Public Act 095-0661
 
SB0229 Enrolled LRB095 07909 AJO 28071 b

    AN ACT concerning civil law.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 2. The Illinois Banking Act is amended by changing
Section 48.1 as follows:
 
    (205 ILCS 5/48.1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 360)
    Sec. 48.1. Customer financial records; confidentiality.
    (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 a
    deposit or account;
        (2) a statement, ledger card or other record on any
    deposit or account, which shows each transaction in or with
    respect to that account;
        (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
    financial statements or other financial information
    provided by the customer.
    (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 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.
        (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.
        (3) The publication of data furnished from financial
    records relating to customers where the data cannot be
    identified to any particular customer 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 bank and other 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 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.
        (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.
        (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.
        (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.
        (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
    Section 5 and conducted at an affiliate facility.
        (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.
        (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.
        (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:
            (A) servicing or processing a financial product or
        service requested or authorized by the customer;
            (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.
        (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
    related to the identity of the customer.
        (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.
        (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.
    (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;
        (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
        (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.
    (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.
    (e) Any officer or employee of a 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.
    (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.
(Source: P.A. 94-495, eff. 8-8-05; 94-851, eff. 6-13-06.)
 
    Section 2.5. The Illinois Savings and Loan Act of 1985 is
amended by changing Section 3-8 as follows:
 
    (205 ILCS 105/3-8)  (from Ch. 17, par. 3303-8)
    Sec. 3-8. Access to books and records; communication with
members.
    (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.
    (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
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