Appointment of Receiver; Conditions; Proceeding; Bond; Reporting Schedule; Subrogation of Federal Agency to Rights of Deposit Owners.

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Sec. 232.

(1) If a domestic credit union refuses to pay its shares, deposits, or obligations in accordance with the terms under which the shares were received or the deposits or obligations were incurred, becomes insolvent, or refuses to submit its books, papers, and records for inspection by the commissioner, or if it appears to the commissioner that the domestic credit union is in an unsafe or unsound condition, the commissioner may either appoint a conservator under section 241 or apply to the circuit court for Ingham county or for the county in which the principal place of business of the domestic credit union is located for the appointment of a receiver for the domestic credit union.

(2) In a proceeding for the appointment of a receiver, the court may act upon the application immediately and without notice to any person. If at any time it appears to the court that the claimed reasons for receivership do not exist, the court shall dissolve the receivership and terminate the proceedings.

(3) An insuring federal agency may act as receiver without bond. All other receivers, with the exception of an employee of the office of financial and insurance services appointed as receiver in his or her official capacity, shall post a bond in an amount determined by the court.

(4) A receiver shall report to the commissioner regarding all matters involving the receivership on a schedule established by the commissioner.

(5) If a domestic credit union is closed and placed in receivership, and the insuring federal agency pays or makes available for payment the insured shares and deposit liabilities of the closed domestic credit union, the agency, whether or not it has become receiver of the domestic credit union, is subrogated to all of the rights of the owners of the deposits against the closed domestic credit union in the same manner and to the same extent as subrogation of the agency is provided for under federal law.

History: 2003, Act 215, Eff. June 1, 2004


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