Subject to section 47-30.2-12, the following property is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed by the apparent owner during the period specified below: 1. Except as provided in this section, checks held, issued, or owing in the ordinary course of the holder's business which remain uncashed by the owner two years after becoming payable; 2. A traveler's check, fifteen years after issuance; 3. A money order, seven years after issuance; 4. A state or municipal bond, bearer bond, or original-issue-discount bond, three years after the earliest of the date: a. The bond matures; b. The bond is called; or c. The obligation to pay the principal of the bond arises; 5. A debt of a business association, three years after the obligation to pay arises; 6. A payroll card or a demand, savings, or time deposit, including a time deposit that is automatically renewable, five years after the date of maturity of the time deposit or the date of the last indication of interest in the property by the apparent owner, whichever is earlier, provided a time deposit that is automatically renewable is deemed matured
on its initial date of maturity unless the apparent owner has consented in a record on file with the holder to renewal at or about the time of the renewal. If an apparent owner has another established account with the financial institution and has demonstrated interest in any account under section 47-30.2-12, then all accounts must be considered active; 7. A cashier's check or certified check, two years after issuance; 8. Money or a credit owed to a customer as a result of a retail business transaction, other than in-store credit for returned merchandise, three years after the obligation arose; 9. An amount owed by an insurance company on a life or endowment insurance policy or an annuity contract that has matured or terminated, three years after the obligation to pay arose under the terms of the policy or contract or, if a policy or contract for which an amount is owed on proof of death has not matured by proof of the death of the insured or annuitant, as follows: a. With respect to an amount owed on a life or endowment insurance policy, three years after the earlier of the date: (1) The insurance company has knowledge of the death of the insured; or (2) The insured has attained, or would have attained if living, the limiting age under the mortality table on which the reserve for the policy is based; and b. With respect to an amount owed on an annuity contract, three years after the date the insurance company has knowledge of the death of the annuitant. 10. Property distributable by a business association in the course of dissolution, one year after the property becomes distributable; 11. Property held by a court, including property received as proceeds of a class action, three years after the property becomes distributable; 12. Property held by a government or political subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, including municipal bond interest and unredeemed principal under the administration of a paying agent or indenture trustee, three years after the property becomes distributable; 13. Wages, commissions, bonuses, or reimbursements to which an employee is entitled, or other compensation for personal services, one year after the amount becomes payable; 14. A deposit or refund owed to a subscriber by a utility, one year after the deposit or refund becomes payable; 15. A security deposit, including interest on the security deposit, made in advance by a person to secure an agreement for rights of services, less any lawsuit deductions, which remains unclaimed by the owner for more than one year after termination of the agreement for which the deposit or advance payment was made; 16. A sum payable as mineral proceeds which has remained unclaimed by the owner for more than three years after it became payable or distributable and the owner's underlying right to receive those mineral proceeds are deemed abandoned. At the time an owner's underlying right to receive mineral proceeds is deemed abandoned, any mineral proceeds then owing to the owner and any proceeds accruing after that time are deemed abandoned; 17. Virtual currency, three years after the apparent owner's last indication of interest in the property; 18. Excess proceeds from the sale of abandoned vehicles under chapter 23.1-15, the time prescribed by section 23.1-15-07; 19. Excess proceeds from the sale of public or private property under chapter 57-28, the time prescribed by section 57-28-20; and 20. Property not specified in this section or sections 47-30.2-05 through 47-30.2-10, the earlier of three years after the owner first has a right to demand the property or the obligation to pay or distribute the property arises.
47-30.2-05. (202) When tax-deferred or tax-exempt retirement account presumed abandoned. 1. Subject to section 47-30.2-12, property held in a pension account or retirement account that qualifies for tax deferral or tax exemption under the income tax laws of the United States is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed by the apparent owner three years after the later of: a. The following dates: (1) Except as in paragraph 2, the date a second consecutive communication sent by the holder by first-class United States mail to the apparent owner is returned to the holder undelivered by the United States postal service; or (2) If the second communication is sent later than thirty days after the date the first communication is returned undelivered, the date the first communication was returned undelivered by the United States postal service; or b. The earlier of the following dates: (1) The date the apparent owner becomes seventy-two years of age, if determinable by the holder; or (2) If the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, [26 U.S.C. 1 et seq.] or title 57, requires distribution to avoid a tax penalty, two years after the date the holder: (a) Receives confirmation of the death of the apparent owner in the ordinary course of its business; or (b) Confirms the death of the apparent owner under subsection 2. 2. If a holder in the ordinary course of its business receives notice or an indication of the death of an apparent owner and subdivision b of subsection 1 applies, the holder shall attempt not later than ninety days after receipt of the notice or indication to confirm whether the apparent owner is deceased. 3. If the holder does not send communications to the apparent owner of an account described in subsection 1 by first-class United States mail, the holder shall attempt to confirm the apparent owner's interest in the property by sending the apparent owner an electronic-mail communication not later than two years after the apparent owner's last indication of interest in the property. However, the holder promptly shall attempt to contact the apparent owner by first-class United States mail if: a. The holder does not have information needed to send the apparent owner an electronic-mail communication; b. The holder receives notification that the electronic-mail communication was not received; or c. The apparent owner does not respond to the electronic-mail communication not later than thirty days after the communication was sent. 4. If first-class United States mail sent under subsection 3 is returned to the holder undelivered by the United States postal service, the property is presumed abandoned three years after the later of: a. Except as in subdivision b, the date a second consecutive communication to contact the apparent owner sent by first-class United States mail is returned to the holder undelivered; b. If the second communication is sent later than thirty days after the date the first communication is returned undelivered, the date the first communication was returned undelivered; or c. The date established by subdivision b of subsection 1.
47-30.2-06. (203) When other tax-deferred or tax-exempt account presumed abandoned. Subject to section 47-30.2-12 and except for property described in section 47-30.2-05 and property held in a plan described in section 529A of the Internal Revenue Code, as amended, [26 U.S.C. 529A] property held in an account or plan, including a health savings account, that qualifies for tax deferral or tax exemption under the income tax laws of the United States is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed by the apparent owner three years after the earlier of:
1. The date, if determinable by the holder, specified in the income tax laws and regulations of the United States by which distribution of the property must begin to avoid a tax penalty, with no distribution having been made; or 2. Thirty years after the date the account was opened.