Title: Foreclosure Update and New Appraisal Regulations
1 Foreclosure Update and New Appraisal
Regulations
2The Robosigning Issue
- Employees of servicers admit in foreclosure
depositions that they signed up to thousands of
documents per month without necessarily reviewing
the documents, including affidavits of
indebtedness filed with courts. - Affidavits often contain information on the loan,
the borrower, or the transaction that may be
difficult to verify - Marital status
- Mental competence
- Meaning of Personal Knowledge
- Reliance on Business Records
- Verification of system
3Notarial Oath and Presence
- Servicers acknowledged that employees signing
documents that required notarization may not have
signed in the documents in the presence of a
notary, and that, if required, an oath may not
have been given. - These documents were filed with judicial
foreclosure actions.
4Judicial vs. Non-Judicial States
- Certain servicers suspended foreclosure actions
in states using judicial foreclosure procedures. - Affidavits are less frequently used in
non-judicial foreclosures, but some documents
still require notarization - SCRA
- Substitution of Trustee
- Loss mitigation affidavit
- Quasi-Judicial States E.g. MD
5Multi-State AG and Banking Dept. Inquiries
- State Attorneys General partner with state bank
and mortgage regulators in 50 states to form a
bi-partisan multistate group to investigate
individual mortgage servicers. - Regulators investigate allegations that servicers
submitted faulty affidavits in support of
mortgage foreclosure proceedings. - According to the group, "The facts uncovered in
our review will dictate the scope of our
inquiry. - Some AGs have indicated that they would like to
link settlement of this issue with the servicers
agreeing to deep reductions to principal balance
6Congressional Inquiries
- Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called on major
lenders to halt foreclosures across the country. - Senate Banking Committee will hold hearings
investigating the foreclosure paperwork morass on
November 16. - White House states that it is not sure about a
national moratorium because there are in fact
valid foreclosures that probably should go
forward" because documents are accurate.
7DOJ Criminal Division Inquiry
- U.S. Justice Department announces a task force to
investigate foreclosure practices. - The Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force will
probe foreclosure practices in 23 states in which
banks attorneys have been accused of submitting
falsified evidence to obtain foreclosures. - The task force includes officials from more than
20 federal agencies as well as state and local
authorities.
8Investors/ GSE Response
- FHFA Issues Four-Point Policy Framework for
dealing with Foreclosure Process Deficiencies - Addresses actions for Pre-Judgment, Post-Judgment
Pre-Sale, Post-Sale (Evictions) and REO - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac urged lenders not to
hold up foreclosures. - Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac warned servicers to
put paperwork in order to keep the foreclosure
process moving and to minimize losses - Most interpret these statements as indications
that GSEs will apply foreclosure timeline
penalties to servicers unless an official
moratorium is put in place - May play into broader issue of loan repurchase
claims by investors
9Servicer Response Varied
- Major servicers reviewing their processes and
enhancing procedures - Some servicers suspended foreclosure activity,
mostly in judicial foreclosure states. - Others have continued foreclosures, stating their
procedures were appropriate. - Most major servicers are refiling affected
documents and restarting foreclosure cases when
necessary
10Impact on REO
- Title insurers state that banks and other lenders
must vouch for the accuracy of their mortgage
documents before title insurers will write
insurance for a REO sale. - Questions remain whether challenges will be
raised in connection with the sale of REO
property.
11Standing Issues MERS
- Questions regarding MERS capacity to pursue a
foreclosure or even be in the chain of title - Are recorded chain of assignments required?
- DC Attorney General Peter Nickles announced that
a foreclosure may not be commenced against a D.C.
homeowner unless the security interest of the
current noteholder is properly supported by
public filings with the Districts Recorder of
Deeds.
12Impact of Crisis on Housing Market
- The Treasury Department alleged that uncertainty
over the legal status of foreclosed homes in the
nation could further depress home prices and
delay the recovery of the housing market.
13New Appraisal Rules
- CMLA did webinar on Dodd Frank appraisal
provisions last month - Covered new provisions on
- Appraiser independence requirements
- Appraisal requirements for High Risk Mortgages
- New Appraisal Management Company requirements
14New Appraisal Developments
- In last 2 weeks, two major developments
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac issued New Appraiser
Independence Requirements (AIR) to replace
HVCC - Fed issued Interim Final Appraisal Regulations
- Effective April 1, 2011
15Appraisal Independence Requirement (AIR)
- HVCC expired upon issuance of new Fed regs
- Big question Can Brokers Order Appraisals?
- The new regs do not prohibit brokers from
ordering appraisals . . . BUT - The new AIR issued by GSEs to replace HVCC
continues the ban on brokers ordering appraisals - Likely that the detailed GSE guidance on HVCC
will carry over to AIR, but must wait and see
16New Appraisal Regulations
- Covered both
- Customary and Reasonable Fee Provision
- Appraiser Independence Provisions
17Customary Reasonable Fee
- Wasnt clear that Fed would implement Dodd Frank
controversial provision on customary and
reasonable fee requirement - Lenders argued that customary and reasonable
fees provision was not an appraisal
independence provision requiring interim final
rules within 90 of enactment of the Dodd-Frank
Act - FRB disagreed. The rule implements the provision
18Customary Reasonable Fee
- Lenders and their agents must compensate fee
appraisers (as opposed to staff appraisers) at
a rate that is customary and reasonable for
appraisal services performed in the market area
of the property being appraised. - Lenders using AMCs will look to them, their
agents, to demonstrate compliance - AMC's are responsible for over two-thirds of
residential appraisals ordered and produced - Lenders not using AMCs must implement compliance
on their own
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19FRBs Interpretation of Section 129E(i)
- FRB interprets the customary and reasonable fee
requirement to signify that the marketplace
should be the primary determiner of the value of
appraisal services, and hence the customary and
reasonable rate of compensation for fee
appraisers. -
- FRB relied on HUD Mortgage Letter on same topic
- FRB requires customary and reasonable
compensation for appraisal services which is
limited to the services required to perform an
appraisal, including defining the scope of work,
inspecting the property, reviewing necessary and
appropriate public and private data sources,
developing and rendering an opinion of value, and
preparing and submitting the appraisal report.
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20Scope of Customary and Reasonable Fee Requirement
- Fee appraiser definition (not an employee of
lender/AMC engaging the appraiser is state
licensed or certified performs appraisals under
USPAP includes companies who act as AMCs but are
too small to meet the definition of AMC) - According to the FRB, whether a person is an
agent of the creditor is determined by
applicable law. - A fee appraiser is not an agent of the lender
- FRB notes that it believes that Congress was
especially concerned that AMCs be covered by this
provision - FRB interprets market area to be geographic
area. - FRB defines AMCs based on definition of AMC in
FIRREA but without an exemption for smaller AMCs.
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21First Presumption of Compliance
- Amount reasonably related to recent rates paid
for comparable services performed in the
geographic market. Adjustment based on - Type of property
- Scope of Work
- Time in which services are required to be
performed - Fee appraisers qualifications
- Fee appraisers experience and professional
record - Fee appraisers work quality.
- And creditor/agent do not engage in any
anticompetitive acts in violation of state or
federal law that affect compensation paid to fee
appraisers (price fixing market allocation acts
of monopolization or other antitrust laws). - Generally, recent rates would include rates
charged within one year of the creditors or its
agents reliance on this information to qualify
for the presumption of compliance.
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22Alternative Presumption of Compliance
- Rely on information about rates that
- Is based on objective third-party information,
including fee schedules, studies, and surveys
prepared by independent third parties such as
government agencies, academic institutions, and
private research firms - Is based on recent rates paid to a representative
sample of providers of appraisal services in the
geographic market of the property being appraised
or the fee schedules of those providers and - In the case of information based on fee
schedules, studies, and surveys, such fee
schedules excludes compensation paid to fee
appraisers for appraisals order by AMCs (as
defined by the rule).
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23Fee Studies
- Excluding AMCs, no reliable and objective fee
studies exist across the appraisal spectrum - VA fee schedule
- Ala Mode study
- HUD guidelines
- Question
- How should fee studies be conducted to ensure
accuracy and reliability? - FRB concludes that a creditor/agent may, but is
not required to, use or perform a fee survey.
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24No Presumption for Fee Appraiser Certification
- Signed document of agreed rate does not itself
create a presumption of compliance. Need
objective factors. - Volume-based discounts not prohibited, so long as
compensation is customary and reasonable. - The FRB requests comment on whether further
guidance is needed concerning the permissibility
of volume-based discounts.
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25Penalties
- Why is this important?
- Section 129E sets forth substantial civil
penalties for violations of customary and
reasonable fee restrictions - 10,000 per day violation continues for a first
violation - 20,000 per day violation continues for a
subsequent violation. - Civil penalties are in addition other enforcement
provisions referred to in section 130 of TILA. - Will this provision result in higher income to
appraiser and thus higher appraisal fees to
consumers?
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26Appraisal Independence
- Appraisal independence required
- Closed and Open-end loans (HELOCs)
- Consumers principal dwelling
- Valuation includes BPO, not AVM
- Prohibited Creditor or settlement service
provider must not attempt to cause value to be
based on any factor other than the independent
judgment of the appraiser - Through compensation, coercion, extortion,
collusion, instruction, inducement, bribery, or
intimidation
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27Appraisal Independence
- Acts or practices that violate appraisal
independence include - Mischaracterizing or falsifying value
- Influence the reporting of a targeted or minimum
value - Implying future orders are dependent on targeted
value - Withholding timely payment (or threatening to)
when the value does not meet targeted amount
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28Appraisal Independence
- Appraisal independence requirements dont
prohibit - Asking appraiser to
- Consider additional, appropriate property
information, including the consideration of
additional comparable properties to make or
support an appraisal - Provide further detail, substantiation, or
explanation for the appraisers value conclusion - Correct errors in the appraisal report
- Obtaining multiple valuations to select the most
reliable - Withholding compensation for a breach or poor
performance
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29Prohibitions on Appraiser Conflicts of Interest
- No person performing valuation may have a direct
or indirect interest in the property or
transaction - Lender-affiliated AMCs still permitted
- Performing additional settlement services
permitted - Firewalls from loan production for entities gt
250 million - Similar to HVCC
- Lesser firewalls for entities lt 250 million
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30Appraisal Independence
- Mandatory Reporting of Violations
- Creditor or other settlement service provider
having a reasonable basis to believe appraiser is
not complying with USPAP or applicable laws, or
is engaging in unethical or unprofessional
conduct, must refer the matter to the applicable
State appraiser agency - For non-compliance that likely affects value
- Includes AMC and lender / broker employees
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31Appraisal Independence
- No Extension of Credit in Case of
Non-Independence of Appraiser - A lender that knows of a violation of the
appraisal independence standards must not close
the loan unless it acts with reasonable diligence
to determine the appraisal does not materially
misstate or misrepresent the value of the
dwelling - Practical result Order new appraisal
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32For more information
- Jeffrey P. Naimon
- jnaimon_at_buckleysandler.com
- 202.349.8030
- Clinton R. Rockwell
- crockwell_at_buckleysandler.com
- 424.203.1002