of personal 
and financial reasons. To protect the rights of these bond owners, 
Treasury has not made any changes to the proposed regulation in 
response to this comment.
    Comment: Several commenters asserted that the proposed rule exceeds 
Treasury's legal authority by preempting state property law regimes. In 
the commenters' view, states have the right to determine when property 
is unclaimed, and Treasury's proposed rule would unduly limit this 
right by allowing Treasury to scrutinize state escheat judgments and by 
preventing states from taking title to bonds that are not in the 
state's possession. The commenters urged that states be allowed to 
determine when property is abandoned, and to submit claims for bonds 
that are not in their possession.
    Response: The ownership of savings bonds arises from Treasury's 
savings bond regulations, which have been issued under an explicit 
grant of authority from Congress. 31 U.S.C. 3105. Under these 
regulations, the owner has a contract with the federal government that 
defines not only the registered owner's rights, but also those of 
successors specified in the regulations, such as a beneficiary named on 
the bond or the bond owner's estate. Federal courts have upheld these 
federal rules of succession against contrary claims founded on state 
law. See, e.g., Free v. Bland, 369 U.S. 663 (1962).
    Treasury has long recognized that savings bonds can be abandoned, 
particularly in the context of a deceased person without heirs. When no 
person appears able under Treasury regulations to satisfy the 
requirements for payment, and the state can establish that a bond has 
been abandoned, Treasury has allowed a state to escheat the bond and 
submit it for payment. This does not interfere with any rights 
protected by the savings bond regulations, because no one else is 
eligible under the Treasury regulations to receive payment. Treasury 
has allowed states to redeem bonds belonging to a deceased owner under 
31 CFR part 315, subpart L, and bonds in a state's possession when the 
state can establish that they are abandoned and can satisfy the 
requirements for a waiver under 31 CFR 315.90.
    The definition of abandonment, however, cannot be left entirely to 
states because of the potential for states to impair the rights of 
ownership provided by federal law. As the United States General 
Accounting Office (GAO) explained in a 1989 report, the amounts that 
the United States owes to owners of matured savings bonds are not 
considered ``unclaimed because these moneys are currently payable to 
the rightful owners upon presentation of a proper claim and without any 
time limitation.'' \4\ If states are allowed to define when a bond is 
abandoned or unclaimed, the states could impose requirements on bond 
owners that are outside the savings bond regulations, such as a 
requirement to redeem the bond within a certain time after issuance, or 
to maintain some active communication with the state or Treasury to 
prove the bond owner's continuing interest in the bond. Persons holding 
matured bonds with an expectation that they can be redeemed anytime--an 
expectation reasonably based on the savings bond regulations--should 
not be required to consult state law to determine if their federal 
property rights are protected. Because the ownership rights for savings 
bonds arise under federal law, they cannot be taken away by a contrary 
state law.
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    \4\ General Accounting Office, Unclaimed Money: Proposals for 
Transferring Unclaimed Funds to States 17 (1989). GAO found that 
Treasury was receiving claims amounting to $7,000 to $10,000 each 
day for bonds that had matured many years earlier. Id. at 23.
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    For this reason, Treasury has required more evidence of abandonment 
than is required under some state laws. While some states presume that 
a bond is

[[Page 80261]]

abandoned if it has not been redeemed within a certain time after 
issuance, Treasury has required positive evidence that the owner has 
relinquished a claim over the bond. In particular cases, this evidence 
has included the state's physical possession of the bond and affidavits 
showing that the registered owner did not seek to claim it after 
notice. When the evidence of abandonment is sufficient, Treasury is 
able to recognize a state's claim to title under the waiver provisions 
of 31 CFR 315.90, 353.90, and 360.90 (depending on the bond series). 
Under these provisions, Treasury may waive a savings bond regulation if 
(a) the waiver would not be inconsistent with law or equity, (b) the 
waiver would not impair any existing rights, and (c) Treasury is 
satisfied that the waiver would not subject the United States to any 
substantial expense or liability.
    The proposed rule disallows escheat claims for ``unclaimed'' bonds 
that are not in a state's possession in part because states cannot 
produce sufficient evidence that these bonds are abandoned. States 
typically have little information about bonds that are not in their 
possession. In the claims reviewed by Treasury, states could not 
specify the original or current owner of these bonds, their physical 
location, or the evidence that bonds have been abandoned by their 
owner. Instead, states identified these bonds by general description, 
typically the bond series, the date range when the bonds were issued, 
and the state recorded in the registration. The states presumed that 
the bonds were abandoned based on a deadline in state law, a concept 
that is alien to Treasury's savings bond regulations. In contrast, a 
state in possession of a bond may be able to show that the bond is 
abandoned. Often, a state acquires possession of the bond from a bank 
or other entity, which made unsuccessful efforts to return the bond to 
its owner. The fact that a state possesses the bond is itself evidence, 
though not conclusive, that the bond has been abandoned. Such evidence 
is unavailable when a state does not possess the bonds.
    Based on Treasury's review of several claims, a state escheat 
proceeding produces little or no evidence of actual abandonment for 
bonds that are not in the state's possession. At the outset, a state 
will publish a general notice in local newspapers that the state is 
initiating an escheat proceeding for a class of bonds. These notices 
are a mere formality. The notice does not list the bond owners' names. 
Bond owners in possession of their bonds have no reason to search for 
their bonds in a listing of ``unclaimed'' property. Bond owners may not 
reside in the state initiating escheat proceedings or have any 
connection to that state. In these circumstances, few if any bond 
owners are likely to see the notice and come forward in time to contest 
the state's claim to their bonds. When a state court issues an 
uncontested finding that such bonds are ``unclaimed'' or ``abandoned'' 
under such a statute, there is an insufficient basis to conclude that 
owners have actually abandoned their claim to the bonds.
    Some commenters asserted that states should be allowed under 31 CFR 
parts 315, 353, and 360, subpart F, to submit evidence that bonds they 
have escheated have been lost, stolen, or destroyed. Treasury does not 
accept the commenters' unproven assumption that a bond is necessarily 
lost, stolen, or destroyed simply because it has not been redeemed by a 
date specified in a state escheat law. If an unforeseen instance arises 
in which a state escheats a bond that it cannot surrender for payment, 
and the state can show particularized evidence about that bond as 
required in subpart F, Treasury can consider that request under the 
waiver provisions in 31 CFR 315.90, 353.90, or 360.90. The proposed 
rule is consistent with the rights of bond owners safeguarded by 
Treasury's current savings bond regulations. Accordingly, no changes 
have been made to the rule in response to this comment.
    Comment: Several commenters argued that the preamble and proposed 
rule take a position on escheat that is at odds with past statements, 
where Treasury acknowledged that it would recognize state escheat 
claims to the title of savings bonds. The commenters specifically cited 
statements in 1952, 1983, and a brief filed on behalf of the United 
States opposing certiorari in New Jersey v. U.S. Dept. of Treasury, a 
case involving custody escheat claims.
    Response: State escheat claims are not explicitly recognized in the 
savings bond regulations. While the regulations specifically 
acknowledge the rights of beneficiaries, heirs, and others to succeed 
to ownership of savings bonds, the ability of states to claim title by 
escheat is not mentioned. However, Treasury has said that it will 
recognize state claims to title in savings bonds in particular 
contexts.
    Treasury's statement on escheat in 1952, the earliest cited by 
commenters, arose in the context of a state seeking custody of bonds in 
its possession. In that statement, the Secretary of the Treasury 
addressed a request by the Comptroller of New York to redeem four 
United States savings bonds that came into the state's possession after 
the registered owner died as a ward of the state, leaving no heirs. The 
Secretary informed the Comptroller that Treasury would not redeem the 
bonds in the state's possession unless the state obtained title to the 
bonds based on an escheat judgment. The Secretary's 1952 letter did not 
suggest that a state could demand redemption of U.S. savings bonds that 
the state did not possess.
    The commenters also refer to a statement first posted on Treasury's 
Web site in 2000, which discusses Treasury's views on escheat claims 
when a state seeks title to bonds in its possession, and to a 1983 
letter that discusses escheat in the context of a state's claim for 
custody of ``abandoned bonds and notes.'' The 1983 letter may not 
concern savings bonds at all, but rather bonds and notes that Treasury 
has issued under different legal authority. Neither of these statements 
addresses claims by states to the title of savings bonds that are still 
in the registered owner's possession.
    The commenters also cite to a brief filed by the United States in a 
case involving state claims to the custody of savings bonds. This 
brief, opposing certiorari in the Supreme Court, does not advance a new 
position on escheat. Rather, it explains Treasury's longstanding view 
that states cannot escheat savings bonds under custody escheat 
statutes. In a background section, the brief summarizes the views 
expressed in the 1952 bulletin, the 1983 letter, and the notice on 
Treasury's Web site, and notes the general proposition that a state 
cannot receive payment without completing an escheat proceeding that 
satisfies due process and that awards title to the bond to the state. 
The litigation did not concern, and the Solicitor General did not 
address, the full criteria that Treasury would apply under a title 
escheat statute when a state seeks to redeem savings bonds that it does 
not possess.
    The commenters did not mention the letters that Treasury sent to 
states in 2004 and 2006 addressing the states' demand that Treasury pay 
them the proceeds of all matured, unredeemed savings held by residents 
of those states. Three commenters on the proposed rule, North Carolina, 
South Dakota and Kentucky, were recipients of these letters. As noted 
earlier, Treasury's 2004 and 2006 letters rejected the states' claims 
to bonds they did not possess. The letters specifically informed the 
states that they must obtain title to the bonds and then apply to 
Treasury for payment under existing procedures. These procedures 
require claimants to surrender the physical bond or provide

[[Page 80262]]

evidence that the bond has been lost, stolen, or destroyed. The 2004 
letters specifically said that the states must possess the bonds they 
seek to redeem.
    The proposed rule does not conflict with the statements cited by 
commenters or with Treasury's 2004 and 2006 letters. The proposed rule 
permits states to escheat savings bonds in their possession when they 
meet specified criteria. It also permits states to escheat the savings 
bonds of owners who die without successors named in the regulations, 
when the states meet the requirements that apply to all claimants from 
deceased owners, co-owners, and beneficiaries. The proposed rule does 
not permit states to escheat bonds that they do not possess, a position 
that is consistent with letters sent to states in 2004 and 2006, and 
more recent letters sent to Kansas and other states.
    The proposed rule is also consistent with Treasury's longstanding 
view that a bond owner can redeem matured bonds in the owner's 
possession at any time. It does not conflict with the statements cited 
by commenters, because those statements did not specifically address a 
title escheat claim for bonds that are not in a state's possession. To 
the extent the statements cited by commenters require interpretation, 
this preamble and the final rule clarify that Treasury will not 
recognize every state escheat judgment purporting to convey title over 
savings bonds. In keeping with Treasury's longstanding position, 
savings bond owners remain entitled to submit their paper bonds to 
Treasury for payment indefinitely, notwithstanding a state escheat 
judgment that purports to give the state title over bonds that the 
state does possess.
    The statements on escheat cited by commenters also did not excuse 
states from satisfying Treasury's payment requirements. Generally, 
Treasury regulations require a claimant seeking payment to surrender 
the bond. See, e.g., 31 CFR parts 315 and 353, subpart H, and 31 CFR 
316.10. If a claimant cannot surrender the bond, the claimant must 
provide satisfactory evidence of the loss, theft, or destruction of the 
bond, or a satisfactory explanation of the mutilation or defacement, as 
well as sufficient information to identify the bond by serial number. 
See, e.g., 31 CFR parts 315 and 353, subpart F. Treasury will not 
consider any claim for a missing bond that is filed more than six years 
after a bond's final maturity, unless the claimant supplies the serial 
number of the bond. 31 CFR 315.29(c) and 353.29(c). When a state does 
not possess a bond, and does not have specific information about a 
bond's location, history, or serial numbers, the state cannot satisfy 
Treasury's requirements for payment. The proposed rule is consistent 
with the payment requirements in Treasury's existing savings bond 
regulations.
    The commenters seem to prefer that Treasury consider their escheat 
claims under 31 CFR parts 315, 353, or 360 subpart E (depending on the 
bond series), instead of the waiver provisions in sections 315.90, 
353.90, or 360.90. Treasury has considered the commenters' arguments 
carefully. Subpart E provides in part that Treasury ``will recognize a 
claim against an owner of a savings bond and conflicting claims of 
ownership of, or interest in, a bond between coowners or between the 
registered owner and the beneficiary, if established by valid, judicial 
proceedings, but only as specifically provided in this subpart.'' See, 
e.g., 31 CFR 315.20(b). The subpart then describes the types of adverse 
claims covered by this subpart (payment to judgment creditors, divorce, 
and gifts causa mortis), and the type of evidence necessary to 
establish the validity of judicial proceedings. Treasury has the right 
to require other evidence to establish the validity of judicial 
proceedings under sections 315.91(a), 353.91(a), and 360.91.
    As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule and other public 
documents, Treasury interprets subpart E to apply only to the adverse 
proceedings specifically listed there. Escheat proceedings are not 
among the listed proceedings, and because they are in rem proceedings, 
they do not qualify as ``a claim against an owner of a savings bond'' 
in section 315.20(b), 353.20(b), or 360.20(b). State escheat 
proceedings are claims against an intangible asset, which is why state 
courts do not obtain jurisdiction over the bond owner in order to issue 
an escheat judgment. This position is not inconsistent with the 1952 
letter, the 1983 letter, or the 2000 Web site entry that the commenters 
cite, because none of these documents cites to subpart E or any 
specific regulation that allows states to claim title by escheat. 
Treasury's letters to states in 2004 and 2006 regarding escheat also 
did not cite to subpart E as the basis for state escheat claims. To the 
extent there is any ambiguity in Treasury's prior statements on the 
applicability of subpart E to escheat proceedings, the final rule is 
intended to clarify these statements: Subpart E does not apply to 
escheat proceedings.
    But even when subpart E does apply, it only applies to ``valid'' 
judicial proceedings. Treasury has never maintained that it would 
recognize every title escheat judgment, under subpart E or any other 
savings bond regulation. When evaluating the validity of a proceeding 
under subpart E, Treasury expects more than evidence that a state 
judgment was entered. Treasury may require that a claimant submit any 
evidence pertaining to the judgment under 31 CFR 315.23, 315.91, 
353.23, 353.91, 360.23, and 360.91. Treasury may require evidence, for 
example, that the proceeding provided due process and that the judgment 
does not interfere with the rights of bond owners. A state judgment is 
not valid under subpart E, for example, if it ``gives effect to an 
attempted voluntary transfer inter vivos of a bond, or a judicial 
determination that impairs the rights of survivorship conferred by 
these regulations upon a coowner or beneficiary.'' See, e.g., 31 CFR 
315.20(a); see also Free v. Bland, 368 U.S. 663 (1962). A state 
judgment also will not be valid if it purports to convey custody over 
bonds to the state. See New Jersey v. U.S. Dept. of Treasury, 684 F.3d 
382 (3rd Cir. 2012). These examples illustrate that the validity of a 
state judgment for purposes of subpart E depends in part on its 
substantive compliance with law.
    To the extent there is any ambiguity about the scope of ``valid'' 
proceedings under subpart E, the final rule has been amended to make 
clear that Treasury may review judicial proceedings to determine 
whether they provided due process, complied with the savings bond 
regulations, and complied with relevant state law. No other changes 
have been made to the proposed rule in response to this comment.
    Comment: Several commenters describe the proposed rule as a 
``convenient litigating position,'' which they believe should not be 
applied in the litigation with Kansas.
    Response: The regulation addresses escheat claims from all states, 
and reflects Treasury's longstanding positions on the rights of bond 
owners. It also reflects Treasury's consideration of new title escheat 
statutes and new claims for bonds that a state does not possess. No 
changes have been made to the regulation in response to this comment.
    Comment: Several commenters questioned Treasury's authority to 
review state escheat judgments. According to the commenters, only the 
Supreme Court has jurisdiction over appeals from final state court 
judgments, relying on Lance v. Dennis, 546 U.S. 459 (2006), a case 
construing

[[Page 80263]]

the bounds of federal jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. 1257.
    Response: Contrary to the assertions of the commenters, Lance is 
inapposite because Treasury's consideration of the savings bond 
redemption request does not constitute judicial appellate review. To be 
sure, the United States Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction to 
hear appeals from final state court judgments under 28 U.S.C. 1257, but 
that principle only applies when invoked against a losing party in the 
underlying state judicial action. Lance, 546 U.S. at 464. Because 
Treasury is not a party to state escheat proceedings, and is not in a 
position to request Supreme Court review of the state judgment, Lance 
and 28 U.S.C. 1257 do not apply here. No changes have been made to the 
regulation in response to this comment.
    Comment: One commenter viewed the savings bond regulations as an 
unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority.
    Response: Under its constitutional power to borrow money, Congress 
has authorized the Secretary of the Treasury, with approval of the 
President, to issue savings bonds in such form and under such 
conditions as he may prescribe. Free v. Bland, 369 U.S. 663, 666-667 
(1962); 31 U.S.C. 3105. This authority allows Treasury to issue 
regulations prescribing restrictions on transfer and conditions 
governing redemption. 31 U.S.C. 3105(c). The proposed savings bond 
regulations fit within this authority. No changes have been made to the 
regulation in response to this comment.
    Comment: One commenter asserted that the proposed rule is a ``major 
rule'' subject to the Congressional Review Act (CRA), 5 U.S.C. 804. The 
commenter claimed that the rule would substantially decrease the 
likelihood that bond owners will ``recover'' over $16,000,000,000 in 
matured savings bonds, thereby surpassing the Act's $100,000,000 
threshold for economic impact. The commenter also asserted that the 
proposed rule could substantially increase costs for states seeking to 
restore unclaimed property to their citizens.
    Response: The CRA defines a ``major rule'' as any rule that the 
Office of Management and Budget finds has resulted or is likely to 
result in ``(A) an annual effect on the economy of $100,000,000 or 
more; (B) a major increase in costs or prices for consumers, individual 
industries, Federal, State, or local government agencies, or geographic 
regions; or (C) significant adverse effects on competition, employment, 
investment, productivity, innovation, or on the ability of United 
States-based enterprises to compete with foreign-based enterprises in 
domestic and export markets.'' 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The commenter asserted 
that the rule triggers the first two definitions of a major rule.
    The rule does not alter the United States' obligation to redeem 
savings bonds in accordance with the savings bond regulations. Current 
bond owners may continue to surrender their matured, unredeemed bonds 
to Treasury for payment, as many people do every year. Because the rule 
protects the existing rights of bond owners under the savings bond 
contract, its effect on the economy does not meet the threshold test 
for a major rule.
    The commenter did not offer evidence that the proposed rule will 
cause a major increase in costs or prices for state unclaimed property 
programs. When a state seeks to escheat bonds in a state's possession, 
Treasury's rule would require states to show that bonds are actually 
abandoned and that the state escheat proceeding provided due process 
and was consistent with federal and state law. Treasury does not expect 
that this requirement will impose major, new costs on states.
    No changes have been made in the proposed rule in response to this 
comment.

V. Summary of the Final Rule

    The final rule describes when Treasury will recognize an escheat 
judgment vesting title in the state to abandoned savings bonds. For 
bonds in the state's possession, the final rule requires a state to 
demonstrate that it made reasonable efforts to provide actual and 
constructive notice of the state escheat proceeding to all persons 
listed on the face of the bond and all persons who may have an interest 
in the bond. The state must also demonstrate that those persons had an 
opportunity to be heard before the escheat judgment was entered. The 
steps normally required in a state escheat proceeding may be adequate 
to establish abandonment, but Treasury is not bound by these 
proceedings. Because state escheat rules may vary and state escheat 
proceedings are often uncontested, Treasury reserves the right to 
require additional evidence of abandonment. Existing regulations 
already allow Treasury to require a bond of indemnity, with or without 
surety, in any case for the protection of the United States' interests. 
See 31 CFR 315.91, 353.91, and 360.91. These regulations remain in 
effect.
    The final regulation also makes explicit that Treasury will not 
recognize escheat judgments that convey custody, but not title, to a 
state. This principle is well established in Federal case law and has 
been incorporated into the final regulation.
    Treasury's decision to recognize escheat judgments for bonds in a 
state's possession will be a discretionary matter, because the breadth 
of state escheat laws is not within Treasury's control. In exercising 
discretion, Treasury will consider whether a state's escheat claim 
impairs any existing rights under Treasury regulations and will assess 
the risk to Treasury of duplicative payment claims. Requiring states to 
possess the bonds that they seek to redeem protects these interests, 
and enables Treasury to locate records of the bonds for which the state 
seeks payment. Treasury will also assess whether the state has followed 
its own escheat rules, to ensure (for example) that a state judgment 
only covers bonds that were eligible for escheat.
    The final rule on escheat claims to unclaimed property does not 
apply when a state claims title to a definitive savings bond as the 
heir to a deceased owner. Treasury has long recognized circumstances in 
which a state may obtain title to a savings bond by escheat when the 
bond owner has died. These escheat claims will be considered under 
existing savings bond regulations that pertain to the estates of 
deceased owners, co-owners, and beneficiaries. See 31 CFR part 315, 
subpart L; part 353, subpart L; and part 360, subpart K.
    The final rule does reflect one change in the proposed rule. The 
final rule provides additional information about how Treasury will 
assess whether a state proceeding is ``valid'' under 31 CFR 315.20, 
353.20, and 360.20. Under the final rule, Treasury may require any 
evidence to establish the validity of judicial proceedings, such as 
evidence that the proceeding provided due process, complied with this 
Part, and complied with relevant state law.

VI. Procedural Requirements

A. Administrative Procedure Act (APA)

    Because this rule relates to United States securities, which are 
contracts between Treasury and the owner of the security, this 
rulemaking falls within the contract exception to the APA at 5 U.S.C. 
553(a)(2). Treasury, however, voluntarily sought public comment to 
assist the agency in giving full consideration to the matters discussed 
in the proposed rule. Treasury fully considered and responded to those 
comments in the preamble to this final rule.

[[Page 80264]]

B. Congressional Review Act (CRA)

    This rule is not a major rule pursuant to the CRA, 5 U.S.C. 801 et 
seq. It is not expected to lead to any of the results listed in 5 
U.S.C. 804(2). This rule will take effect upon publication in the 
Federal Register.

C. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    We ask for no collections of information in this final rule. 
Therefore, the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. does not apply.

D. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., does not 
apply to this rulemaking because, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(a)(2), it is 
not required to be issued with notice and opportunity for public 
comment. The rule will not have a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities. The rule primarily affects states 
and is not expected to have a direct impact on any small entities.

E. Executive Order 12866

    This rule is not a significant regulatory action pursuant to 
Executive Order 12866.

List of Subjects in 31 CFR Parts 315, 353, and 360

    Government securities, Savings bonds.

    Accordingly, for the reasons set out in the preamble, 31 CFR parts 
315, 353, and 360 are amended to read as follows:

PART 315--REGULATIONS GOVERNING U.S. SAVINGS BONDS, SERIES A, B, C, 
D, E, F, G, H, J, AND K, AND U.S. SAVINGS NOTES

0
1. The authority citation for part 315 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 31 U.S.C. 3105 and 5 U.S.C. 301.


0
2. Amend Sec.  315.20 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:


Sec.  315.20  General.

* * * * *
    (b) The Department of the Treasury will recognize a claim against 
an owner of a savings bond and conflicting claims of ownership of, or 
interest in, a bond between coowners or between the registered owner 
and the beneficiary, if established by valid, judicial proceedings 
specifically listed in this subpart. Escheat proceedings will not be 
recognized under this subpart. Section 315.23 specifies evidence 
required to establish the validity of judicial proceedings. Treasury 
may require any other evidence to establish the validity of judicial 
proceedings, such as evidence that the proceeding provided due process, 
complied with this part, and complied with relevant state law.
* * * * *

0
3. Redesignate subpart O as subpart P.
0
4. Add a new subpart O to read as follows:

Subpart O--Escheat and Unclaimed Property Claims by States


Sec.  315.88  Payment to a State claiming title to abandoned bonds.

    (a) General. The Department of the Treasury may, in its discretion, 
recognize an escheat judgment that purports to vest a State with title 
to a definitive savings bond that has reached the final extended 
maturity date and is in the State's possession, when the State presents 
evidence satisfactory to Treasury that the bond has been abandoned by 
all persons entitled to payment under Treasury regulations. A State 
claiming title to a definitive savings bond as the heir to a deceased 
owner must comply with the requirements of subpart L, and not this 
section. Treasury will not recognize an escheat judgment that purports 
to vest a State with title to a bond that has not reached its final 
extended maturity date. Treasury also will not recognize an escheat 
judgment that purports to vest a State with title to a bond that the 
State does not possess, or a judgment that purports to grant the State 
custody of a bond, but not title.
    (b) Due process. At a minimum, a State requesting payment under 
this section must demonstrate to Treasury's satisfaction that it made 
reasonable efforts to provide actual and constructive notice of the 
escheat proceeding to all persons listed on the face of the bond and 
all persons who may have an interest in the bond, and that those 
persons had an opportunity to be heard before the escheat judgment was 
entered.
    (c) Fulfillment of obligation. Payment to a State claiming title 
under this section fulfills the United States' obligations to the same 
extent as if payment had been made to the registered owner.

PART 353--REGULATIONS GOVERNING DEFINITIVE UNITED STATES SAVINGS 
BONDS, SERIES EE AND HH

0
5. The authority citation for part 353 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 12 U.S.C. 391; 31 U.S.C. 3105, 3125.


0
6. Amend Sec.  353.20 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:


Sec.  353.20  General

* * * * *
    (b) The Department of the Treasury will recognize a claim against 
an owner of a savings bond and conflicting claims of ownership of, or 
interest in, a bond between coowners or between the registered owner 
and the beneficiary, if established by valid, judicial proceedings 
specifically listed in this subpart. Escheat proceedings will not be 
recognized under this subpart. Section 353.23 specifies evidence 
required to establish the validity of judicial proceedings. Treasury 
may require any other evidence to establish the validity of judicial 
proceedings, such as evidence that the proceeding provided due process, 
complied with this part, and complied with relevant state law.
* * * * *

0
7. Redesignate subpart O as subpart P.
0
8. Add a new subpart O to read as follows:

Subpart O--Escheat and Unclaimed Property Claims by States


Sec.  353.88  Payment to a State claiming title to abandoned bonds.

    (a) General. The Department of the Treasury may, in its discretion, 
recognize an escheat judgment that purports to vest a State with title 
to a definitive savings bond that has reached final maturity and is in 
the State's possession, when the State presents evidence satisfactory 
to Treasury that the bond has been abandoned by all persons entitled to 
payment under Treasury regulations. A State claiming title to a 
definitive savings bond as the heir to a deceased owner must comply 
with the requirements of subpart L, and not this section. Treasury will 
not recognize an escheat judgment that purports to vest a State with 
title to a bond that has not reached its final maturity. Treasury also 
will not recognize an escheat judgment that purports to vest a State 
with title to a bond that the State does not possess, or a judgment 
that purports to grant the State custody of a bond, but not title.
    (b) Due process. At a minimum, a State requesting payment under 
this section must demonstrate to Treasury's satisfaction that it made 
reasonable efforts to provide actual and constructive notice of the 
escheat proceeding to all persons listed on the face of the bond and 
all persons who may have an interest in the bond, and that those 
persons had an opportunity to be heard before the escheat judgment was 
entered.
    (c) Fulfillment of obligation. Payment to a State claiming title 
under this section fulfills the United States'

[[Page 80265]]

obligations to the same extent as if payment had been made to the 
registered owner.

PART 360--REGULATIONS GOVERNING DEFINITIVE UNITED STATES SAVINGS 
BONDS, SERIES I

0
9. The authority citation for part 360 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 5 U.S.C. 301; 31 U.S.C. 3105 and 3125.


0
10. Amend Sec.  360.20 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:


Sec.  360.20  General

* * * * *
    (b) The Department of the Treasury will recognize a claim against 
an owner of a savings bond and conflicting claims of ownership of, or 
interest in, a bond between coowners or between the registered owner 
and the beneficiary, if established by valid, judicial proceedings 
specifically listed in this subpart. Escheat proceedings will not be 
recognized under this subpart. Section 360.23 specifies evidence 
required to establish the validity of judicial proceedings. Treasury 
may require any other evidence to establish the validity of judicial 
proceedings, such as evidence that the proceeding provided due process, 
complied with this part, and complied with relevant state law.
* * * * *

0
11. Redesignate subpart M as subpart N.
0
12. Add a new subpart M to read as follows:

Subpart M--Escheat and Unclaimed Property Claims by States


Sec.  360.77  Payment to a State claiming title to abandoned bonds.

    (a) General. The Department of the Treasury may, in its discretion, 
recognize an escheat judgment that purports to vest a State with title 
to a definitive savings bond that has stopped earning interest and is 
in the State's possession, when the State presents evidence 
satisfactory to Treasury that the bond has been abandoned by all 
persons entitled to payment under Treasury regulations. A State 
claiming title to a definitive savings bond as the heir to a deceased 
owner must comply with the requirements of subpart L of this part, and 
not this section. Treasury will not recognize an escheat judgment that 
purports to vest a State with title to a bond that is still earning 
interest. Treasury also will not recognize an escheat judgment that 
purports to vest a State with title to a bond that the State does not 
possess, or a judgment that purports to grant the State custody of a 
bond, but not title.
    (b) Due process. At a minimum, a State requesting payment under 
this section must demonstrate to Treasury's satisfaction that it made 
reasonable efforts to provide actual and constructive notice of the 
escheat proceeding to all persons listed on the face of the bond and 
all persons who may have an interest in the bond, and that those 
persons had an opportunity to be heard before the escheat judgment was 
entered.
    (c) Fulfillment of obligation. Payment to a State claiming title 
under this section fulfills the United States' obligations to the same 
extent as if payment had been made to the registered owner.

    Dated: December 18, 2015.
David A. Lebryk,
Fiscal Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2015-32488 Filed 12-23-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-AS-P