(a) Administrative enforcement.
(1) As set forth more fully in section
704 of the Act, administrative enforcement of the Act and this part
regarding certain creditors is assigned to the Comptroller of the
Currency, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Board
of Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National
Credit Union Administration, Surface Transportation Board, Civil Aeronautics
Board, Secretary of Agriculture, Farm Credit Administration, Securities
and Exchange Commission, Small Business Administration, Secretary
of Transportation, and Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection.
(2) Except to the extent
that administrative enforcement is specifically assigned to some government
agency other than the Bureau, and subject to subtitle B of the Consumer
Financial Protection Act of 2010, the Federal Trade Commission is
authorized to enforce the requirements imposed under the Act and this
part.
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(b) Penalties and liabilities.
(1) Sections 702(g) and 706(a) and (b)
of the Act provide that any creditor that fails to comply with a requirement
imposed by the Act or this part is subject to civil liability for
actual and punitive damages in individual or class actions. Pursuant
to sections 702(g) and 704(b), (c), and (d) of the Act, violations
of the Act or this part also constitute violations of other Federal
laws. Liability for punitive damages can apply only to nongovernmental
entities and is limited to $10,000 in individual actions and the lesser
of $500,000 or 1 percent of the creditor’s net worth in class actions.
Section 706(c) provides for equitable and declaratory relief and section
706(d) authorizes the awarding of costs and reasonable attorney’s
fees to an aggrieved applicant in a successful action.
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(2) As provided in section
706(f) of the Act, a civil action under the Act or this part may be
brought in the appropriate United States district court without regard
to the amount in controversy or in any other court of competent jurisdiction
within five years after the date of the occurrence of the violation,
or within one year after the commencement of an administrative enforcement
proceeding or of a civil action brought by the Attorney General of the
United States within five years after the alleged violation.
(3) If an agency responsible
for administrative enforcement is unable to obtain compliance with
the Act or this part, it may refer the matter to the Attorney General
of the United States. If the Bureau, the Comptroller of the Currency,
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, or the National Credit Union Administration
has reason to believe that one or more creditors have engaged in a
pattern or practice of discouraging or denying applications in violation
of the Act or this part, the agency shall refer the matter to the
Attorney General. If the agency has reason to believe that one or
more creditors violated section 701(a) of the Act, the agency may
refer a matter to the Attorney General.
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(4) On referral, or whenever the Attorney
General has reason to believe that one or more creditors have engaged
in a pattern or practice in violation of the Act or this part, the
Attorney General may bring a civil action for such relief as may be
appropriate, including actual and punitive damages and injunctive
relief.
(5) If the
Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, or the National
Credit Union Administration has reason to believe (as a result of
a consumer complaint, a consumer compliance examination, or some other
basis) that a violation of the Act or this part has occurred which
is also a violation of the Fair Housing Act, and the matter is not
referred to the Attorney General, the agency shall:
(i) Notify
the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; and
(ii) Inform the applicant that the Secretary
of Housing and Urban Development has been notified and that remedies
may be available under the Fair Housing Act.
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(c) Failure of compliance. A creditor’s failure to comply with sections 1002.6(b)(6), 1002.9,
1002.10, 1002.12 or 1002.13 is not a violation if it results from
an inadvertent error. On discovering an error under sections 1002.9
and 1002.10, the creditor shall correct it as soon as possible. If
a creditor inadvertently obtains the monitoring information regarding
the ethnicity, race, and sex of the applicant in a dwelling-related
transaction not covered by section 1002.13, the creditor may retain
information and act on the application without violating the regulation.