Among the key sections of Regulation
B relating to sex and marital-status discrimination are the ones regarding
the signatures a creditor may require when granting a loan. The purpose
of these sections is to permit people (and particularly women) who
are creditworthy in their own right to obtain credit on their own
by removing, to the greatest extent possible, the need to depend on
a spouse (or any other person).
Two general rules apply throughout the sections on signature
requirements. First, a lender may not require a signature other than
the applicant’s or joint applicant’s if, under the creditor’s standards
of creditworthiness, the applicant qualifies for the amount and terms
of the credit requested. Second, a creditor has much more latitude
in seeking signatures for instruments necessary to reach property
used as security, or in support of the customer’s creditworthiness,
than it does in obtaining cosignatures on documents that establish
the contractual obligation to repay.
To understand the second general principle it is necessary
to keep in mind that there is an important distinction between debt instruments,
such as the note itself, and instruments that are necessary to secure
the credit and to reach and obtain property in the event of default,
such as mortgages, deeds of trust, and other security devices. A debt
instrument is a legal admission that a debt exists. A person who signs
a note accepts a personal obligation to repay the debt in full—even
though there may be other signatories or someone else may have received
the actual proceeds of the loan. A mortgage or security agreement,
on the other hand, creates a far more limited obligation—one that
only allows the lender to reach the signer’s interest in the property
described, in the event of default. If, after default and the sale
of the pledged property, an amount remains due to the creditor, someone
who has signed only a mortgage or other security agreement is not
obligated to pay that amount.
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Joint Applicants A creditor may
obtain the signature of all joint applicants, on both the note
and the security instrument. It is irrelevant whether the applicants
are married or not so long as the applicants intend that the
application be joint, that is, if the assets of both borrowers support
the debt and liability is shared. The only difficult aspect of this
rule is in determining who are joint applicants. If two people come
into the bank and voluntarily make joint application, there is no
problem, of course, and the lender need not try to discourage this.
However, if two people come in together but only one applies, the
lender may not try to persuade the other to join, or require a joint
application, if the individual applicant is creditworthy. If there
is any doubt about the applicants’ intent, the loan officer should
ask for clarification.
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Cosigners If, using objective, nondiscriminatory standards,
a creditor determines that an applicant for individual credit cannot
support the credit, the creditor may then request that the applicant
obtain a cosigner, a guarantor, or the like. In all such cases, however—
- the creditor must require a cosigner or guarantor
for all applicants who are similarly situated; (For example, it cannot
require cosigners only for unmarried applicants or married applicants,
or only for women, men, or applicants of a particular race.)
- the creditor may not require that the applicant’s
spouse be the cosigner, although the applicant may so choose; and
- the creditor may not impose requirements on the cosigner
or guarantor that it is prohibited from imposing on the applicant.
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Signature of the Applicant’s
Spouse In certain circumstances a creditor
may request the spouse’s signature, even where a married applicant
applies for individual credit.
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Secured credit. When a loan is to be secured by a particular piece of property,
a creditor may require any person (including the applicant’s spouse)
who owns an interest in the property to sign any instrument the bank
reasonably believes to be necessary under state law to make
that property available to satisfy the debt in the event of default.
In a non-community property state, this will normally not include
the note itself.
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Unsecured credit. When an applicant
requests unsecured credit but relies in part on property to establish
creditworthiness and the property relied on is necessary to satisfy
the bank’s objective, nondiscriminatory standards of credit risk,
the bank may require that the co-owner or any other person with an
interest in the property sign any instrument necessary, or
reasonably believed to be necessary, under state law to make the property
relied on available to satisfy the debt in the event of default or
the applicant’s death.
In deciding what is reasonably necessary, a creditor may
look not only at state law, but also the form of ownership of the
property; its susceptibility
to attachment, execution, severence, and partition; and any other
factors that may affect the value of the applicant’s interest in the
property. The fact that the spouse may use property being relied
on (such as a car) does not necessarily mean that that person’s signature
is “necessary” for the bank’s legal protection. Some stronger ownership
interest than mere use is generally required. Also, if one spouse
has authority under state law to commit enough of the jointly held
property to establish creditworthiness without the other spouse’s
signature, such a signature is not necessary to reach the property,
and the bank may not require it.
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Community
property states. Consistent with the general principles outlined
previously, a separate set of rules applies if a married applicant
requests individual unsecured credit and resides in a community property
state or if the property upon which the applicant is relying is located
in a community property state. In such circumstances, a bank may require
the signature of the spouse on any instrument—including the note —necessary
under the law of the state in which the applicant resides, or in which
the property is located, to make the community property available
to satisfy the debt in the event of default, only if—
- the applicable state law denies the applicant power
to manage or control enough community property to qualify for the
credit requested and
- the applicant does not have sufficient separate property
to qualify, without regard to the community property.
Of course, even in a community property state
a creditor may always require the spouse’s signature on any instrument
necessary to reach the collateral for a secured loan, but it may not
automatically require a spouse’s signature on the note, except
in conformance with these rules.
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Integrated instruments. A creditor may not require the spouse
to sign an integrated instrument that combines the note, security
agreement, and other disclosures if the nonapplicant spouse’s signature
would not be required on the note under the rules discussed under
“Community Property States.” If a spouse’s signature is necessary
to reach the property relied on and the creditor habitually uses an
integrated form, the creditor should have the spouse sign a separate
security agreement.
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Establishment of a credit history. A bank may permit a nonapplicant spouse to sign a note, and thereby
become obligated to repay the loan, if the spouse volunteers to do
so. Some spouses may want to use this option to help create a credit
history that would operate in their own favor.
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Business credit. The signature rules apply to business as well as consumer credit.
A spouse’s signature may be required for business loans only in the
same circumstances that it may be required for other loans.