Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Interest on Escrow


Chairman & Managing Director
Lenders Compliance Group

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act retained much of the existing framework regarding federal preemption of state laws. But included a number of significant changes that opened the door to a larger role for state involvement in the activities of federally chartered institutions.
For example, the Dodd-Frank Act clarified that states generally may, if they so choose, provide greater protection to consumers than Title X of Dodd-Frank (its Consumer Financial Protection Act) provides.
Specifically, Dodd-Frank § 1041 specifies that “a statute, regulation, order, or interpretation in effect in any state is not inconsistent with the provisions of this title if the protection that such statute, regulation, order, or interpretation affords to consumers is greater than the protection provided under this title.”
Recently, a Chief Compliance Officer at a large financial services institution, a national bank, told me that he had received a call from a borrower who lives in California. The borrower contended that this financial institution should be paying him interest on his mortgage escrow account. The compliance officer was concerned about how this request should be met under Dodd-Frank. 
After getting some facts regarding the institution’s regulatory framework, I offered the following guidance.
Based on my call with him, it sounded as though the bank had made the decision to comply with state interest-on-escrow laws, even though the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and others have questioned whether a national bank is required to comply. A decision of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit suggests that compliance with state interest-on-escrow laws is a good idea, certainly for institutions located within the jurisdiction of the 9th Circuit (viz., Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands).
Suffice it to note that national banks and federal savings associations interested in avoiding litigation of the matter would be well-advised to comply with state interest-on-escrow laws.
Dodd-Frank § 1044 amended the National Bank Act to clarify the preemption standards for national banks and § 1046 amended the Home Owners’ Loan Act to set the same preemption standards for federal savings associations. Dodd-Frank provides that state consumer financial laws are preempted only if:
  Application of a state consumer financial law would have a discriminatory effect on national banks (or federal savings associations), in comparison with the effect of the law on a bank (or savings association) chartered by that state;
  In accordance with the legal standard for preemption in the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Barnett Bank v. Nelson, 517 U.S. 25 (1996), the state consumer financial law prevents or significantly interferes with the exercise by the national bank (or federal savings association) of its powers; and any preemption determination may be made by a court, or by regulation or order of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), on a case-by-case basis in accordance with applicable law; or
  The state consumer financial law is preempted by a provision of federal law other than Title X of the Dodd-Frank Act.
On July 20, 2011, the OCC amended its regulations to reflect its understanding of the Dodd-Frank preemption standards as applied to national banks and federal savings associations (which Dodd-Frank moved from OTS to OCC control). Since 2011, several court decisions have considered how much change Dodd-Frank wrought.

Friday, January 5, 2018

When is an Allegation not a valid Allegation?

Jonathan Foxx
Managing Director
Lenders Compliance Group

Answer: When a Florida federal district court distinguishes between a borrower’s allegation that a servicer owned a mortgage loan – an allegation asserting ownership – and the borrower’s allegation that the servicer stated (in a letter) that it, the servicer, was the owner of the loan.
Get the difference?
The borrower did not connect the allegations by further stating that the servicer was the owner of the borrower’s mortgage loan.
You might think this is a distinction without a difference. But, according to the United States District Court, Southern District of Florida ("Court"), you would be wrong!
Let’s see what happened here. 

Back in June 2016, Mr. Scott, the borrower, became aware that his mortgage lender had put his name on a neighbor’s title. The original lender on the mortgage was Sovereign Lending Group, with whom Scott had completed a refinance.
Scott dealt with the mistake by getting the title company to resolve that matter. But he began to wonder if the lender and title company had not clouded his title. A clouded title, also called a title defect, is any irregularity in the chain of title of the property that could prevent a conveyance of title.
So, in August 2016, Scott decided to find out if there was any chance of a cloud on title. He sent a letter to the servicer, 360 Mortgage Group, the new servicer (“360MG” or “servicer”). Scott did not state in the letter where the mortgage assignment was recorded, but he had checked the public records and was unable to find any assignment to 360MG.
Apparently, Scott felt he needed an affirmative response from the servicer and, on April 7, 2017, in order to "check on the validity of the loan," he sent 360MG a Qualified Written Request (“QWR”). But the servicer didn’t respond. Then, on April 29, 2017, Scott sent another QWR to the servicer. Also on April 29, 2017, after discovering that MERSCORP® ("MERS") was acting solely as nominee for the lender with respect to his mortgage, Scott sent MERS a request for the “milestones” on the mortgage. He had gone to the MERS website and found that 360MG was indeed listed as the current active servicer.
A couple of weeks later, on May 10, 2017, Scott received a letter from the servicer, in response to his second QWR, which supposedly contained information that he already had from public records, such as a copy of the mortgage and note from Sovereign.
Importantly, 360MG stated in its response that it was the "Holder" of the note and the "Owner" of the loan.
On May 15, 2017, Scott received a letter from 360MG in response to the milestones status that he requested of MERS, which MERS had forwarded to the servicer for it to answer Scott on its behalf. The letter, according to the Complaint, indicated that MERS was the "recorded lienholder of [the] property on behalf of [360MG]" and stated that Scott's county would reflect MERS as the lienholder on behalf of 360MG. But, Scott was unable to find any assignment indicating such in the public records! On that point, the letter advised Scott: "No assignment is required to be recorded with your county as long as…MERS is the recorded lienholder. An assignment, which would be from MERS to [Scott], would only be recorded in the event legal proceedings are ever required."
One can almost sense Scott’s frustration at this point, which no doubt led him to his pro se litigation.[i]