2012 Connecticut General Statutes
Title 36a - The Banking Law of Connecticut
Chapter 665 - Powers, Loans and Investments
Section 36a-262 - (Formerly Sec. 36-98b). Limitations on liabilities of any one obligor. Exemptions.


CT Gen Stat § 36a-262 (2012) What's This?

(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, the total direct or indirect liabilities of any one obligor that are not fully secured, however incurred, to any Connecticut bank, exclusive of such bank’s investment in the investment securities of such obligor, shall not exceed at the time incurred fifteen per cent of the equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses of such bank. The total direct or indirect liabilities of any one obligor that are fully secured, however incurred, to any Connecticut bank, exclusive of such bank’s investment in the investment securities of such obligor, shall not exceed at the time incurred ten per cent of the equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses of such bank, provided this limitation shall be separate from and in addition to the limitation on liabilities that are not fully secured. Notwithstanding any provision of this subsection, the limitation on the liabilities of any one obligor shall take into account the credit exposure to such obligor arising from a derivative transaction. The commissioner shall have the authority to establish the method for determining the credit exposure and the extent to which the credit exposure shall be taken into account. As used in this subsection, “derivative transaction” includes any transaction that is a contract, agreement, swap, warrant, note or option that is based, in whole or in part, on the value of any interest in, or any quantitative measure or the occurrence of any event leading to, one or more commodities, securities, currencies, interest or other rates, indices or other assets. The commissioner may adopt regulations in accordance with the provisions of chapter 54 establishing the method for determining credit exposure to derivative transactions and the extent to which the credit exposure shall be taken into account. For purposes of this section, a liability shall be considered to be fully secured if it is secured by readily marketable collateral having a market value, as determined by reliable and continuously available price quotations, at least equal to the amount of the liability. For purposes of determining the limitations of this section, in computing the liabilities of an obligor, a liability is incurred at the time of the closing of the transaction, unless such closing is preceded by a legally binding written commitment to enter into the transaction, in which case such liability is incurred at the time of commitment and is net of any liabilities of the obligor to such bank that will be paid with the proceeds of the commitment at the time of closing. The limitations provided for in this subsection may be exceeded for a period of time not to exceed six hours if at the closing of any transaction at which such obligor incurs such liabilities to a Connecticut bank in excess of such limitations, such bank immediately assigns or participates out to one or more other persons an amount that constitutes not less than the excess over the applicable limitation. Obligations as endorser or guarantor of negotiable or nonnegotiable installment consumer paper which carry an agreement to repurchase on default, unless the bank’s sole recourse is to an agreed reserve held by it, in which case the liability shall be excluded, a full recourse endorsement or an unconditional guarantee by the person, partnership, association or corporation transferring the same, shall be subject under this section to a limitation of fifteen per cent of the bank’s equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses in addition to the applicable limitations of this section with respect to the makers of such obligations; provided, upon certification by an officer of the bank designated for that purpose by the governing board that the responsibility of each maker of such obligations has been evaluated and the bank is relying primarily upon each such maker for the payment of such obligations, the limitations of this section as to the obligations of each maker shall be the sole applicable loan limitation; and provided such certification shall be in writing and shall be retained as part of the records of such bank.

(b) Liabilities of one obligor shall be attributed to another person and each such person shall be deemed to be an obligor when proceeds of a loan are to be used for the direct benefit of the other person, to the extent of the proceeds to be so used, or a common enterprise is deemed to exist between such persons. For purposes of this section, the proceeds of a loan to an obligor shall be deemed to be used for the direct benefit of another person and shall be attributed to the person when the proceeds, or assets purchased with the proceeds, are transferred to another person, other than in a bona fide arm’s length transaction where the proceeds are used to acquire property, goods or services. For purposes of this section, a common enterprise shall be deemed to exist and liabilities of separate obligors shall be aggregated:

(1) When the expected source of repayment for each liability is the same for each obligor and neither obligor has another source of income from which the liability, together with the obligor’s other liabilities, may be fully repaid. An employer shall not be treated as a source of repayment under this subdivision because of wages and salaries paid to an employee, unless the standards of subdivision (2) of this subsection are met;

(2) When loans are made (A) to obligors who are related directly or indirectly through common control, including where one obligor is directly or indirectly controlled by another obligor; and (B) substantial financial interdependence exists between or among the obligors. Substantial financial interdependence is deemed to exist when fifty per cent or more of one obligor’s gross receipts or gross expenditures, on an annual basis, are derived from transactions with the other obligor. Gross receipts and expenditures include gross revenues, expenses, intercompany loans, dividends, capital contributions, and similar receipts or payments;

(3) When separate persons borrow from a Connecticut bank to acquire a business enterprise of which such obligors will own more than fifty per cent of the voting securities or voting interests, in which case a common enterprise is deemed to exist between the obligors for purposes of combining the acquisition loans; or

(4) When the commissioner determines, based upon an evaluation of the facts and circumstances of particular transactions, that a common enterprise exists.

(c) Loans to an obligor and its subsidiary, or to different subsidiaries of an obligor shall not be aggregated unless either the direct benefit or the common enterprise test is met. For purposes of this subsection, a corporation or a limited liability company is a subsidiary of an obligor if the obligor owns or beneficially owns directly or indirectly more than fifty per cent of the voting securities or voting interests of the corporation or company.

(d) Loans to a partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association shall be deemed to be loans to each member of the partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association. This provision shall not apply to limited partners in limited partnerships or to members of joint ventures, limited liability companies or associations unless the partners or members, by the terms of the partnership or membership agreement, are held generally liable for the debts or actions of the partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association, and such terms are valid under applicable law. Loans to partners or members of a partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association are not attributed to the partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association unless either the direct benefit or the common enterprise test is met. Both the direct benefit and common enterprise tests are met between a partner or member of a partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association and such partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association, when loans are made to the partner or member to purchase an interest in the partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association. Loans to partners or members of a partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association are not attributed to other members of the partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association unless either the direct benefit or the common enterprise test is met.

(e) Loans to foreign governments and their agencies and instrumentalities shall be aggregated only if the loans fail to meet either the means test or the purpose test at the time the loan is made. The means test is met if the obligor has resources or revenue of its own sufficient to service its debt obligations. If the government’s support, excluding guarantees by a central government of the obligor’s debt, exceeds the obligor’s annual revenues from other sources, it shall be presumed that the means test has not been satisfied. The purpose test is met if the purpose of the loan is consistent with the purposes of the obligor’s general business. In order to show that the means test or the purpose test has been satisfied, a Connecticut bank shall, at a minimum, retain in its files the following items:

(1) A statement, accompanied by supporting documentation, describing the legal status and the degree of financial and operational autonomy of the borrowing entity;

(2) Financial statements for the borrowing entity for a minimum of three years prior to the date the loan or extension of credit was made or for each year that the borrowing entity has been in existence, if less than three;

(3) Financial statements for each year the loan is outstanding;

(4) The bank’s assessment of the obligor’s means of servicing the loan, including specific reasons in support of that assessment. The assessment shall include an analysis of the obligor’s financial history, its present and projected economic and financial performance, and the significance of any financial support provided to the obligor by third parties, including the obligor’s central government; and

(5) A loan agreement or other written statement from the obligor which clearly describes the purpose of the loan. The written representation shall ordinarily constitute sufficient evidence that the purpose test has been satisfied. However, when, at the time the funds are disbursed, the bank knows or has reason to know of other information suggesting the obligor will use the proceeds in a manner inconsistent with the written representation, it may not, without further inquiry, accept the representation.

(f) Obligations of the United States or this state, or of any town, city, borough or legally established district in this state which has the power to levy taxes for the payment of such obligations, shall not be subject to any limitation based upon such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses.

(g) Obligations of any one obligor, with the exception of loans secured by mortgage of real estate and insured by the Federal Housing Administrator, which are secured or covered by guaranties, or by commitments or agreements to take over or to purchase, made by the United States or the Federal Reserve Bank or by any department, bureau, board, commission or establishment of the United States, including any corporation wholly owned, directly or indirectly by the United States, which, at the time of making such guaranty or commitment or agreement to take over or purchase, is authorized by law to enter into contracts with any financing institution guaranteeing such financing institution against loss of principal and interest on loans, taxes or advances or agreeing to take over or purchase the same, shall not be subject to any limitation based upon such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses.

(h) Obligations of any one obligor secured by the pledge of direct or fully guaranteed obligations of the United States shall be limited to fifty per cent of such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses; except that obligations secured by the pledge of direct or fully guaranteed obligations of the United States which will mature in not more than eighteen months shall not be subject under this section to any limitation based upon such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses.

(i) Any Connecticut bank may accept drafts or bills of exchange drawn upon it having not more than six months’ sight to run, exclusive of days of grace, which grow out of transactions involving the importation or exportation of goods, or which grow out of transactions involving the domestic shipment of goods, provided shipping documents conveying or securing title are attached at the time of acceptance, or which are secured at the time of acceptance by a warehouse receipt or other such document conveying or securing title covering readily marketable staples. No Connecticut bank shall accept such bills to an amount equal at any time in the aggregate to more than one-half of its equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses; provided the commissioner may authorize any Connecticut bank to accept such bills to an amount not exceeding at any time in the aggregate one hundred per cent of its equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses; provided further, the aggregate of acceptances growing out of domestic transactions shall in no event exceed fifty per cent of such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses.

(j) The following shall not be subject under this section to any limitation based upon such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses: (1) Obligations in the form of bankers’ acceptances of other banks, provided such acceptances have at the time of discount not more than six months’ sight, exclusive of days of grace, and are endorsed by at least one other bank; (2) obligations resulting from the purchase of securities subject to a resale agreement; and (3) the rental obligation of a lessee of real or personal property under a lease made or held by such bank.

(k) Obligations of any one obligor which are secured by a first mortgage on real estate shall be limited to fifty per cent of such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses, provided the total obligations to any one obligor to which this subsection and subsection (a) of this section apply shall not exceed fifty per cent of such equity capital and reserves for loan and lease losses. Loans made to manufacturing, industrial or commercial borrowers when the bank looks for repayment out of the operations of the borrowers’ business, relying primarily on the borrowers’ general credit standing and forecast of operation, shall not be considered to be secured by a mortgage on real estate for purposes of this subsection, even though such loan may be secured by a mortgage on real estate.

(P.A. 85-379, S. 41; P.A. 86-403, S. 103, 132; P.A. 91-357, S. 23, 78; P.A. 92-97, S. 2, 4; P.A. 94-122, S. 119, 340; P.A. 03-259, S. 18; P.A. 04-8, S. 4; P.A. 12-96, S. 23.)

History: P.A. 86-403 made technical changes; P.A. 91-357 made technical changes in Subsec. (a); P.A. 92-97 added provisions in Subsec. (a) specifying when a liability is incurred for purposes of determining limitations of section; P.A. 94-122 consolidated the limits on loans to one obligor for all banks using the savings banks section as a base, deleted Subsecs. (f) and (h) and renumbered former Subsecs. (g) and (i) as Subsecs. (f) and (g), clarified in Subsec. (g) that certain commercial loans secured by mortgages are still limited to the 15% of equity capital and loss reserves limit on loans to one obligor and cannot take advantage of the 50% of equity capital and loss reserves limit on first mortgage loans to any one obligor, and made technical changes, effective January 1, 1995; Sec. 36-98b transferred to Sec. 36a-262 in 1995; P.A. 03-259 amended Subsec. (a) by deleting provision re computing liabilities of a partnership and a general partner, added new Subsecs. (b) to (e) re attribution of liabilities of obligors, aggregation of loans to an obligor and its subsidiaries, loans to a partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or association, and aggregation of loans to foreign governments and their agencies and instrumentalities, and redesignated existing Subsecs. (b) to (g) as new Subsecs. (f) to (k); P.A. 04-8 made a technical change in Subsec. (b)(1), effective April 16, 2004; P.A. 12-96 amended Subsec. (a) by adding requirement that credit exposure arising from a derivative transaction be taken into account, adding definition of “derivative transaction” and permitting commissioner to adopt regulations re determining credit exposure to derivative transactions.

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