Public Act 90-0665 of the 90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0665

SB1528 Enrolled                                LRB9009866JSmg

    AN ACT concerning financial  regulation,  amending  named
Acts.

    Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  5.  The  Illinois  Bank   Examiners'   Education
Foundation Act is amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (20 ILCS 3210/6) (from Ch. 17, par. 406)
    Sec. 6.  The Board shall have the power:
    (1)  To  promulgate  reasonable  rules for the purpose of
administering the provisions of this Act.
    (2)  To issue orders for the purpose of administering the
provisions of this Act and any rule promulgated in accordance
with this Act.
    (3)  To require the Commissioner  to  furnish  the  Board
space  for  meetings  to  be  held by the Board as well as to
require the Commissioner to provide the technical  assistance
and  clerical  and  professional  support  as  the  Board may
require.
    (4)  To adopt  its  own  bylaws  with  respect  to  board
meetings and procedures.  The bylaws shall provide that:
         (A)  A  majority  of  the  whole Board constitutes a
    quorum.
         (B)  A  majority  of  the  quorum  shall  constitute
    effective action except that a vote of a majority of  the
    whole  Board shall be necessary for the approval of rules
    and regulations proposed for adoption by the Commissioner
    under  paragraph  (1)  of  this  Section  and  shall   be
    necessary  for  recommendations  made to the Commissioner
    with regard to proposed amendments to this Act or to  the
    administrative practices hereunder.
         (C)  The  Board  shall  meet  at  least once in each
    calendar year and upon the call of the Commissioner or  a
    majority  of  the  Board  quarter.  The Commissioner or a
    majority of the Board may call such special or additional
    meetings as may be deemed he or they  deem  necessary  or
    desirable.
    (5)  To authorize the transfer of funds from the Illinois
Bank  Examiners' Education Fund to the Bank and Trust Company
Fund.  Any amount so transferred shall  be  retransferred  to
the Illinois Bank Examiners' Education Fund from the Bank and
Trust Company Fund within a period not to exceed 3 years.
    (6)  To  maintain  and  direct  the  investments  of  the
Illinois  Bank  Examiners'  Education Fund as provided in the
Illinois Banking Act and to issue an  annual  report  to  the
Governor,  the General Assembly and all State-chartered banks
on the activities of the Foundation during the preceding year
which shall include, but is not  limited  to,  detailing  the
monies   generated  and  deposited  into  the  Illinois  Bank
Examiners' Education  Fund  by  the  special  education  fee,
voluntary  contributions, and income from investments and the
expenditures from the Fund.
(Source: P.A. 86-1449; 87-1038.)

    Section 10.  The  Illinois  Banking  Act  is  amended  by
changing  Sections  5,  9,  10, 13, 21.1, 24, 48, and 48.1 as
follows:

    (205 ILCS 5/5) (from Ch. 17, par. 311)
    Sec. 5.  General  corporate  powers.   A  bank  organized
under  this  Act  or subject hereto shall be a body corporate
and politic and shall, without specific  mention  thereof  in
the  charter,  have  all the powers conferred by this Act and
the following additional general corporate powers:
    (1)  To sue and be sued,  complain,  and  defend  in  its
corporate name.
    (2)  To  have  a  corporate seal, which may be altered at
pleasure, and to use the same by causing it  or  a  facsimile
thereof   to  be  impressed  or  affixed  or  in  any  manner
reproduced, provided that the affixing of a corporate seal to
an instrument shall not give the instrument additional  force
or effect, or change the construction thereof, and the use of
a corporate seal is not mandatory.
    (3)  To  make,  alter,  amend,  and  repeal  bylaws,  not
inconsistent   with   its   charter  or  with  law,  for  the
administration of the affairs of the bank.
    (4)  To elect or appoint and remove officers  and  agents
of   the   bank   and  define  their  duties  and  fix  their
compensation.
    (5)  To  adopt  and  operate  reasonable   bonus   plans,
profit-sharing  plans, stock-bonus plans, stock-option plans,
pension plans and similar incentive plans for its  directors,
officers and employees.
    (5.1)  To  manage,  operate and administer a fund for the
investment of funds by a public agency or agencies, including
any unit of local  government  or  school  district,  or  any
person.   The  fund  for  a public agency shall invest in the
same  type  of  investments  and  be  subject  to  the   same
limitations provided for the investment of public funds.  The
fund  for  public  agencies  shall maintain a separate ledger
showing the amount of investment for each  public  agency  in
the  fund. "Public funds" and "public agency" as used in this
Section shall have the meanings ascribed to them in Section 1
of the Public Funds Investment Act.
    (6)  To make reasonable donations for the public  welfare
or  for  charitable,  scientific,  religious  or  educational
purposes.
    (7)  To  borrow or incur an obligation; and to pledge its
assets:
         (a)  to secure its borrowings, its lease of personal
    or real property or its other nondeposit obligations;
         (b)  to enable it to act as agent for  the  sale  of
    obligations of the United States;
         (c)  to  secure  deposits  of  public  money  of the
    United States, whenever  required  by  the  laws  of  the
    United   States,  including  without  being  limited  to,
    revenues and funds the deposit of which is subject to the
    control or regulation of the United States or any of  its
    officers, agents, or employees and Postal Savings funds;
         (d)  to secure deposits of public money of any state
    or  of  any  political corporation or subdivision thereof
    including, without being limited to, revenues  and  funds
    the  deposit  of  which  is  subject  to  the  control or
    regulation of any state or of any  political  corporation
    or  subdivisions  thereof  or  of  any of their officers,
    agents, or employees;
         (e)  to secure deposits of money  whenever  required
    by the National Bankruptcy Act;
         (f)  (blank); and
         (g)  to  secure  trust  funds  commingled  with  the
    bank's  funds,  whether  deposited  by  the  bank  or  an
    affiliate  of  the  bank,  pursuant to Section 2-8 of the
    Corporate Fiduciary Act.
    (8)  To own, possess, and carry as assets all or part  of
the  real estate necessary in or with which to do its banking
business, either directly or indirectly through the ownership
of all or part of the capital stock, shares or  interests  in
any  corporation,  association,  trust engaged in holding any
part or parts or all of the bank premises,  engaged  in  such
business  and  in  conducting  a safe deposit business in the
premises or part of them, or engaged in any activity that the
bank is permitted to conduct  in  a  subsidiary  pursuant  to
paragraph (12) of this Section 5.
    (9)  To  own,  possess,  and  carry  as assets other real
estate to which it may obtain title in the collection of  its
debts  or  that  was  formerly  used  as  a  part of the bank
premises, but title to  any  real  estate  except  as  herein
permitted  shall not be retained by the bank, either directly
or by or through a subsidiary,  as  permitted  by  subsection
(12) of this Section for a total period of more than 10 years
after acquiring title, either directly or indirectly.
    (10)  To  do any act, including the acquisition of stock,
necessary to  obtain  insurance  of  its  deposits,  or  part
thereof, and any act necessary to obtain a guaranty, in whole
or  in part, of any of its loans or investments by the United
States or any agency thereof, and any act necessary  to  sell
or  otherwise  dispose  of any of its loans or investments to
the United States or any agency thereof, and to  acquire  and
hold membership in the Federal Reserve System.
    (11)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act or
any  other  law, to do any act and to own, possess, and carry
as assets property of the character, including stock, that is
at the time authorized or permitted to national banks  by  an
Act  of  Congress, but subject always to the same limitations
and restrictions as are applicable to national banks  by  the
pertinent federal law and subject to applicable provisions of
the Financial Institutions Insurance Sales Law.
    (12)  To  own,  possess, and carry as assets stock of one
or more corporations that is, or are, engaged in one or  more
of the following businesses:
         (a)  holding   title  to  and  administering  assets
    acquired as a result of the collection or liquidating  of
    loans, investments, or discounts; or
         (b)  holding  title  to  and  administering personal
    property acquired by the  bank,  directly  or  indirectly
    through  a  subsidiary,  for  the  purpose  of leasing to
    others, provided the lease or leases and  the  investment
    of  the  bank,  directly or through a subsidiary, in that
    personal property otherwise comply with Section  35.1  of
    this Act; or
         (c)  carrying   on   or  administering  any  of  the
    activities excepting  the  receipt  of  deposits  or  the
    payment  of  checks  or  other  orders for the payment of
    money in which a bank  may  engage  in  carrying  on  its
    general banking business; provided, however, that nothing
    contained in this paragraph (c) shall be deemed to permit
    a  bank organized under this Act or subject hereto to do,
    either directly or indirectly through any subsidiary, any
    act, including the making of any loan or  investment,  or
    to  own, possess, or carry as assets any property that if
    done by or owned, possessed, or carried by the State bank
    would be in violation of or prohibited by  any  provision
    of this Act.
    The provisions of this subsection (12) shall not apply to
and  shall  not be deemed to limit the powers of a State bank
with respect to the ownership, possession,  and  carrying  of
stock  that  a  State  bank  is permitted to own, possess, or
carry under this Act.
    Any bank intending to establish a subsidiary  under  this
subsection (12) shall give written notice to the Commissioner
60  days prior to the subsidiary's commencing of business or,
as the case may be, prior to acquiring stock in a corporation
that has already commenced  business.   After  receiving  the
notice,  the  Commissioner may waive or reduce the balance of
the 60 day notice period.  The Commissioner may  specify  the
form  of  the notice and may promulgate rules and regulations
to administer this subsection (12).
    (13)  To  accept  for  payment  at  a  future  date   not
exceeding  one year from the date of acceptance, drafts drawn
upon it by its customers; and to issue,  advise,  or  confirm
letters  of  credit  authorizing  the holders thereof to draw
drafts upon it or its correspondents.
    (14)  To own and lease personal property acquired by  the
bank  at  the  request  of  a prospective lessee and upon the
agreement of that  person  to  lease  the  personal  property
provided  that the lease, the agreement with respect thereto,
and the amount of the investment of the bank in the  property
comply with Section 35.1 of this Act.
    (15) (a)  To  establish  and maintain, in addition to the
main banking premises, branches offering any banking services
permitted at the main banking premises of a State bank.
    (b)  To establish  and  maintain,  after  May  31,  1997,
branches  in  another  state that may conduct any activity in
that state that is authorized or permitted for any bank  that
has  a  banking  charter issued by that state, subject to the
same limitations and  restrictions  that  are  applicable  to
banks chartered by that state.
    (16)  (Blank).
    (17)  To  establish and maintain terminals, as authorized
by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.
    (18)  To establish and maintain temporary service  booths
at  any  International  Fair  held  in  this  State  which is
approved by the United States Department of Commerce, for the
duration of the international fair for the  sole  purpose  of
providing  a  convenient place for foreign trade customers at
the fair to exchange  their  home  countries'  currency  into
United  States currency or the converse. This power shall not
be construed  as  establishing  a  new  place  or  change  of
location for the bank providing the service booth.
    (19)  To  indemnify  its  officers, directors, employees,
and agents, as authorized for corporations under Section 8.75
of the Business Corporation Act of 1983.
    (20)  To own, possess, and carry as assets stock  of,  or
be  or  become  a member of, any corporation, mutual company,
association, trust, or other entity  formed  exclusively  for
the  purpose  of providing directors' and officers' liability
and bankers' blanket bond insurance or reinsurance to and for
the benefit of the stockholders, members,  or  beneficiaries,
or  their assets or businesses, or their officers, directors,
employees, or agents, and not to or for the  benefit  of  any
other person or entity or the public generally.
    (21)  To  make debt or equity investments in corporations
or projects, whether for profit or not for  profit,  designed
to  promote the development of the community and its welfare,
provided that  the  aggregate  investment  in  all  of  these
corporations and in all of these projects does not exceed 10%
of  the unimpaired capital and unimpaired surplus of the bank
and  provided  that  this  limitation  shall  not  apply   to
creditworthy  loans  by  the  bank  to  those corporations or
projects.  Upon written application to  the  Commissioner,  a
bank  may make an investment that would, when aggregated with
all other such investments,  exceed  10%  of  the  unimpaired
capital  and unimpaired surplus of the bank. The Commissioner
may approve the investment if he is of the opinion and  finds
that the proposed investment will not have a material adverse
effect on the safety and soundness of the bank.
    (22)  To own, possess, and carry as assets the stock of a
corporation engaged in the ownership or operation of a travel
agency  or  to  operate  a  travel  agency  as  a part of its
business, provided that the bank either owned, possessed, and
carried as assets the stock of such a corporation or operated
a travel agency as part of its business before July 1, 1991.
    (23)  With respect to affiliate facilities:
         (a)  to conduct at affiliate facilities any  of  the
    following  transactions  for  and  on  behalf  of another
    commonly owned bank, if so authorized by the other  bank:
    receiving  deposits;  cashing and issuing checks, drafts,
    and money orders; changing money; and receiving  payments
    on existing indebtedness; and
         (b)  to  authorize  a commonly owned bank to conduct
    for and on behalf of it any of the transactions listed in
    this paragraph (23) at one or more affiliate facilities.
    Any bank intending to conduct or to authorize a  commonly
owned  bank  to  conduct  at an affiliate facility any of the
transactions specified in  this  paragraph  (23)  shall  give
written  notice  to  the Commissioner at least 30 days before
any such transaction is conducted at the affiliate facility.
    (24)  To act as the agent for any fire,  life,  or  other
insurance  company  authorized  by  the State of Illinois, by
soliciting and selling insurance and collecting  premiums  on
policies  issued  by  such  company;  and  to may receive for
services so rendered such  fees  or  commissions  as  may  be
agreed  upon  between the said bank and the insurance company
for which it may act as agent;  provided,  however,  that  no
such  bank  shall in any case assume or guarantee the payment
of any premium  on  insurance  policies  issued  through  its
agency  by its principal; and provided further, that the bank
shall not guarantee the truth of any  statement  made  by  an
assured in filing his application for insurance.
    (25)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act or
any other law, to offer any product or service that is at the
time   authorized   or   permitted  to  any  insured  savings
association by applicable law, provided that powers conferred
only by this subsection (25):
         (a)  shall always be subject to the same limitations
    and restrictions  that  are  applicable  to  the  insured
    savings  association  for  the product or service by such
    applicable law;
         (b)  shall be subject to  applicable  provisions  of
    the Financial Institutions Insurance Sales Law;
         (c)  shall not include the right to own or conduct a
    real  estate brokerage business for which a license would
    be required under the laws of this State; and
         (d)  shall  not  be   construed   to   include   the
    establishment  or maintenance of a branch, nor shall they
    be construed to limit the establishment or maintenance of
    a branch pursuant to subsection (11).
(Source: P.A. 89-208,  eff.  9-29-95;  89-310,  eff.  1-1-96;
89-364,  eff.  8-18-95;  89-626,  eff.  8-9-96;  90-41,  eff.
10-1-97; 90-301, eff. 8-1-97; revised 10-22-97.)

    (205 ILCS 5/9) (from Ch. 17, par. 316)
    Sec.  9.  Contents  of application. The application for a
permit to organize shall  be  in  a  form  specified  by  the
Commissioner  and shall be filed with the Commissioner signed
by each of the applicants and shall  be  acknowledged  before
some officer authorized by law to acknowledge deeds. It shall
state:
    (1)  The  name,  residence,  business  or  occupation and
address of each applicant, and a statement  of  the  proposed
management;
    (2)  The name for the proposed bank;
    (3)  The location of the proposed bank;
    (4)  The  amount  of capital and, surplus and reserve for
operating expenses for the proposed bank;
    (5)  The number of shares of capital stock, the number of
shares and classes of preferred stock, if any, the par  value
of  the capital stock and preferred stock, and the amount for
which each share of capital stock and preferred stock  is  to
be sold;
    (6)  A  statement  of  the financial worth of each of the
applicants;
    (7)  (Blank);
    (8)  Such other relevant information as the  Commissioner
may require.
(Source: P.A. 90-301, eff. 8-1-97.)

    (205 ILCS 5/10) (from Ch. 17, par. 317)
    Sec.  10.  Permit  to  organize.  Upon  the  filing of an
application for a permit to organize, the Commissioner  shall
investigate  the  truth  of  the statements therein and shall
consider the proposed bank's capital  structure,  its  future
earnings  prospects,  the  general character, experience, and
qualifications of its proposed management, its proposed  plan
of  operation,  and  the  convenience  and  needs of the area
sought to be served and  notwithstanding  the  provisions  of
Section 7 of this Act, the Commissioner shall not approve the
application and issue a permit to organize unless he shall be
of the opinion and finds:
    (1)  That the proposed capital at least meets the minimum
requirements  of  this  Act  determined  by  the Commissioner
pursuant to  Section  7  of  this  Act  including  additional
capital  necessitated  by  the  circumstances of the proposed
bank including its size,  scope of operations and  market  in
which it proposes to operate;
    (2)  That the future earnings prospects are favorable;
    (3)  That   the   general   character,   experience,  and
qualifications of its proposed management  and  its  proposed
plan of operation are is such as to assure reasonable promise
of successful, safe and sound operation;
    (4)  That  the  name of the proposed bank is not the same
as or deceptively similar to the name of any other bank  then
operating in this State; and
    (5)  That the convenience and needs of the area sought to
be served by the proposed bank will be promoted.
(Source: P.A. 86-368.)

    (205 ILCS 5/13) (from Ch. 17, par. 320)
    Sec. 13.  Issuance of charter.
    (a)  When  the  directors  have  organized as provided in
Section 12 of  this  Act,  and  the  capital  stock  and  the
preferred  stock, if any, together with a surplus of not less
than 50% of the capital, has been all fully  paid  in  and  a
record   of   the  same  filed  with  the  Commissioner,  the
Commissioner or some competent person of  the  Commissioner's
appointment  shall  make  a  thorough  examination  into  the
affairs  of  the proposed bank, and if satisfied (i) that all
the requirements of this Act have been  complied  with,  (ii)
and  that  no intervening circumstance has occurred to change
the Commissioner's findings made pursuant to  Section  10  of
this  Act,  and  (iii)  that  the  prior  involvement  by any
stockholder who will own a sufficient amount of stock to have
control, as defined  in  Section  18  of  this  Act,  of  the
proposed  bank  with any other financial institution, whether
as stockholder, director, officer, or customer, was conducted
in  a  safe  and  sound  manner,  upon   payment   into   the
Commissioner's  office  of  the  reasonable  expenses  of the
examination,  as  determined   by   the   Commissioner,   the
Commissioner  shall  issue  a charter authorizing the bank to
commence business as authorized in this  Act.   All  charters
issued  by  the  Commissioner or any predecessor agency which
chartered State banks, including any charter  outstanding  as
of  September  1,  1989, shall be perpetual.  For the 2 years
after the Commissioner has issued a charter to  a  bank,  the
bank  shall  request  and  obtain from the Commissioner prior
written approval  before  it  may  change  senior  management
personnel or directors.
    The original charter, duly certified by the Commissioner,
or  a  certified  copy  shall  be  evidence in all courts and
places of the existence and  authority  of  the  bank  to  do
business.    Upon   the   issuance  of  the  charter  by  the
Commissioner, the bank shall be deemed  fully  organized  and
may  proceed  to  do  business.  The Commissioner may, in the
Commissioner's  discretion,  withhold  the  issuing  of   the
charter  when the Commissioner has reason to believe that the
bank  is  organized  for  any   purpose   other   than   that
contemplated by this Act or that a commission or fee has been
paid  in  connection  with the sale of the stock of the bank.
The  Commissioner  shall  revoke  the   charter   and   order
liquidation  in  the  event that the bank does not commence a
general banking business within one year from the date of the
issuance of the charter, unless a request has been submitted,
in writing, to the Commissioner  for  an  extension  and  the
request  has  been  approved.   After  commencing  a  general
banking   business,  a  bank,  upon  written  notice  to  the
Commissioner, may change its name.
    (b) (1)  The Commissioner may also issue a charter  to  a
bank   that   is   owned   exclusively  by  other  depository
institutions or depository institution holding companies  and
is  organized  to engage exclusively in providing services to
or  for  other   depository   institutions,   their   holding
companies, and the officers, directors, and employees of such
institutions  and  companies,  and in providing correspondent
banking  services  at  the  request   of   other   depository
institutions  or their holding companies (also referred to as
a "bankers' bank").
    (2)  A bank chartered pursuant to  paragraph  (1)  shall,
except   as   otherwise   specifically   determined   by  the
Commissioner, be vested with the same rights  and  privileges
and  subject to the same duties, restrictions, penalties, and
liabilities now or hereafter imposed under this Act.
    (c)  A bank chartered under this Act  after  November  1,
1985,  and an out-of-state bank that merges with a State bank
and establishes or maintains a branch in this State after May
31, 1997, shall obtain  from  and,  at  all  times  while  it
accepts  or  retains  deposits,  maintain  with  the  Federal
Deposit  Insurance Corporation, or such other instrumentality
of or corporation chartered by  the  United  States,  deposit
insurance as authorized under federal law.
    (d) (i)  A  bank that has a banking charter issued by the
Commissioner under  this  Act  may,  pursuant  to  a  written
purchase and assumption agreement, transfer substantially all
of  its  assets  to  another  State  bank or national bank in
consideration, in whole or in part, for the transferee banks'
assumption of any part or all of  its  liabilities.   Such  a
transfer  shall  in no way be deemed to impair the charter of
the transferor bank or cause the transferor bank  to  forfeit
any   of   its  rights,  powers,  interests,  franchises,  or
privileges as a State bank, nor shall any voluntary reduction
in  the  transferor  bank's  activities  resulting  from  the
transfer have any such  effect;  provided,  however,  that  a
State  bank  that  transfers  substantially all of its assets
pursuant to this subsection (d) and  following  the  transfer
does  not  accept deposits and make loans, shall not have any
rights, powers, interests, franchises,  or  privileges  under
subsection  (15)  of Section 5 of this Act until the bank has
resumed accepting deposits and making loans.
    (ii)  The  fact  that  a  State  bank  does  not   resume
accepting deposits and making loans for a period of 24 months
commencing on September 11, 1989 or on a date of the transfer
of  substantially  all of a State bank's assets, whichever is
later, or such longer period as the Commissioner may allow in
writing, may be the basis for a finding by  the  Commissioner
under  Section  51  of  this  Act  that the bank is unable to
continue operations.
    (iii)  The authority provided by subdivision (i) of  this
subsection  (d)  shall terminate on May 31, 1997, and no bank
that has transferred substantially all of its assets pursuant
to this subsection (d) shall continue in existence after  May
31, 1997.
(Source:  P.A.  89-208,  eff.  9-29-95; 89-567, eff. 7-26-96;
89-603,  eff.  8-2-96;  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-301,   eff.
8-1-97.)
    (205 ILCS 5/21.1)
    Sec. 21.1.  Application for certificate of authority.
    (a)  On  or after June 1, 1997, an out-of-state bank may,
in order to procure a certificate of authority to merge  with
a  State  bank after executing, shall execute and filing file
in duplicate not  less  than  60  days  before  the  proposed
effective date of the merger an application therefor with the
Commissioner   and   after   shall   also   filing  with  the
Commissioner  file  a  copy  of  its  charter,  articles   of
association  or articles of incorporation, and all amendments
thereto, duly authenticated by  the  proper  officer  of  the
state  wherein  it  is chartered or incorporated and the last
quarterly statement of condition filed  by  the  out-of-state
bank  with  the  appropriate  federal banking regulator.  The
Commissioner shall specify the form of the application  which
shall   set   forth,  to  the  extent  applicable,  the  same
information  required  in  an  application   by   a   foreign
corporation   pursuant  to  Section  13.15  of  the  Business
Corporation Act of 1983. Subject to Sections 21.2 and 21.3 of
this Act, receipt  by  the  Commissioner  of  a  copy  of  an
application  filed  with  and  approved  by  the out-of-state
bank's chartering authority authorizing the out-of-state bank
to  merge  with  a  State  bank  shall  satisfy  the   filing
requirements of this subsection (a).
    When  the  provisions  of this Section have been complied
with, the Commissioner shall issue a certificate of authority
to merge. If the merger is not consummated within  one  year,
the Commissioner may cancel the certificate of authority.
    (b)  An out-of-state bank that is the resulting bank in a
merger with a State bank may, after the merger, establish and
maintain  a  branch  or branches in Illinois at the locations
where the  State  bank  had  its  main  office  and  branches
immediately before the merger.
    (c)  An  out-of-state bank that establishes and maintains
a branch or branches in Illinois pursuant to  subsection  (b)
of this Section may, after the merger, establish and maintain
additional  branches  in  this  State to the same extent as a
State bank.
    (d)  A branch of an out-of-state bank may not conduct any
activity that is not authorized for a State bank.
    (e)  An out-of-state bank shall provide written notice to
the Commissioner of its intent  to  establish  an  additional
branch  or  branches  in  this  State  within  30  days after
approval  of  the  appropriate  federal  banking  agency   to
establish  the  branch or branches.  The notice form shall be
specified by the Commissioner and  may  include  any  of  the
information  required  for  a similar notice by a State bank.
Receipt by the Commissioner of  notice  of  the  out-of-state
bank's intent to establish such additional branch or branches
in   this  State  from  the  out-of-state  bank's  chartering
authority shall satisfy the requirements of  this  subsection
(e).
(Source: P.A. 89-208, eff. 9-29-95.)

    (205 ILCS 5/24) (from Ch. 17, par. 331)
    Sec.  24.  Effective date of merger; filing. The executed
merger agreement together with copies of the  resolutions  of
the  stockholders  of  each  merging  bank or insured savings
association approving it, certified by the bank's or  insured
savings  association's  president  or  vice-president  or the
cashier, shall be filed with the Commissioner. A merger  that
is  to  result  in a State bank shall, unless a later date is
specified  in  the  agreement,  become  effective  when   the
Commissioner   has   approved  the  agreement  and  issued  a
certificate of merger to the continuing bank. The charters of
the merging banks or insured savings association, other  than
the continuing bank, shall thereupon automatically terminate.
If,  after  May  31,  1997,  the  merger  will  result  in an
out-of-state bank, the charter of a merging State bank  shall
terminate  upon notice to the Commissioner that the merger is
effective. The certificate of merger shall specify  the  name
of  each  merging bank or insured savings association and the
name of the  continuing  bank,  and  the  amendments  to  the
charter  of  the  continuing  bank provided for by the merger
agreement. The certificate shall be  conclusive  evidence  of
the merger and of the correctness of all proceedings therefor
in  all  courts  and  places,  and  the  certificate shall be
recorded.
(Source: P.A. 89-208, eff. 9-29-95.)

    (205 ILCS 5/48) (from Ch. 17, par. 359)
    Sec. 48. Commissioner's powers; duties.  The Commissioner
shall have the powers and authority, and is charged with  the
duties  and  responsibilities  designated  in this Act, and a
State bank shall not be subject to any other visitorial power
other than as authorized by this Act, except those vested  in
the courts, or upon prior consultation with the Commissioner,
a  foreign  bank  regulator  with  an appropriate supervisory
interest in the parent or affiliate of a state bank.  In  the
performance of the Commissioner's duties:
    (1)  The  Commissioner shall call for statements from all
State banks as provided in  Section  47  at  least  one  time
during each calendar quarter.
    (2) (a)  The  Commissioner,  as often as the Commissioner
shall deem necessary or proper, and no less  frequently  than
18  months following the preceding examination, shall appoint
a suitable person or persons to make an  examination  of  the
affairs  of  every State bank, except that for every eligible
State bank, as defined by  regulation,  the  Commissioner  in
lieu  of  the  examination may accept on an alternating basis
the examination made by the eligible State bank's appropriate
federal banking agency pursuant to Section 111 of the Federal
Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  Improvement  Act  of   1991,
provided the appropriate federal banking agency has made such
an  examination.   A  person  so  appointed  shall  not  be a
stockholder or officer or employee of  any  bank  which  that
person  may  be directed to examine, and shall have powers to
make a thorough examination into all the affairs of the  bank
and  in  so doing to examine any of the officers or agents or
employees thereof on oath and shall make a full and  detailed
report  of the condition of the bank to the Commissioner.  In
making  the  examination  the  examiners  shall  include   an
examination of the affairs of all the affiliates of the bank,
as  defined in subsection (b) of Section 35.2 of this Act, as
shall be necessary to disclose fully the  conditions  of  the
affiliates, the relations between the bank and the affiliates
and  the  effect  of  those relations upon the affairs of the
bank, and in connection therewith shall have power to examine
any of the officers, directors, agents, or employees  of  the
affiliates on oath.  After May 31, 1997, the Commissioner may
enter  into  cooperative  agreements  with  state  regulatory
authorities  of  other  states  to provide for examination of
State bank branches in those states, and the Commissioner may
accept reports of examinations of State  bank  branches  from
those   state  regulatory  authorities.    These  cooperative
agreements may set forth the manner in which the other  state
regulatory  authorities  may  be compensated for examinations
prepared for and submitted to the Commissioner.
    (b)  After May 31, 1997, the Commissioner  is  authorized
to examine, as often as the Commissioner shall deem necessary
or  proper, branches of out-of-state banks.  The Commissioner
may  establish  and  may  assess  fees  to  be  paid  to  the
Commissioner for examinations under this subsection (b).  The
fees shall be borne by the out-of-state bank, unless the fees
are borne by the state regulatory  authority  that  chartered
the   out-of-state  bank,  as  determined  by  a  cooperative
agreement between the Commissioner and the  state  regulatory
authority that chartered the out-of-state bank.
    (2.5)  Whenever   any   State  bank,  any  subsidiary  or
affiliate of a State bank, or after May 31, 1997, any  branch
of  an  out-of-state bank causes to be performed, by contract
or otherwise, any bank services for itself, whether on or off
its premises:
         (a)  that   performance   shall   be   subject    to
    examination  by the Commissioner to the same extent as if
    services were being performed by the bank or,  after  May
    31,  1997,  branch of the out-of-state bank itself on its
    own premises; and
         (b)  the bank or, after May 31, 1997, branch of  the
    out-of-state  bank  shall  notify the Commissioner of the
    existence of a service  relationship.   The  notification
    shall  be submitted with the first statement of condition
    (as required by Section 47 of this  Act)  due  after  the
    making  of the service contract or the performance of the
    service, whichever occurs first.  The Commissioner  shall
    be  notified  of  each  subsequent  contract  in the same
    manner.
    For purposes of this subsection  (2.5),  the  term  "bank
services"  means  services  such  as  sorting  and posting of
checks and deposits, computation and posting of interest  and
other credits and charges, preparation and mailing of checks,
statements,   notices,   and  similar  items,  or  any  other
clerical, bookkeeping, accounting,  statistical,  or  similar
functions  performed  for  a  State  bank,  including but not
limited to electronic data processing related to  those  bank
services.
    (3)  The expense of administering this Act, including the
expense  of  the  examinations  of State banks as provided in
this Act, shall to the extent of the amounts  resulting  from
the  fees  provided  for in paragraphs (a), (a-2), and (b) of
this subsection (3) be assessed  against  and  borne  by  the
State banks:
         (a)  Each  bank shall pay to the Commissioner a Call
    Report Fee which shall be paid in quarterly  installments
    equal to one-fourth of the sum of the annual fixed fee of
    $800,  plus  a  variable fee based on the assets shown on
    the quarterly statement of  condition  delivered  to  the
    Commissioner  in  accordance  with  Section  47  for  the
    preceding  quarter  according  to the following schedule:
    16¢ per $1,000 of the first $5,000,000 of  total  assets,
    15¢  per  $1,000 of the next $20,000,000 of total assets,
    13¢ per $1,000 of the next $75,000,000  of total  assets,
    9¢  per  $1,000 of the next $400,000,000 of total assets,
    7¢ per $1,000 of the next $500,000,000 of  total  assets,
    and   5¢   per   $1,000   of  all  assets  in  excess  of
    $1,000,000,000, of the State bank. The  Call  Report  Fee
    shall be calculated by the Commissioner and billed to the
    banks  for  remittance  at  the  time  of  the  quarterly
    statements  of  condition provided for in Section 47. The
    Commissioner may require payment of the fees provided  in
    this  Section  by  an  electronic transfer of funds or an
    automatic debit of an account of each of the State banks.
    In case more than one examination of any bank  is  deemed
    by  the  Commissioner  to be necessary in any examination
    frequency cycle specified  in  subsection  2(a)  of  this
    Section,   and   is   performed  at  his  direction,  the
    Commissioner may assess a reasonable  additional  fee  to
    recover  the cost of the additional examination.  In lieu
    of the method and amounts set forth in this paragraph (a)
    for  the  calculation  of  the  Call  Report   Fee,   the
    Commissioner  may  specify  by  rule that the Call Report
    Fees  provided  by   this   Section   may   be   assessed
    semiannually  or some other period and may provide in the
    rule the formula to be used for calculating and assessing
    the periodic Call Report Fees to be paid by State banks.
         (a-1)  If in the  opinion  of  the  Commissioner  an
    emergency  exists or appears likely, the Commissioner may
    assign an examiner or examiners to monitor the affairs of
    a  State  bank   with   whatever   frequency   he   deems
    appropriate,  including but not limited to a daily basis.
    The reasonable and necessary expenses of the Commissioner
    during the period of the monitoring shall be borne by the
    subject bank.  The Commissioner shall furnish  the  State
    bank  a statement of time and expenses if requested to do
    so within 30 days of the  conclusion  of  the  monitoring
    period.
         (a-2)  On  and after January 1, 1990, the reasonable
    and  necessary  expenses  of  the   Commissioner   during
    examination   of   the  performance  of  electronic  data
    processing services under subsection (2.5) shall be borne
    by the banks for which the  services  are  provided.   An
    amount,  based  upon  a  fee  structure prescribed by the
    Commissioner, shall be paid by the banks  or,  after  May
    31,  1997,  branches  of out-of-state banks receiving the
    electronic data processing services along with  the  Call
    Report   Fee   assessed   under  paragraph  (a)  of  this
    subsection (3).
         (a-3)  After  May  31,  1997,  the  reasonable   and
    necessary expenses of the Commissioner during examination
    of the performance of electronic data processing services
    under  subsection  (2.5)  at  or on behalf of branches of
    out-of-state banks shall be  borne  by  the  out-of-state
    banks,  unless  those  expenses  are  borne  by the state
    regulatory authorities that  chartered  the  out-of-state
    banks,  as  determined  by cooperative agreements between
    the Commissioner and  the  state  regulatory  authorities
    that chartered the out-of-state banks.
         (b)  "Fiscal  year"  for purposes of this Section 48
    is defined as a period beginning July 1 of any  year  and
    ending  June  30 of the next year. The Commissioner shall
    receive for each fiscal year, commencing with the  fiscal
    year  ending June 30, 1987, a contingent fee equal to the
    lesser of the aggregate of the fees  paid  by  all  State
    banks  under  paragraph  (a)  of  subsection (3) for that
    year, or the amount, if any, whereby the aggregate of the
    administration expenses, as defined in paragraph (c), for
    that fiscal year exceeds the sum of the aggregate of  the
    fees  payable  by  all  State  banks  for that year under
    paragraph (a) of subsection (3), plus all  other  amounts
    collected  by  the  Commissioner  for that year under any
    other provision of this Act, plus the  aggregate  of  all
    fees  collected  for  that year by the Commissioner under
    the Corporate Fiduciary Act, excluding  the  receivership
    fees  provided  for  in  Section  5-10  of  the Corporate
    Fiduciary Act, and the Foreign Banking  Office  Act.  The
    aggregate  amount  of  the contingent fee thus arrived at
    for  any  fiscal  year  shall  be  apportioned   amongst,
    assessed  upon,  and  paid by the State banks and foreign
    banking   corporations,   respectively,   in   the   same
    proportion that the fee of each under  paragraph  (a)  of
    subsection  (3), respectively, for that year bears to the
    aggregate for that  year  of  the  fees  collected  under
    paragraph  (a) of subsection (3). The aggregate amount of
    the  contingent  fee,  and  the  portion  thereof  to  be
    assessed  upon  each  State  bank  and  foreign   banking
    corporation,  respectively,  shall  be  determined by the
    Commissioner and shall be  paid  by  each,  respectively,
    within  120 days of the close of the period for which the
    contingent fee  is  computed  and  is  payable,  and  the
    Commissioner  shall  give  20  days advance notice of the
    amount of the contingent fee payable by  the  State  bank
    and  of the date fixed by the Commissioner for payment of
    the fee.
         (c)  The "administration expenses"  for  any  fiscal
    year  shall mean the ordinary and contingent expenses for
    that year incident to making  the  examinations  provided
    for  by,  and  for otherwise administering, this Act, the
    Corporate Fiduciary Act, excluding the expenses paid from
    the Corporate Fiduciary Receivership account in the  Bank
    and  Trust  Company Fund, the Foreign Banking Office Act,
    the Electronic Fund Transfer Act, and the  Illinois  Bank
    Examiners'   Education   Foundation  Act,  including  all
    salaries  and  other  compensation  paid   for   personal
    services  rendered for the State by officers or employees
    of the State, including the Commissioner and  the  Deputy
    Commissioners,   all   expenditures   for  telephone  and
    telegraph charges, postage  and  postal  charges,  office
    stationery,  supplies  and services, and office furniture
    and equipment,  including  typewriters  and  copying  and
    duplicating  machines  and  filing equipment, surety bond
    premiums, and  travel  expenses  of  those  officers  and
    employees,  employees,  expenditures  or  charges for the
    acquisition, enlargement or improvement of,  or  for  the
    use  of,  any  office  space,  building, or structure, or
    expenditures  for  the   maintenance   thereof   or   for
    furnishing  heat,  light,  or power with respect thereto,
    all to the extent that those  expenditures  are  directly
    incidental  to  such examinations or administration.  The
    Commissioner shall not be required by paragraphs  (c)  or
    (d-1)  of  this  subsection (3) to maintain in any fiscal
    year's budget appropriated reserves for accrued  vacation
    and  accrued  sick  leave  that is required to be paid to
    employees of the Commissioner upon termination  of  their
    service  with  the Commissioner in an amount that is more
    than is reasonably anticipated to be  necessary  for  any
    anticipated  turnover in employees, whether due to normal
    attrition   or   due   to   layoffs,   terminations,   or
    resignations.
         (d)  The aggregate of  all  fees  collected  by  the
    Commissioner under this Act, the Corporate Fiduciary Act,
    or  the  Foreign  Banking Office Act on and after July 1,
    1979, shall be paid promptly after receipt of  the  same,
    accompanied  by  a  detailed  statement thereof, into the
    State treasury and shall be set apart in a  special  fund
    to  be known as the "Bank and Trust Company Fund", except
    as provided in paragraph (c) of subsection (11)  of  this
    Section.  The amount from time to time deposited into the
    Bank and Trust Company Fund shall be used to  offset  the
    ordinary  administrative  expenses of the Commissioner of
    Banks and Real Estate as defined in this Section. Nothing
    in this amendatory Act of 1979 shall  prevent  continuing
    the  practice  of  paying  expenses  involving  salaries,
    retirement,  social  security,  and  State-paid insurance
    premiums of State officers  by  appropriations  from  the
    General  Revenue Fund.  However, the General Revenue Fund
    shall be reimbursed for those payments made on and  after
    July  1,  1979,  by  an annual transfer of funds from the
    Bank and Trust Company Fund.
         (d-1)  Adequate funds shall be available in the Bank
    and Trust Company Fund to permit the  timely  payment  of
    administration  expenses.   In each fiscal year the total
    administration expenses shall be deducted from the  total
    fees  collected  by  the  Commissioner  and the remainder
    transferred into the Cash Flow  Reserve  Account,  unless
    the balance of the Cash Flow Reserve Account prior to the
    transfer  equals  or  exceeds  one-fourth  of  the  total
    initial  appropriations  from  the Bank and Trust Company
    Fund for the subsequent year, in which case the remainder
    shall be credited to  State  banks  and  foreign  banking
    corporations  and  applied  against  their  fees  for the
    subsequent year.  The amount credited to each State  bank
    and  foreign  banking  corporation  shall  be in the same
    proportion as the Call Report Fees paid by each  for  the
    year bear to the total Call Report Fees collected for the
    year.   If,  after  a  transfer  to the Cash Flow Reserve
    Account is made or  if  no  remainder  is  available  for
    transfer, the balance of the Cash Flow Reserve Account is
    less  than one-fourth of the total initial appropriations
    for the subsequent year and  the  amount  transferred  is
    less  than 5% of the total Call Report Fees for the year,
    additional amounts needed to make the transfer  equal  to
    5%  of  the  total Call Report Fees for the year shall be
    apportioned amongst, assessed upon, and paid by the State
    banks  and  foreign  banking  corporations  in  the  same
    proportion  that  the   Call   Report   Fees   of   each,
    respectively,  for the year bear to the total Call Report
    Fees collected for  the  year.   The  additional  amounts
    assessed  shall be transferred into the Cash Flow Reserve
    Account.  For  purposes  of  this  paragraph  (d-1),  the
    calculation  of  the  fees  collected by the Commissioner
    shall exclude  the  receivership  fees  provided  for  in
    Section 5-10 of the Corporate Fiduciary Act.
         (e)  The  Commissioner  may  upon request certify to
    any public record in his keeping and shall have authority
    to levy a reasonable charge for issuing certifications of
    any public record in his keeping.
         (f)  In addition to  fees  authorized  elsewhere  in
    this  Act,  the  Commissioner  may,  in connection with a
    review, approval, or  provision  of  a  service,  levy  a
    reasonable  charge  to  recover  the  cost of the review,
    approval, or service.
    (4)  Nothing contained in this Act shall be construed  to
limit  the obligation relative to examinations and reports of
any State bank, deposits in which are to any  extent  insured
by  the  United States or any agency thereof, nor to limit in
any way the powers of  the  Commissioner  with  reference  to
examinations and reports of that bank.
    (5)  The  nature  and  condition  of  the  assets  in  or
investment  of any bonus, pension, or profit sharing plan for
officers or employees of every State bank or, after  May  31,
1997,  branch  of  an out-of-state bank shall be deemed to be
included in the affairs of that State bank or  branch  of  an
out-of-state  bank subject to examination by the Commissioner
under the provisions of subsection (2) of this  Section,  and
if  the  Commissioner shall find from an examination that the
condition of or operation of the investments or assets of the
plan is unlawful, fraudulent, or unsafe, or that any  trustee
has   abused  his  trust,  the  Commissioner  shall,  if  the
situation so found by the Commissioner shall not be corrected
to his satisfaction within 60 days after the Commissioner has
given notice to the board of directors of the State  bank  or
out-of-state  bank  of  his findings, report the facts to the
Attorney General who shall  thereupon  institute  proceedings
against  the  State  bank  or out-of-state bank, the board of
directors thereof, or the trustees under  such  plan  as  the
nature of the case may require.
    (6)  The Commissioner shall have the power:
         (a)  To  promulgate reasonable rules for the purpose
    of administering the provisions of this Act.
         (b)  To   issue   orders   for   the   purpose    of
    administering  the  provisions  of  this Act and any rule
    promulgated in accordance with this Act.
         (c)  To appoint hearing officers to execute  any  of
    the powers granted to the Commissioner under this Section
    for  the  purpose  of administering this Act and any rule
    promulgated in accordance with this Act.
         (d)  To  subpoena   witnesses,   to   compel   their
    attendance,  to administer an oath, to examine any person
    under oath, and to require the production of any relevant
    books, papers, accounts, and documents in the  course  of
    and pursuant to any investigation being conducted, or any
    action being taken, by the Commissioner in respect of any
    matter relating to the duties imposed upon, or the powers
    vested  in, the Commissioner under the provisions of this
    Act or any rule promulgated in accordance with this Act.
         (e)  To conduct hearings.
    (7)  Whenever, in the opinion of  the  Commissioner,  any
director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent of a State bank or,
after May 31, 1997, of any branch  of  an  out-of-state  bank
shall  have violated any law, rule, or order relating to that
bank or shall have engaged in an unsafe or  unsound  practice
in  conducting  the  business  of  that  bank  or  shall have
violated any law or engaged or participated in any unsafe  or
unsound practice in connection with any financial institution
or  other business entity such that the character and fitness
of the director, officer, employee, or agent does not  assure
reasonable  promise  of safe and sound operation of the State
bank, the Commissioner may issue an order of removal. If,  in
the   opinion  of  the  Commissioner,  any  former  director,
officer, employee, or agent of a State  bank,  prior  to  the
termination  of  his  or her service with that bank, violated
any law, rule, or  order  relating  to  that  State  bank  or
engaged  in  an  unsafe or unsound practice in conducting the
business of that bank or  violated  any  law  or  engaged  or
participated  in any unsafe or unsound practice in connection
with any financial institution or other business entity  such
that  the  character  and  fitness  of the director, officer,
employee, or agent would not have assured reasonable  promise
of  safe  and  sound operation of the State bank prior to the
termination of  his  or  her  service  with  that  bank,  the
Commissioner  may issue an order prohibiting that person from
further service with a bank as a director, officer, employee,
or agent.  An order issued pursuant to this subsection  shall
be  served  upon the director, officer, employee, or agent. A
copy of the order shall be sent to each director of the  bank
affected  by  registered  mail.  The  person  affected by the
action may request a hearing before the State  Banking  Board
within  10  days  after receipt of the order of removal.  The
hearing shall be held by the Board within 30 days  after  the
request  has been received by the Board. The Board shall make
a determination approving,  modifying,  or  disapproving  the
order   of  the  Commissioner  as  its  final  administrative
decision. If a hearing is held by the Board, the Board  shall
make  its determination within 60 days from the conclusion of
the hearing. Any person affected by a decision of  the  Board
under  this subsection (7) of Section 48 of this Act may have
the decision reviewed only under and in accordance  with  the
Administrative  Review  Law  and  the  rules adopted pursuant
thereto. A copy of the order shall also be  served  upon  the
bank  of which he is a director, officer, employee, or agent,
whereupon he shall cease to be a director, officer, employee,
or agent of that bank.   The  Commissioner  may  institute  a
civil  action  against the director, officer, or agent of the
State bank or, after May 31,  1997,  of  the  branch  of  the
out-of-state bank against whom any order provided for by this
subsection  (7)  of  this  Section  48  has  been issued, and
against the State bank or, after May 31,  1997,  out-of-state
bank,  to  enforce compliance with or to enjoin any violation
of the terms of the  order.  Any  person  who  has  been  the
subject  of  an  order  of removal or an order of prohibition
issued by  the Commissioner under this subsection or  Section
5-6  of  the Corporate Fiduciary Act may not thereafter serve
as director, officer, employee, or agent of any State bank or
of any branch of any out-of-state bank, or of  any  corporate
fiduciary,  as  defined  in  Section  1-5.05 of the Corporate
Fiduciary Act, or of any other  entity  that  is  subject  to
licensure  or regulation by the Commissioner or the Office of
Banks and Real Estate unless  the  Commissioner  has  granted
prior approval in writing.
    (8)  The Commissioner may impose civil penalties of up to
$10,000   against  any  person  for  each  violation  of  any
provision of this Act, any  rule  promulgated  in  accordance
with  this  Act,  any order of the Commissioner, or any other
action which in the Commissioner's discretion is an unsafe or
unsound banking practice.
    (9)  The Commissioner may impose civil penalties of up to
$100 against any person for the first failure to comply  with
reporting requirements set forth in the report of examination
of  the  bank  and  up  to $200 for the second and subsequent
failures to comply with those reporting requirements.
    (10)  All   final   administrative   decisions   of   the
Commissioner hereunder shall be subject  to  judicial  review
pursuant  to the provisions of the Administrative Review Law.
For matters involving administrative review, venue  shall  be
in either Sangamon County or Cook County.
    (11)  The endowment fund for the Illinois Bank Examiners'
Education Foundation shall be administered as follows:
         (a)  (Blank).
         (b)  The   Foundation   is   empowered   to  receive
    voluntary contributions,  gifts,  grants,  bequests,  and
    donations  on  behalf  of  the  Illinois  Bank Examiners'
    Education  Foundation  from  national  banks  and   other
    persons  for  the purpose of funding the endowment of the
    Illinois Bank Examiners' Education Foundation.
         (c)  The aggregate of all special  educational  fees
    collected  by  the  Commissioner and property received by
    the  Commissioner  on  behalf  of   the   Illinois   Bank
    Examiners'  Education  Foundation  under  this subsection
    (11) on or after June  30,  1986,  shall  be  either  (i)
    promptly paid after receipt of the same, accompanied by a
    detailed  statement  thereof, into the State Treasury and
    shall be set apart in a special fund to be known as  "The
    Illinois  Bank  Examiners' Education Fund" to be invested
    by either the Treasurer of the State of Illinois  in  the
    Public  Treasurers'  Investment  Pool  or  in  any  other
    investment  he  is  authorized to make or by the Illinois
    State Board of Investment as the board of trustees of the
    Illinois Bank Examiners' Education Foundation may  direct
    or  (ii)  deposited  into  an  account  maintained  in  a
    commercial bank or corporate fiduciary in the name of the
    Illinois Bank Examiners' Education Foundation pursuant to
    the  order  and direction of the Board of Trustees of the
    Illinois Bank Examiners' Education Foundation.
    (12)  (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 89-208, eff.  9-29-95;  89-317,  eff.  8-11-95;
89-508,  eff.  7-3-96;  89-567,  eff.  7-26-96;  89-626, eff.
8-9-96; 90-14, eff. 7-1-97; 90-301, eff. 8-1-97.)

    (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.
    (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  credit  information between a bank and other banks or
    financial   institutions   or   commercial   enterprises,
    directly or through a consumer reporting agency.
         (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.
    (c)  A bank may not disclose to any person, except to the
customer or his duly authorized agent, any 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  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, or court order only  after
the  bank  mails a copy of the subpoena, summons, warrant, 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,
or court order. The Commissioner shall  determine  the  rates
and conditions under which payment may be made.
(Source:  P.A.  89-208,  eff.  9-29-95; 89-364, eff. 8-18-95;
89-508,  eff.  7-3-96;  89-626,  eff.  8-9-96;  90-18,   eff.
7-1-97.)

    Section  15.  The Savings Bank Act is amended by changing
Sections 1006, 1008, 6001, 6003, and 6013 as follows:

    (205 ILCS 205/1006) (from Ch. 17, par. 7301-6)
    Sec. 1006. Parity.
    (a)  Subject to the regulation of the Commissioner and in
addition to the powers granted by  this  Act,   each  savings
bank  operating  under  this  Act  shall possess those powers
granted by regulation promulgated under the  Federal  Deposit
Insurance Act for state savings banks.
    (b)  A  savings bank may establish branches or offices at
which savings or investments are regularly received or  loans
approved as follows:
         (1)  to  the  extent  branch  powers and offices are
    granted to State banks under the Illinois Banking Act;
         (2)  within the geographic area defined in Article 2
    of this Act and subject to the provisions of Article 2 of
    this Act;
         (3)  within the same geographic areas or  states  as
    those states from which a holding company is permitted to
    acquire  an  Illinois savings bank or an Illinois savings
    bank holding company;
         (4)  to the same extent that holding  companies  and
    savings  and  loan associations headquartered outside the
    State of Illinois are allowed to operate in  Illinois  by
    virtue  of Articles 1A and 2B of the Illinois Savings and
    Loan Act of 1985;
         (5)  as the result of  mergers,  consolidations,  or
    bulk sales of facilities in the case of relocations.
    (c)  The  Commissioner may adopt regulations that provide
for  the  establishment  of  branches  as  defined   by   the
Commissioner.
    (d)  Notwithstanding  any  other provision of this Act, a
savings bank that purchases or assumes all or any part of the
assets or liabilities of a bank, savings bank, or savings and
loan association or  merges  or  consolidates  with  a  bank,
savings  bank, or savings and loan association may retain and
maintain the main premises or branches of  the  former  bank,
savings  bank, or savings and loan association as branches of
the  purchasing,  merging,  or  consolidating  savings  bank,
provided it assumes the  deposit  liabilities  of  the  bank,
savings  bank,  or savings and loan association maintained at
the main premises or branches.
    (e)  A savings bank has any  power  reasonably  incident,
convenient,  or  useful  to the accomplishment of the express
powers conferred upon the savings bank by this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-74, eff. 6-30-95; 90-301, eff. 8-1-97.)

    (205 ILCS 205/1008) (from Ch. 17, par. 7301-8)
    Sec. 1008. General corporate powers.
    (a)  A savings bank operating under this Act shall  be  a
body corporate and politic and shall have all of the specific
powers  conferred  by  this  Act and in addition thereto, the
following general powers:
         (1)  To sue and be sued, complain, and defend in its
    corporate name and to have a common seal,  which  it  may
    alter or renew at pleasure.
         (2)  To  obtain  and maintain insurance by a deposit
    insurance corporation as defined in this Act.
         (3)  To act as a fiscal agent for the United States,
    the State of Illinois or any department, branch, arm,  or
    agency  of  the  State or any unit of local government or
    school district in the State, when  duly  designated  for
    that   purpose,   and  as  agent  to  perform  reasonable
    functions as may be required of it.
         (4)  To  become  a  member  of  or  deal  with   any
    corporation  or  agency of the United States or the State
    of Illinois, to the extent that  the  agency  assists  in
    furthering  or facilitating its purposes or powers and to
    that end to  purchase  stock  or  securities  thereof  or
    deposit  money  therewith,  and  to comply with any other
    conditions of membership or credit.
         (5)  To make donations in reasonable amounts for the
    public welfare or for charitable, scientific,  religious,
    or educational purposes.
         (6)  To  adopt  and  operate  reasonable  insurance,
    bonus,  profit sharing, and retirement plans for officers
    and  employees  and  for  directors  including,  but  not
    limited to, advisory, honorary, and  emeritus  directors,
    who are not officers or employees.
         (7)  To  reject  any  application for membership; to
    retire  deposit  accounts  by  enforced   retirement   as
    provided  in  this  Act  and the bylaws; and to limit the
    issuance of, or payments on, deposit  accounts,  subject,
    however, to contractual obligations.
         (8)  To  purchase  stock in service corporations and
    to invest in any form  of  indebtedness  of  any  service
    corporation   as   defined   in   this  Act,  subject  to
    regulations of the Commissioner.
         (9)  To  purchase  stock  of  a  corporation   whose
    principal purpose is to operate a safe deposit company or
    escrow service company.
         (10)  To   exercise  all  the  powers  necessary  to
    qualify as a trustee or custodian under federal or  State
    law,  provided  that  the authority to accept and execute
    trusts is subject to  the  provisions  of  the  Corporate
    Fiduciary  Act and to the supervision of those activities
    by the Commissioner of Banks and Real Estate.
         (11)  (Blank).
         (12)  To establish, maintain, and operate  terminals
    as  authorized  by the Electronic Fund Transfer Act.  The
    establishment, maintenance, operation,  and  location  of
    those  terminals  shall be subject to the approval of the
    Commissioner.
         (13)  Pledge its assets:
              (A)  to enable it to act as agent for the  sale
         of obligations of the United States;
              (B)  to secure deposits;
              (C)  to   secure  deposits  of  money  whenever
         required by the National Bankruptcy Act;
              (D)  to  qualify  under  Section  2-9  of   the
         Corporate Fiduciary Act; and
              (E)  to  secure trust funds commingled with the
         savings  bank's  funds,  whether  deposited  by  the
         savings bank or an affiliate of the savings bank, as
         required  under  Section  2-8   of   the   Corporate
         Fiduciary Act.
         (14)  To  accept for payment at a future date not to
    exceed one year from the date of acceptance, drafts drawn
    upon it by  its  customers;  and  to  issue,  advise,  or

    confirm  letters of credit authorizing holders thereof to
    draw drafts upon it or its correspondents.
         (15)  Subject   to   the    regulations    of    the
    Commissioner, to own and lease personal property acquired
    by  the  savings  bank  at  the  request of a prospective
    lessee and, upon the agreement of that person,  to  lease
    the personal property.
         (16)  To  establish  temporary service booths at any
    International Fair in this State that is approved by  the
    United  States Department of Commerce for the duration of
    the international fair for the  purpose  of  providing  a
    convenient  place for foreign trade customers to exchange
    their  home  countries'  currency  into   United   States
    currency  or the converse.  To provide temporary periodic
    service to persons residing in a bona fide nursing  home,
    senior  citizens'  retirement  home,  or  long-term  care
    facility.    These  powers  shall  not  be  construed  as
    establishing a new place or change of  location  for  the
    savings bank providing the service booth.
         (17)  To    indemnify   its   officers,   directors,
    employees, and agents,  as  authorized  for  corporations
    under  Section  8.75  of the Business Corporations Act of
    1983.
         (18)  To provide data processing services to  others
    on a for-profit basis.
         (19)  To   utilize   any  electronic  technology  to
    provide customers with home banking services.
         (20)  Subject   to   the    regulations    of    the
    Commissioner,  to  enter  into  an  agreement to act as a
    surety.
         (21)  Subject   to   the    regulations    of    the
    Commissioner,   to  issue  credit  cards,  extend  credit
    therewith, and otherwise  engage  in  or  participate  in
    credit card operations.
         (22)  To  purchase  for  its  own  account shares of
    stock of a bankers' bank, described in  Section  13(b)(1)
    of  the  Illinois  Banking  Act,  on  the  same terms and
    conditions as a bank may purchase  such  shares.   In  no
    event  shall  the  total  amount  of such stock held by a
    savings bank in such bankers'  bank  exceed  10%  of  its
    capital  and surplus (including undivided profits) and in
    no event shall a savings bank acquire more than 5% of any
    class of voting securities of such bankers' bank.
         (23)  With respect to affiliate facilities:
              (A)  to conduct at affiliate facilities any  of
         the  following transactions for and on behalf of any
         affiliated depository institution, if so  authorized
         by  the affiliate or affiliates: receiving deposits;
         renewing  deposits;  cashing  and  issuing   checks,
         drafts,  money  orders, travelers checks, or similar
         instruments; changing money; receiving  payments  on
         existing  indebtedness;  and  conducting ministerial
         functions  with  respect   to   loan   applications,
         servicing   loans,   and   providing   loan  account
         information; and
              (B)  to  authorize  an  affiliated   depository
         institution  to conduct for and on behalf of it, any
         of the transactions listed in this subsection at one
         or more affiliate facilities.
         A savings bank intending to conduct or to  authorize
    an  affiliated  depository  institution  to conduct at an
    affiliate facility any of the transactions  specified  in
    this   subsection   shall  give  written  notice  to  the
    Commissioner at least 30 days before any such transaction
    is conducted at an affiliate facility.  All conduct under
    this subsection shall be on terms  consistent  with  safe
    and sound banking practices and applicable law.
         (24) (23)  Subject  to  Article XLIV of the Illinois
    Insurance Code, to act as the agent for any  fire,  life,
    or  other  insurance  company  authorized by the State of
    Illinois,  by  soliciting  and  selling   insurance   and
    collecting  premiums  on policies issued by such company;
    and may receive for services so  rendered  such  fees  or
    commissions  as  may  be  agreed  upon  between  the said
    savings bank and the insurance company for which  it  may
    act  as  agent;  provided,  however, that no such savings
    bank shall in any case assume or guarantee the payment of
    any premium on  insurance  policies  issued  through  its
    agency  by  its principal; and provided further, that the
    savings  bank  shall  not  guarantee  the  truth  of  any
    statement made by an assured in filing his    application
    for insurance.
         (25) (23)  To  become  a  member of the Federal Home
    Loan Bank Board and to  have  the  powers  granted  to  a
    savings  association organized under the Illinois Savings
    and Loan Act of 1985 or the laws of  the  United  States,
    subject to regulations of the Commissioner.
         (26)  To offer any product or service that is at the
    time authorized or permitted to a bank by applicable law,
    but   subject   always   to   the  same  limitations  and
    restrictions that are applicable  to  the  bank  for  the
    product  or service by such applicable law and subject to
    the applicable provisions of the  Financial  Institutions
    Insurance Sales Law and rules of the Commissioner.
    (b)  If  this  Act  or the regulations adopted under this
Act fail to provide specific guidance in matters of corporate
governance, the provisions of the Business Corporation Act of
1983 may be used.
(Source: P.A.  89-74,  eff.  6-30-95;  89-310,  eff.  1-1-96;
89-317,  eff.  8-11-95;  89-355,  eff.  8-17-95; 89-508, eff.
7-3-96; 89-603, eff. 8-2-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96; 90-14, eff.
7-1-97; 90-41, eff. 10-1-97; 90-270,  eff.  7-30-97;  90-301,
eff. 8-1-97; revised 10-21-97.)

    (205 ILCS 205/6001) (from Ch. 17, par. 7306-1)
    Sec. 6001. General provisions.
    (a)  No  savings  bank  shall make any loan or investment
authorized by this Article unless the savings bank first  has
determined  that  the  type,  amount,  purpose, and repayment
provisions of the loan  or  investment  in  relation  to  the
borrower's  or issuer's resources and credit standing support
the reasonable belief that the loan  or  investment  will  be
financially  sound  and will be repaid according to its terms
and that the loan or investment is not otherwise unlawful.
    (b)  Each loan or investment that a savings bank makes or
purchases, whether wholly or  in  part,  must  be  adequately
underwritten,  reviewed periodically, and reserved against as
necessary in accordance with its payment performance, all  in
accordance   with  the  regulations  and  directives  of  the
Commissioner.
    (c)  Every appraisal or reappraisal of  property  that  a
savings bank is required to make shall be made as follows:
         (1)  By    an   independent   qualified   appraiser,
    designated by the board of  directors,  who  is  properly
    licensed  or  and  certified  by the entity authorized to
    govern his licensure or and certification and  who  meets
    the requirements of the Appraisal Subcommittee and of the
    Federal Act.
         (2)  In  the  case of an insured or guaranteed loan,
    by any appraiser appointed by any lending,  insuring,  or
    guaranteeing  agency of the United States or the State of
    Illinois that insures or guarantees the loan,  wholly  or
    in part.
         (3)  Each  appraisal shall be in writing prepared at
    the request of the lender for the lender's use;  disclose
    the   market  value  of  the  security  offered;  contain
    sufficient information and data concerning the  appraised
    property  to  substantiate  the  market value thereof; be
    certified and signed by the appraiser or appraisers;  and
    state  that  the  appraiser or appraisers have personally
    examined the described property.  The appraisal shall  be
    filed and preserved by the savings bank. In addition, the
    appraisal  shall  be  prepared and reported in accordance
    with the  Standards  of  Professional  Practice  and  the
    ethical  rules of the Appraisal Foundation as adopted and
    promulgated by the Appraisal Subcommittee.
    (d)  If appraisals of  real  estate  securing  a  savings
bank's  loans  are  obtained as part of an examination by the
Commissioner, the cost of those appraisals shall promptly  be
paid  by  the  savings  bank  directly  to  the  appraiser or
appraisers.
    (e)  Any violation of this Article  shall  constitute  an
unsafe   or  unsound  practice.   Any  person  who  knowingly
violates any provision of this Article shall  be  subject  to
enforcement  action  or civil money penalties as provided for
in this Act.
    (f)  For purposes of this Article,  "underwriting"  shall
mean  the  process  of  compiling  information  to  support a
determination as to whether an  investment  or  extension  of
credit  shall  be  made by a savings bank.  It shall include,
but   not   be   limited   to,   evaluating   a    borrower's
creditworthiness,   determination   of   the   value  of  the
underlying    collateral,    market    factors,    and    the
appropriateness of the investment or  loan  for  the  savings
bank.   Underwriting  as  used  herein  does  not include the
agreement to purchase unsold portions of public offerings  of
stocks  or  bonds  as  commonly  used in corporate securities
issuances and sales.
    (g)  For  purposes  of  this   Section,   the   following
definitions shall apply:
         (1)  "Federal  Act"  means Title XI of the Financial
    Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989
    and regulations adopted pursuant thereto.
         (2)  "Appraisal Subcommittee" means the designee  of
    the   heads   of   the   Federal  Financial  Institutions
    Examination Council Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3301 et seq.).
         (3)  "Appraisal  Foundation"  means  the   Appraisal
    Foundation   that   was   incorporated   as  an  Illinois
    not-for-profit corporation on November 30, 1987.
(Source: P.A. 86-1213.)

    (205 ILCS 205/6003) (from Ch. 17, par. 7306-3)
    Sec. 6003.  Other investments. If the board of  directors
determines  at any time that funds are available in excess of
the demands and needs for loans, maturities, and withdrawals,
A savings bank may invest funds as provided in this Section:
         (1)  In  demand,  time,  or  savings   deposits   or
    accounts,   withdrawable   accounts,   or  other  insured
    obligations of any financial institution the accounts  of
    which are insured by a federal agency.
         (2)  In  participating  interests in loans of a type
    that the savings bank would be authorized  to  make,  but
    only  if  the  other  participants  are (A) savings banks
    organized  under  this  Act,   (B)   savings   and   loan
    associations,  banks,  credit unions, and licensees under
    the Consumer Installment Loan Act or  the  Sales  Finance
    Agency  Act,  organized under the laws of this State, (C)
    associations    or    corporations    insured    by    an
    instrumentality    of    the    United    States,     (D)
    instrumentalities  of  or corporations owned wholly or in
    part by the United States or this State, or, (E)  subject
    to  regulations of the Commissioner, service corporations
    of  a  savings  bank  organized   under   this   Act   or
    subsidiaries  of a savings and loan association, bank, or
    credit union organized under the laws of  this  State  or
    the United States.
         (3)  In  obligations  of,  or  obligations  that are
    fully guaranteed by the United States and  in  stocks  or
    obligations  of  any  Federal  Reserve Bank, Federal Home
    Loan Bank,  the  Student  Loan  Market  Association,  the
    Government  National  Mortgage  Association,  the Federal
    National Mortgage  Association,  The  Federal  Home  Loan
    Mortgage  Corporation,  the  Federal  Deposit   Insurance
    Corporation, or any other agency of the United States.
         (4)  In  bonds  or  other  direct obligations of, or
    guaranteed as to principal and interest by, this State.
         (5)  In obligations that by the laws of  this  State
    are made legal investments for savings banks.
         (6)  In  bonds  or  other  evidences of indebtedness
    that are direct general obligations of any unit of  local
    government  of  this State or in bonds or other evidences
    of  indebtedness  that  are  payable  from  revenues   or
    earnings specifically pledged therefor of a unit of local
    government, but in no event shall the total amount of the
    securities  of any one maker or obligor exceed 15% of the
    savings bank's total capital,  nor  shall  the  aggregate
    amount  of investments under this paragraph exceed 15% of
    the savings bank's total assets.
         (7)  Equity investments in real  estate.   With  the
    prior written consent of the Commissioner, a savings bank
    may  invest  in  the initial purchase and development, or
    the purchase or commitment to purchase after  completion,
    of  home sites and housing for sale or rental, including,
    but not limited  to,  projects  for  the  reconstruction,
    rehabilitation,  or  rebuilding of residential properties
    to meet the minimum standards  of  health  and  occupancy
    prescribed   by   appropriate   local   authorities,  the
    provision of accommodations for retail stores, shops, and
    other community services that are reasonably incident  to
    that  housing or in the shares of a corporation that owns
    one or more of those projects and that is wholly owned by
    one or more financial institutions whose investments  are
    regulated  by  the  laws  of  this State or of the United
    States.  In no event shall the total  investment  in  any
    one  project  exceed  15%  of  the  savings  bank's total
    capital, nor shall the aggregate  investment  under  this
    paragraph  exceed  50%  of its total capital.  No savings
    bank may make an investment of this type unless it is  in
    compliance  with the capital requirements of this Act and
    with the capital maintenance requirements of its  insurer
    of deposit accounts.   The Commissioner shall approve the
    investment only if the savings bank shows:
              (A)  that  the savings bank has adequate assets
         available for the investment;
              (B)  that  the  proposed  investment  does  not
         exceed the reasonable market value of  the  property
         or interest therein as determined in accordance with
         the appraisal requirements of this Act; and
              (C)  that   all   other  requirements  of  this
         Section have been met.
         Nothing contained  in  this  paragraph  prohibits  a
    savings bank from developing or building on land acquired
    by  it  under  any  other  provision of this Act nor from
    completing the construction of  buildings  in  accordance
    with  any  construction  loan contract where the borrower
    has failed to comply with the terms of the contract.
         (8)  In  obligations  of  the  State  of  Israel  or
    obligations fully guaranteed by the State of Israel as to
    payment of principal and interest, but in no event  shall
    the  total  amount  of  that investment exceed 15% of the
    savings bank's total capital.
         (9)  In   stocks   or   obligations   of    business
    development  corporations  chartered  by this State or by
    the United States or an agency thereof, but in  no  event
    shall  the  aggregate  amount of stock exceed 2.5% of the
    savings bank's total capital or  $250,000,  whichever  is
    greater.
         (10)  In  obligations  of  urban  renewal investment
    corporations chartered under the laws of this  State,  or
    the  United  States,  or  in  certificates  of beneficial
    interest of urban renewal investment trusts,  but  in  no
    event   shall   the   aggregate   amount  of  the  stock,
    obligations or beneficial interest  certificates  of  any
    one  maker  exceed  2.5%  of  the  savings  bank's  total
    capital,  nor  shall  the aggregate amount of investments
    under this paragraph exceed 15% of its total capital.
         (11)  Subject   to   the    regulations    of    the
    Commissioner, in loans deemed sufficiently secured by the
    board  of directors of the savings bank.  However, if the
    security is stock or equity securities of any kind  other
    than  those  of  a  financial  institution,  the stock or
    securities must be  listed  on  a  national  exchange  or
    actively  traded and quoted on an over-the-counter market
    or their value must be ascertainable in  accordance  with
    regulations promulgated by the Commissioner.
         (12)  In commercial paper.  As used in this Section,
    the  term "commercial paper" means short term obligations
    having a maturity ranging from 2 to 270  days  issued  by
    banks,  corporations, or other borrowers.  Investments in
    commercial paper under this Section must be in securities
    rated in one of the 4 highest categories by a  nationally
    recognized rating service.
         (13)  Purchase  of  stock  in  insurance  companies.
    Notwithstanding   any   provision  of  this  Act  to  the
    contrary, a savings  bank  may  purchase  shares  of,  or
    otherwise   acquire   equity   interests   in,  insurance
    companies and insurance holding  companies  organized  to
    provide    insurance   for   savings   institutions   and
    corporations  and  individuals  affiliated  with  savings
    institutions, provided ownership of equity interests is a
    prerequisite to obtaining  directors  and  officers'  and
    blanket  bond insurance through the company or companies.
    The Commissioner may  promulgate  regulations  concerning
    the  size of each savings bank's investment and manner of
    holding those investments.
         (14)  Subject to the regulation of the Commissioner,
    in equity or debt securities or instruments of a  service
    corporation subsidiary of the savings bank.
         (15)  Through   advances   of   federal   funds   to
    designated  depositories,  provided that the advances are
    made on the condition that they be  repaid  on  the  next
    business  day  following the date on which the advance is
    made.  For the  purposes  of  this  paragraph,  the  term
    "federal  funds"  means  funds that a savings bank has on
    deposit at a depository that are exchangeable  for  funds
    on  deposit at a federal reserve bank; the term "business
    day" means  any  day  on  which  the  savings  bank,  the
    depository,  and the federal reserve bank where the funds
    are on deposit are all open for general business.
         (16)  In financial futures or  options  transactions
    subject to the regulations of the Commissioner.
         (17)  In  a  subsidiary chartered for the purpose of
    exercising all powers necessary to  act  as  a  corporate
    fiduciary under the Corporate Fiduciary Act.
         (18)  In marketable investment securities, but in no
    event  shall  the total amount of those securities of any
    one maker or obligor exceed 15%  of  the  savings  bank's
    total   capital   nor   shall  the  aggregate  amount  of
    investments  under  this  Section  exceed  15%  of  total
    assets.  As used in this Section,  the  term  "marketable
    investment securities" does not include stocks, but means
    investment   grade   marketable   obligations  evidencing
    indebtedness of any person in the form of  bonds,  notes,
    or  debentures  commonly  known as investment securities,
    and of a type customarily sold on recognized exchanges or
    traded over the counter and investment  grade  marketable
    obligations  of the International Bank for Reconstruction
    and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, the
    Asian Development Bank, the African Development Bank,  or
    the  International  Finance Corporation.  As used in this
    Section, the term "investment grade" means being rated in
    one  of  the  4  highest  categories  by  at  least   one
    nationally recognized rating service.
         (19)  In  investment grade marketable obligations of
    any other state, territory, or  possession  or  political
    subdivision thereof to the same extent that it may invest
    in  marketable investment securities under paragraph (18)
    of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 88-481; 89-317, eff. 8-11-95.)

    (205 ILCS 205/6013) (from Ch. 17, par. 7306-13)
    Sec. 6013. Loans to one borrower.
    (a)  Except as provided  in  subsection  (c),  the  total
loans  and extensions of credit, both direct and indirect, by
a  savings  bank  to  any  person,  other  than  a  municipal
corporation for money borrowed, outstanding at one time shall
not exceed 20% of  the  savings  bank's  total  capital  plus
general loan loss reserves.
    (b)  Except  as  provided  in  subsection  (c), the total
loans and extensions of credit, both direct and indirect,  by
a  savings  bank to any person outstanding at one time and at
least 100% secured by readily marketable collateral having  a
market  value,  as  determined  by  reliable and continuously
available price quotations,  shall  not  exceed  10%  of  the
savings bank's total capital plus general loan loss reserves.
This limitation shall be separate from and in addition to the
limitation contained in subsection (a).
    (c)  If  the  limit  under subsection (a) or (b) on total
loans to one borrower is less than $500,000, a  savings  bank
that meets its minimum capital requirement under this Act may
have loan and extensions of credit, both direct and indirect,
outstanding to any person at one time not to exceed $500,000.
With  the  prior  written  approval  of  the  Commissioner, a
savings bank that has capital in excess of 6% of  assets  may
make  loans  and extensions of credit to one borrower for the
development of residential housing properties, located or  to
be  located  in  this State, not to exceed 30% of the savings
bank's total capital plus general loan loss reserves.
    (d)  For purposes of  this  Section,  the  term  "person"
shall  be deemed to include an individual, firm, corporation,
business  trust,  partnership,  trust,  estate,  association,
joint  venture,   pool,   syndicate,   sole   proprietorship,
unincorporated association, any political subdivision, or any
similar entity or organization.
    (e)  For  the  purposes  of  this  Section  any  loan  or
extension  of  credit  granted to one person, the proceeds of
which are used for the direct benefit  of  a  second  person,
shall  be  deemed a loan or extension of credit to the second
person as well as the first person.
    (f)  For  the  purposes  of  this  Section,   the   total
liabilities of a firm, partnership, pool, syndicate, or joint
venture  shall  include the liabilities of the members of the
entity.
    (g)  For the purposes of this Section, the term  "readily
marketable collateral" means financial instruments or bullion
that are salable under ordinary circumstances with reasonable
promptness  at  a  fair  market  value  on  an  auction  or a
similarly   available   daily   bid-and-ask   price   market.
"Financial  instruments"  include   stocks,   bonds,   notes,
debentures traded on a national exchange or over the counter,
commercial   paper,   negotiable   certificates  of  deposit,
bankers' acceptances, and shares in money  market  or  mutual
funds.
    (h)  Each   savings   bank   shall   institute   adequate
procedures  to  ensure  that  collateral  fully  secures  the
outstanding loan or extension of credit at all times.
    (i)  If   collateral   values  fall  below  100%  of  the
outstanding loan or extension of credit to  the  extent  that
the  loan  or extension of credit no longer is in conformance
with  subsection  (b)  and  exceeds  the  20%  limitation  of
subsection (a), the loan must  be  brought  into  conformance
with  this  Section  within  5  business  days  except  where
judicial   proceedings   or   other   similar   extraordinary
occurrences prevent the savings bank from taking action.
    (j)  This  Section shall not apply to loans or extensions
of credit to the United States of America or its agencies  or
this  State  or  its  agencies or to any loan, investment, or
extension of credit made pursuant to  Section  6003  of  this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-74, eff. 6-30-95.)

    Section  20.  The Illinois Credit Union Act is amended by
changing Sections 1.1 and  61  and  adding  Section  34.1  as
follows:

    (205 ILCS 305/1.1) (from Ch. 17, par. 4402)
    Sec.  1.1.   Definitions. Credit Union - The term "credit
union"   means   a   cooperative,   non-profit   association,
incorporated under this Act, under the  laws  of  the  United
States of America or under the laws of another state, for the
purposes  of encouraging thrift among its members, creating a
source of credit  at  a  reasonable  rate  of  interest,  and
providing  an  opportunity for its members to use and control
their own money in order to improve their economic and social
conditions. The membership of a credit union shall consist of
a group or groups each having a common  bond as set forth  in
this Act.
    Common  Bond - The term "common bond" refers to groups of
people who meet one of the following qualifications:
    (1)  Persons belonging to a specific  association,  group
or  organization,  such  as  a  church,  labor union, club or
society and members of their immediate families  which  shall
include  any  relative  by  blood  or  marriage or foster and
adopted children.
    (2)  Persons who reside in a reasonably compact and  well
defined  neighborhood  or  community,  and  members  of their
immediate families which shall include any relative by  blood
or marriage or foster and adopted children.
    (3)  Persons  who  have  a  common  employer  or  who are
members  of  an  organized  labor  union  or   an   organized
occupational   or   professional   group   within  a  defined
geographical area, and members of  their  immediate  families
which  shall  include  any  relative  by blood or marriage or
foster and adopted children.
    Shares - The term "shares" or "share accounts" means  any
form  of shares issued by a credit union and established by a
member in accordance with standards  specified  by  a  credit
union,  including  but  not  limited  to common shares, share
draft  accounts,  classes  of  shares,  share   certificates,
special  purpose  share  accounts,  shares  issued  in trust,
custodial accounts, and  individual  retirement  accounts  or
other  plans established pursuant to Section 401(d) or (f) or
Section 408(a) of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code,  as  now  or
hereafter  amended,  or similar provisions of any tax laws of
the United States that may hereafter exist.
    Credit  Union  Organization  -  The  term  "credit  union
organization" means any organization established to serve the
needs of credit unions, the business of which relates to  the
daily operations of credit unions.
    Department  -  The  term  "Department" means the Illinois
Department of Financial Institutions.
    Director - The term "Director" means the Director of  the
Illinois Department of Financial Institutions.
    NCUA  -  The  term "NCUA" means the National Credit Union
Administration, an agency of  the  United  States  Government
charged with the supervision of credit unions chartered under
the laws of the United States of America.
    Central  Credit  Union  - The term "central credit union"
means a credit union incorporated primarily to receive shares
from and make loans to credit unions and Directors, Officers,
committee members and employees of credit unions.  A  central
credit  union  may  also  accept  as members persons who were
members of credit unions which were  liquidated  and  persons
from  occupational  groups  not  otherwise  served by another
credit union.
    Corporate Credit  Union  -  The  term  "corporate  credit
union"   means   a  credit  union  which  is  a  cooperative,
non-profit association, the membership of  which  is  limited
primarily to other credit unions.
    Insolvent  - "Insolvent" means the condition that results
when the total of all  liabilities  and  shares  exceeds  net
assets of the credit union.
    Danger of insolvency - The term "Danger of insolvency" as
used in Section 61 means when a credit union falls below a 2%
capital to asset ratio.
(Source: P.A. 86-432.)

    (205 ILCS 305/34.1 new)
    Sec. 34.1.  Compliance review.
    (a)  As used in this Section:
    "Affiliate"  means  an  organization established to serve
the needs of credit unions, the business of which relates  to
the daily operations of credit unions.
    "Compliance review committee" means:
         (1)  one  or  more persons appointed by the board of
    directors or supervisory committee of a credit union  for
    the purposes set forth in subsection (b); or
         (2)  any  other person to the extent the person acts
    in an  investigatory  capacity  at  the  direction  of  a
    compliance review committee.
    "Compliance review documents" means documents prepared in
connection  with a review or evaluation conducted by or for a
compliance review committee.
    "Person means an individual, a group  of  individuals,  a
board  committee,  a  partnership,  a firm, an association, a
corporation, or any other entity.
    (b)  This Section applies to compliance review committees
whose functions are to evaluate and seek to  improve  any  of
the following:
         (1)  loan policies or underwriting standards;
         (2)  asset quality;
         (3)  financial   reporting   to   federal  or  State
    governmental or regulatory agencies; or
         (4)  compliance with federal or State  statutory  or
    regulatory requirements.
    (c)  Except  as  provided  in  subsection (d), compliance
review documents and  the  deliberations  of  the  compliance
review  committee  are  privileged  and  confidential and are
nondiscoverable and nonadmissible.
         (1)  Compliance review documents are privileged  and
    confidential   and   are  not  subject  to  discovery  or
    admissible in evidence in any civil action.
         (2)  Individuals  serving   on   compliance   review
    committees  or acting under the direction of a compliance
    review committee shall not be required to testify in  any
    civil  action about the contents of any compliance review
    document  or  conclusions  of   any   compliance   review
    committee  or  about  the  actions  taken by a compliance
    review committee.
         (3)  An affiliate of a credit union, a credit  union
    regulatory  agency, and the insurer of credit union share
    accounts  shall  have   access   to   compliance   review
    documents,  provided  that (i) the documents shall remain
    confidential and are not subject to discovery  from  such
    entity  and  (ii) delivery of compliance review documents
    to an affiliate or pursuant  to  the  requirements  of  a
    credit  union  regulatory  agency or an insurer of credit
    union share accounts shall not constitute a waiver of the
    privilege granted in this Section.
    (d)  This Section  does  not  apply  to:  (1)  compliance
review  committees  on which individuals serving on or at the
direction of the compliance review committee have  management
responsibility  for  the  operations,  records, employees, or
activities being examined  or  evaluated  by  the  compliance
review  committee  and (2) any civil or administrative action
initiated by a credit union regulatory agency or  an  insurer
of credit union share accounts.
    (e)  This  Section  shall  not  be construed to limit the
discovery  or  admissibility  in  any  civil  action  of  any
documents  other  than  compliance  review  documents  or  to
require the appointment of a compliance review committee.

    (205 ILCS 305/61) (from Ch. 17, par. 4462)
    Sec. 61.  Suspension.
    (1) If the Director determines that any credit  union  is
bankrupt,  insolvent,  impaired  or  that  it  has  willfully
violated  this  Act,  or is operating in an unsafe or unsound
manner, he shall issue an order  temporarily  suspending  the
credit  union's  operations  for  not more than 60 days.  The
Board of Directors shall be given  notice  by  registered  or
certified mail of such suspension, which notice shall include
the  reasons  for  such  suspension  and  a  list of specific
violations of the Act, or a list of the  specific  violations
of  this  Act,  or  both  such reasons and list. The Director
shall also notify the members of the Credit  Union  Board  of
Advisors  of  any suspension.  The Director may assess to the
credit union a penalty, not to exceed the examination fee  as
set  forth  in  this  Act,  $50  to  offset costs incurred in
determining the condition of the  credit  union's  books  and
records.
    (2)  Upon  receipt  of such suspension notice, the credit
union shall cease all operations, except those authorized  by
the  Director,  or the Director may appoint a Manager-Trustee
to operate the credit union  during  the  suspension  period.
The  Board  of Directors shall, within 10 days of the receipt
of the suspension notice, file with the Director a  reply  to
the  suspension  notice,  either by submitting one or more of
the following:  a corrective plan of action or a request  for
formal  hearing  on  said action pursuant to the Department's
rules and regulations. or by a request that the credit  union
be declared insolvent and a Liquidating Agent be appointed.
    (3)  Upon  receipt  from  the  suspended  credit union of
evidence that the conditions causing the order of  suspension
have  been corrected, and after determining that the proposed
corrective plan of action submitted is factual, the  Director
shall  revoke  the suspension notice, permit the credit union
to resume normal operations, and notify the Board  of  Credit
Union Advisors of such action.
    (4)  If   the   Director  determines  that  the  proposed
corrective plan of action will not  correct  such  conditions
and  that the credit union cannot be reorganized, he may take
possession and  control  of  the  credit  union  its  office,
furniture, fixtures, books, records and other assets and upon
examination, determine whether it is practicable and feasible
to reorganize the credit union to continue its business.  The
Director  may  permit  the  credit union to operate under his
direction and control, and may appoint a  Manager-Trustee  to
manage its affairs until such time as the condition requiring
such  action  has been remedied, or in the case of insolvency
or  danger  of  insolvency  where  an   emergency   requiring
expeditious  action  exists,  the  Director may involuntarily
merge the credit union without  the  vote  of  the  suspended
credit  union's  Board  of  Directors  or  members (hereafter
involuntary merger)  subject  to  rules  promulgated  by  the
Director.   No  credit  union shall be required to serve as a
surviving credit union in any involuntary merger.   Upon  the
request  of  the  Director,  a  credit  union  by a vote of a
majority of its Board of Directors may elect to  serve  as  a
surviving  credit  union  in  an  involuntary merger.  If the
Director he determines that the suspended credit union should
be liquidated, he may appoint a Liquidating Agent and require
of that person such bond and security as he considers proper.
    (5)  Upon receipt of a request for a formal hearing,  the
Director  shall  conduct  proceedings  pursuant  to rules and
regulations of  the  Department  and  take  necessary  action
subsequent  to  the hearing officer's decision; whether it be
revocation  of  the  suspension  notice,   issuance   of   an
involuntary liquidation or appointment of a Manager-Trustee..
The  credit  union  may request the appropriate court to stay
execution  of  such  action.   Involuntary   liquidation   or
involuntary merger may not be ordered prior to the conclusion
of suspension procedures outlined in this Section.
    (6)  If,  within  the suspension period, the credit union
fails to answer the suspension notice or fails to  request  a
formal   hearing,   or   both,  the  Director  may  then  (i)
involuntarily merge the credit union if the credit  union  is
insolvent  or  in  danger  of  insolvency  and  an  emergency
requiring expeditious action exists or (ii) revoke the credit
union's  charter,  appoint  a Liquidating Agent and liquidate
the credit union.
(Source: P.A. 86-432.)

    Section 25.  The Electronic Fund Transfer Act is  amended
by adding Section 85 as follows:

    (205 ILCS 616/85 new)
    Sec.  85.  Reliance  on Commissioner.  No person shall be
liable under this Act for any act done  or  omitted  in  good
faith in conformity with any rule, interpretation, or opinion
issued   by  the  Commissioner  of  Banks  and  Real  Estate,
notwithstanding that after the act or omission has  occurred,
the  rule,  interpretation, or opinion upon which reliance is
placed is amended, rescinded, or determined  by  judicial  or
other authority to be invalid for any reason.

    Section  30.  The  Corporate  Fiduciary Act is amended by
changing Sections 1-7, 4-4, and 5-6 as follows:

    (205 ILCS 620/1-7) (from Ch. 17, par. 1551-7)
    Sec. 1-7.  Office locations corporate fiduciaries.
    (a)  Any corporate fiduciary may establish branch offices
at any  location.  Any  corporate  fiduciary  that  seeks  to
establish  a  branch  office shall, if it is a trust company,
apply for and obtain approval for the branch office from  the
Commissioner   or,   if  it  is  a  bank,  savings  and  loan
association, or savings bank, give notice of  its  intent  to
establish  a branch office to the Commissioner, 30 days prior
to the purchasing or leasing of land, building, or  equipment
for  the  branch office under the terms and conditions as the
Commissioner shall specify by rule.
    (b)  Any trust  company  that  proposes  to  establish  a
subsidiary,  whether  by  incorporating  the subsidiary or by
acquiring the subsidiary, shall apply for  and  obtain  prior
approval  from  the  Commissioner 60 days prior to commencing
business by the subsidiary, if newly incorporated,  or  prior
to   its   acquisition,  if  it  is  acquired,  provided  the
Commissioner may specify circumstances and conditions when  a
trust company may directly or indirectly acquire a subsidiary
without prior approval.
(Source: P.A. 86-754; 87-506.)

    (205 ILCS 620/4-4) (from Ch. 17, par. 1554-4)
    Sec.  4-4.   Place  of  business not to be established in
State; not deemed transacting business.
    (a)  A foreign corporation, as defined in Section  1-5.08
of  this  Act,  shall  not establish in this State a place of
business,  branch  office,  or  agency  for  the  conduct  of
business as a fiduciary and because it is  not  permitted  to
establish in this State a place of business, branch office or
agency,  a  foreign  corporation  insofar  as  it  acts  in a
fiduciary capacity in this State pursuant to  the  provisions
of this Act shall not be deemed to be transacting business in
this  State.  The  foreign  corporation  may  apply  for, and
procure from the  Commissioner,  a  license  to  establish  a
representative   office   pursuant   to   the   Foreign  Bank
Representative Office Act.
    (b)  Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section  4-4,
after  May  31,  1997,  a  branch of an out-of-state bank, as
defined in  Section  2  of  the  Illinois  Banking  Act,  may
establish an office in this State for the conduct of business
as a fiduciary, provided:; (i) the branch of the out-of-state
bank  obtains  a  certificate  of  authority pursuant to this
Section; (ii) fiduciary business conducted in this State by a
branch of an out-of-state bank is subject to  examination  by
the  Commissioner; and (ii) (iii) the trust activities of the
branch of the out-of-state bank are  subject  to  regulation,
including  enforcement  actions,  by  the Commissioner to the
same extent as Illinois corporate fiduciaries.
    (c)  The  application  for  a  certificate  of  authority
pursuant to this Section shall be filed with the Commissioner
on forms prescribed by the  Commissioner  and  shall  contain
such  relevant information as the Commissioner may specify to
determine that the fiduciary business will  be  conducted  by
the  branch  of  the  out-of-state  bank  in a safe and sound
manner.
(Source: P.A. 89-208, eff.  9-29-95;  89-364,  eff.  8-18-95;
89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)

    (205 ILCS 620/5-6) (from Ch. 17, par. 1555-6)
    Sec.  5-6.  Removal  orders.  Whenever, in the opinion of
the Commissioner, any director, officer, employee,  or  agent
of  a  corporate fiduciary shall have violated any law, rule,
or order relating to the corporate fiduciary, or  shall  have
engaged  in  an  unsafe or unsound practice in conducting the
business of the corporate fiduciary, or shall  have  violated
any  law  or engaged or participated in any unsafe or unsound
practice in connection  with  any  financial  institution  or
other  business entity such that the character and fitness of
the director, officer, employee, or  agent  does  not  assure
reasonable  promise  of  safe  and  sound  operation  of  the
corporate  fiduciary,  the Commissioner may issue an order of
removal. If in the opinion of the  Commissioner,  any  former
director,   officer,   employee,  or  agent  of  a  corporate
fiduciary, prior to the termination of  his  or  her  service
with  the  corporate  fiduciary,  violated  any law, rule, or
order relating to the corporate fiduciary or  engaged  in  an
unsafe  or unsound practice in conducting the business of the
corporate  fiduciary  or  violated  any  law  or  engaged  or
participated in any unsafe or unsound practice in  connection
with  any financial institution or other business entity such
that the character and  fitness  of  the  director,  officer,
employee,  or agent would not have assured reasonable promise
of safe and sound operation of the corporate fiduciary  prior
to  the  termination of his or her service with the corporate
fiduciary, the Commissioner may issue  an  order  prohibiting
that  person  from further service with a corporate fiduciary
as a director, officer, employee, or agent. An  order  issued
pursuant  to  this Section shall be served upon the director,
officer, employee, or agent.  A copy of the  order  shall  be
sent  to each director of the corporate fiduciary affected by
personal service, certified mail return receipt requested, or
any other method that provides proof of service and  receipt.
The  person  affected  by  the  action  may request a hearing
before the State Banking Board of  Illinois,  hereafter  "the
Board",  within 10 days after receipt of the order of removal
or prohibition.  The hearing  shall  be  held  by  the  Board
according  to the same procedures used pursuant to Section 48
of the Illinois Banking Act, and the hearing  shall  be  held
within  30  days  after  the request has been received by the
Board.  After concluding the hearing, the Board shall make  a
determination approving, modifying, or disapproving the order
of  the Commissioner as its final administrative decision.  A
copy  of  the  order  shall  be  served  upon  the  corporate
fiduciary  of  which  the  person  is  a  director,  officer,
employee, or agent, whereupon the person shall cease to be  a
director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent  of  the  corporate
fiduciary.   Any person who has been removed or prohibited by
an order of the Commissioner under this Section or subsection
(7) of Section  48  of  the  Illinois  Banking  Act  may  not
thereafter  serve as director, officer, employee, or agent of
any State bank or corporate fiduciary, or of any other entity
that  is  subject  to  licensure   or   regulation   by   the
Commissioner  or  the  Office of Banks and Real Estate unless
the Commissioner has granted prior approval in writing.   The
Commissioner  may  institute  a  civil  action  against   the
director,  officer,  employee,  or  agent subject to an order
issued under this Section and against the corporate fiduciary
to enforce compliance with or to enjoin any violation of  the
terms of the order.
(Source: P.A. 90-301, eff. 8-1-97.)

    Section 35.  The Consumer Installment Loan Act is amended
by changing Section 19.1 as follows:

    (205 ILCS 670/19.1) (from Ch. 17, par. 5425.1)
    Sec. 19.1. Where the licensee repossesses a motor vehicle
that  was  used as collateral and which is used primarily for
the obligor's personal, family  or  household  purposes,  the
licensee  shall  be  subject to the requirements of and shall
transfer the certificate of title pursuant to  Section  3-114
of  the  Illinois Vehicle Code and the obligor at the time of
repossession has paid an amount equal to 30% or more  of  the
total  of  payments  due,  the  obligor  may, within 15 days,
reinstate the contract and recover the motor vehicle from the
licensee by tendering:
    (a)  the total  of  all  unpaid  amounts,  including  any
unpaid   delinquency   or   deferral   charges  due,  without
acceleration; and
    (b)  performance necessary to cure any default other than
nonpayment of the amounts due; and
    (c)  any reasonable cost or fees incurred by the licensee
in  the  retaking  of  the  goods.  Tender  of  payment   and
performance  pursuant to this Section restores to the obligor
his rights under the loan as though no default had  occurred.
The obligor has a right to reinstate the contract and recover
the  collateral  from  the  licensee  only  once  under  this
Section.
    The  licensee  must  give  written notice to the obligor,
within 3 days of the repossession, of the obligor's right  to
reinstate the contract and recover the collateral pursuant to
this  Section.  The  Written notice shall be in substantially
the following form:
             NOTICE OF RIGHT TO RECOVER VEHICLE
    Your car was repossessed on (specify date) for failure to
make payments on the loan (or other reason).
    Under Illinois law, because you have paid at least 30% of
the loan before repossession, you may be able to get the  car
back.  To  recover the car and reinstate the loan you must do
the following within 15 days of the date of repossession:
    1.   Make payment of all back payments  as
         of the date of this notice
.                                                $...........
    2.   Pay any late charge due.                $...........
    3.   Pay the costs of repossession.          $...........
         Total  due  as  of  the  date of this
         notice
plus any additional amounts which  may  become
         due
between the date of the notice and the date of
         reinstatement.                          $...........
    Bring  cash,  a  certified  check  or money order for the
total amount plus any amounts which may  become  due  between
the  date  of the notice and the date of reinstatement to our
office located at (specify address) by (specify date) to  get
your car back.
(Source: P.A. 90-437, eff. 1-1-98.)

    Section  45.  The  Illinois  Vehicle  Code  is amended by
changing Sections 3-114 and 3-117.1 as follows:
    (625 ILCS 5/3-114) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-114)
    Sec. 3-114.  Transfer by operation of law.
    (a)  If the interest of an owner in a vehicle  passes  to
another  other  than  by  voluntary  transfer, the transferee
shall, except as provided in paragraph (b), promptly mail  or
deliver  within  20  days  to the Secretary of State the last
certificate of title, if available, proof  of  the  transfer,
and  his  application  for  a new certificate in the form the
Secretary of State prescribes. It shall be unlawful  for  any
person  having  possession  of  a  certificate of title for a
motor vehicle, semi-trailer, or house car by  reason  of  his
having  a  lien  or  encumbrance  on such vehicle, to fail or
refuse to deliver such certificate to  the  owner,  upon  the
satisfaction   or  discharge  of  the  lien  or  encumbrance,
indicated upon such certificate of title.
    (b)  If the interest of an owner in a vehicle  passes  to
another  under the provisions of the Small Estates provisions
of the Probate Act of 1975 the transferee shall promptly mail
or deliver to the Secretary of State, within  120  days,  the
last  certificate  of  title, if available, the documentation
required under the provisions of the Probate Act of 1975, and
an application for certificate of  title.  The  Small  Estate
Affidavit  form shall be furnished by the Secretary of State.
The transfer may be to the transferee or to  the  nominee  of
the transferee.
    (c)  If  the  interest of an owner in a vehicle passes to
another under other provisions of the Probate Act of 1975, as
amended, and the transfer is  made  by  a  representative  or
guardian,  such  transferee shall promptly mail or deliver to
the Secretary of State, the last  certificate  of  title,  if
available,  and  a certified copy of the letters of office or
guardianship, and an application for  certificate  of  title.
Such  application  shall be made before the estate is closed.
The transfer may be to the transferee or to  the  nominee  of
the transferee.
    (d)  If  the interest of an owner in joint tenancy passes
to  the  other  joint  tenant  with  survivorship  rights  as
provided by  law,  the  transferee  shall  promptly  mail  or
deliver  to  the  Secretary of State, the last certificate of
title, if available, proof of death of the one  joint  tenant
and  survivorship  of  the  surviving  joint  tenant,  and an
application for certificate of title. Such application  shall
be  made within 120 days after the death of the joint tenant.
The transfer may be to the transferee or to  the  nominee  of
the transferee.
    (e)  The  Secretary  of State shall transfer a decedent's
vehicle title to any legatee, representative or heir  of  the
decedent who submits to the Secretary a death certificate and
an  affidavit  by  an  attorney  at  law  on  the  letterhead
stationery   of  the attorney at law stating the facts of the
transfer.
    (f)  Repossession with assignment of title.  In all cases
wherein a lienholder has repossessed a vehicle by other  than
judicial  process  and  holds  it for resale under a security
agreement, and the owner of record has executed an assignment
of the existing  certificate  of  title  after  default,  the
lienholder  may  proceed  to sell or otherwise dispose of the
vehicle as authorized  under  the  Uniform  Commercial  Code.
Upon  selling  the  vehicle to another person, the lienholder
need not send the certificate of title to  the  Secretary  of
State,  but shall promptly and within 20 days mail or deliver
to the purchaser as transferee the  existing  certificate  of
title  for the repossessed vehicle, reflecting the release of
the  lienholder's  security  interest  in  the  vehicle.  The
application for a certificate of title made by the  purchaser
shall  comply  with  subsection  (a)  of Section 3-104 and be
accompanied by the existing  certificate  of  title  for  the
repossessed   vehicle.   The  lienholder  shall  execute  the
assignment and warranty of title showing the name and address
of the purchaser in  the  spaces  provided  therefor  on  the
certificate of title or as the Secretary of State prescribes.
The  lienholder shall complete the assignment of title in the
certificate of title to reflect the transfer of  the  vehicle
to  the  lienholder  and  also  a reassignment to reflect the
transfer from the lienholder  to  the  purchaser.   For  this
purpose,   the   lienholder  is  specifically  authorized  to
complete and execute the space reserved in the certificate of
title for a dealer  reassignment,  notwithstanding  that  the
lienholder is not a licensed dealer.  Nothing herein shall be
construed  to mean that the lienholder is taking title to the
repossessed vehicle for purposes of  liability  for  retailer
occupation,  vehicle  use,  or  other tax with respect to the
proceeds  from  the  repossession  sale.    Delivery  of  the
existing certificate of  title  to  the  purchaser  shall  be
deemed  disclosure  to  the  purchaser  of  the  owner of the
vehicle.
    (f-5)  Repossession without assignment of title.  In  all
cases wherein a lienholder has repossessed a vehicle by other
than  judicial  process  and  holds  it  for  resale  under a
security agreement, and the owner of record has not  executed
an  assignment  of  the  existing  certificate  of title, the
lienholder shall comply with the following provisions:
         (1)  Prior to sale, the lienholder shall deliver  or
    mail  to  the owner at the owner's last known address and
    to any other lienholder of record, a notice of redemption
    setting forth the following information: (i) the name  of
    the  owner  of record and in bold type at or near the top
    of the notice a statement that the  owner's  vehicle  was
    repossessed  on  a  specified  date  for  failure to make
    payments  on  the  loan  (or  other   reason),   (ii)   a
    description of the vehicle subject to the lien sufficient
    to  identify  it,  (iii) the right of the owner to redeem
    the vehicle, (iv) the  lienholder's  intent  to  sell  or
    otherwise  dispose of the vehicle after the expiration of
    21 days from the date  of  mailing  or  delivery  of  the
    notice,  and  (v) the name, address, and telephone number
    of the lienholder from whom information may  be  obtained
    concerning  the amount due to redeem the vehicle and from
    whom the vehicle may be redeemed under Section  9-506  of
    the Uniform Commercial Code.  At the lienholder's option,
    the  information  required to be set forth in this notice
    of redemption may be made a  part  of  or  accompany  the
    notification  of sale or other disposition required under
    subsection (3) of Section 9-504 of the Uniform Commercial
    Code, but none of the information required by this notice
    shall  be  construed  to  impose  any  requirement  under
    Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
         (2)  With respect to the repossession of  a  vehicle
    used   primarily   for  personal,  family,  or  household
    purposes, the lienholder shall also deliver  or  mail  to
    the  owner at the owner's last known address an affidavit
    of defense.  The affidavit of defense shall accompany the
    notice of redemption required in subdivision (f-5)(1)  of
    this Section. The affidavit of defense shall (i) identify
    the  lienholder,  owner,  and  the  vehicle; (ii) provide
    space for the owner to state the defense claimed  by  the
    owner;  and  (iii) include an acknowledgment by the owner
    that the owner may be liable to the lienholder for  fees,
    charges,   and   costs  incurred  by  the  lienholder  in
    establishing  the  insufficiency  or  invalidity  of  the
    owner's defense.  To stop  the  transfer  of  title,  the
    affidavit  of  defense must be received by the lienholder
    no later than 21  days  after  the  date  of  mailing  or
    delivery  of  the notice required in subdivision (f-5)(1)
    of this Section. If the lienholder receives the affidavit
    from the owner in a timely manner,  the  lienholder  must
    apply  to  a court of competent jurisdiction to determine
    if the  lienholder  is  entitled  to  possession  of  the
    vehicle.
         (3)  Upon selling the vehicle to another person, the
    lienholder  need not send the certificate of title to the
    Secretary of State, but shall promptly and within 20 days
    mail or deliver to the purchaser as  transferee  (i)  the
    existing   certificate   of  title  for  the  repossessed
    vehicle,  reflecting  the  release  of  the  lienholder's
    security interest in the vehicle; and (ii)  an  affidavit
    of  repossession  made  by or on behalf of the lienholder
    which  provides  the  following  information:  that   the
    vehicle  was  repossessed,  a  description of the vehicle
    sufficient to identify it, whether the vehicle  has  been
    damaged  in excess of 33 1/3% of its fair market value as
    required under subdivision  (b)(3)  of  Section  3-117.1,
    that  the  owner  and any other lienholder of record were
    given the notice required in subdivision (f-5)(1) of this
    Section, that the owner of record was given the affidavit
    of defense  required  in  subdivision  (f-5)(2)  of  this
    Section,  that  the  interest  of  the owner was lawfully
    terminated or sold pursuant to the terms of the  security
    agreement,  and  the purchaser's name and address. If the
    vehicle is damaged in excess  of  33  1/3%  of  its  fair
    market value, the lienholder shall make application for a
    salvage  certificate  under  Section 3-117.1 and transfer
    the vehicle to a person eligible to  receive  assignments
    of salvage certificates identified in Section 3-118.
         (4)  The application for a certificate of title made
    by  the  purchaser  shall  comply  with subsection (a) of
    Section 3-104 and be  accompanied  by  the  affidavit  of
    repossession furnished by the lienholder and the existing
    certificate  of  title  for  the repossessed vehicle. The
    lienholder shall execute the assignment and  warranty  of
    title  showing  the  name and address of the purchaser in
    the spaces provided therefor on the certificate of  title
    or  as the Secretary of State prescribes.  The lienholder
    shall complete the assignment of title in the certificate
    of title to reflect the transfer of the  vehicle  to  the
    lienholder   and  also  a  reassignment  to  reflect  the
    transfer from the lienholder to the purchaser.  For  this
    purpose,  the  lienholder  is  specifically authorized to
    execute the assignment on behalf of the owner  as  seller
    if  the owner has not done so and to complete and execute
    the space reserved in the  certificate  of  title  for  a
    dealer  reassignment, notwithstanding that the lienholder
    is not  a  licensed  dealer.   Nothing  herein  shall  be
    construed  to mean that the lienholder is taking title to
    the repossessed vehicle for  purposes  of  liability  for
    retailer  occupation,  vehicle  use,  or  other  tax with
    respect to  the  proceeds  from  the  repossession  sale.
    Delivery  of  the  existing  certificate  of title to the
    purchaser shall be deemed disclosure to the purchaser  of
    the  owner  of  the  vehicle. In the event the lienholder
    does  not  hold  the  certificate  of   title   for   the
    repossessed    vehicle,   the   lienholder   shall   make
    application for and may obtain a new certificate of title
    in the name of the lienholder upon furnishing information
    satisfactory to the Secretary of State.   Upon  receiving
    the  new certificate of title, the lienholder may proceed
    with the sale described in subdivision  (f-5)(3),  except
    that  upon  selling  the  vehicle  the  lienholder  shall
    promptly  and  within  20  days  mail  or  deliver to the
    purchaser the new certificate  of  title  reflecting  the
    assignment and transfer of title to the purchaser.
         (5)  Neither the lienholder nor the owner shall file
    with  the  Office of the Secretary of State the notice of
    redemption  or  affidavit  of  defense     described   in
    subdivisions  (f-5)(1)  and (f-5)(2) of this Section. The
    Office of the Secretary of State shall not determine  the
    merits  of  an owner's affidavit of defense, nor consider
    any allegations or assertions regarding the  validity  or
    invalidity  of  a lienholder's claim to the vehicle or an
    owner's asserted defenses to the repossession action.
    (f-7)  Notice of reinstatement in certain cases.
         (1)  If, at the time of repossession by a lienholder
    that is seeking to transfer title pursuant to  subsection
    (f-5),  the owner has paid an amount equal to 30% or more
    of the deferred payment price or total of  payments  due,
    the   owner   may,   within   21  days  of  the  date  of
    repossession, reinstate the contract  or  loan  agreement
    and  recover the vehicle from the lienholder by tendering
    in a lump sum  (i)  the  total  of  all  unpaid  amounts,
    including  any unpaid delinquency or deferral charges due
    at the date of reinstatement, without  acceleration;  and
    (ii) performance necessary to cure any default other than
    nonpayment  of  the amounts due; and (iii) all reasonable
    costs and fees incurred by the  lienholder  in  retaking,
    holding, and preparing the vehicle for disposition and in
    arranging  for the sale of the vehicle.  Reasonable costs
    and fees  incurred  by  the  lienholder  include  without
    limitation  repossession  and  storage  expenses  and, if
    authorized by the contract or loan agreement,  reasonable
    attorneys' fees and collection agency charges.
         (2)  Tender  of  payment and performance pursuant to
    this limited right of reinstatement restores to the owner
    his rights under the contract or loan agreement as though
    no default had occurred.  The  owner  has  the  right  to
    reinstate  the contract or loan agreement and recover the
    vehicle  from  the  lienholder  only  once   under   this
    subsection.  The lienholder may, in the lienholder's sole
    discretion,  extend the period during which the owner may
    reinstate the contract or loan agreement and recover  the
    vehicle beyond the 21 days allowed under this subsection,
    and  the  extension  shall  not subject the lienholder to
    liability to the owner under the laws of this State.
         (3)  The lienholder shall deliver  or  mail  written
    notice  to  the  owner at the owner's last known address,
    within 3 business days of the date  of  repossession,  of
    the  owner's  right  to  reinstate  the  contract or loan
    agreement and recover the vehicle pursuant to the limited
    right of reinstatement described in this subsection.   At
    the  lienholder's  option, the information required to be
    set forth in this notice of  reinstatement  may  be  made
    part of or accompany the notice of redemption required in
    subdivision (f-5)(1) of this Section and the notification
    of  sale  or  other disposition required under subsection
    (3) of Section 9-504 of the Uniform Commercial Code,  but
    none  of  the  information  required  by  this  notice of
    reinstatement  shall   be   construed   to   impose   any
    requirement  under  Article  9  of the Uniform Commercial
    Code.
         (4)  The reinstatement period,  if  applicable,  and
    the  redemption  period described in subdivision (f-5)(1)
    of  this  Section,  shall   run   concurrently   if   the
    information  required  to  be  set forth in the notice of
    reinstatement is part of or  accompanies  the  notice  of
    redemption.   In  any event, the 21 day redemption period
    described in subdivision (f-5)(1) of this  Section  shall
    commence  on the date of mailing or delivery to the owner
    of the information required to be set forth in the notice
    of  redemption,  and  the  21  day  reinstatement  period
    described  in  this  subdivision,  if  applicable,  shall
    commence on the date of mailing or delivery to the  owner
    of the information required to be set forth in the notice
    of reinstatement.
         (5)  The  Office of the Secretary of State shall not
    determine the merits of an  owner's  claim  of  right  to
    reinstatement, nor consider any allegations or assertions
    regarding  the  validity  or invalidity of a lienholder's
    claim to the vehicle or  an  owner's  asserted  right  to
    reinstatement.    Where   a   lienholder  is  subject  to
    licensing and regulatory  supervision  by  the  State  of
    Illinois,  the  lienholder shall be subject to all of the
    powers and authority of the  lienholder's  primary  State
    regulator  to  enforce compliance with the procedures set
    forth in this subsection (f-7).
    (f-10)  Repossession by judicial process.  In  all  cases
wherein  a  lienholder  has repossessed a vehicle by judicial
process and holds it for resale under a  security  agreement,
order  for  replevin,  or  other court order establishing the
lienholder's  right  to  possession  of  the   vehicle,   the
lienholder  may  proceed  to sell or otherwise dispose of the
vehicle as authorized under the Uniform  Commercial  Code  or
the  court order. Upon selling the vehicle to another person,
the lienholder need not send the certificate of title to  the
Secretary  of  State,  but  shall promptly and within 20 days
mail or deliver  to  the  purchaser  as  transferee  (i)  the
existing  certificate  of  title  for the repossessed vehicle
reflecting the release of the lienholder's security  interest
in the vehicle; (ii) a certified copy of the court order; and
(iii)  a  bill  of  sale identifying the new owner's name and
address and the year, make, model, and vehicle identification
number of the vehicle. The application for a  certificate  of
title  made by the purchaser shall comply with subsection (a)
of Section 3-104 and be accompanied by the certified copy  of
the  court order furnished by the lienholder and the existing
certificate  of  title  for  the  repossessed  vehicle.   The
lienholder shall execute the assignment and warranty of title
showing  the  name and address of the purchaser in the spaces
provided therefor on the  certificate  of  title  or  as  the
Secretary of State prescribes.  The lienholder shall complete
the  assignment  of  title  in  the  certificate  of title to
reflect the transfer of the vehicle  to  the  lienholder  and
also   a  reassignment  to  reflect  the  transfer  from  the
lienholder  to  the  purchaser.   For   this   purpose,   the
lienholder   is   specifically   authorized  to  execute  the
assignment on behalf of the owner as seller if the owner  has
not done so and to complete and execute the space reserved in
the   certificate   of   title  for  a  dealer  reassignment,
notwithstanding that the lienholder is not a licensed dealer.
Nothing herein shall be construed to mean that the lienholder
is taking title to the repossessed vehicle  for  purposes  of
liability  for retailer occupation, vehicle use, or other tax
with respect to the  proceeds  from  the  repossession  sale.
Delivery   of  the  existing  certificate  of  title  to  the
purchaser shall be deemed disclosure to the purchaser of  the
owner  of  the  vehicle. In the event the lienholder does not
hold the certificate of title for  the  repossessed  vehicle,
the  lienholder  shall  make application for and may obtain a
new certificate of title in the name of the  lienholder  upon
furnishing  information  satisfactory  to  the  Secretary  of
State.   Upon  receiving  the  new  certificate of title, the
lienholder may  proceed  with  the  sale  described  in  this
subsection,   except   that  upon  selling  the  vehicle  the
lienholder shall promptly and within 20 days mail or  deliver
to  the purchaser the new certificate of title reflecting the
assignment and transfer of title to the purchaser.
    (f-15)  The  Secretary  of  State  shall  not   issue   a
certificate  of  title  to  a purchaser under subsection (f),
(f-5), or (f-10) of this Section, unless the person from whom
the vehicle has been repossessed by the lienholder  is  shown
to  be  the  last registered owner of the motor vehicle.  The
Secretary of State may provide by rule for the  standards  to
be  followed  by  a  lienholder in assigning and transferring
certificates of title with respect to repossessed vehicles.
    (f-20)  If  applying  for  a  salvage  certificate  or  a
junking certificate, after the original 21 day notice to  the
debtor  has  been  fulfilled,  the lienholder shall within 20
days make an application to the  Secretary  of  State  for  a
certificate  of  title,  a  salvage  certificate or a junking
certificate, as  set  forth  in  this  Code.  In  all  cases,
however, The Secretary of State shall not issue a certificate
of  title,  a salvage certificate or a junking certificate to
such lienholder unless the person from whom such vehicle  has
been  repossessed is shown to be the last registered owner of
such motor vehicle and such  lienholder  establishes  to  the
satisfaction of the Secretary of State that he is entitled to
such  certificate  of  title,  salvage certificate or junking
certificate. The Secretary of State may shall provide by rule
for the standards to be followed by a lienholder in order  to
obtain  a salvage certificate or junking certificate of title
for a repossessed vehicle.
    (g)  A  person  holding  a  certificate  of  title  whose
interest in the vehicle has been extinguished or  transferred
other  than  by  voluntary transfer shall mail or deliver the
certificate, within 20 days upon request of the Secretary  of
State.  The  delivery  of  the  certificate  pursuant  to the
request of the Secretary of State does not affect the  rights
of the person surrendering the certificate, and the action of
the  Secretary of State in issuing a new certificate of title
as provided herein is not conclusive upon the  rights  of  an
owner or lienholder named in the old certificate.
    (h)  The  Secretary  of  State may decline to process any
application for a  transfer  of  an  interest  in  a  vehicle
hereunder  if  any  fees or taxes due under this Act from the
transferor  or  the  transferee  have  not  been  paid   upon
reasonable notice and demand.
    (i)  The  Secretary of State shall not be held civilly or
criminally  liable  to  any  person  because  any   purported
transferor  may not have had the power or authority to make a
transfer  of  any  interest  in  any  vehicle  or  because  a
certificate of title issued in error is subsequently used  to
commit a fraudulent act.
(Source: P.A. 90-212, eff. 1-1-98.)

    (625 ILCS 5/3-117.1) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-117.1)
    Sec.   3-117.1.  When  junking  certificates  or  salvage
certificates must be obtained.
    (a)  Except as provided in Chapter  4  of  this  Code,  a
person  who  possesses  a  junk  vehicle shall within 15 days
cause  the  certificate  of   title,   salvage   certificate,
certificate  of  purchase,  or  a similarly acceptable out of
state  document  of  ownership  to  be  surrendered  to   the
Secretary  of  State  along with an application for a junking
certificate, except as provided in Section 3-117.2, whereupon
the Secretary of State shall issue to such a person a junking
certificate, which shall  authorize  the  holder  thereof  to
possess, transport, or, by an endorsement, transfer ownership
in  such junked vehicle, and a certificate of title shall not
again be issued for such vehicle.
    A licensee who possesses a junk vehicle and a Certificate
of Title, Salvage Certificate, Certificate of Purchase, or  a
similarly  acceptable  out-of-state document of ownership for
such junk vehicle, may transport the junk vehicle to  another
licensee  prior  to  applying  for  or  obtaining  a  junking
certificate,  by  executing  a  uniform invoice. The licensee
transferor shall furnish a copy of the uniform invoice to the
licensee transferee at the time of transfer.   In  any  case,
the licensee transferor shall apply for a junking certificate
in  conformance  with  Section  3-117.1 of this Chapter.  The
following  information  shall  be  contained  on  a   uniform
invoice:
         (1)  The  business  name, address and dealer license
    number of the  person  disposing  of  the  vehicle,  junk
    vehicle or vehicle cowl;
         (2)  The  name  and  address of the person acquiring
    the vehicle, junk vehicle or vehicle cowl,  and  if  that
    person  is  a dealer, the Illinois or out-of-state dealer
    license number of that dealer;
         (3)  The date of the  disposition  of  the  vehicle,
    junk vehicle or vehicle cowl;
         (4)  The year, make, model, color and description of
    each vehicle, junk vehicle or vehicle cowl disposed of by
    such person;
         (5)  The   manufacturer's   vehicle   identification
    number,  Secretary  of  State  identification  number  or
    Illinois  Department  of  State  Police  number, for each
    vehicle, junk vehicle or vehicle cowl part disposed of by
    such person;
         (6)  The printed name and legible signature  of  the
    person or agent disposing of the vehicle, junk vehicle or
    vehicle cowl; and
         (7)  The  printed  name and legible signature of the
    person accepting delivery of the vehicle, junk vehicle or
    vehicle cowl.
    The Secretary of State may certify a junking manifest  in
a  form  prescribed  by  the Secretary of State that reflects
those vehicles  for  which  junking  certificates  have  been
applied  or  issued.  A junking manifest may be issued to any
person and it shall constitute evidence of ownership for  the
vehicle   listed   upon   it.   A  junking  manifest  may  be
transferred only to a person licensed under Section 5-301  of
this  Code  as  a  scrap  processor.  A junking manifest will
allow  the  transportation  of  those  vehicles  to  a  scrap
processor prior to receiving the junk  certificate  from  the
Secretary of State.
    (b)  An  application  for  a salvage certificate shall be
submitted to the Secretary of State in any of  the  following
situations:
         (1)  When  an  insurance  company makes a payment of
    damages  on  a  total  loss  claim  for  a  vehicle,  the
    insurance company shall be deemed to be the owner of such
    vehicle and the vehicle shall be considered to be salvage
    except that ownership of a vehicle 9 model years  of  age
    or  older  may, by agreement between the registered owner
    and the insurance company, be retained by the  registered
    owner  of  such  vehicle.   The  insurance  company shall
    promptly deliver or mail within 20 days  the  certificate
    of  title  along  with  proper application and fee to the
    Secretary of State, and a salvage  certificate  shall  be
    issued  in the name of the insurance company.  An insurer
    making payment of damages on a total loss claim  for  the
    theft  of  a vehicle may exchange the salvage certificate
    for a certificate of title if the  vehicle  is  recovered
    without  damage.   In such a situation, the insurer shall
    fill out and sign a form prescribed by the  Secretary  of
    State  which  contains  an  affirmation  under penalty of
    perjury that the vehicle was recovered without damage and
    the Secretary  of  State  may,  by  rule  or  regulation,
    require photographs to be submitted.
         (2)  When  a vehicle the ownership of which has been
    transferred  to  any  person  through  a  certificate  of
    purchase from acquisition of the vehicle at  an  auction,
    other  dispositions  as  set  forth in Sections 4-208 and
    4-209 of this Code, a lien arising under Section  18a-501
    of this Code, or a public sale under the Abandoned Mobile
    Home Act shall be deemed salvage or junk at the option of
    the purchaser.  The person acquiring such vehicle in such
    manner  shall  promptly  deliver  or mail, within 20 days
    after the acquisition of the vehicle, the certificate  of
    purchase,  the  proper  application  and fee, and, if the
    vehicle is an abandoned mobile home under  the  Abandoned
    Mobile  Home  Act,  a  certification  from  a  local  law
    enforcement  agency  that  the  vehicle  was purchased or
    acquired at a public sale under the Abandoned Mobile Home
    Act to the Secretary of State and a  salvage  certificate
    or  junking  certificate  shall  be issued in the name of
    that  person.    The  salvage  certificate   or   junking
    certificate  issued  by the Secretary of State under this
    Section shall be free of any lien  that  existed  against
    the vehicle prior to the time the vehicle was acquired by
    the applicant under this Code.
         (3)  A  vehicle  which  has  been  repossessed  by a
    lienholder shall be considered to be  salvage  only  when
    the  repossessed  vehicle, on the date of repossession by
    the lienholder, has sustained damage by collision,  fire,
    theft, rust corrosion, or other means so that the cost of
    repairing  such damage, including labor, would be greater
    than 33 1/3%  of  its  fair  market  value  without  such
    damage.   If  the lienholder determines that such vehicle
    is damaged in excess of  33  1/3%  of  such  fair  market
    value,  the  lienholder  shall,  before sale, transfer or
    assignment of the vehicle, make application for a salvage
    certificate, and shall submit with such  application  the
    proper  fee  and  evidence  of  possession.  If the facts
    required to be shown in subsection (f) of  Section  3-114
    are  satisfied,  the  Secretary  of  State  shall issue a
    salvage certificate in the name of the lienholder  making
    the   application.   In  any  case  wherein  the  vehicle
    repossessed is not damaged in excess of 33  1/3%  of  its
    fair  market  value, the lienholder shall comply with the
    requirements of subsections (f),  (f-5),  and  (f-10)  of
    Section  3-114, except that the affidavit of repossession
    made by  or  on  behalf  of  the  lienholder,  after  the
    original  21 day notice to the debtor has been fulfilled,
    shall within 15 days make an application to the Secretary
    of State for a certificate of title, submitting with such
    application  evidence  of  possession.   The  application
    shall  also  contain  an  affirmation  under  penalty  of
    perjury that  the  vehicle  on  the  date  of  sale  such
    application  for  certificate  of title is not damaged in
    excess of 33 1/3% of its fair market value.  If the facts
    required to be shown in subsection (f) of  Section  3-114
    are  satisfied,  the  Secretary  of  State  shall issue a
    certificate of title as set forth  in  Section  3-116  of
    this  Code.  The  Secretary  of  State  may  by  rule  or
    regulation require photographs to be submitted.
         (4)  A  vehicle  which  is a part of a fleet of more
    than 5 commercial vehicles registered in  this  State  or
    any  other  state  or  registered  proportionately  among
    several  states  shall  be  considered to be salvage when
    such vehicle has sustained  damage  by  collision,  fire,
    theft,  rust, corrosion or similar means so that the cost
    of repairing  such  damage,  including  labor,  would  be
    greater  than  33  1/3%  of  the fair market value of the
    vehicle without such damage.  If the  owner  of  a  fleet
    vehicle desires to sell, transfer, or assign his interest
    in  such vehicle to a person within this State other than
    an insurance company licensed to do business within  this
    State, and the owner determines that such vehicle, at the
    time  of  the  proposed  sale,  transfer or assignment is
    damaged in excess of 33 1/3% of its  fair  market  value,
    the   owner   shall,   before   such  sale,  transfer  or
    assignment, make application for a  salvage  certificate.
    The   application  shall  contain  with  it  evidence  of
    possession of the vehicle.  If the fleet vehicle  at  the
    time  of its sale, transfer, or assignment is not damaged
    in excess of 33 1/3% of its fair market value, the  owner
    shall  so  state  in  a  written  affirmation  on  a form
    prescribed  by  the  Secretary  of  State  by   rule   or
    regulation.   The  Secretary  of  State  may  by  rule or
    regulation require photographs  to  be  submitted.   Upon
    sale,  transfer  or  assignment  of the fleet vehicle the
    owner shall mail the  affirmation  to  the  Secretary  of
    State.
         (5)  A  vehicle  that has been submerged in water to
    the point that rising water has  reached  over  the  door
    sill  and  has entered the passenger or trunk compartment
    is  a  "flood  vehicle".   A  flood  vehicle   shall   be
    considered   to  be  salvage  only  if  the  vehicle  has
    sustained damage  so  that  the  cost  of  repairing  the
    damage, including labor, would be greater than 33 1/3% of
    the fair market value of the vehicle without that damage.
    The  salvage  certificate issued under this Section shall
    indicate the word "flood", and the word "flood" shall  be
    conspicuously   entered  on  subsequent  titles  for  the
    vehicle.  A person who  possesses  or  acquires  a  flood
    vehicle  that  is not damaged in excess of 33 1/3% of its
    fair market value shall make  application  for  title  in
    accordance  with  Section 3-116 of this Code, designating
    the vehicle as "flood" in  a  manner  prescribed  by  the
    Secretary  of  State.   The  certificate  of title issued
    shall indicate the word "flood",  and  the  word  "flood"
    shall  be  conspicuously entered on subsequent titles for
    the vehicle.
    (c)  Any person who without  authority  acquires,  sells,
exchanges,  gives  away,  transfers  or destroys or offers to
acquire, sell, exchange, give away, transfer or  destroy  the
certificate  of  title  to  any  vehicle  which  is a junk or
salvage vehicle shall be guilty of a Class 3 felony.
    (d)  Any person who knowingly fails to surrender  to  the
Secretary   of   State   a   certificate  of  title,  salvage
certificate,  certificate  of   purchase   or   a   similarly
acceptable  out-of-state  document  of  ownership as required
under the provisions of this Section is guilty of a  Class  A
misdemeanor  for  a  first offense and a Class 4 felony for a
subsequent offense; except that a person licensed under  this
Code  who  violates  paragraph  (5) of subsection (b) of this
Section is guilty of a business offense and  shall  be  fined
not less than $1,000 nor more than $5,000 for a first offense
and  is guilty of a Class 4 felony for a second or subsequent
violation.
    (e)  Any vehicle which is salvage  or  junk  may  not  be
driven  or  operated on roads and highways within this State.
A violation of this subsection is a Class A  misdemeanor.   A
salvage  vehicle displaying valid special plates issued under
Section 3-601(b) of this Code, which is being  driven  to  or
from  an  inspection  conducted  under  Section 3-308 of this
Code, is exempt from the provisions of  this  subsection.   A
salvage vehicle for which a short term permit has been issued
under   Section  3-307  of  this  Code  is  exempt  from  the
provisions of this subsection for the duration of the permit.
(Source: P.A. 88-516;  88-685,  eff.  1-24-95;  89-669,  eff.
1-1-97.)

    (625 ILCS 5/3-104.1 rep.)
    Section  50.  The  Illinois  Vehicle  Code  is amended by
repealing Section 3-104.1.

    Section 55.  The Fiduciary Obligations Act is amended  by
changing Section 9 as follows:

    (760 ILCS 65/9) (from Ch. 17, par. 2009)
    Sec.  9.  Notwithstanding  any  other law, if a fiduciary
makes a deposit in a bank to his personal  credit  of  checks
drawn by him upon an account in his own name as fiduciary, or
of  checks payable to him as fiduciary, or of checks drawn by
him upon an account in the name of his  principal  if  he  is
empowered to draw checks thereon, or of checks payable to his
principal  and indorsed by him, if he is empowered to indorse
such checks, or if he otherwise makes a deposit of funds held
by him as fiduciary, the bank receiving such deposit  is  not
bound  to inquire whether the fiduciary is committing thereby
a breach of his obligation as  fiduciary;  and  the  bank  is
authorized  to  pay  the  amount  of  the deposit or any part
thereof upon the personal  check  of  the  fiduciary  without
being  liable  to the principal, unless the bank receives the
deposit or pays the check  with  actual  knowledge  that  the
fiduciary  is  committing  a  breach  of  his  obligation  as
fiduciary in making such deposit or in drawing such check, or
with knowledge of such facts that its action in receiving the
deposit or paying the check amounts to bad faith.
(Source: Laws 1931, p. 676.)

    Section  60.  The  Uniform  Commercial Code is amended by
changing Sections 9-105, 9-106, and 9-302 as follows:

    (810 ILCS 5/9-105) (from Ch. 26, par. 9-105)
    Sec. 9-105.  Definitions and index of definitions.
    (1)  In  this  Article  unless  the   context   otherwise
requires:
         (a)  "Account   debtor"  means  the  person  who  is
    obligated  on  an  account,  chattel  paper  or   general
    intangible;
         (b)  "Chattel  paper"  means  a  writing or writings
    which evidence both a monetary obligation and a  security
    interest  in  or a lease of specific goods, but a charter
    or other contract involving the use or hire of  a  vessel
    is  not  chattel  paper.  When a transaction is evidenced
    both by such a security agreement or a lease  and  by  an
    instrument  or  a  series  of  instruments,  the group of
    writings taken together constitutes chattel paper;
         (c)  "Collateral" means the property  subject  to  a
    security  interest,  and  includes  accounts  and chattel
    paper which have been sold;
         (d)  "Debtor" means the person who owes  payment  or
    other  performance  of the obligation secured, whether or
    not he owns or has rights in the collateral, and includes
    the seller of accounts or chattel paper. Where the debtor
    and the owner of the collateral are not the same  person,
    the  term  "debtor"  means the owner of the collateral in
    any provision of the Article dealing with the collateral,
    the obligor in any provision dealing with the obligation,
    and may include both where the context so requires;
         (e)  "Deposit  account"  means   a   demand,   time,
    savings, passbook or like account maintained with a bank,
    as defined in subsection (1) of Section 4-105 savings and
    loan  association,  credit  union  or  like organization,
    other than an  account  evidenced  by  a  certificate  of
    deposit;
         (f)  "Document"  means  document of title as defined
    in the general definitions of Article 1 (Section  1-201),
    and  a receipt of the kind described in subsection (2) of
    Section 7-201;
         (g)  "Encumbrance" includes  real  estate  mortgages
    and  other  liens  on real estate and all other rights in
    real estate that are not ownership interests;
         (h)  "Goods" includes all things which  are  movable
    at  the  time the security interest attaches or which are
    fixtures (Section 9-313), but  does  not  include  money,
    documents,  instruments,  investment  property, commodity
    contracts, accounts, chattel paper, general  intangibles,
    or  minerals  or  the like (including oil and gas) before
    extraction. "Goods" also includes standing  timber  which
    is  to  be cut and removed under a conveyance or contract
    for sale, the unborn young of animals, and growing crops;
         (i)  "Instrument"  means  a  negotiable   instrument
    (defined    in   Section   3-104),   a   non-transferable
    certificate of deposit, a non-negotiable  certificate  of
    deposit,  or any other writing which evidences a right to
    the payment  of  money  and  is  not  itself  a  security
    agreement  or lease and is of a type which is in ordinary
    course of  business  transferred  by  delivery  with  any
    necessary  indorsement  or assignment.  The term does not
    include investment property;
         (j)  "Mortgage" means a consensual interest  created
    by  a  real estate mortgage, a trust deed on real estate,
    or the like;
         (j-5)  "Non-negotiable certificate of deposit" means
    a written document  issued  by  a  bank,  as  defined  in
    subsection   (1)  of  Section  4-105,  that  contains  an
    acknowledgement that a sum of money has been received  by
    the  issuer  and a promise by the issuer to repay the sum
    of money, and is not a negotiable instrument  as  defined
    in Section 3-104;
         (j-7)  "Non-transferable   certificate  of  deposit"
    means a non-negotiable certificate of deposit  which  may
    not  be  transferred  except  on the books of the issuer,
    with the consent of the issuer, or is  subject  to  other
    restrictions or conditions of the issuer on transfer;
         (k)  An  advance is made "pursuant to commitment" if
    the secured party has bound himself to make  it,  whether
    or  not  a subsequent event of default or other event not
    within his control has relieved or may relieve  him  from
    his obligation;
         (l)  "Security  agreement"  means an agreement which
    creates or provides for a security interest;
         (m)  "Secured party" means a lender, seller or other
    person in whose  favor  there  is  a  security  interest,
    including a person to whom accounts or chattel paper have
    been  sold.  When the holders of obligations issued under
    an indenture of trust, equipment trust agreement  or  the
    like  are  represented  by a trustee or other person, the
    representative is the secured party;
         (n)  "Transmitting   utility"   means   any   person
    primarily engaged in  the  railroad,  street  railway  or
    trolley   bus   business,  the  electric  or  electronics
    communications transmission business, the transmission of
    goods by pipeline, or the distribution, transmission,  or
    the  production  and  transmission of electricity, steam,
    gas or water, or the provision of sewer service.
    (o)  "Uncertificated certificate  of  deposit"  means  an
obligation of a bank, as defined in subsection (1) of Section
4-105, to repay a sum of money it has received, that is not a
deposit account and is not represented by a writing, but only
by  an  entry  on the books of the bank and any documentation
given to the customer by the bank.
    (2)  Other definitions applying to this Article  and  the
Sections in which they appear are:
    "Account". Section 9-106.
    "Attach". Section 9-203.
    "Commodity contract". Section 9-115.
    "Commodity customer". Section 9-115.
    "Commodity intermediary". Section 9-115.
    "Construction mortgage". Section 9-313 (1).
    "Consumer goods". Section 9-109 (1).
    "Control". Section 9-115.
    "Equipment". Section 9-109 (2).
    "Farm products". Section 9-109 (3).
    "Fixture". Section 9-313 (1).
    "Fixture filing". Section 9-313 (1).
    "General intangibles". Section 9-106.
    "Inventory". Section 9-109 (4).
    "Investment property". Section 9-115.
    "Lien creditor". Section 9-301 (3).
    "Proceeds". Section 9-306 (1).
    "Purchase money security interest". Section 9-107.
    "United States". Section 9-103.
    (3)  The following definitions in other Articles apply to
this Article:
    "Bank".  Section 4-105.
    "Broker".  Section 8-102.
    "Certificated security".  Section 8-102.
    "Check". Section 3-104.
    "Clearing corporation". Section 8-102.
    "Contract for sale". Section 2-106.
    "Control". Section 8-106.
    "Delivery". Section 8-301.
    "Entitlement holder". Section 8-102.
    "Financial asset". Section 8-102.
    "Holder in due course". Section 3-302.
    "Letter of credit". Section 5-102.
    "Note". Section 3-104.
    "Proceeds of a letter of credit". Section 5-114(a).
    "Sale". Section 2-106.
    "Securities intermediary". Section 8-102.
    "Security". Section 8-102.
    "Security certificate". Section 8-102.
    "Security entitlement". Section 8-102.
    "Uncertificated security". Section 8-102.
    (4)  In  addition  Article 1 contains general definitions
and principles of construction and interpretation  applicable
throughout this Article.
(Source: P.A. 89-364, eff. 1-1-96; 89-534, eff. 1-1-97.)
    (810 ILCS 5/9-106) (from Ch. 26, par. 9-106)
    Sec.     9-106.  Definitions:     "account";     "general
intangibles".  "Account" means any right to payment for goods
sold  or  leased  or  for  services  rendered  which  is  not
evidenced by an instrument or chattel paper, whether  or  not
it  has  been  earned  by  performance. "General intangibles"
means any personal  property  (including  things  in  action)
other   than   goods,  accounts,  chattel  paper,  documents,
instruments,  investment  property,  rights  to  proceeds  of
written letters of credit, deposit  accounts,  uncertificated
certificates  of  deposit,  and  money. All rights to payment
earned  or  unearned  under  a  charter  or  other   contract
involving the use or hire of a vessel and all rights incident
to the charter or contract are accounts.
(Source: P.A. 89-364, eff. 1-1-96; 89-534, eff. 1-1-97.)

    (810 ILCS 5/9-302) (from Ch. 26, par. 9-302)
    Sec.  9-302.  When filing is required to perfect security
interest; security interests to which  filing  provisions  of
this Article do not apply.
    (1)  A  financing  statement must be filed to perfect all
security interests except the following:
         (a)  a security interest in collateral in possession
    of the secured party under Section 9-305;
         (b)  a security interest  temporarily  perfected  in
    instruments,   certificated   securities,   or  documents
    without delivery under Section 9-304 or in proceeds for a
    20 day period under Section 9-306;
         (c)  a security interest created by an assignment of
    a beneficial interest in a trust or a decedent's estate;
         (d)  a purchase money security interest in  consumer
    goods;  but  filing  is  required  for  a  motor  vehicle
    required to be registered; and fixture filing is required
    for  priority  over  conflicting interests in fixtures to
    the extent provided in Section 9-313;
         (e)  an assignment of accounts which does not  alone
    or  in  conjunction  with  other  assignments to the same
    assignee transfer a significant part of  the  outstanding
    accounts of the assignor;
         (f)  a   security  interest  of  a  collecting  bank
    (Section 4-208) or arising under  the  Article  on  Sales
    (see  Section 9-113) or covered in subsection (3) of this
    Section;
         (g)  an assignment for the benefit of all  creditors
    of  the  transferor,  and  subsequent  transfers  by  the
    assignee thereunder;
         (h)  a  security  interest  in  investment  property
    which  is perfected without filing under Section 9-115 or
    Section 9-116;
         (i)  a security interest in a deposit account.  Such
    a security interest is perfected:
              (i)  as to a deposit  account  maintained  with
         the  secured  party,  when the security agreement is
         executed;
              (ii)  as to a deposit account  maintained  with
         any  organization other than the secured party, when
         notice  thereof  is  given   in   writing   to   the
         organization   with  whom  the  deposit  account  is
         maintained and that  organization  provides  written
         acknowledgement  of and consent to the notice of the
         secured party.
         (j)  a  security  interest  in   an   uncertificated
    certificate  of  deposit.    Such  a security interest is
    perfected;
              (i)  as to  an  uncertificated  certificate  of
         deposit  issued  by  the  secured  party,  when  the
         security agreement is executed;
              (ii)  as  to  an  uncertificated certificate of
         deposit issued by any organization  other  than  the
         secured  party,  when  notice  thereof  is  given in
         writing  to  the  issuer   of   the   uncertificated
         certificate  of  deposit  and  the  issuer  provides
         written acknowledgement of and consent to the notice
         of the secured party.
    (2)  If  a  secured  party  assigns  a perfected security
interest, no filing under this Article is required  in  order
to  continue  the  perfected  status of the security interest
against  creditors  of  and  transferees  from  the  original
debtor.
    (3)  The  filing  of  a  financing  statement   otherwise
required  by  this  Article  is not necessary or effective to
perfect a security interest in property subject to
         (a)  a statute or treaty of the United States  which
    provides  for a national or international registration or
    a national or international certificate of title or which
    specifies a place of filing different from that specified
    in this Article for filing of the security interest; or
         (b)  the  following  statutes  of  this  State:  the
    Illinois Vehicle Code; the Boat Registration  and  Safety
    Act;  but  during  any  period  in  which  collateral  is
    inventory  held  for  sale  by  a  person  who  is in the
    business of  selling  goods  of  that  kind,  the  filing
    provisions  of  this Article (Part 4) apply to a security
    interest in that collateral created by him as debtor; or
         (c)  a  certificate  of  title  statute  of  another
    jurisdiction under the  law  of  which  indication  of  a
    security  interest  on  the  certificate is required as a
    condition  of  perfection  (subsection  (2)  of   Section
    9-103).
    (4)  Compliance  with  a  statute  or treaty described in
subsection (3) is equivalent to the  filing  of  a  financing
statement  under  this  Article,  and  a security interest in
property subject to the statute or treaty  can  be  perfected
only  by  compliance  therewith except as provided in Section
9-103 on multiple state transactions. Duration and renewal of
perfection of a security  interest  perfected  by  compliance
with  the statute or treaty are governed by the provisions of
the  statute  or  treaty;  in  other  respects  the  security
interest is subject to this Article.
(Source: P.A. 89-364, eff. 1-1-96.)

    Section 65.  The Illinois  Fairness  in  Lending  Act  is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

    (815 ILCS 120/6) (from Ch. 17, par. 856)
    Sec.  6.  Where  a  financial  institution,  other than a
credit union, as defined  in  Section  1.1  of  the  Illinois
Credit  Union Act, as now or hereafter amended, repossesses a
motor vehicle that was used as a  collateral  and   which  is
used   primarily  for  the  borrower's  personal,  family  or
household  purposes,  the  financial  institution  shall   be
subject  to  the  requirements  of  and  shall  transfer  the
certificate  of  title  pursuant  to  Section  3-114  of  the
Illinois  Vehicle  Code  and  the  borrower  at  the  time of
repossession has paid an amount equal to 30% or more  of  the
total  of  payments  due,  the  borrower may, within 15 days,
redeem the motor vehicle from the  financial  institution  by
tendering:
    (a)  the  total  of  all  unpaid  amounts,  including any
unpaid  delinquency   or   deferral   charges   due   without
acceleration, and
    (b)  performance necessary to cure any default other than
nonpayment of the amounts due; and
    (c)  any   reasonable   cost  or  fees  incurred  by  the
financial institution in the retaking of the goods.
Tender of payment and performance pursuant  to  this  Section
restores  to the borrower his rights under the loan as though
no default had occurred. The borrower has a right  to  redeem
the collateral from the financial institution only once under
this Section. The financial institution may, in the financial
institution's sole discretion, extend the period during which
the  borrower  may  redeem  the collateral beyond the 15 days
allowed under this  Section,  and  the  extension  shall  not
subject   the  financial  institution  to  liability  to  the
borrower under the laws of this State.
    The financial institution must give written notice to the
borrower,  within  3  days  of  the  repossession,   of   the
borrower's  right  to  redeem the collateral pursuant to this
Section. The written notice shall  be  in  substantially  the
following form:
             NOTICE OF RIGHT TO RECOVER VEHICLE
    Your  vehicle  was  repossessed  on  (specify  date)  for
failure to make payments on the loan (or other reason).
    Under Illinois law, because you have paid at least 30% of
the  loan  before  repossession,  you  may be able to get the
vehicle back. You have the right to recover  the  vehicle  if
you   do  the  following  within  15  days  of  the  date  of
repossession:
    1.   Make payment of all back payments  so
         that you are current on the loan.       $...........
    2.   Pay any late charge due.                $...........
    3.   Pay the costs of repossession.          $...........
         Total Amount Now Due                    $...........
    Bring  cash,  a  certified  check  or money order for the
total amount now due that  is  listed  above  to  our  office
located  at  (specify  address) by (specify date) to get your
vehicle back.
(Source: P.A. 90-343, eff. 8-8-97.)

    Section 70.  The Motor Vehicle Retail  Installment  Sales
Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows:

    (815 ILCS 375/20) (from Ch. 121 1/2, par. 580)
    Sec.  20.   Unless  otherwise  limited  by  this Act, the
parties shall  have  the  rights  and  remedies  provided  in
Article  9  of  the  Uniform  Commercial Code with respect to
default  and,  disposition,  and   recovery   redemption   of
collateral.  If  the  holder of a retail installment contract
repossesses a motor vehicle that was used as collateral,  the
holder  shall  be  subject  to  the requirements of and shall
transfer the certificate of title pursuant to  Section  3-114
of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
    If  the  buyer has paid an amount equal to 60% or more of
the deferred payment price at the time of his  default  under
the  contract  and if the buyer, at the request of the holder
and without legal proceedings, surrenders the  goods  to  the
holder  in ordinary condition and free from malicious damage,
the holder must, within a period of 5 days from the  date  of
receipt  of  the goods at his place of business, elect either
(a) to retain the goods and release the  buyer  from  further
obligation  under the contract, or (b) to return the goods to
the buyer at the holder's expense and be limited to an action
to recover the balance of the indebtedness.
    If the buyer has paid an amount equal to 30% or  more  of
the  deferred  payment price at the time of repossession, the
buyer shall have the right  to  reinstate  the  contract  and
recover  the  collateral  from the holder within 15 days from
the date of repossession by tendering (a)  the total  of  all
unpaid  amounts, including any unpaid delinquency or deferral
charges due at the time of tender, without acceleration,  and
(b)  performance  necessary  to  cure  any default other than
nonpayment of the amounts due; and (c) any reasonable cost or
fees incurred by the holder in the  retaking  of  the  goods.
Tender  of  payment  and performance pursuant to this Section
restores to the buyer his rights under the contract as though
no default had occurred.  The buyer has a right to  reinstate
the  contract and recover the collateral from the holder only
once under this Section. The holder may, in the holder's sole
discretion, extend the period  during  which  the  buyer  may
reinstate  the  contract  and  recover  redeem the collateral
beyond the 15  days  allowed  under  this  Section,  and  the
extension  shall  not  subject the holder to liability to the
buyer under the laws of this State.
    The holder must give written notice to the buyer,  within
3 days of the repossession, of the buyer's right to reinstate
the  contract  and  recover  the  collateral pursuant to this
Section.  The written notice shall be  in  substantially  the
following form:

             NOTICE OF RIGHT TO RECOVER VEHICLE
    Your  vehicle  was  repossessed  on  (specify  date)  for
failure to make payments on the contract (or other reason).
    Under Illinois law, because you have paid at least 30% of
the  deferred  payment  price before repossession, you may be
able to get the vehicle back.  You have the right to  recover
the  vehicle  if  you  do the following within 15 days of the
date of repossession:
    1.  Make payment of all back payments due as
         of the date of this notice.                        $
    2.  Pay any late charges due.                           $
    3.  Pay the costs of repossession.                      $
           TOTAL AMOUNT DUE as of  the  date  of
              this notice:                                  $
    4.  Plus  pay  any  additional amounts which
         may become due between the date of this
         the   notice   and    the    date    of
         reinstatement.                                     $
         AMOUNT NOW DUE
    Bring  cash,  a  certified check or a money order for the
total amount now due that  is  plus  any  additional  amounts
which  may become due between the date of this notice and the
date of the reinstatement to our office located  at  (specify
address) by (specify date) to get your vehicle back.
(Source:  P.A.  90-343,  eff.  8-8-97;  90-437,  eff. 1-1-98;
revised 2-7-98.)

    Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
becoming  law,  except  that  Sections 35, 45, 50, 65, and 70
take effect January 1, 1999.

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