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Eleventh Circuit Scrutinizes Claims that the CTA is Unconstitutional

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CTA

Corporate Transparency Act

September 30, 2024

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit heard oral arguments on

Eleventh Circuit Scrutinizes Claims that the CTA is Unconstitutional

Friday September 27, on the appeal of a decision from a federal district court in Alabama finding the Corporate Transparency Act’s (“CTA”) beneficial owner reporting requirements unconstitutional because the requirements exceeded Congress’ authority under the commerce clause. In short, businesses should not expect a decision in this case to impact the looming deadline to comply with the CTA. The CTA, which came into effect on January 1, 2024, requires certain companies to report beneficial ownership information to the Treasury Department’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”). The deadline for companies that existed on January 1, 2024, to report beneficial ownership information to FinCEN is January 1, 2025. See Honigman’s previous coverage, available here, for background on the CTA. In November 2022, National Small Business United, doing business as the National Small Business Association (“NSBA”), sued the Department of Treasury in federal court in Alabama (National Small Business United v. Yellen) arguing that the CTA is unconstitutional on several grounds, including that Congress lacks authority to enact such a law. The court agreed, issuing an opinion in March 2024 finding the CTA unconstitutional. This was the decision on which the Eleventh Circuit heard arguments.

In short, businesses should not

See Honigman’s previous coverage, available here, for background on the lower

expect a decision in this case

court decision.

to impact the looming deadline

During oral arguments, the Treasury defended the CTA’s beneficial owner reporting

to comply with the CTA.

requirements, asserting they fall well within Congress’ constitutional authority to regulate commerce. The Treasury also contended that NSBA failed to prove that the CTA has no constitutional application, as required to invalidate the law. NSBA argued that the CTA oversteps Congress’ authority under the Commerce Clause, by regulating entity formation, a non-economic act. NSBA also argued that the CTA constituted an unreasonable search in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

September 30, 2024 | Corporate Transparency Act Alert


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