The following illustrations
provide additional guidance on the meaning and coverage of the provisions
of RESPA. Other provisions of Federal or state law may also be applicable
to the practices and payments discussed in the following illustrations.
1. Facts: A, a provider of settlement services,
provides settlement services at abnormally low rates or at no charge
at all to B, a builder, in connection with a subdivision being developed
by B. B agrees to refer purchasers of the completed homes in the subdivision
to A for the purchase of settlement services in connection with the
sale of individual lots by B.
Comments: The rendering of services by A to B at
little or no charge constitutes a thing of value given by A to B in
return for the referral of settlement services business, and both
A and B are in violation of section 8 of RESPA.
6-1435.1
2. Facts: B, a lender, encourages persons who receive federally
related mortgage loans from it to employ A, an attorney, to perform
title searches and related settlement services in connection with
their transaction. B and A have an understanding that in return for
the referral of this business A provides legal services to B or B’s
officers or employees at abnormally low rates or for no charge.
Comments: Both A and B are in violation of section
8 of RESPA. Similarly, if an attorney gives a portion of his or her
fees to another attorney, a lender, a real estate broker or any other
provider of settlement services, who had referred prospective clients
to the attorney, section 8 would be violated by both persons.
6-1435.2
3. Facts: A, a real estate broker, obtains all necessary licenses
under state law to act as a title insurance agent. A refers individuals
who are purchasing homes in transactions in which A participates as
a broker to B, an unaffiliated title company, for the purchase of
title insurance services. A performs minimal, if any, title services
in connection with the issuance of the title insurance policy (such
as placing an application with the title company). B pays A a commission
(or A retains a portion of the title insurance premium) for the transactions
or alternatively B receives a portion of the premium paid directly
from the purchaser.
Comments: The payment of a commission or portion
of the title insurance premium by B to A, or receipt of a portion
of the payment for title insurance under circumstances where no substantial
services are being performed by A, is a violation of section 8 of
RESPA. It makes no difference whether the payment comes from B or
the purchaser. The amount of the payment must bear a reasonable relationship
to the services rendered. Here A really is being compensated for a
referral of business to B.
6-1435.3
4. Facts: A is an attorney who, as a part of his legal representation of clients
in residential real estate transactions, orders and reviews title
insurance policies for his clients. A enters into a contract with
B, a title company, to be an agent of B under a program set up by
B. Under the agreement, A agrees to prepare and forward title insurance
applications to B, to re-examine the preliminary title commitment
for accuracy and if he chooses to attempt to clear exceptions to the
title policy before closing. A agrees to assume liability for waiving
certain exceptions to title, but never exercises this authority. B
performs the necessary title search and examination work, determines
insurability of title, prepares documents containing substantive information
in title commitments, handles closings for A’s clients and issues
title policies. A receives a fee from his client for legal services
and an additional fee for his title agent “services” from the client’s
title insurance premium to B.
Comments: A and B are violating section 8 of RESPA.
Here, A’s clients are being double billed because the work A performs
as a “title agent” is that which he already performs for his client
in his capacity as an attorney. For A to receive a separate payment
as a title agent, A must perform necessary core title work
and may not contract out the work. To receive additional compensation
as a title agent for this transaction, A must provide his client with
core title agent services for which he assumes liability, and which
includes at a minimum, the evaluation of the title search to determine
insurability of the title, and the issuance of a title commitment
where customary, the clearance of underwriting objections, and the
actual issuance of the policy or policies on behalf of the title company.
A may not be compensated for the mere re-examination of work performed
by B. Here, A is not performing these services and may not be compensated
as a title agent under section 8(c)(1)(B). Referral fees or splits
of fees may not be disguised as title agent commissions when the core
title agent work is not performed. Further, because B created the
program and gave A the opportunity to collect fees (a thing of value)
in exchange for the referral of settlement service business, it has
violated section 8 of RESPA.
6-1435.4
5. Facts: A, a “mortgage originator,” receives loan applications, funds the
loans with its own money or with a wholesale line of credit for which
A is liable, and closes the loans in A’s own name. Subsequently, B,
a mortgage lender, purchases the loans and compensates A for the value
of the loans, as well as for any mortgage servicing rights.
Comments: Compensation for
the sale of a mortgage loan and servicing rights constitutes a secondary
market transaction, rather than a referral fee, and is beyond the
scope of section 8 of RESPA. For purposes of section 8, in determining
whether a bona fide transfer of the loan obligation has taken
place, the Bureau examines the real source of funding, and the real
interest of the named settlement lender.
6-1435.5
6. Facts: A, a credit reporting company, places a facsimile transmission machine
(FAX) in the office of B, a mortgage lender, so that B can easily
transmit requests for credit reports and A can respond. A supplies
the FAX machine at no cost or at a reduced rental rate based on the
number of credit reports ordered.
Comments: Either situation violates section 8 of
RESPA. The FAX machine is a thing of value that A provides in exchange
for the referral of business from B. Copying machines, computer terminals,
printers, or other like items which have general use to the recipient
and which are given in exchange for referrals of business also violate
RESPA.
6-1435.6
7. Facts: A, a real estate broker, refers
title business to B, a company that is a licensed title agent for
C, a title insurance company. A owns more than 1% of B. B performs
the title search and examination, makes determinations of insurability,
issues the commitment, clears underwriting objections, and issues
a policy of title insurance on behalf of C, for which C pays B a commission.
B pays annual dividends to its owners, including A, based on the relative
amount of business each of its owners refers to B.
Comments: The facts involve an affiliated
business arrangement. The payment of a commission by C to B is not
a violation of section 8 of RESPA if the amount of the commission
constitutes reasonable compensation for the services performed by
B for C. The payment of a dividend or the giving of any other thing
of value by B to A that is based on the amount of business referred
to B by A does not meet the affiliated business agreement exemption
provisions and such actions violate section 8. Similarly, if the amount
of stock held by A in B (or, if B were a partnership, the distribution
of partnership profits by B to A) varies based on the amount of business
referred or expected to be referred, or if B retained any funds for
subsequent distribution to A where such funds were generally in proportion
to the amount of business A referred to B relative to the amount referred
by other owners, such arrangements would violate section 8. The exemption
for controlled business arrangements would not be available because
the payments here would not be considered returns on ownership interests.
Further, the required disclosure of the affiliated business
arrangement and estimated charges have not been provided.
6-1435.7
8. Facts: Same as illustration 7, but B pays annual dividends
in proportion to the amount of stock held by its owners, including
A, and the distribution of annual dividends is not based on the amount
of business referred or expected to be referred.
Comments: If A and B meet the requirements
of the affiliated business arrangement exemption there is not a violation
of RESPA. Since the payment is a return on ownership interests, A
and B will be exempt from section 8 if (1) A also did not require
anyone to use the services of B, and (2) A disclosed its ownership
interest in B on a separate disclosure form and provided an estimate
of B’s charges to each person referred by A to B (see Appendix D of
this part), and (3) B makes no payment (nor is there any other thing
of value exchanged) to A other than dividends.
6-1435.8
9. Facts: A, a franchisor for franchised real estate brokers,
owns B, a provider of settlement services. C, a franchisee of A, refers
business to B.
Comments: This is an affiliated business arrangement.
A, B and C will all be exempt from section 8 if C discloses its franchise
relationship with the owner of B on a separate disclosure form and
provides an estimate of B’s charges to each person referred to B (see
Appendix D of this part) and C does not require anyone to use B’s
services and A gives no thing a value to C under the franchise agreement
(such as an adjusted level of franchise payment based on the referrals),
and B makes no payments to A other than dividends representing a return
on ownership interest (rather than, e.g., an adjusted level of payment
being based on the referrals). Nor may B pay C anything of value for
the referral.
6-1435.9
10. Facts: A is a real estate
broker who refers business to its affiliate title company B. A makes
all required written disclosures to the homebuyer of the arrangement
and estimated charges and the homebuyer is not required to use B.
B refers or contracts out business to C who does all the title work
and splits the fee with B. B passes its fee to A in the form of dividends,
a return on ownership interest.
Comments: The relationship between A and B is an
affiliated business arrangement. However, the affiliated business
arrangement exemption does not provide exemption between an affiliated
entity, B, and a third party, C. Here, B is a mere “shell” and provides
no substantive services for its portion of the fee. The arrangement
between B and C would be in violation of section 8(a) and (b). Even
if B had an affiliate relationship with C, the required exemption
criteria have not been met and the relationship would be subject to
section 8.
6-1436
11. Facts: A, a mortgage lender is affiliated
with B, a title company, and C, an escrow company and offers consumers
a package of mortgage title and escrow services at a discount from
the prices at which such services would be sold if purchased separately.
Neither A, B, nor C requires consumers to purchase the services of
their sister companies and each company sells such services separately
and as part of the package. A also pays its employees (e.g., loan
officers, secretaries, etc.) a bonus for each loan, title insurance
or closing that A’s employees generate for A, B, or C respectively.
A pays such employee bonuses out of its own funds and receives no
payments or reimbursements for such bonuses from B or C. At or before
the time that customers are told by A or its employees about the services
offered by B and C and/or the package of services that is available,
the customers are provided with an affiliated business disclosure
form.
Comments: A’s selling of a package of settlement
services at a discount to a settlement service purchaser does not
violate section 8 of RESPA. A’s employees are making appropriate affiliated
business disclosures and since the services are available separately
and as part of a package, there is not “required use” of the additional
services. A’s payments of bonuses to its employees for the referral
of business to A or A’s affiliates, B and C, are exempt from section
8 under section 1024.14(g)(1). However, if B or C reimbursed A for
any bonuses that A paid to its employees for referring business to
B or C, such reimbursements would violate section 8. Similarly, if
B or C paid bonuses to A’s employees directly for generating business
for them, such payments would violate section 8.
6-1436.1
12. Facts: A is a mortgage broker who provides origination
services to submit a loan to a lender for approval. The mortgage broker
charges the borrower a uniform fee for the total origination services,
as well as a direct up-front charge for reimbursement of credit reporting,
appraisal services, or similar charges.
Comment: The mortgage broker’s fee must be reflected
in the Good Faith Estimate and on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement.
Other charges which are paid for by the borrower and paid in advance
are listed as P.O.C. on the HUD-1 Settlement Statement, and reflect
the actual provider charge for such services.
6-1436.2
13. Facts: A is a dealer in home improvements who has established
funding arrangements with several lenders. Customers for home improvements
receive a proposed contract from A. The proposal requires that customers
both execute forms authorizing a credit check and employment verification,
and frequently, execute a dealer consumer credit contract secured
by a lien on the customer’s (borrower’s) 1- to 4-family residential
property. Simultaneously with the completion and certification of
the home improvement work, the note is assigned by the dealer to a
funding lender.
Comments: The loan that is assigned to the funding
lender is a loan covered by RESPA, when a lien is placed on the borrower’s
1- to 4-family residential structure. The dealer loan or consumer
credit contract originated by a dealer is also a RESPA-covered transaction,
except when the dealer is not a “creditor” under the definition of
“federally related mortgage loan” in section 1024.2. The lender to
whom the loan will be assigned is responsible for assuring that the
lender or the dealer delivers to the borrower a Good Faith Estimate
of closing costs consistent with Regulation X, and that the HUD-1
or HUD-1A Settlement Statement is used in conjunction with the settlement
of the loan to be assigned. A dealer who, under section 1024.2, is
covered by RESPA as a creditor is responsible for the Good Faith Estimate
of Closing Costs and the use of the appropriate settlement statement
in connection with the loan.