ABA Banking Journal
No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
SUBSCRIBE
ABA Banking Journal
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Uncategorized

Alabama district court rules Corporate Transparency Act is unconstitutional

April 1, 2024
Reading Time: 3 mins read

CORPORATE TRANSPARENCY ACT
National Small Business United v. Yellen
Date: March 1, 2024

Issue: Whether the Corporate Transparency Act is unconstitutional.

Case Summary: An Alabama federal district court held that the Corporate Transparency Act is unconstitutional because it exceeds Congress’ enumerated powers.

The CTA requires companies doing business in the United States to report information about the individuals who ultimately control or own them. The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) issued a final rule in 2022 implementing the CTA. The act requires over 32 million entities to disclose their beneficial ownership to FinCEN. The CTA was intended to provide law enforcement with information to detect, prevent, and punish terrorism, money laundering and other misconduct through business entities. The CTA was scheduled to go into effect on January 1, 2024.

The National Small Business Association (NSBA) sued FinCEN and the Treasury Department (collectively the government), alleging the CTA’s mandatory disclosure requirements exceeded Congress’ authority under Article I of the Constitution, and violate the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Tenth Amendments. The government contended the CTA is authorized by: the government’s foreign affairs and national security powers, the Necessary and Proper Clause Interstate Commerce Clause; Foreign Commerce Clause; and the government’s taxing authority.

Judge Liles Burke of the Northern District of Alabama, ruled the CTA is unconstitutional. At the outset, the court concluded NSBA has associational standing to sue FinCEN. The court then turned to the constitutional claims.

First, the court ruled CTA is not authorized by Congress’ foreign affairs powers. According to the government, in enacting the CTA, Congress concluded collecting beneficial ownership information is needed to protect vital United States national security interests. However, the court emphasized incorporation is an internal affair, and corporations are typically creatures of state law. The court concluded the CTA is not authorized by Congress’ foreign affairs powers, because those powers do not extend to purely internal affairs especially in an area traditionally left to the states.

Second, the court ruled the CTA does not fall under the Commerce Clause’s authority. The court reasoned the CTA does not regulate the channels and instrumentalities of commerce or prevent their use for a specific purpose, and thus it cannot be justified as a valid regulation of those channels. The government also argued that the CTA has a substantial effect on interstate and foreign commerce. The government explained the CTA is within Congress’ commerce power because Congress rationally concluded the ability of certain legal entities to withhold beneficial ownership and applicant information impacts interstate commerce. However, the court emphasized the CTA is not a facial regulation of commercial activity. Because the CTA does not regulate commerce on its face or serve as an essential part of a comprehensive regulatory scheme, it falls outside Congress’ power to regulate non-commercial, intrastate activity.

Finally, the court ruled the government’s taxing authority does not authorize the CTA. The government argued the collection of beneficial ownership information is necessary and proper to ensure taxable income is appropriately reported. The court recognized the relationship between the taxing power and the CTA’s disclosure requirements. However, the court explained the Government did not prove that there was a “sufficiently close” relationship. In the court’s view, it would be a “substantial expansion of federal authority to permit Congress to bring its taxing power to bear just by collecting useful data and allowing tax-enforcement officials access to that data.”

The court’s decision applies to only NSBA members. Other than NSBA members, reporting companies are still required to comply with the CTA and file beneficial ownership reports as provided in FinCEN’s regulations.

Bottom Line: On March 11, the Justice Department, on behalf of the Treasury Department and FinCEN, filed a Notice of Appeal  in the Eleventh Circuit.

Documents: Opinion

Tags: Banking Docket
ShareTweetPin

Related Posts

Compliance question of the month: February 2025

Compliance question of the month: April 2026

Uncategorized
April 13, 2026

Compliance QOTM answers question on hiring incentives.

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: April 5

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: April 13

Uncategorized
April 13, 2026

News items that are the most recent sanctions-related actions from the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

Terrorism and money laundering aggregates published: April through June 2024

Terrorism and money laundering aggregates published: January through March 2026

Uncategorized
April 13, 2026

The FinCEN 314(a) Updates section is published on a periodic basis to better capture the trend line for 314(a) usage. Section 314(a) of the USA PATRIOT Act allows information sharing between law enforcement and the private sector where...

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: April 5

Recent news from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control: April 6

Uncategorized
April 6, 2026

News items that are the most recent sanctions-related actions from the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

ABA files amicus brief urging U.S. Supreme Court to review First Circuit’s Conti decision on NBA preemption

ABA files amicus brief urging U.S. Supreme Court to review First Circuit’s Conti decision on NBA preemption

Uncategorized
April 1, 2026

ABA filed a coalition amicus brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to review a First Circuit decision that ruled the National Bank Act did not preempt Rhode Island’s interest‑on‑escrow law.

BarterPay sues Deutsche Bank and Pathward over MATCH list placement and transaction laundering allegations

BarterPay sues Deutsche Bank and Pathward over MATCH list placement and transaction laundering allegations

Uncategorized
April 1, 2026

BarterPay sued Deutsche Bank AG and Pathward N.A., alleging that they improperly contributed to its placement on the MATCH list by asserting that its transactions constituted transaction laundering.

NEWSBYTES

ABA: Illinois interchange law will ‘wreck havoc’ on payment systems

April 17, 2026

Banking agencies issue revised risk management model guidance

April 17, 2026

ABA supports deregulatory approach in proposed CFPB strategic plan

April 17, 2026

SPONSORED CONTENT

Planning Your 2026 Budget? Allocate Resources to Support Growth and Retention Goals

How leading banks are enhancing customer engagement through financial data insights

April 10, 2026
Check Fraud Is Outpacing Legacy Controls. What Banks Should Evaluate Now.

Check Fraud Is Outpacing Legacy Controls. What Banks Should Evaluate Now.

April 1, 2026
How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

How top agricultural lenders are approaching AI, automation and innovation in 2026

March 2, 2026
Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

Top 7 FP&A Trends in Banking for 2026

March 1, 2026

PODCASTS

Podcast: Capitalizing on opportunities to serve high-net-worth clients

April 9, 2026

Podcast: Are credit union commercial loans risky business?

March 30, 2026

Podcast: Risk and strategy in sponsor banking

March 19, 2026

American Bankers Association
1333 New Hampshire Ave NW
Washington, DC 20036
1-800-BANKERS (800-226-5377)
www.aba.com
About ABA
Privacy Policy
Contact ABA

ABA Banking Journal
About ABA Banking Journal
Media Kit
Advertising
Subscribe

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Topics
    • Ag Banking
    • Commercial Lending
    • Community Banking
    • Compliance and Risk
    • Cybersecurity
    • Economy
    • Human Resources
    • Insurance
    • Legal
    • Mortgage
    • Mutual Funds
    • Payments
    • Policy
    • Retail and Marketing
    • Tax and Accounting
    • Technology
    • Wealth Management
  • Newsbytes
  • Podcasts
  • Magazine
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Magazine Archive
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Podcast Archive
    • Sponsored Content Archive

© 2026 American Bankers Association. All rights reserved.