AN ACT
RELATING TO CREDIT UNIONS; CLARIFYING PROVISIONS FOR OUT‑OF‑STATE
CREDIT UNIONS TO CONDUCT BUSINESS IN NEW MEXICO; MODIFYING LOAN POLICIES;
AMENDING, REPEALING AND ENACTING SECTIONS OF THE CREDIT UNION ACT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO: Section 1.
Section 58-11-2 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987, Chapter 311, Section 2, as
amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑2. DEFINITIONS.‑‑As used in the
Credit Union Act:
A. "board member" means a member of
the board of directors of a credit union;
B. "capital" means share accounts,
membership shares, reserves and undivided earnings;
C. "credit union" means a cooperative,
nonprofit, financial institution organized under or subject to the Credit Union
Act for the purposes of encouraging thrift among its members, creating a source
of credit at fair and reasonable rates of interest and providing an opportunity
for its members to use and control their own money on a democratic basis in
order to improve their economic and social condition;
D. "deposit account" means a balance
held by a credit union and established by a person in accordance with standards
specified by the credit union, including balances designated as deposits,
deposit certificates, checking accounts or other names. Ownership of a deposit account does not
confer membership or voting rights and does not represent an interest in the
capital of the credit union upon dissolution or conversion to another type of
institution;
E. "director" means the director of
the financial institutions division of the regulation and licensing department;
F. "division" means the financial
institutions division of the regulation and licensing department;
G. "executive officer" means any
person who is responsible for the management of the credit union as provided in
the bylaws of the credit union and includes the chief executive officer, the
president, a vice president, the credit union manager, an assistant manager or
a person who is assigned and performs the management duties appropriate to those
offices;
H. "governmental unit" means any
board, agency, department, authority, instrumentality or other unit or
organization of the United States, this state or any political subdivision
thereof;
I. "immediate family" means those
persons related by blood or marriage as well as stepchildren, foster children
and adopted children or persons who live in the same residence and maintain a
single economic unit;
J. "insolvent" means the condition
that results when the cash value of assets is less than the liabilities and
members' share and deposit accounts;
K. "insuring organization" means the
national credit union administration or any other insurer that has been
approved by the director to provide aid and financial assistance to credit
unions that are in the process of liquidation or are incurring financial
difficulty, in order that the share and deposit accounts in credit unions shall
be protected or guaranteed against loss without limit or up to a specified
level for each account;
L. "membership share" means a balance
held by a credit union and established by a member in accordance with standards
specified by the credit union.
Ownership of a membership share represents an interest in the capital of
the credit union upon dissolution or conversion to another type of institution;
M. "organization" means any
corporation, association, partnership, society, firm, syndicate, trust or other
legal entity;
N. "person" means any individual,
organization or governmental unit;
O. "primary share account" means a
share account that a credit union's bylaws designate as conferring voting
rights;
P. "risk assets" means all assets of
the credit union except those exempted by the director by regulation;
Q. "service facility" means any
building, machine or device, whether mechanical, electronic or otherwise, that
is operated or maintained, in whole or in part, to provide services to members;
and
R. "share account" means a balance
held by a credit union and established by a member in accordance with standards
specified by the credit union, including balances designated as shares, share
certificates, share draft accounts or other similar names. Ownership of a share account confers
membership and represents an interest in the capital of the credit union upon
dissolution or conversion to another type of institution."
Section 2. Section 58-11-6 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 6) is amended to read:
"58-11-6. RECORDS.--
A. A credit union shall maintain all books,
records, accounting systems and procedures in accordance with the rules,
regulations and orders the director from time to time establishes or
issues. In establishing and issuing such
rules, regulations and orders, the director shall consider the relative size of
a credit union and its reasonable capability of compliance.
B. A credit union is not liable for destroying
records after the expiration of the record retention time prescribed by
regulation, except for any records involved in an official investigation or
examination about which the credit union has received notice.
C. A photostatic, photographic or xerographic
reproduction of any credit union record or any credit union record retrieved in
perceptible form from an electronic record maintained pursuant to the
provisions of the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act shall be admissible as
evidence of transaction with the credit union."
Section 3. Section 58-11-7 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 7, as amended) is amended to read:
"58-11-7. REPORTS.--
A. Credit unions shall report to the director
quarterly on or before January 30, April 30, July 30 and October 30. Reports shall be on forms supplied by the
director. The director may require
additional reports.
B. A charge of twenty-five dollars ($25.00)
shall be levied for each day a credit union fails to provide a required report,
unless that charge is by the director excused for cause."
Section 4. Section 58-11-16 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 16, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑16. OUT‑OF‑STATE CREDIT
UNIONS--APPROVAL TO CONDUCT BUSINESS--DIRECTOR'S DUTIES AND POWERS.--
A. An out-of-state credit union organized
pursuant to the laws of another state or territory of the United States may
conduct business as a credit union in this state with the approval of the
director.
B. Before granting approval for an out-of-state
credit union to conduct business in New Mexico, the director shall determine
that the out‑of‑state credit union:
(1) is organized pursuant to laws similar to
those provided in the Credit Union Act;
(2) is financially solvent;
(3) is examined and supervised by a regulatory
agency of the state or territory in which it is organized;
(4) meets share and deposit insurance
requirements comparable to those provided in Section 58-11-48 NMSA 1978; and
(5) establishes a need to conduct business in
this state to adequately serve its members in this state.
C. The director may:
(1) revoke the approval granted to an
out-of-state credit union to conduct business in New Mexico if the director
determines that:
(a) the credit union no longer meets the
requirements as provided in Subsection B of this section;
(b) the credit union has violated a law of this
state or a rule issued by the director;
(c) the credit union has engaged in a pattern of
unsafe or unsound credit union practices;
(d) permitting the credit union to continue to
conduct business in New Mexico is likely to have a substantial adverse impact
on financial, economic or other interests of the residents of the state; or
(e) the credit union is prohibited from
conducting business in the state or territory in which it is organized;
(2) cooperate with credit union regulators in
other states or territories and share with those regulators pertinent
information received pursuant to the provisions of the Credit Union Act;
(3) adopt rules for the periodic examination and
investigation of the affairs of an out-of-state credit union conducting
business in New Mexico. The costs
associated with the examination or investigation shall be borne by the
out-of-state credit union that is the subject of the examination or
investigation; or
(4) enter into agreements with the regulators of
out-of-state credit unions to identify laws and rules applicable to branches of
out-of-state credit unions conducting business in New Mexico, or enter into
agreements with credit union regulators in other states or territories to
identify laws and rules applicable to credit unions organized in New Mexico
pursuant to the Credit Union Act that are conducting business in out-of-state
locations. The agreements provided for
in this section may include, but are not limited to, agreements concerning
corporate governance and operational matters, and the rules regarding the
manner in which examination, supervision and application processes shall be
coordinated with the regulators.
D. An out-of-state credit union conducting
business in New Mexico shall:
(1) comply with the provisions of the Credit
Union Act, rules issued pursuant to that act and all other applicable state
laws; and
(2) designate and maintain an agent for service
of process in New Mexico."
Section 5. Section 58-11-18 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 18, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑18. POWERS OF CREDIT UNIONS.‑‑In
addition to the powers authorized elsewhere in the Credit Union Act, a credit
union may:
A. enter into contracts of any nature;
B. sue and be sued;
C. adopt, use and display a corporate seal;
D. acquire, lease, hold, assign, pledge,
hypothecate, sell and discount or otherwise dispose of property or assets,
either in whole or in part, necessary or incidental to its operations;
E. lend funds to members;
F. borrow from any source; provided that a
credit union shall have prior approval of the director before borrowing in
excess of an aggregate of fifty percent of its capital;
G. purchase the assets of another credit union,
subject to the approval of the director;
H. offer various financial services approved by
the director;
I. hold membership in other credit unions
organized under the Credit Union Act, the Federal Credit Union Act or other
acts and in associations and organizations controlled by or fostering the
interests of credit unions, including a central liquidity facility organized
under state or federal law;
J. engage in activities and programs as
requested by any governmental unit;
K. act as fiscal agent and receive payments on
deposit accounts from a governmental unit;
L. sell or offer to sell insurance to the same
extent allowed by law to other state chartered lending institutions; and
M. provide services to persons within the credit
union's field of membership, including electronic funds transfers and the sale
and negotiation of instruments, including money orders, traveler's checks and
stored value cards."
Section 6. Section 58-11-27 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 27, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑27. DIRECTION OF AFFAIRS.‑‑
A. A credit union shall be directed by a board
of directors, consisting of an odd number of members, as provided in the
bylaws, but not less than five in number, to be elected annually by and from
the members. The election shall be held
at the annual meeting or in such other manner as the bylaws provide. All members of the board shall hold office
for such terms as the bylaws provide.
B. A supervisory committee shall consist of an
odd number of members, as provided in the bylaws, but not less than three or
more than seven in number. The bylaws
shall specify the length of the terms of the committee members and whether
membership of the supervisory committee shall be by annual election or
appointment by the board of directors.
C. The board of directors may delegate any or
all of its authority to extend credit, including the determination of interest
rates, to one or more committees or an executive officer, provided such person
is not a member of the board. A
committee may consist of one or more members."
Section 7. Section 58-11-30 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 30, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑30. COMPENSATION OF OFFICIALS.‑‑No
board or committee member may be compensated for services performed in the
regular course of duties pertaining to that board or committee position. Notwithstanding any provision of the Credit
Union Act to the contrary, board or committee members may be compensated for
those services provided to the credit union while temporarily serving in an
additional capacity other than as a board or committee member. Reasonable life, accident and similar
insurance protection shall not be considered compensation to a board or
committee member. Board and committee
members may be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses incidental to
the performance of official business of the credit union, provided such
expenses are documented."
Section 8. Section 58-11-36 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 36, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑36. DUTIES OF BOARD MEMBERS.‑‑
A. The board of directors shall:
(1) act upon applications for membership or to
appoint one or more membership officers to approve applications for membership
under such conditions as the board prescribes.
A record of the actions taken by a membership officer shall be made
available in writing to the board of directors for inspection. A person denied membership may appeal the
denial to the board, and the person shall be informed of that right of appeal
in writing by the credit union;
(2) authorize and require the purchase of
adequate fidelity coverage as it determines to be necessary for the board
members, committee members, executive officers or employees of the credit
union, with documentation made available to the director about who is covered;
(3) authorize and determine from time to time the
interest rates that shall be charged on extensions of credit to members and
authorize any interest refunds on extensions of credit under the conditions the
board prescribes; provided that the board may delegate that authority to the
chief executive officer and a committee with the requirement that any exercise
of that authority shall be reported to the board at the next monthly board
meeting;
(4) establish written policies with respect to
the terms and conditions for granting loans and the extension of credit, including
the maximum amount that may be provided to any one member;
(5) declare dividends on share accounts and
membership shares in the manner and form as provided in the bylaws, which
dividends shall not exceed the credit union's net earnings, including undivided
earnings; provided that the board may delegate that authority, except with
regard to an account that the credit union designates as a member's primary
share account, to the chief executive officer and a committee, with the
requirement that any exercise of that authority shall be reported to the board
of directors at the next board meeting;
(6) have charge of the investment of funds,
except that the board may designate an investment committee or investment
officer under written investment policies established by the board;
(7) authorize the employment of persons to carry
on the business of the credit union and establish the compensation of the
executive officer;
(8) approve an annual operating budget for the
credit union;
(9) authorize the conveyance of property;
(10) authorize the designation of depositories for
the operating funds of the credit union;
(11) appoint any committees deemed necessary; and
(12) perform such other duties as the members from
time to time direct and perform or authorize any action not inconsistent with
the Credit Union Act and not specifically reserved by the bylaws to the
members.
B. Any member of the supervisory committee or of
any other committee established for the purposes of extending credit may be
temporarily suspended or removed by the board of directors, by a two‑thirds
vote of the board of directors at a meeting in which a quorum is present, for
failure to perform those duties in accordance with the Credit Union Act, the
articles of organization or the bylaws and for no other reason. The suspension or removal of a supervisory
committee member shall be acted upon by the members at a meeting to be held not
less than seven or more than twenty‑one days after such suspension or
removal."
Section 9. Section 58-11-49 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 49, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑49. LOAN POLICIES.‑‑
A. A credit union may extend credit to members
for such purposes and upon such conditions as the bylaws may provide.
B. The interest rates on extensions of credit
shall be authorized and determined by the board of directors or any person or
committee to which it has delegated that authority.
C. A credit union may assess charges to members,
in accordance with the bylaws, for failure to meet their obligations to the
credit union in a timely manner.
D. Except as provided in Subsection H of this
section, every application for an extension of credit and every approved
extension of credit shall be made in writing or in such other manner as
permitted or required by law in a standard format consistent with the extension
of credit policies approved by the board of directors.
E. No loan shall be made to any member in an
aggregate amount in excess of ten percent of the credit union's total assets as
determined by the director.
F. Security, within the meaning of the Credit
Union Act, may include, without limitation because of enumeration, the
endorsement of a note by a surety or guarantor, assignment of an interest in
real or personal property or any other collateral deemed acceptable by the
board of directors. The types of
security acceptable shall be determined by the written policies established by
the board of directors pursuant to Section 58‑11‑36 NMSA 1978.
G. A member may receive an extension of credit
in installments or in one sum and may pay the whole or any part on any day on
which the office of the credit union is open for business.
H. Upon written application by a member, the
board of directors or any person or committee to which it has delegated
authority to extend credit may approve a self‑replenishing line of
credit, and advances may be granted to the member within the limit of such line
of credit. Whenever a line of credit has
been approved, no additional credit application is required as long as the
aggregate indebtedness does not exceed the approved limit; provided, however,
each line of credit shall be reviewed in accordance with the credit union's
policy governing extensions of credit.
I. A credit union may participate in extensions
of credit to credit union members jointly with other credit unions or other
financial organizations pursuant to written policies established by the board
of directors.
J. A credit union may:
(1) participate in any guaranteed loan program of
the federal government or of this state under the terms and conditions
specified by the law under which such a program is provided; and
(2) purchase the conditional sales contracts,
notes and similar instruments of its members.
K. A credit union may make an extension of
credit to any of its executive officers, board members and members of its
supervisory and other committees; provided that:
(1) the extension of credit complies with all
lawful requirements under the Credit Union Act with respect to loans to other
members, is not on terms more favorable than those extended to other borrowers
and is in compliance with loan policies established by the board for other
borrowers;
(2) the following provisions have been met:
(a) the extension of credit is approved by the
board of directors or any person or committee to which it has delegated
authority to extend credit; and
(b) the applicant takes no part in the
consideration of his application and does not attend any committee or board
meeting while his application is under consideration; and
(3) if the aggregate extension of credit to the
applicant, including the extension applied for and excluding share or deposit
secured loans, exceeds the limits set for the total asset size of the credit
union as provided in this paragraph, the extension of credit shall be submitted
to the board of directors for approval.
The board shall require, at a minimum, a completed loan application and
a detailed current financial statement of the applicant; provided that
submission to the board of directors of an application of an executive officer
shall only be required for an applicant serving the credit union as chief
executive officer, chief operating officer, chief financial officer or chief
lending supervisor. The set limits for
the total asset size of the credit union are as follows:
Credit Union Total Assets Aggregate
Credit Exceeding
less than $5,000,000 $20,000
$5,000,000 - $10,000,000 $30,000
$10,000,001 - $50,000,000 $40,000
$50,000,001 or greater $50,000.
L. A credit union may permit executive officers,
board members and members of its committees to act as co‑makers,
guarantors or endorsers of extensions of credit to other members, subject to
the requirements of Subsection K of this section."
Section 10. Section 58-11-51 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 51, as amended) is amended to read:
"58-11-51. LIABILITY AND FIDELITY INSURANCE FOR
OFFICIALS AND EMPLOYEES.--A credit union shall, unless otherwise specified by
the director, purchase and maintain liability and fidelity insurance coverage
on behalf of a person who is or was a board member, committee member, executive
officer, employee or agent of the credit union or who is or was serving at the
request of the credit union as a director, committee member, executive officer,
employee or agent of another corporation, partnership, joint venture, trust or
other enterprise against any liability asserted against that person and
incurred by that person in any such capacity or arising out of that person's
status whether or not the credit union would have the power to indemnify that
person against such liability; provided, a credit union shall not provide for
the indemnification of personnel who are adjudged guilty of or liable for
willful misconduct, gross neglect of duty or criminal acts."
Section 11. Section 58-11-53 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 53, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑53. MONEY‑TYPE INSTRUMENTS.‑‑A
credit union may collect, receive and disburse money in connection with the
providing of negotiable checks, money orders, travelers checks and other money‑type
instruments for its members and other persons within the credit union's field
of membership and in connection with the providing of services through service
facilities, including automated terminal machines, and for such other purposes
as may provide benefit or convenience to its members. A credit union may charge reasonable fees for
those services."
Section 12. Section 58-11-56 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 56, as amended) is amended to read:
"58‑11‑56. INVESTMENTS.‑‑
A. Funds not required to satisfy member demands
for extensions of credit may be invested in:
(1) securities, obligations or other instruments
of or issued by or fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by the United
States or any agency of the United States or in any trust investing solely,
directly or indirectly, in the same;
(2) securities, obligations or other instruments
of this state or any political subdivision of this state;
(3) deposits or other accounts of state or
federally chartered financial institutions, the accounts of which are insured
by an agency of the United States;
(4) loans or extensions of credit to or shares or
deposits of other credit unions, central credit unions or corporate credit
unions, the accounts of which are insured by the national credit union
administration's share insurance fund;
(5) deposits in, loans to or shares of any
federal reserve bank or of any central liquidity facility established under
federal law;
(6) shares, stocks, loans or extensions of credit
to or other obligations of any organization, corporation or association
providing services that are associated with the general purposes of the credit
union or that engage in activities incidental to the operations of a credit
union. Those investments in the
aggregate shall not exceed five percent of the credit union's capital;
(7) shares of a cooperative society organized
under the laws of this state or of the laws of the United States in a total
amount not exceeding ten percent of the capital of the credit union, subject to
prior approval by the director;
(8) fixed assets, not to exceed six percent of
the credit union's capital and deposits, unless with the written approval of
the director. For the purpose of this
subsection, "fixed assets" means structures, land, computer hardware
and software and heating and cooling equipment that are affixed to the
premises;
(9) common trusts or mutual funds whose
investment portfolios consist of mortgages, securities and obligations and
bonds of the federal national mortgage association, federal home loan mortgage
corporation, government national mortgage association and other
government-sponsored enterprises;
(10) other investments, or in amounts in excess of
the thresholds listed in this section, as approved by the director in written
application; and
(11) activities that the director determines are a
part of or incidental to the operations of a credit union notwithstanding any
provision to the contrary in the Credit Union Act.
B. Credit unions with minimum undivided earnings
of one million dollars ($1,000,000) and with capital in excess of seven and
one-half percent after required reserves may also invest funds not required to
satisfy member demands for extensions of credit. The aggregate of a credit union's investments
as provided in this subsection shall not exceed ten percent of the credit
union's undivided earnings. Such
investments may only be in or through:
(1) common trusts or mutual funds whose
investment portfolios consist of the bonds or other obligations of insured
financial institutions organized pursuant to the laws of another state or the
United States, or corporations organized in any state, the District of
Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico or the territories organized by
congress; provided that the investment portfolios are representative of a
recognized broadly traded bond index, as defined in the credit union's
board-approved investment policy, and provided that the portfolios shall be
limited to such bonds and other obligations having maturities of less than
fifteen years with an average weighted life not to exceed seven years and being
rated among the three highest ratings established by one or more national
rating services; and
(2) common trusts or mutual funds whose
investment portfolios consist of the stock of corporations organized in any
state, the District of Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico or the
territories organized by congress, provided that the investment portfolios of
such common trusts or mutual funds are representative of a recognized broadly
traded stock index as defined in the credit union's board-approved investment
policy."
Section 13. Section 58-11-60 NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987,
Chapter 311, Section 60) is amended to read:
"58-11-60. CONVERSION.--
A. A credit union organized under the laws of
this state may be converted to a credit union organized under the laws of any
other state or under the laws of the United States, subject to regulations
issued by the director.
B. A credit union organized under the laws of
the United States or of any other state may convert to a credit union organized
under the laws of this state. To effect
such a conversion, a credit union shall comply with all of the requirements of
the jurisdiction under which it was originally organized, the requirements
provided for in the Credit Union Act and other requirements determined by the
director, and file proof of such compliance with the director.
C. A bank, savings and loan company or other
financial institution that is not a credit union may be converted to a credit
union organized pursuant to the Credit Union Act. To effect such a conversion, the converting
financial institution shall file proof of compliance with all of the
requirements of the jurisdiction under which it was originally organized, the
provisions of the Credit Union Act and other requirements determined by the
director.
D. A credit union organized pursuant to the
Credit Union Act may be converted to a bank, savings and loan company or other
financial institution. To effect such a
conversion, the converting credit union shall comply with all the requirements
of the jurisdiction in which it will be organized, including any rules issued
by the appropriate regulating agency and other requirements determined by the
director."
Section 14. A new section of the Credit Union Act is
enacted to read:
"CAPITALIZATION AND
RESERVES.--
A. A credit union shall maintain a
well-capitalized status as determined by the director.
B. A credit union shall set aside and maintain
such reserves as may be required by the insurer of its share accounts and
deposit accounts."
Section 15. REPEAL.--Sections 58-11-57 and 58-11-64
NMSA 1978 (being Laws 1987, Chapter 311, Sections 57 and 64,
as amended) are repealed.