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Public Act 095-0661 |
SB0229 Enrolled |
LRB095 07909 AJO 28071 b |
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AN ACT concerning civil law.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 2. The Illinois Banking Act is amended by changing |
Section 48.1 as follows:
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(205 ILCS 5/48.1) (from Ch. 17, par. 360)
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Sec. 48.1. Customer financial records; confidentiality.
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(a) For the purpose of this Section, the term "financial |
records" means any
original, any copy, or any summary of:
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(1) a document granting signature
authority over a |
deposit or account;
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(2) a statement, ledger card or other
record on any |
deposit or account, which shows each transaction in or with
|
respect to that account;
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(3) a check, draft or money order drawn on a bank
or |
issued and payable by a bank; or
|
(4) any other item containing
information pertaining |
to any relationship established in the ordinary
course of a |
bank's business between a bank and its customer, including
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financial statements or other financial information |
provided by the customer.
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(b) This Section does not prohibit:
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(1) The preparation, examination, handling or |
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maintenance of any
financial records by any officer, |
employee or agent of a bank
having custody of the records, |
or the examination of the records by a
certified public |
accountant engaged by the bank to perform an independent
|
audit.
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(2) The examination of any financial records by, or the |
furnishing of
financial records by a bank to, any officer, |
employee or agent of (i) the
Commissioner of Banks and Real |
Estate, (ii) after May
31, 1997, a state regulatory |
authority authorized to examine a branch of a
State bank |
located in another state, (iii) the Comptroller of the |
Currency,
(iv) the Federal Reserve Board, or (v) the |
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation for use solely in the |
exercise of his duties as an officer,
employee, or agent.
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(3) The publication of data furnished from financial |
records
relating to customers where the data cannot be |
identified to any
particular customer or account.
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(4) The making of reports or returns required under |
Chapter 61 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
|
(5) Furnishing information concerning the dishonor of |
any negotiable
instrument permitted to be disclosed under |
the Uniform Commercial Code.
|
(6) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
(i) credit
information
between a bank and other banks or |
financial institutions or commercial
enterprises, directly |
or through a consumer reporting agency or (ii)
financial |
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records or information derived from financial records |
between a bank
and other banks or financial institutions or |
commercial enterprises for the
purpose of conducting due |
diligence pursuant to a purchase or sale involving
the bank |
or assets or liabilities of the bank.
|
(7) The furnishing of information to the appropriate |
law enforcement
authorities where the bank reasonably |
believes it has been the victim of a
crime.
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(8) The furnishing of information under the Uniform |
Disposition of
Unclaimed Property Act.
|
(9) The furnishing of information under the Illinois |
Income Tax Act and
the Illinois Estate and |
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax Act.
|
(10) The furnishing of information under the federal |
Currency
and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act Title 31, |
United States
Code, Section 1051 et seq.
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(11) The furnishing of information under any other |
statute that
by its terms or by regulations promulgated |
thereunder requires the disclosure
of financial records |
other than by subpoena, summons, warrant, or court order.
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(12) The furnishing of information about the existence |
of an account
of a person to a judgment creditor of that |
person who has made a written
request for that information.
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(13) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
information
between commonly owned banks in connection |
with a transaction authorized
under paragraph (23) of
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Section 5 and conducted at an affiliate facility.
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(14) The furnishing of information in accordance with |
the federal
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity |
Reconciliation Act of 1996.
Any bank governed by this Act |
shall enter into an agreement for data
exchanges with a |
State agency provided the State agency
pays to the bank a |
reasonable fee not to exceed its
actual cost incurred. A |
bank providing
information in accordance with this item |
shall not be liable to any account
holder or other person |
for any disclosure of information to a State agency, for
|
encumbering or surrendering any assets held by the bank in |
response to a lien
or order to withhold and deliver issued |
by a State agency, or for any other
action taken pursuant |
to this item, including individual or mechanical errors,
|
provided the action does not constitute gross negligence or |
willful misconduct.
A bank shall have no obligation to |
hold, encumber, or surrender assets until
it has been |
served with a subpoena, summons, warrant, court or |
administrative
order,
lien, or levy.
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(15) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
information
between
a bank and any commonly owned affiliate |
of the bank, subject to the provisions
of the Financial |
Institutions Insurance Sales Law.
|
(16) The furnishing of information to law enforcement |
authorities, the
Illinois Department on
Aging and its |
regional administrative and provider agencies, the |
|
Department of
Human Services Office
of Inspector General, |
or public guardians: (i) upon subpoena by the investigatory |
entity or the guardian, or (ii) if there is suspicion by |
the bank that a customer
who is an elderly or
disabled |
person has been or may become the victim of financial |
exploitation.
For the purposes of this
item (16), the term: |
(i) "elderly person" means a person who is 60 or more
years |
of age, (ii) "disabled
person" means a person who has or |
reasonably appears to the bank to have a
physical or mental
|
disability that impairs his or her ability to seek or |
obtain protection from or
prevent financial
exploitation, |
and (iii) "financial exploitation" means tortious or |
illegal use
of the assets or resources of
an elderly or |
disabled person, and includes, without limitation,
|
misappropriation of the elderly or
disabled person's |
assets or resources by undue influence, breach of fiduciary
|
relationship, intimidation,
fraud, deception, extortion, |
or the use of assets or resources in any manner
contrary to |
law. A bank or
person furnishing information pursuant to |
this item (16) shall be entitled to
the same rights and
|
protections as a person furnishing information under the |
Elder Abuse and
Neglect Act, the Illinois
Domestic Violence |
Act of 1986, and the Abuse of Adults with Disabilities |
Intervention Act.
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(17) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
effect, administer, or enforce |
|
a transaction requested or authorized by the
customer, or |
in connection with:
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(A) servicing or processing a financial product or |
service requested or
authorized by the customer;
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(B) maintaining or servicing a customer's account |
with the bank; or
|
(C) a proposed or actual securitization or |
secondary market sale
(including sales of servicing |
rights) related to a
transaction of a customer.
|
Nothing in this item (17), however, authorizes the sale |
of the financial
records or information of a customer |
without the consent of the customer.
|
(18) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
protect against actual or |
potential fraud, unauthorized transactions, claims,
or |
other liability.
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(19)(a) The disclosure of financial records or |
information
related to a private label credit program |
between a financial
institution and a private label party |
in connection with that
private label credit program. Such |
information is limited to
outstanding balance, available |
credit, payment and performance
and account history, |
product references, purchase information,
and information
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related to the identity of the customer.
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(b)(l) For purposes of this paragraph (19) of |
subsection
(b) of Section 48.1, a "private label credit |
|
program" means a
credit program involving a financial |
institution and a private label
party that is used by a |
customer of the financial institution and the
private label |
party primarily for payment for goods or services
sold, |
manufactured, or distributed by a private label party.
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(2) For purposes of this paragraph (19) of subsection |
(b)
of Section 48.l, a "private label party" means, with |
respect to a
private label credit program, any of the |
following: a
retailer, a merchant, a manufacturer, a trade |
group,
or any such person's affiliate, subsidiary, member,
|
agent, or service provider.
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(c) Except as otherwise provided by this Act, a bank may |
not disclose to
any person, except to the customer or his
duly |
authorized agent, any financial records or financial |
information
obtained from financial records relating to that |
customer of
that bank unless:
|
(1) the customer has authorized disclosure to the |
person;
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(2) the financial records are disclosed in response to |
a lawful
subpoena, summons, warrant , citation to discover |
assets, or court order which meets the requirements
of |
subsection (d) of this Section; or
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(3) the bank is attempting to collect an obligation |
owed to the bank
and the bank complies with the provisions |
of Section 2I of the Consumer
Fraud and Deceptive Business |
Practices Act.
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(d) A bank shall disclose financial records under paragraph |
(2) of
subsection (c) of this Section under a lawful subpoena, |
summons, warrant, citation to discover assets, or
court order |
only after the bank mails a copy of the subpoena, summons, |
warrant, citation to discover assets,
or court order to the |
person establishing the relationship with the bank, if
living, |
and, otherwise his personal representative, if known, at his |
last known
address by first class mail, postage prepaid, unless |
the bank is specifically
prohibited from notifying the person |
by order of court or by applicable State
or federal law. A bank |
shall not mail a copy of a subpoena to any person
pursuant to |
this subsection if the subpoena was issued by a grand jury |
under
the Statewide Grand Jury Act.
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(e) Any officer or employee of a bank who knowingly and
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willfully furnishes financial records in violation of this |
Section is
guilty of a business offense and, upon conviction, |
shall be fined not
more than $1,000.
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(f) Any person who knowingly and willfully induces or |
attempts to
induce any officer or employee of a bank to |
disclose financial
records in violation of this Section is |
guilty of a business offense
and, upon conviction, shall be |
fined not more than $1,000.
|
(g) A bank shall be reimbursed for costs that are |
reasonably necessary
and that have been directly incurred in |
searching for, reproducing, or
transporting books, papers, |
records, or other data of a customer required or
requested to |
|
be produced pursuant to a lawful subpoena, summons, warrant, |
citation to discover assets, or
court order. The Commissioner |
shall determine the rates and conditions
under which payment |
may be made.
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(Source: P.A. 94-495, eff. 8-8-05; 94-851, eff. 6-13-06.)
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Section 2.5. The Illinois Savings and Loan Act of 1985 is |
amended by changing Section 3-8 as follows:
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(205 ILCS 105/3-8) (from Ch. 17, par. 3303-8)
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Sec. 3-8. Access to books and records; communication with |
members.
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(a) Every member or holder of capital shall have the right |
to inspect
the books and records of the association that |
pertain to his account.
Otherwise, the right of inspection and |
examination of the books and
records shall be limited as |
provided in this Act, and no other person
shall have access to |
the books and records or shall be entitled to a
list of the |
members.
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(b) For the purpose of this Section, the term "financial |
records"
means any original, any copy, or any summary of (i) a |
document granting
signature authority over a deposit or |
account; (ii) a statement, ledger
card, or other record on any |
deposit or account that
shows each transaction in or with |
respect to that account; (iii) a check,
draft, or money order |
drawn on an association or issued and payable by
an |
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association; or (iv) any other item containing information |
pertaining to
any relationship established in the ordinary |
course of an association's
business between an association and |
its customer, including financial
statements or other |
financial information provided by the member or holder of
|
capital.
|
(c) This Section does not prohibit:
|
(1) The preparation, examination, handling, or |
maintenance of any
financial records by any officer, |
employee, or agent of an association having
custody of |
those records or the examination of those records by a |
certified
public accountant engaged by the association to |
perform an independent
audit.
|
(2) The examination of any financial records by, or the |
furnishing of
financial records by an association to, any |
officer, employee, or agent of the
Commissioner of Banks |
and Real Estate or federal depository institution
|
regulator for use solely in the exercise
of
his duties as |
an officer, employee, or agent.
|
(3) The publication of data furnished from financial |
records
relating to members or holders of capital where the |
data cannot be
identified to any particular member, holder |
of capital, or account.
|
(4) The making of reports or returns required under |
Chapter 61 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
|
(5) Furnishing information concerning the dishonor of |
|
any negotiable
instrument permitted to be disclosed under |
the Uniform Commercial
Code.
|
(6) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
(i) credit
information between an association and other |
associations or financial
institutions or commercial |
enterprises, directly or through a consumer
reporting |
agency
or (ii) financial records or information derived |
from financial records
between an association and other |
associations or financial institutions or
commercial |
enterprises for the purpose of conducting due diligence |
pursuant to
a purchase or sale involving the association or |
assets or liabilities of the
association.
|
(7) The furnishing of information to the appropriate |
law enforcement
authorities where the association |
reasonably believes it has been the
victim of a crime.
|
(8) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Uniform Disposition
of Unclaimed Property Act.
|
(9) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Illinois Income Tax
Act and the Illinois Estate and |
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax Act.
|
(10) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
federal "Currency
and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act", |
(Title 31, United States
Code, Section 1051 et seq.).
|
(11) The furnishing of information pursuant to any |
other statute that
by its terms or by regulations |
promulgated thereunder requires the disclosure
of |
|
financial records other than by subpoena, summons, |
warrant, or court
order.
|
(12) The exchange of information between an |
association and an affiliate
of the association; as used in |
this item, "affiliate" includes any
company, partnership, |
or organization that controls, is controlled by, or is
|
under common control with an association.
|
(13) The furnishing of information
in accordance with |
the federal Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
|
Reconciliation Act of 1996. Any association governed by |
this Act shall enter
into an agreement for data
exchanges |
with a State agency provided the State agency
pays to the |
association a reasonable fee not to exceed its
actual cost |
incurred. An association
providing
information in |
accordance with this item shall not be liable to any |
account
holder or other person for any disclosure of |
information to a State agency, for
encumbering or |
surrendering any assets held by the association in response |
to a
lien
or order to withhold and deliver issued by a |
State agency, or for any other
action taken pursuant to |
this item, including individual or mechanical errors,
|
provided the action does not constitute gross negligence or |
willful misconduct.
An association shall have no |
obligation to hold, encumber, or surrender assets
until it |
has been served with a subpoena, summons, warrant, court or
|
administrative order, lien, or levy.
|
|
(14) The furnishing of information to law enforcement |
authorities, the
Illinois Department on
Aging and its |
regional administrative and provider agencies, the |
Department of
Human Services Office
of Inspector General, |
or public guardians: (i) upon subpoena by the investigatory |
entity or the guardian, or (ii) if there is suspicion by |
the association that a
customer who is an elderly or
|
disabled person has been or may become the victim of |
financial exploitation.
For the purposes of this
item (14), |
the term: (i) "elderly person" means a person who is 60 or |
more
years of age, (ii) "disabled
person" means a person |
who has or reasonably appears to the association to have
a |
physical or mental
disability that impairs his or her |
ability to seek or obtain protection from or
prevent |
financial
exploitation, and (iii) "financial exploitation" |
means tortious or illegal use
of the assets or resources of
|
an elderly or disabled person, and includes, without |
limitation,
misappropriation of the elderly or
disabled |
person's assets or resources by undue influence, breach of |
fiduciary
relationship, intimidation,
fraud, deception, |
extortion, or the use of assets or resources in any manner
|
contrary to law. An
association or person furnishing |
information pursuant to this item (14) shall
be entitled to |
the same
rights and protections as a person furnishing |
information under the Elder Abuse
and Neglect Act, the
|
Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986, and the Abuse of |
|
Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act.
|
(15) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
effect, administer, or enforce |
a transaction requested or authorized by the
member or |
holder of capital, or in connection with:
|
(A) servicing or processing a financial product or |
service requested or
authorized by the member or holder |
of capital;
|
(B) maintaining or servicing an account of a member |
or holder of capital
with the association; or
|
(C) a proposed or actual securitization or |
secondary market sale
(including
sales of servicing |
rights) related to a transaction of
a member or holder |
of capital.
|
Nothing in this item (15), however, authorizes the sale |
of the financial
records or information of a member or |
holder of capital without the consent of
the member or |
holder of capital.
|
(16) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
protect against or prevent |
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, |
claims, or other liability.
|
(17)(a) The disclosure of financial records or |
information
related to a private label credit program |
between a financial
institution and a private label party |
in connection
with that private label credit program. Such |
|
information
is limited to outstanding balance, available |
credit, payment and
performance and account history, |
product references, purchase
information,
and information |
related to the identity of the
customer.
|
(b)(l) For purposes of this paragraph (17) of |
subsection
(c) of Section 3-8, a "private label credit |
program" means a
credit program involving a financial |
institution and a private label
party that is used by a |
customer of the financial institution and the
private label |
party primarily for payment for goods or services
sold, |
manufactured, or distributed by a private label party.
|
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (17) of subsection |
(c)
of Section 3-8, a "private label party" means, with |
respect to a
private label credit program, any of the |
following: a
retailer, a merchant, a manufacturer, a trade |
group,
or any such person's affiliate, subsidiary, member,
|
agent, or service provider.
|
(d) An association may not disclose to any person, except |
to the
member or holder of capital or his duly authorized |
agent, any financial
records relating to that member or holder |
of capital of that association
unless:
|
(1) The member or holder of capital has authorized |
disclosure to the
person; or
|
(2) The financial records are disclosed in response to |
a lawful
subpoena, summons, warrant, citation to discover |
assets, or court order that meets the
requirements of |
|
subsection (e) of this Section.
|
(e) An association shall disclose financial records under |
subsection
(d) of this Section pursuant to a lawful subpoena, |
summons,
warrant, citation to discover assets, or court order |
only after the association mails a copy of the
subpoena, |
summons, warrant, citation to discover assets, or court order |
to the person establishing
the relationship with the |
association, if living, and, otherwise, his
personal |
representative, if known, at his last known address by first |
class
mail, postage prepaid, unless the association is |
specifically prohibited
from notifying that person by order of |
court.
|
(f)(1) Any officer or employee of an association who |
knowingly and
willfully furnishes financial records in |
violation of this Section is
guilty of a business offense and, |
upon conviction, shall be fined not
more than $1,000.
|
(2) Any person who knowingly and willfully induces or |
attempts to
induce any officer or employee of an association to |
disclose financial
records in violation of this Section is |
guilty of a business offense
and, upon conviction, shall be |
fined not more than $1,000.
|
(g) However, if any member desires to communicate with the |
other
members of the association with reference to any question |
pending or to
be presented at a meeting of the members, the |
association shall give him
upon request a statement of the |
approximate number of members entitled
to vote at the meeting |
|
and an estimate of the cost of
preparing and mailing the |
communication. The requesting
member then shall submit the |
communication to the Commissioner who, if he
finds it to be |
appropriate and truthful, shall direct that it be prepared
and |
mailed to the members upon the requesting member's payment or
|
adequate provision for payment of the expenses of preparation |
and mailing.
|
(h) An association shall be reimbursed for costs that are |
necessary and
that have been directly incurred in searching |
for, reproducing, or
transporting books, papers, records, or |
other data of a customer required
to be reproduced pursuant to |
a lawful subpoena, warrant, citation to discover assets, or |
court order.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-271, eff. 7-22-03; 94-495, eff. 8-8-05; |
94-851, eff. 6-13-06.)
|
Section 3. The Savings Bank Act is amended by changing |
Section 4013 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 205/4013) (from Ch. 17, par. 7304-13)
|
Sec. 4013. Access to books and records; communication with |
members
and shareholders. |
(a) Every member or shareholder shall have the right to |
inspect books
and records of the savings bank that pertain to |
his accounts. Otherwise,
the right of inspection and |
examination of the books and records shall be
limited as |
|
provided in this Act, and no other person shall have access to
|
the books and records nor shall be entitled to a list of the |
members or
shareholders.
|
(b) For the purpose of this Section, the term "financial |
records" means
any original, any copy, or any summary of (1) a |
document granting signature
authority over a deposit or |
account; (2) a statement, ledger card, or other
record on any |
deposit or account that shows each transaction in or with
|
respect to that account; (3) a check, draft, or money order |
drawn on a
savings bank or issued and payable by a savings |
bank; or (4) any other item
containing information pertaining |
to any relationship established in the
ordinary course of a |
savings bank's business between a savings bank and
its |
customer, including financial statements or other financial |
information
provided by the member or shareholder.
|
(c) This Section does not prohibit:
|
(1) The preparation examination, handling, or |
maintenance of any
financial records by any officer, |
employee, or agent of a savings bank
having custody of |
records or examination of records by a certified public
|
accountant engaged by the savings bank to perform an |
independent audit.
|
(2) The examination of any financial records by, or the |
furnishing of
financial records by a savings bank to, any |
officer, employee, or agent of
the Commissioner of Banks |
and Real Estate or the federal depository
institution |
|
regulator for use
solely in
the exercise of his duties as |
an officer, employee, or agent.
|
(3) The publication of data furnished from financial |
records relating
to members or holders of capital where the |
data cannot be identified to any
particular member, |
shareholder, or account.
|
(4) The making of reports or returns required under |
Chapter 61 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
|
(5) Furnishing information concerning the dishonor of |
any negotiable
instrument permitted to be disclosed under |
the Uniform Commercial Code.
|
(6) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
(i) credit
information between a savings bank and other |
savings banks or financial
institutions or commercial |
enterprises, directly or through a consumer
reporting |
agency
or (ii) financial records or information derived |
from financial records
between a savings bank and other |
savings banks or financial institutions or
commercial |
enterprises for the purpose of conducting due diligence |
pursuant to
a purchase or sale involving the savings bank |
or assets or liabilities of the
savings bank.
|
(7) The furnishing of information to the appropriate |
law enforcement
authorities where the savings bank |
reasonably believes it has been the
victim of a crime.
|
(8) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Uniform Disposition
of Unclaimed Property Act.
|
|
(9) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Illinois Income Tax
Act
and the Illinois Estate and |
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax Act.
|
(10) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
federal "Currency
and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act", |
(Title 31, United States Code,
Section 1051 et seq.).
|
(11) The furnishing of information pursuant to any |
other statute which
by its terms or by regulations |
promulgated thereunder requires the
disclosure of |
financial records other than by subpoena, summons, |
warrant, or
court order.
|
(12) The furnishing of information in accordance with |
the federal
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity |
Reconciliation Act of 1996.
Any savings bank governed by |
this Act shall enter into an agreement for data
exchanges |
with a State agency provided the State agency
pays to the |
savings bank a reasonable fee not to exceed its
actual cost |
incurred. A savings bank
providing
information in |
accordance with this item shall not be liable to any |
account
holder or other person for any disclosure of |
information to a State agency, for
encumbering or |
surrendering any assets held by the savings bank in |
response to
a lien
or order to withhold and deliver issued |
by a State agency, or for any other
action taken pursuant |
to this item, including individual or mechanical errors,
|
provided the action does not constitute gross negligence or |
|
willful misconduct.
A savings bank shall have no obligation |
to hold, encumber, or surrender
assets until
it has been |
served with a subpoena, summons, warrant, court or |
administrative
order,
lien, or levy.
|
(13) The furnishing of information to law enforcement |
authorities, the
Illinois Department on
Aging and its |
regional administrative and provider agencies, the |
Department of
Human Services Office
of Inspector General, |
or public guardians: (i) upon subpoena by the investigatory |
entity or the guardian, or (ii) if there is suspicion by |
the savings bank that a
customer who is an elderly
or |
disabled person has been or may become the victim of |
financial exploitation.
For the purposes of this
item (13), |
the term: (i) "elderly person" means a person who is 60 or |
more
years of age, (ii) "disabled
person" means a person |
who has or reasonably appears to the savings bank to
have a |
physical or mental
disability that impairs his or her |
ability to seek or obtain protection from or
prevent |
financial
exploitation, and (iii) "financial exploitation" |
means tortious or illegal use
of the assets or resources of
|
an elderly or disabled person, and includes, without |
limitation,
misappropriation of the elderly or
disabled |
person's assets or resources by undue influence, breach of |
fiduciary
relationship, intimidation,
fraud, deception, |
extortion, or the use of assets or resources in any manner
|
contrary to law. A savings
bank or person furnishing |
|
information pursuant to this item (13) shall be
entitled to |
the same rights and
protections as a person furnishing |
information under the Elder Abuse and
Neglect Act, the |
Illinois
Domestic Violence Act of 1986, and the Abuse of |
Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act.
|
(14) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
effect, administer, or enforce |
a transaction requested or authorized by the
member or |
holder of capital, or in connection with:
|
(A) servicing or processing a financial product or |
service requested or
authorized by the member or holder |
of capital;
|
(B) maintaining or servicing an account of a member |
or holder of capital
with the savings bank; or
|
(C) a proposed or actual securitization or |
secondary market sale
(including sales of servicing |
rights) related to a
transaction of a member or holder |
of capital.
|
Nothing in this item (14), however, authorizes the sale |
of the financial
records or information of a member or |
holder of capital without the consent of
the member or |
holder of capital.
|
(15) The exchange in the regular course of business of |
information between
a
savings bank and any commonly owned |
affiliate of the savings bank, subject to
the provisions of |
the Financial Institutions Insurance Sales Law.
|
|
(16) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
protect against or prevent |
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, |
claims, or other liability.
|
(17)(a) The disclosure of financial records or |
information
related to a private label credit program |
between a financial
institution and a private label party |
in connection
with that private label credit program. Such |
information
is limited to outstanding balance, available |
credit, payment and
performance and account history, |
product references, purchase
information,
and information |
related to the identity of the
customer.
|
(b)(l) For purposes of this paragraph (17) of |
subsection
(c) of Section 4013, a "private label credit |
program" means a
credit program involving a financial |
institution and a private label
party that is used by a |
customer of the financial institution and the
private label |
party primarily for payment for goods or services
sold, |
manufactured, or distributed by a private label party.
|
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (17) of subsection |
(c)
of Section 4013, a "private label party" means, with |
respect to a
private label credit program, any of the |
following: a
retailer, a merchant, a manufacturer, a trade |
group,
or any such person's affiliate, subsidiary, member,
|
agent, or service provider.
|
(d) A savings bank may not disclose to any person, except |
|
to the member
or holder of capital or his duly authorized |
agent, any financial records
relating to that member or |
shareholder of the savings bank unless:
|
(1) the member or shareholder has authorized |
disclosure to the person; or
|
(2) the financial records are disclosed in response to |
a lawful
subpoena, summons, warrant, citation to discover |
assets, or court order that meets the requirements of
|
subsection (e) of this Section.
|
(e) A savings bank shall disclose financial records under |
subsection (d)
of this Section pursuant to a lawful subpoena, |
summons, warrant, citation to discover assets, or court
order |
only after the savings bank mails a copy of the subpoena, |
summons,
warrant, citation to discover assets, or court order |
to the person establishing the relationship with
the savings |
bank, if living, and otherwise, his personal representative, if
|
known, at his last known address by first class mail, postage |
prepaid,
unless the savings bank is specifically prohibited |
from notifying the
person by order of court.
|
(f) Any officer or employee of a savings bank who knowingly |
and
willfully furnishes financial records in violation of this |
Section is
guilty of a business offense and, upon conviction, |
shall be fined not
more than $1,000.
|
(g) Any person who knowingly and willfully induces or |
attempts to
induce any officer or employee of a savings bank to |
disclose financial
records in violation of this Section is |
|
guilty of a business offense and,
upon conviction, shall be |
fined not more than $1,000.
|
(h) If any member or shareholder desires to communicate |
with the other
members or shareholders of the savings bank with |
reference to any question
pending or to be presented at an |
annual or special meeting, the savings
bank shall give that |
person, upon request, a statement of the approximate
number of |
members or shareholders entitled to vote at the meeting and an
|
estimate of the cost of preparing and mailing the |
communication. The
requesting member shall submit the |
communication to the Commissioner
who, upon finding it to be |
appropriate and truthful, shall direct that it
be prepared and |
mailed to the members upon the requesting member's or
|
shareholder's payment or adequate provision for payment of the |
expenses of
preparation and mailing.
|
(i) A savings bank shall be reimbursed for costs that are |
necessary and
that have been directly incurred in searching |
for, reproducing, or
transporting books, papers, records, or |
other data of a customer required
to be reproduced pursuant to |
a lawful subpoena, warrant, citation to discover assets, or |
court order.
|
(j) Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, a |
savings bank may
sell or otherwise make use of lists of |
customers' names and addresses. All
other information |
regarding a customer's account are subject to the
disclosure |
provisions of this Section. At the request of any customer,
|
|
that customer's name and address shall be deleted from any list |
that is to
be sold or used in any other manner beyond |
identification of the customer's
accounts.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-271, eff. 7-22-03; 94-495, eff. 8-8-05; |
94-851, eff. 6-13-06.)
|
Section 3.5. The Illinois Credit Union Act is amended by |
changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(205 ILCS 305/10) (from Ch. 17, par. 4411)
|
Sec. 10. Credit union records; member financial records.
|
(1) A credit union shall establish and maintain books, |
records, accounting
systems and procedures which accurately |
reflect its operations and which
enable the Department to |
readily ascertain the true financial condition
of the credit |
union and whether it is complying with this Act.
|
(2) A photostatic or photographic reproduction of any |
credit union records
shall be admissible as evidence of |
transactions with the credit union.
|
(3)(a) For the purpose of this Section, the term "financial |
records"
means any original, any copy, or any summary of (1) a |
document granting
signature authority over an account, (2) a |
statement, ledger card or other
record on any account which |
shows each transaction in or with respect to
that account, (3) |
a check, draft or money order drawn on a financial
institution |
or other entity or issued and payable by or through a financial
|
|
institution or other entity, or (4) any other item containing |
information
pertaining to any relationship established in the |
ordinary course of
business between a credit union and its |
member, including financial
statements or other financial |
information provided by the member.
|
(b) This Section does not prohibit:
|
(1) The preparation, examination, handling or |
maintenance of any
financial records by any officer, |
employee or agent of a credit union
having custody of such |
records, or the examination of such records by a
certified |
public accountant engaged by the credit union to perform an
|
independent audit.
|
(2) The examination of any financial records by or the |
furnishing of
financial records by a credit union to any |
officer, employee or agent of
the Department, the National |
Credit Union Administration, Federal Reserve
board or any |
insurer of share accounts for use solely in the exercise of
|
his duties as an officer, employee or agent.
|
(3) The publication of data furnished from financial |
records relating
to members where the data cannot be |
identified to any particular customer
of account.
|
(4) The making of reports or returns required under |
Chapter 61 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954.
|
(5) Furnishing information concerning the dishonor of |
any negotiable
instrument permitted to be disclosed under |
the Uniform Commercial
Code.
|
|
(6) The exchange in the regular course of business
of |
(i) credit information
between a credit union and other |
credit unions or financial institutions
or commercial |
enterprises, directly or through a consumer reporting |
agency
or (ii) financial records or information derived |
from financial records
between a credit union and other |
credit unions or financial institutions or
commercial |
enterprises for
the purpose of conducting due diligence |
pursuant to a merger or a purchase or
sale of assets or |
liabilities of the credit union.
|
(7) The furnishing of information to the appropriate |
law enforcement
authorities where the credit union |
reasonably believes it has been the victim
of a crime.
|
(8) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Uniform Disposition
of Unclaimed Property Act.
|
(9) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
Illinois Income Tax
Act and the Illinois Estate and |
Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax Act.
|
(10) The furnishing of information pursuant to the |
federal "Currency
and Foreign Transactions Reporting Act", |
Title 31, United States Code,
Section 1051 et sequentia.
|
(11) The furnishing of information pursuant to any |
other statute which
by its terms or by regulations |
promulgated thereunder requires the disclosure
of |
financial records other than by subpoena, summons, warrant |
or court order.
|
|
(12) The furnishing of information in accordance with |
the federal
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity |
Reconciliation Act of 1996.
Any credit union governed by |
this Act shall enter into an agreement for data
exchanges |
with a State agency provided the State agency
pays to the |
credit union a reasonable fee not to exceed its
actual cost |
incurred. A credit union
providing
information in |
accordance with this item shall not be liable to any |
account
holder or other person for any disclosure of |
information to a State agency, for
encumbering or |
surrendering any assets held by the credit union in |
response to
a lien
or order to withhold and deliver issued |
by a State agency, or for any other
action taken pursuant |
to this item, including individual or mechanical errors,
|
provided the action does not constitute gross negligence or |
willful misconduct.
A credit union shall have no obligation |
to hold, encumber, or surrender
assets until
it has been |
served with a subpoena, summons, warrant, court or |
administrative
order, lien, or levy.
|
(13) The furnishing of information to law enforcement |
authorities, the
Illinois Department on
Aging and its |
regional administrative and provider agencies, the |
Department of
Human Services Office
of Inspector General, |
or public guardians: (i) upon subpoena by the investigatory |
entity or the guardian, or (ii) if there is suspicion by |
the credit union that a
member who is an elderly or
|
|
disabled person has been or may become the victim of |
financial exploitation.
For the purposes of this
item (13), |
the term: (i) "elderly person" means a person who is 60 or |
more
years of age, (ii) "disabled
person" means a person |
who has or reasonably appears to the credit union to
have a |
physical or mental
disability that impairs his or her |
ability to seek or obtain protection from or
prevent |
financial
exploitation, and (iii) "financial exploitation" |
means tortious or illegal use
of the assets or resources of
|
an elderly or disabled person, and includes, without |
limitation,
misappropriation of the elderly or
disabled |
person's assets or resources by undue influence, breach of |
fiduciary
relationship, intimidation,
fraud, deception, |
extortion, or the use of assets or resources in any manner
|
contrary to law. A credit
union or person furnishing |
information pursuant to this item (13) shall be
entitled to |
the same rights and
protections as a person furnishing |
information under the Elder Abuse and
Neglect Act, the |
Illinois
Domestic Violence Act of 1986, and the Abuse of |
Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act.
|
(14) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary
to
effect, administer, or enforce |
a transaction requested or authorized by the
member, or in |
connection with:
|
(A) servicing or processing a financial product or |
service requested
or
authorized by the member;
|
|
(B) maintaining or servicing a member's account |
with the credit union;
or
|
(C) a proposed or actual securitization or |
secondary market sale
(including sales of servicing |
rights) related to a
transaction of a member.
|
Nothing in this item (14), however, authorizes the sale |
of the financial
records or information of a member without |
the consent of the member.
|
(15) The disclosure of financial records or |
information as necessary to
protect against or prevent |
actual or potential fraud, unauthorized
transactions, |
claims, or other liability.
|
(16)(a) The disclosure of financial records or |
information
related to a private label credit program |
between a financial
institution and a private label party |
in connection
with that private label credit program. Such |
information
is limited to outstanding balance, available |
credit, payment and
performance and account history, |
product references, purchase
information,
and information |
related to the identity of the
customer.
|
(b)(l) For purposes of this paragraph (16) of |
subsection
(b) of Section 10, a "private label credit |
program" means a credit
program involving a financial |
institution and a private label party
that is used by a |
customer of the financial institution and the
private label |
party primarily for payment for goods or services
sold, |
|
manufactured, or distributed by a private label party.
|
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (16) of subsection |
(b)
of Section 10, a "private label party" means, with |
respect to a
private label credit program, any of the |
following: a
retailer, a merchant, a manufacturer, a trade |
group,
or any such person's affiliate, subsidiary, member,
|
agent, or service provider.
|
(c) Except as otherwise provided by this Act, a credit |
union may not
disclose to any person, except to the member
or |
his duly authorized agent, any financial records relating to |
that member
of the credit union unless:
|
(1) the member has authorized disclosure to the person;
|
(2) the financial records are disclosed in response to |
a lawful
subpoena,
summons, warrant , citation to discover |
assets, or court order that meets the requirements of |
subparagraph
(d) of this Section; or
|
(3) the credit union is attempting to collect an |
obligation owed to
the credit union and the credit union |
complies with the provisions of
Section 2I of the Consumer |
Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act.
|
(d) A credit union shall disclose financial records under |
subparagraph
(c)(2) of this Section pursuant to a lawful |
subpoena, summons, warrant , citation to discover assets, or
|
court order only after the credit union mails a copy of the |
subpoena, summons,
warrant , citation to discover assets, or |
court order to the person establishing the relationship with
|
|
the credit union, if living, and otherwise his personal |
representative,
if known, at his last known address by first |
class mail, postage prepaid
unless the credit union is |
specifically prohibited from notifying the person
by order of |
court or by applicable State or federal law. In the case
of a |
grand jury subpoena, a credit union shall not mail a copy of a |
subpoena
to any person pursuant to this subsection if the |
subpoena was issued by a grand
jury under the Statewide Grand |
Jury Act or notifying the
person would constitute a violation |
of the federal Right to Financial
Privacy Act of 1978.
|
(e)(1) Any officer or employee of a credit union who |
knowingly and
wilfully furnishes financial records in |
violation of this Section is guilty of
a business offense and |
upon conviction thereof shall be fined not more than
$1,000.
|
(2) Any person who knowingly and wilfully induces or |
attempts to induce
any officer or employee of a credit union to |
disclose financial records
in violation of this Section is |
guilty of a business offense and upon
conviction thereof shall |
be fined not more than $1,000.
|
(f) A credit union shall be reimbursed for costs which are |
reasonably
necessary and which have been directly incurred in |
searching for,
reproducing or transporting books, papers, |
records or other data of a
member required or requested to be |
produced pursuant to a lawful subpoena,
summons, warrant , |
citation to discover assets, or court order. The Director may |
determine, by rule, the
rates and
conditions under which |
|
payment shall be made. Delivery of requested documents
may be |
delayed until final reimbursement of all costs is received.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-495, eff. 8-8-05; 94-851, eff. 6-13-06.)
|
Section 5. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by |
changing Sections 2-1402, 12-501, 12-803, 12-808, 12-808.5, |
12-814, 19-117, and 19-123 and by adding Sections 5-126.5 and |
19-129 as follows:
|
(735 ILCS 5/2-1402) (from Ch. 110, par. 2-1402)
|
Sec. 2-1402. Supplementary proceedings.
|
(a) A judgment creditor, or his or her successor in |
interest when that
interest is made to appear of record, is |
entitled to prosecute supplementary
proceedings for the |
purposes of examining the judgment debtor or any other
person |
to discover assets or income of the debtor not exempt from the
|
enforcement of the judgment, a deduction order or garnishment, |
and of
compelling the application of non-exempt assets or |
income discovered toward the
payment of the amount due under |
the judgment. A supplementary proceeding shall
be commenced by |
the service of a citation issued by the clerk. The procedure
|
for conducting supplementary proceedings shall be prescribed |
by rules. It is
not a prerequisite to the commencement of a |
supplementary proceeding that a
certified copy of the judgment |
has been returned wholly or partly unsatisfied.
All citations |
issued by the clerk shall have the following language, or
|
|
language substantially similar thereto, stated prominently on |
the front, in
capital letters: "YOUR FAILURE TO APPEAR IN COURT |
AS HEREIN DIRECTED MAY CAUSE
YOU TO BE ARRESTED AND BROUGHT |
BEFORE THE COURT TO ANSWER TO A CHARGE OF
CONTEMPT OF COURT, |
WHICH MAY BE PUNISHABLE BY IMPRISONMENT IN THE COUNTY JAIL."
|
The court shall not grant a continuance of the supplementary |
proceeding except
upon good cause shown.
|
(b) Any citation served upon a judgment debtor or any other |
person shall
include a certification by the attorney for the |
judgment creditor or the
judgment creditor setting forth the |
amount of the judgment, the date of the
judgment, or its |
revival date, the balance due thereon, the name of the court,
|
and the number of the case, and a copy of the citation notice |
required by this
subsection. Whenever a citation is served upon |
a person or party other than
the judgment debtor, the officer |
or person serving the citation shall send to
the judgment |
debtor, within three business days of the service upon the |
cited
party, a copy of the citation and the citation notice, |
which may be sent
by regular first-class mail to the judgment |
debtor's last known address. In no
event shall a citation |
hearing be held sooner than five business days after the
|
mailing of the citation and citation notice to the judgment |
debtor, except by
agreement of the parties. The citation notice |
need not be mailed to a
corporation, partnership, or |
association. The citation notice shall be in
substantially the |
following form:
|
|
"CITATION NOTICE
|
(Name and address of Court)
|
Name of Case: (Name of Judgment Creditor),
|
Judgment Creditor v.
|
(Name of Judgment Debtor),
|
Judgment Debtor.
|
Address of Judgment Debtor: (Insert last known
|
address)
|
Name and address of Attorney for Judgment
|
Creditor or of Judgment Creditor (If no
|
attorney is listed): (Insert name and address)
|
Amount of Judgment: $ (Insert amount)
|
Name of Person Receiving Citation: (Insert name)
|
Court Date and Time: (Insert return date and time
|
specified in citation)
|
NOTICE: The court has issued a citation against the person |
named above. The
citation directs that person to appear in |
court to be examined for the purpose
of allowing the judgment |
creditor to discover income and assets belonging to
the |
judgment debtor or in which the judgment debtor has an |
interest. The
citation was issued on the basis of a judgment |
against the judgment debtor in
favor of the judgment creditor |
in the amount stated above. On or after the
court date stated |
above, the court may compel the application of any
discovered |
income or assets toward payment on the judgment.
|
The amount of income or assets that may be applied toward |
|
the judgment is
limited by federal and Illinois law. The |
JUDGMENT DEBTOR HAS THE RIGHT TO
ASSERT STATUTORY EXEMPTIONS |
AGAINST CERTAIN INCOME OR ASSETS OF THE JUDGMENT
DEBTOR WHICH |
MAY NOT BE USED TO SATISFY THE JUDGMENT IN THE AMOUNT STATED
|
ABOVE:
|
(1) Under Illinois or federal law, the exemptions of |
personal property
owned by the debtor include the debtor's |
equity interest, not to exceed $4,000
in value, in any |
personal property as chosen by the debtor; Social Security |
and
SSI benefits; public assistance benefits; unemployment |
compensation benefits;
worker's compensation benefits; |
veteran's benefits; circuit breaker property
tax relief |
benefits; the debtor's equity interest, not to exceed |
$2,400 in
value, in any one motor vehicle, and the debtor's |
equity interest, not to
exceed $1,500 in value, in any |
implements, professional books, or tools of the
trade of |
the debtor.
|
(2) Under Illinois law, every person is entitled to an |
estate in
homestead, when it is owned and occupied as a |
residence, to the extent in value
of $15,000, which |
homestead is exempt from judgment.
|
(3) Under Illinois law, the amount of wages that may be |
applied toward a
judgment is limited to the lesser of (i) |
15% of gross weekly wages or (ii) the
amount by which |
disposable earnings for a week exceed the total of 45 times |
the
federal minimum hourly wage or, under a wage deduction |
|
summons served on or after January 1, 2006, the Illinois |
minimum hourly wage, whichever is greater.
|
(4) Under federal law, the amount of wages that may be |
applied toward a
judgment is limited to the lesser of (i) |
25% of disposable earnings for a week
or (ii) the amount by |
which disposable earnings for a week exceed 30 times the
|
federal minimum hourly wage.
|
(5) Pension and retirement benefits and refunds may be |
claimed as exempt
under Illinois law.
|
The judgment debtor may have other possible exemptions |
under the law.
|
THE JUDGMENT DEBTOR HAS THE RIGHT AT THE CITATION HEARING |
TO DECLARE EXEMPT
CERTAIN INCOME OR ASSETS OR BOTH. The |
judgment debtor also has the right to
seek a declaration at an |
earlier date, by notifying the clerk in writing at
(insert |
address of clerk). When so notified, the Clerk of the Court |
will
obtain a prompt hearing date from the court and will
|
provide the necessary forms that must be prepared by the |
judgment debtor or the
attorney for the judgment debtor and |
sent to the judgment creditor and the
judgment creditor's |
attorney regarding the time and location of the hearing.
This |
notice may be sent by regular first class mail."
|
(c) When assets or income of the judgment debtor not exempt |
from
the satisfaction of a judgment, a deduction order or |
garnishment are
discovered, the court may, by appropriate order |
or judgment:
|
|
(1) Compel the judgment debtor to deliver up, to be |
applied in
satisfaction of the judgment, in whole or in |
part, money, choses in
action, property or effects in his |
or her possession or control, so discovered,
capable of |
delivery and to which his or her title or right of |
possession is not
substantially disputed.
|
(2) Compel the judgment debtor to pay to the judgment |
creditor or
apply on the judgment, in installments, a |
portion of his or her income, however
or whenever earned or |
acquired, as the court may deem proper, having due
regard |
for the reasonable requirements of the judgment debtor and |
his or her
family, if dependent upon him or her, as well as |
any payments required to be
made by prior order of court or |
under wage assignments outstanding; provided
that the |
judgment debtor shall not be compelled to pay income which |
would be
considered exempt as wages under the Wage |
Deduction Statute. The court may
modify an order for |
installment payments, from time to time, upon application
|
of either party upon notice to the other.
|
(3) Compel any person cited, other than the judgment |
debtor, to
deliver up any assets so discovered, to be |
applied in satisfaction of
the judgment, in whole or in |
part, when those assets are held under such
circumstances |
that in an action by the judgment debtor he or she could |
recover
them in specie or obtain a judgment for the |
proceeds or value thereof as
for conversion or |
|
embezzlement. A judgment creditor may recover a corporate |
judgment debtor's property on behalf of the judgment debtor |
for use of the judgment creditor by filing an appropriate |
petition within the citation proceedings.
|
(4) Enter any order upon or judgment against the person |
cited that
could be entered in any garnishment proceeding.
|
(5) Compel any person cited to execute an assignment of |
any chose in
action or a conveyance of title to real or |
personal property or resign memberships in exchanges, |
clubs, or other entities , in the
same manner and to the |
same extent as a court could do in any proceeding
by a |
judgment creditor to enforce payment of a judgment or in |
aid of
the enforcement of a judgment.
|
(6) Authorize the judgment creditor to maintain an |
action against
any person or corporation that, it appears |
upon proof satisfactory to
the court, is indebted to the |
judgment debtor, for the recovery of the
debt, forbid the |
transfer or other disposition of the debt until an
action |
can be commenced and prosecuted to judgment, direct that |
the
papers or proof in the possession or control of the |
debtor and necessary
in the prosecution of the action be |
delivered to the creditor or
impounded in court, and |
provide for the disposition of any moneys in
excess of the |
sum required to pay the judgment creditor's judgment and
|
costs allowed by the court.
|
(d) No order or judgment shall be entered under subsection |
|
(c) in favor of
the judgment creditor unless there appears of |
record a certification of
mailing showing that a copy of the |
citation and a copy of the citation notice
was mailed to the |
judgment debtor as required by subsection (b).
|
(e) All property ordered to be delivered up shall, except |
as
otherwise provided in this Section, be delivered to the |
sheriff to be
collected by the sheriff or sold at public sale |
and the proceeds thereof
applied towards the payment of costs |
and the satisfaction of the judgment. If the judgment debtor's |
property is of such a nature that it is not readily delivered |
up to the sheriff for public sale or if another method of sale |
is more appropriate to liquidate the property or enhance its |
value at sale, the court may order the sale of such property by |
the debtor, third party respondent, or by a selling agent other |
than the sheriff upon such terms as are just and equitable. The |
proceeds of sale, after deducting reasonable and necessary |
expenses, are to be turned over to the creditor and applied to |
the balance due on the judgment.
|
(f) (1) The citation may prohibit the party to whom it is |
directed from
making or allowing any transfer or other |
disposition of, or interfering with,
any property not |
exempt from the enforcement of a judgment therefrom, a
|
deduction order or garnishment, belonging to the judgment |
debtor or to which he
or she may be entitled or which may |
thereafter be acquired by or become due to
him or her, and |
from paying over or otherwise disposing of any moneys not |
|
so
exempt which are due or to become due to the judgment |
debtor, until the further
order of the court or the |
termination of the proceeding, whichever occurs
first. The |
third party may not be obliged to withhold the payment of |
any
moneys beyond double the amount of the balance due |
sought to be enforced by the
judgment creditor. The court |
may punish any party who violates the restraining
provision |
of a citation as and for a contempt, or if the party is a |
third party
may enter judgment against him or her in the |
amount of the unpaid portion of
the judgment and costs |
allowable under this Section, or in the amount of the
value |
of the property transferred, whichever is lesser.
|
(2) The court may enjoin any person, whether or not a |
party to the
supplementary proceeding, from making or |
allowing any transfer or other
disposition of, or |
interference with, the property of the judgment
debtor not |
exempt from the enforcement of a judgment, a deduction |
order or
garnishment, or the property or debt not so exempt |
concerning which any
person is required to attend and be |
examined until further direction in the
premises. The |
injunction order shall remain in effect until vacated by |
the
court or until the proceeding is terminated, whichever |
first occurs.
|
(g) If it appears that any property, chose in action, |
credit or
effect discovered, or any interest therein, is |
claimed by any person, the court
shall, as in garnishment |
|
proceedings, permit or require the claimant to appear
and |
maintain his or her right. The rights of the person cited
and |
the rights of any adverse claimant shall be asserted and |
determined
pursuant to the law relating to garnishment |
proceedings.
|
(h) Costs in proceedings authorized by this Section shall |
be
allowed, assessed and paid in accordance with rules, |
provided that if the
court determines, in its discretion, that |
costs incurred by the judgment
creditor were improperly |
incurred, those costs shall be paid by the judgment
creditor.
|
(i) This Section is in addition to and does not affect
|
enforcement of judgments or proceedings supplementary thereto, |
by any other
methods now or hereafter provided by law.
|
(j) This Section does not grant the power to any court to |
order
installment or other payments from, or compel the sale, |
delivery,
surrender, assignment or conveyance of any property |
exempt by statute
from the enforcement of a judgment thereon, a |
deduction order, garnishment,
attachment, sequestration, |
process or other levy or seizure.
|
(k) (Blank).
|
(k-5) If the court determines that any property held by a |
third party respondent is wages pursuant to Section 12-801, the |
court shall proceed as if a wage deduction proceeding had been |
filed and proceed to enter such necessary and proper orders as |
would have been entered in a wage deduction proceeding |
including but not limited to the granting of the statutory |
|
exemptions allowed by Section 12-803 and all other remedies |
allowed plaintiff and defendant pursuant to Part 8 of Article |
12 of this Act.
|
(l) At any citation hearing at which the judgment debtor |
appears and seeks
a declaration that certain of his or her |
income or assets are exempt, the court
shall proceed to |
determine whether the property which the judgment debtor
|
declares to be exempt is exempt from judgment. At any time |
before the return
date specified on the citation, the judgment |
debtor may request, in writing, a
hearing to declare exempt |
certain income and assets by notifying the clerk of
the court |
before that time, using forms as may be provided by the clerk |
of the
court. The clerk of the court will obtain a prompt |
hearing date from the
court and will provide the necessary |
forms that must be prepared by the
judgment debtor or the |
attorney for the judgment debtor and sent to the
judgment |
creditor, or the judgment creditor's attorney, regarding the |
time and
location of the hearing. This notice may be sent by |
regular first class mail.
At the hearing, the court shall |
immediately, unless for good cause shown that
the hearing is to |
be continued, shall proceed to determine whether the property
|
which the judgment debtor declares to be exempt is exempt from |
judgment. The
restraining provisions of subsection (f) shall |
not apply to any property
determined by the court to be exempt.
|
(m) The judgment or balance due on the judgment becomes a |
lien when a
citation is served in accordance with subsection |
|
(a) of this Section. The lien
binds nonexempt personal |
property, including money, choses in action, and
effects of the |
judgment debtor as follows:
|
(1) When the citation is directed against the judgment |
debtor, upon all
personal property belonging to the |
judgment debtor in the possession or control
of the |
judgment debtor or which may thereafter be acquired or come |
due to the
judgment debtor to the time of the disposition |
of the citation.
|
(2) When the citation is directed against a third |
party, upon all personal
property belonging to the judgment |
debtor in the possession or control of the
third party or |
which thereafter may be acquired or come due the judgment |
debtor
and comes into the possession or control of the |
third party to the time of the
disposition of the citation.
|
The lien established under this Section does not affect the |
rights of
citation respondents in property prior to the service |
of the citation upon them
and does not affect the rights of |
bona fide purchasers or lenders without
notice of the citation. |
The lien is effective for the period specified by
Supreme Court |
Rule.
|
This subsection (m), as added by Public Act 88-48, is a |
declaration of
existing law.
|
(n) If any provision of this Act or its application to any |
person or
circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity of that |
provision or application
does not affect the provisions or |
|
applications of the Act that can be given
effect without the |
invalid provision or application.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-293, eff. 1-1-06; 94-306, eff. 1-1-06; revised |
8-19-05.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/5-126.5 new)
|
Sec. 5-126.5. Expenses. The plaintiff shall be allowed to |
recover as costs those expenses required by law or a law |
enforcement or court officer for the purposes of enforcing a |
judgment including levy bonds, replevin bonds, certification |
of court orders, recording certified orders or memoranda of |
judgment, and expenses for those assisting a sheriff or other |
court officer in enforcing court orders including, but not |
limited to, orders for possession, replevin orders, and |
personal property levies.
|
(735 ILCS 5/12-501) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-501)
|
Sec. 12-501. Registration of Federal judgments. Judgments |
of courts of
the United States held,
within this State, and all |
process, returns, certificates of the levy of a
process, and |
records of such courts may be registered, recorded, docketed,
|
indexed or otherwise dealt with in, the public offices of this |
State, so
as to make them conform to the rules and requirements |
relating to
judgments of courts of this State. A certified copy |
of a federal judgment order entered in this State may be filed |
in any circuit court and shall be afforded recognition as if it |
|
were a judgment entered in any other circuit court of this |
State.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-707.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/12-803) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-803)
|
Sec. 12-803. Wages
Maximum wages subject to collection. The |
maximum wages,
salary, commissions and bonuses subject to |
collection under a deduction
order, for any work week shall be
|
not exceed the lesser of (1) 15% of such
gross amount paid for |
that week or (2) the amount by which disposable
earnings for a |
week exceed 45 times the Federal Minimum Hourly Wage
prescribed |
by Section 206(a)(1) of Title 29 of the United States Code, as
|
amended, or, under a wage deduction summons served on or after |
January 1, 2006, the minimum hourly wage prescribed by Section |
4 of the Minimum Wage Law, whichever is greater, in effect at |
the time the amounts are payable. This provision
(and no other) |
applies irrespective of the place where the compensation was
|
earned or payable and the State where the employee resides. No |
amounts
required by law to be withheld may be taken from the |
amount collected by
the creditor. The term "disposable |
earnings" means that part of the
earnings of any individual |
remaining after the deduction from those
earnings of any |
amounts required by law to be withheld.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-306, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/12-808) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-808)
|
|
Sec. 12-808. Duty of employer.
|
(a) An employer served as herein provided shall pay the
|
employee the amount of his or her exempt wages.
|
(b) To the extent of the amount due upon the judgment and |
costs, the
employer shall hold, subject to order of court, any |
non-exempt wages due or
which subsequently come due. The |
judgment or balance due thereon is
a lien on wages due at the |
time of the service of summons, and such lien
shall continue as |
to subsequent earnings until the total amount due upon
the |
judgment and costs is paid, except that such lien on subsequent
|
earnings shall terminate sooner if the employment relationship |
is
terminated or if the underlying judgment is vacated or |
modified.
|
(b-5) If the employer is a federal agency employer and the |
creditor is
represented by an attorney, then the employer, upon |
service of summons and to
the extent of the amount due upon the |
judgment and costs, shall commence to pay
over to the attorney |
for the judgment creditor any non-exempt wages due or that
|
subsequently come due. The attorney for the judgment creditor |
shall thereafter
hold the deducted wages subject to further |
order of the court and shall make
answer to the court regarding |
amounts received from the federal agency
employer. The federal |
agency employer's periodic payments shall be considered
a |
sufficient answer to the interrogatories.
|
(c) Except as provided in subsection (b-5),
the employer |
shall file, on or before the return date or within the
further |
|
time that the court for cause may allow, a written answer under
|
oath to the interrogatories, setting forth the amount due as |
wages to
the judgment debtor for the payroll periods ending |
immediately prior to the service of the summons and a summary |
of the
computation used to determine the amount of non-exempt |
wages. Except as
provided in subsection (b-5), the
employer |
shall mail by first class mail or hand deliver a copy of the
|
answer to the judgment debtor at the address specified in the |
affidavit
filed under Section 12-805 of this Act, or at any |
other address or location
of the judgment debtor known to the |
employer.
|
A lien obtained hereunder shall have priority over any |
subsequent
lien obtained hereunder, except that liens for the |
support of a spouse
or dependent children shall have priority |
over all other liens obtained
hereunder. Subsequent summonses |
shall be effective in the order in which they are served.
|
(d) The Illinois Supreme Court may by rule allow an |
employer to file
answers to interrogatories by facsimile |
transmission.
|
(e) Pursuant to answer under oath to the interrogatories by |
the employer,
an order shall be entered compelling the employer |
to deduct from wages of the
judgment debtor subject to |
collection under a deduction order an amount which is
not to
|
exceed the lesser of (i) 15% of the gross amount of the wages |
or (ii) the
amount by which disposable earnings for a week |
exceed 45 times the Federal
Minimum Hourly Wage prescribed by |
|
Section 206(a)(1) of Title 29 of the United
States Code, as |
amended, in effect at the time the amounts are payable, for
|
each pay period in which statutory exemptions under Section |
12-804 and child
support garnishments, if any, leave funds to |
be remitted or, under a wage deduction summons served on or |
after January 1, 2006, the minimum hourly wage prescribed by |
Section 4 of the Minimum Wage Law, whichever is greater. The |
order shall
further provide that deducted wages shall be |
remitted to the creditor or
creditor's attorney on a monthly |
basis.
|
(f) If after the entry of a deduction order, the employer |
ceases to remit funds to the plaintiff pursuant to the order |
without a lawful excuse (which would terminate the employer's |
obligation under the deduction order such as the debtor having |
filed a bankruptcy, the debtor having left employment or the |
employer having received service of a support order against the |
judgment debtor having priority over the wage deduction |
proceedings), the court shall, upon plaintiff's motion, enter a |
conditional judgment against the employer for the balance due |
on the judgment. The plaintiff may then issue a Summons After |
Conditional Judgment. After service of the Summons After |
Conditional Judgment, the employer may show cause why the |
conditional judgment, or some portion thereof should not be |
made a final judgment. If the employer shall fail to respond or |
show cause why the conditional judgment or some portion thereof |
should not be
made final, the court shall confirm the |
|
conditional judgment and make it final as to the employer plus |
additional court costs.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-306, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/12-808.5)
|
Sec. 12-808.5. Certification of judgment balance. Whenever |
a wage
deduction order has not been fully satisfied by the end |
of the first full
calendar quarter following the date of |
service of the wage deduction
summons:
|
(1) The judgment creditor or his attorney shall prepare |
a certification
that states the amount of the judgment |
remaining unsatisfied as of the last
calendar day of each |
full calendar quarter for which the wage deduction order
|
continues in effect.
|
(2) The certification shall be mailed or delivered to |
the employer by the
judgment creditor or his or her |
attorney within 15 days after the end of each
calendar |
quarter for which the wage deduction order continues in |
effect. The
employer shall hand deliver or mail by first |
class mail a copy of the
certification to the judgment |
debtor at the judgment debtor's last known
address. |
(3) In the event that the plaintiff fails to provide |
the certification required by this Section, the employer |
must continue to withhold funds from the defendant's wages |
but may hold the funds without remitting to the plaintiff |
until such time as it receives a certification required by |
|
this Section. A certification of judgment balance need not |
be filed with the court. |
(4) Any party to the wage deduction proceeding may, |
upon motion with notice to all other parties, ask the court |
to review the balance due claimed by the judgment creditor.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-677, eff. 1-1-99.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/12-814) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-814)
|
Sec. 12-814. Costs and fees.
|
(a) The costs of obtaining a deduction order shall be |
charged to the
judgment debtor, unless the court determines, in |
its discretion, that costs
incurred by the judgment creditor |
were improperly incurred, in which case
those costs shall be |
paid by the judgment creditor.
|
(b) No fee shall be paid by an employer for filing his or |
her appearance,
answer or satisfaction of judgment against him |
or her.
|
(c) A fee consisting of the greater of $12 or 2% of the |
amount
required to be deducted by any deduction order or series |
of deduction
orders arising out of the same judgment debt shall |
be allowed and paid
to the employer, and the amount so paid |
shall be charged to the judgment
debtor.
|
(d) No other fee shall be paid to an employer at the time |
of service
of the summons or at any other time thereafter |
unless he or she is subpoenaed
to appear as a witness, in which |
case he or she is entitled to witness fees as
in other civil |
|
cases.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-569.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/19-117) (from Ch. 110, par. 19-117)
|
Sec. 19-117. Service upon defendant. It shall be the duty |
of the officer
having an order for
replevin, to serve the same |
upon the defendant, whether the property is
found or delivered |
to him or her, or not, unless, when none of the property is
|
found, the officer is otherwise directed by the plaintiff or |
his or her
attorney or agent.
|
If the defendant fails to deliver up to the sheriff the |
chattel which is the subject of the order for replevin and the |
plaintiff has a reasonable belief as to where the chattel is |
sequestered, the court may authorize the sheriff to use |
reasonable force to enter into the property to recover same |
upon such terms and conditions as the court may direct.
|
(Source: P.A. 82-280.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/19-123) (from Ch. 110, par. 19-123)
|
Sec. 19-123. Judgment against plaintiff. If the plaintiff |
in an action
of replevin obtains an order for replevin and
|
fails to prosecute
the action with effect, or allows a |
voluntary or involuntary dismissal,
or if the right of property |
is adjudged against the plaintiff, judgment shall be entered
|
for a return of the property if such property has been |
delivered
to the plaintiff, and damages for the use thereof |
|
from the time it was
taken until a return thereof is made, |
unless the plaintiff shall,
in the meantime, have become |
entitled to the possession of the property,
in which event |
judgment may be entered against the plaintiff for costs and
|
such damage as the
defendant has sustained; or if the property |
was held for the
payment of any money, the judgment may be in |
the alternative that the
plaintiff pay the amount for which the |
same was rightfully held, with
proper damages, within a given |
time, or make return of the property in
case such property was |
delivered to the plaintiff.
|
(Source: P.A. 82-280.)
|
(735 ILCS 5/19-129 new) |
Sec. 19-129. Mobile homes. If the chattel which is the |
subject of the replevin action is a mobile home and is occupied |
by the defendant or other persons, the court may issue a |
forcible order directing the sheriff to remove the personal |
property of the defendant or occupants from the mobile home |
provided that the defendants and unknown occupants are given |
notice of plaintiff's intent to seek a forcible order and that |
upon entry of said order for possession, the execution is |
stayed for a reasonable time as determined by the court so as |
to allow the defendants and unknown occupants to remove their |
property from the mobile home.
|
|
INDEX
|
Statutes amended in order of appearance
|
| 735 ILCS 5/2-1402 |
from Ch. 110, par. 2-1402 |
| 735 ILCS 5/5-126.5 new |
|
| 735 ILCS 5/12-501 |
from Ch. 110, par. 12-501 |
| 735 ILCS 5/12-803 |
from Ch. 110, par. 12-803 |
| 735 ILCS 5/12-808 |
from Ch. 110, par. 12-808 |
| 735 ILCS 5/12-808.5 |
|
| 735 ILCS 5/12-814 |
from Ch. 110, par. 12-814 |
| 735 ILCS 5/19-117 |
from Ch. 110, par. 19-117 |
| 735 ILCS 5/19-123 |
from Ch. 110, par. 19-123 |
| 735 ILCS 5/19-129 new |
|
|
|