Real Estate
Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
RESPA was designed
to give home buyers and sellers better disclosure of settlement costs;
and to elimination of kickbacks or referral fees that tend to increase
unnecessarily the costs of certain settlement services.
Prohibition
Against Kickbacks and Referral Fees
12 U.S.C. §2607(a);
24 C.F.R. § 3500.14(b). RESPA
prohibits the giving or receiving of any fee, kickback or other thing of
value for the referral of a "settlement service" (defined at
12 U.S.C. § 2602(3)
and
24 C.F.R. § 3500.2).
One court has stated
that, in order to state a claim alleging a violation of this section,
one must demonstrate: 1) an agreement between the parties to refer
settlement service business, 2) the transfer of a thing of value, and 3)
the referral of settlement service business. "An agreement or
understanding for the referral of business incident to or part of a
settlement service need not be written or verbalized but may be
established by a practice, pattern or course of conduct." 24
C.F.R. § 3500.14(e).
Yield-spread
premiums:
A yield spread premium is a fee paid by a mortgage lender to a mortgage
broker for arranging a loan with an interest rate at a higher amount
than the par rate. Payment of a yield spread premium is not a per se
violation of this section, but may be illegal under RESPA based on a
factual inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the payment.
HUD (the agency
charged with interpretative, investigative and enforcement powers under
RESPA) recommends a two-step inquiry to determine whether a yield spread
premium is illegal. First, one determines whether the payment of the
yield spread premium was for services actually performed; if it is not,
then the payment is an illegal kickback. If the payment was for services
actually performed, then one looks at whether the total compensation
paid to the broker reasonably related to the value of the services; if
the compensation does not reasonably relate to the value of the
services, the payment is a violation of this section.
Recently, some Courts
have fashioned a five-part pleading standard for alleging a YSP-based
violation of RESPA, based on
Shah's
three-part test and on HUD statements: "(1) the existence of an
agreement between the lender and broker whereby the broker promises to
refer settlement service business to the lender; (2) the transfer of a
thing of value between the lender and broker based upon that agreement;
(3) the referral of settlement service business by the broker to the
lender and either that (4) the broker received a YSP without providing
any goods or services of the kind typically associated with a mortgage
transaction or (5) if the broker did provide such goods or services, the
total compensation paid to the broker was not reasonably related to the
total value of the goods or services actually provided.. As part of
pleading (4) or (5), a borrower must plead what services were offered,
the reasonable value of those services, and the fact that total broker
compensation exceeded that value. Also, a borrower alleging a YSP-based
violation of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business
Practices Act, or a YSP-based breach of fiduciary duty, can only do so
by (also) meeting the RESPA pleading standard.
Prohibition
Against Unearned Fees and Fee Splitting
12 U.S.C. §2607(b);
24 C.F.R. §3500.14(c). RESPA
prohibits the giving or receiving of "any portion, split or percentage
of any charge made or received for the rendering of a settlement
services in connection with a transaction involving a federally related
mortgage loan other than for services performed." The regulations
further state that, "A charge by a person for which no or nominal
services are performed or for which duplicative fees are charged is an
unearned fee and violates this section."
Remedies
There is a private
right of action for violation of § 2607 (Illegal referral fee or
kickback and fee splitting). Statutory damages: person charged for the
settlement service can recover an amount equal to "three times the
amount of any charge paid for such settlement service," plus attorney's
fees and costs. 12
U.S.C. § 2607(d).
Practice
Tip: The
bottom line is that any payment by the lender to the broker is illegal
if it is not for the reasonable value of services actually performed. So
if you see a high up-front broker's fee plus a yield-spread premium or
other broker fee paid by the lender, there's a good chance the
lender-paid is fee is "unearned gravy" and constitutes a violation.
There is a private
right of action for violation of § 2605 (Servicing requirements and
administration of escrow accounts). Actual damages for each failure to
comply, additional damages for a pattern and practice of noncompliance,
plus attorney's fees and costs. 12
U.S.C. § 2605(f).
Statute of
Limitations
· 1
year for affirmative (kickback and fee-splitting) claims. 12
U.S.C. § 2614;
·
Unlimited as
a defense to foreclosure in the nature of a recoupment or setoff.