Title 12 › Chapter 2— NATIONAL BANKS › Subchapter XIII— RECEIVERSHIP › § 197
After a national bank in receivership has paid every proved creditor and the costs of the receivership, the Comptroller of the Currency or the FDIC (if the FDIC is the receiver) must call a shareholders’ meeting. The notice must run for 30 days in a local newspaper where the bank did business, or in the nearest paper if none is published there. At the meeting each share gets one vote. A majority of the shares decides whether the receiver will keep managing and winding up the bank, or whether the shareholders will elect an agent to do that job. If the receiver continues, the receiver keeps the same powers and duties. If an agent is chosen, the agent must get votes for at least a majority of the shares and must post a bond. The bond must promise to pay any future allowed claims from the remaining assets as fully as possible and to do the job honestly. The bond amount is set by the shareholders, the surety must be approved by the U.S. district court where the bank did business, and the bond must be filed with that court. After that, the Comptroller and the receiver or the FDIC must transfer the remaining assets to the agent and are released from further liability. The agent holds and manages the assets for the shareholders. The agent may sue or be sued, sell or settle claims with the court’s approval, and must give the district court a full account at the end of the job so the court can settle the accounts and discharge the agent and sureties. If the agent dies, quits, or is removed, shareholders can call a new meeting with 30 days’ notice to elect a replacement who must post a similar bond. Executors, administrators, guardians, and trustees may vote for the shares they represent. Any money or property left is paid out in this order: first the costs of handling the trust, second repayment of any assessments paid by shareholders under Comptroller orders, and finally the remainder paid to shareholders by share. Distributions may be made over time as funds come in and as the Comptroller, the FDIC (if it stayed as receiver), or the agent decides.
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Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 197
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60