Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 53— - TRADING WITH THE ENEMY › § 4322
Requires the Alien Property Custodian to put money into special Treasury certificates when the Treasury asks. The Custodian may invest up to $40,000,000 from its funds in one or more participating certificates. If trusts file written consent under section 4309(m) and delay return of money, those delayed amounts count against the $40,000,000. If the delayed amounts are larger than $40,000,000, the extra may also be invested without regard to the $40,000,000 limit. If the Custodian has invested more than the delayed amounts, the extra can be paid back to the Custodian from the German special deposit account, with priority over most other payments from that account. The Custodian must also invest $25,000,000 from the unallocated interest fund in one or more participating certificates, and then invest any remaining unallocated interest fund balance as required. If that fund is too small to pay allocated earnings, the German special deposit account must cover the shortfall, again with set payment priority. The Treasury will issue certificates showing these investments: interest-bearing certificates for the Custodian’s $40,000,000 investment (paying about 5% a year) and non-interest certificates for the $25,000,000 investment. The certificates represent a share in the German special deposit account. The United States will pay on those certificates only from that special account, and the certificates generally cannot be transferred except to a trustee for many owners. Payments coming from the German account are divided pro rata among people who filed the written consents and are paid to them; if a payee has died or a business no longer exists, the Custodian decides who gets the money. After paying debts required by section 4309, the Custodian must transfer money and proceeds (including income, dividends, interest, annuities, and earnings) that are owned by the German government or its former ruling family into the German special deposit account. Those transfers count toward the final payment owed by Germany for awards of the Mixed Claims Commission. The Custodian must also transfer similar money and proceeds owned by the Austrian or Hungarian governments (or corporations wholly owned by them) into the Austrian or Hungarian special deposit accounts. Exact deadlines for claiming ownership include three years from March 10, 1928, and one year after the Custodian’s decision (or after March 10, 1928), whichever is later.
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War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 4322
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73