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Opinion: Title insurance matters. Here’s why.

Posted By Richard Giliotti - Agent Section Chair, Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Real World Stories of Title Insurance Protection

From HousingWire

https://www.housingwire.com/articles/opinion-title-insurance-matters-heres-why/

Last month, the Biden Administration announced the revival of a previously abandoned pilot program that would waive the requirement for lender’s title insurance on certain home refinances – part of a misdirected effort to address housing affordability. Additionally, the CFPB has shortsightedly questioned the benefits and cost of title insurance.

It’s uncertain whether federal regulators are purposefully misleading Americans about the potential savings or just don’t understand how title insurance works. The truth is the cost of title insurance coverage has decreased nearly 8% over the last two decades due to innovation in the industry.

Critics of title insurance highlight a limited understanding of the vital nature of title insurance protection by mistakenly and repeatedly referring to the industry’s lower claims rate relative to other lines of insurance. A 70% claims rate — standard for other insurance lines — on property rights would be catastrophic to our economy. Success in the title insurance industry is measured by preventing claims in the first place. A lower claims rate means that title agents are succeeding in their job by resolving any title issues and reducing risk upfront – protecting the largest asset most households will ever own and source of their greatest wealth over time.

Title insurance is significantly different from other lines of insurance. For a one-time fee paid at closing, title insurance provides homeowners protection for as they or their heirs own the property. Other types of insurance charge monthly or yearly premiums. The facts are clear: title insurance is essential to protecting homeowners and their most important investment both during the initial purchase of a home and refinancing – and it exists for a reason.

Without a title insurance policy, homeowners can find themselves fighting for their property over issues they never knew existed.

Here are some real-world examples of how title insurance protects consumers:

Surviving Spouse Left Without Deed


Under the new pilot program, the requirement for a lender’s title insurance policy on certain refinances would be waived – but this can leave homeowners vulnerable. For example, a property owner passes away and leaves behind his surviving wife. If the widow isn’t listed on the deed, issues regarding ownership could arise when the wife goes to refinance. During the refinance process, title insurance professionals would do their due diligence to disqualify any potential heirs who may attempt to claim the property down the road. This would allow the surviving wife to officially claim ownership of the property. The proposed pilot program would not identify this type of issue with a search engine.

IRS Tells Couple: “You Don’t Own Your Home”


After purchasing their home from an individual who had acquired it from an IRS auction, a couple found out the government agency had rescinded the original sale. The IRS refused to turn over the deed to the new homeowners because of unpaid tax bills by a previous owner. The couple contacted their title company and were told they had coverage for this dilemma. Thanks to their title insurance policy and the great work conducted by their title professionals, the couple was able to keep their home, and they didn’t have to pay a dime out of pocket. Fannie Mae is not capitalized to address these issues, nor is set up to be able to pay these types of claims.

Sold—But Not by Homeowners


After a California vacation home was left unused for several months, the county notified the homeowners that the property had sold – but the owners hadn’t put the house up for sale. This was a case of seller impersonation fraud, where an unsavory actor posed as a homeowner and fraudulently “sold” a property. Thankfully, due to their title insurance policy, the homeowners were protected against post-policy fraud; title professionals were able to expunge the fraudulent deed from the record. The “buyer” also had a title insurance policy for the transaction, and their title company paid them the purchase price of the home – money that they otherwise would have lost without their policy. Fraud and forgery claims account for more than 20% of claims expenses and dollars paid to insureds.
Approximately one-third of all claims are for issues that would not be found in a public records search – demonstrating that title insurance could not be effectively replaced by an automated search engine that will be used under the title waiver program.

Title Insurance Provides Essential Protection


The above examples barely scratch the surface when it comes to the protection provided by title insurance. Time and time again, seasoned title professionals have saved American homeowners from their homes being seized, stolen, or defrauded. The Biden Administration’s pilot program would put Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in charge of resolving any title-related claims that arise for qualified borrowers refinancing – a seismic shift in the housing finance system.

Title insurance is equally important when homeowners refinance. When a homeowner refinances, they obtain a new loan. Lenders require a new title search for a title insurance policy on that loan to protect their investment in the property. If this is not done correctly, the homeowner could still face collection on a previous mortgage thought to have been paid off. Similarly, a lender could face the risk that they do not have the required lien priority.

Under the Administration’s title waiver plan, title insurance professionals will be eliminated from refinance transactions, removing a key layer of anti-fraud protections for consumers and lenders. Consumers and lenders who are victims of refinance fraud would have to investigate and negotiate a resolution with some unidentified department within the GSEs, and consumers could ultimately be forced into property sale or foreclosure.

By turning Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into title insurers, the GSEs would also be moving beyond its charter into a primary market activity. The 2008 financial crisis happened the last time these entities took on significant risk for which they were ill-equipped to handle.

The title industry agrees that homeownership should be more attainable and affordable for more Americans. However, the notion that title insurance is in any way a principal driver of affordability challenges is misguided. Title insurance is crucial to protecting American homeowners, lenders, and their most important investments.

Tags:  ALTA  CFPB  GSE  Title Waiver Pilot 

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JD Supra has an excellent article on Abusive Conduct per CFPB

Posted By Robert Treuber, Thursday, July 13, 2023
Updated: Thursday, July 13, 2023

Real-Estate Agents Who Participate in Joint Ventures Should Be Wary of the CFPB’s Recent Policy Statement on Abusive Conduct
(re-posted with permission of JD Supra)

You may direct questions or comments to Jeff Ehrlich at McGuireWoods LLP

Much has been written about the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s recent “Policy Statement on Abusive Acts or Practices,”[1] in which the Bureau analyzed the prohibition on abusive conduct in the Consumer Financial Protection Act of 2010 (CFPA). In response to the statement’s publication in the Federal Register, comments were submitted by banks, credit unions, debt collectors, and others.[2] But the Bureau’s policy statement should be of particular interest to another class of persons: real-estate agents who participate in joint ventures with mortgage or title companies.

Mortgage and title companies arrange joint ventures as a means of rewarding real-estate agents for referrals. Real-estate agents enter into these joint ventures because they allow the agents to share in the profits derived from providing mortgage and title services to the agents’ customers.

I. The CFPA applies to these real-estate agents.

Ordinarily, the CFPA’s prohibition on abusive conduct might be of little concern to real-estate agents, as the CFPA applies only to “covered persons” and “service providers,”[3] and real-estate agents are not “covered persons” or “service providers,” at least to the extent that they act as agents or brokers for buyers and sellers of real property. Moreover, § 1027(b) of the CFPA prohibits the Bureau from exercising “any rulemaking, supervisory, enforcement, or other authority . . . with respect to a . . . real estate agent,” unless the agent is “engaged in an activity of offering or providing any consumer financial product or service.”[4]

But when real-estate agents enter into joint ventures with mortgage or title companies, they expose themselves to the CFPA. The joint ventures, themselves, are “covered persons” under the CFPA because they offer credit or title services.[5] And joint-venture partners who materially participate in the affairs of their covered-person entity are “related persons”[6] and are thus deemed to be “covered persons.”[7] One way that real-estate agents “materially participate” in the affairs of their joint ventures is by referring their real-estate customers to the joint ventures for mortgage or title services.[8] This same conduct might qualify a real-estate agent as “service provider,” which the CFPA defines to mean “any person that provides a material service to a covered person.”[9]

Because the Bureau—or a state attorney general or other regulator, for that matter[10]—might conclude that the CFPA applies to real-estate agents who participate in joint ventures, agents should be wary of the Bureau’s expansive policy statement, particularly its discussion on “reasonable reliance.”

II. Consumers reasonably rely on their real-estate agents.

As the Bureau noted, the CFPA defines abusiveness to include taking unreasonable advantage of “the reasonable reliance by the consumer on a covered person to act in the interests of the consumer.”[11] The Bureau explained that

“sometimes people are in a position in which they have a reasonable expectation that an entity will act in their interest to make decisions for them, or to advise them on how to make a decision. Where people reasonably expect that a covered entity will make decisions or provide advice in the person’s interest, there is potential for betrayal or exploitation of the person’s trust. Therefore, Congress prohibited taking unreasonable advantage of reasonable consumer reliance.”[12]

The policy statement identified two ways that a government enforcer might establish reasonable reliance. “First, reasonable reliance may exist where an entity communicates to a person or the public that it will act in its customers’ best interest, or otherwise holds itself out as acting in the person’s best interest.”[13] “Second, reasonable reliance may also exist where an entity assumes the role of acting on behalf of consumers or helping them to select providers in the market.”[14]

A. Buyers reasonably rely on their agents to be trusted intermediaries.

Real-estate buyers, in particular, often rely on their agents for help with selecting “providers in the market.” A buyer might ask their agent to recommend a mortgage or title company, for example. “In these situations,” the Bureau noted, “the entity [here, the real-estate agent], acting as an intermediary, can function as a broker or other trusted source that the person uses in selecting, negotiating for, or otherwise facilitating the procurement of consumer financial products or services provided by third parties.” In the Bureau’s view, “people should be able to rely on the entity to do so in a manner that is free of manipulation,” and those “that engage in certain forms of steering or self-dealing may be taking unreasonable advantage of the consumers’ reasonable reliance.”[15]

Real-estate agents who refer their customers to the agents’ own joint ventures risk violating the CFPA’s prohibition on abusive conduct in a number of ways. For example, when an agent refers their real-estate customer to a mortgage broker, the consumer might reasonably believe that the agent is acting in the consumer’s interest—i.e., referring the consumer to someone who will help the consumer get the best mortgage for the consumer—while the agent might be acting in their own interest by steering the consumer to a mortgage company that the agent partly owns and from which the agent would share in profits derived from providing a mortgage to the referred consumer. Might the Bureau or a state attorney general consider this to be “steering or self-dealing” that is “abusive” under the CFPA?

B. Sellers reasonably rely on joint-venture title companies to be neutral third parties.

And what about when an agent refers their customer, who is looking for title services, to the agent’s own joint venture? In most jurisdictions, a title agent is a third-party neutral, with fiduciary obligations to both the seller and the buyer.[16] Indeed, as the Arizona Association of REALTORS® recently observed, “[a] title company is a neutral third party employed to insure the title to the home and issue title-insurance policies to the buyer and mortgage lender.”[17] The title company’s duties include researching “the history of the property to identify potential problems, claims, or discrepancies that may interrupt the transaction.”[18] Because “the title company is charged with formally transferring ownership from the seller to the buyer, it is critical that they serve in an impartial manner.”[19]

But when the title company is a joint venture between a sponsoring title company and the buyer’s real-estate agent, it lacks the disinterestedness that the law requires, potentially to the detriment of the seller, who, like the buyer, is a “consumer,” entitled to the CFPA’s protections.

Some states, undoubtedly recognizing this conflict of interests, have enacted laws that preclude real-estate agents from receiving compensation or profits from a title-company joint venture to which they refer their real-estate customers. Arizona law, for example, provides that “no title insurance agent shall pay or give to any . . . person who is acting as agent . . . of the owner . . . or of the prospective owner . . . of the real property[,] either directly or indirectly, any commission or any part of its fees or charges[,] including . . . fees for escrow services performed by a title insurer or title insurance agent, or any other consideration or valuable thing, as an inducement for, or as compensation for, any title insurance business.”[20] New York law likewise makes it unlawful for a “title insurance agent . . . to . . . pay or give to . . . any person . . . acting as agent . . . of the owner . . . or the prospective owner . . . of the real property[,] either directly or indirectly, any . . .  consideration or valuable thing, as an inducement for, or as compensation for, any title insurance business.”[21] New York also makes it unlawful for “any person . . . acting as agent . . . of the owner . . . or of the prospective owner . . . of the real property [to] knowingly receive, directly or indirectly, any such . . . consideration or valuable thing.”[22] And the District of Columbia Code provides that “[a] title insurer or other person shall not give or receive, directly or indirectly, any consideration for the referral of title insurance business or escrow or other service provided by a title insurer.”[23]

C. Disclosing the conflict is unlikely to dissuade the Bureau from bringing a CFPA claim for abusive conduct.

None of these state laws makes an exception for when real-estate agents disclose their conflicts, and it is unlikely that an agent’s disclosure of a conflict would dissuade the Bureau from enforcing the CFPA. This is particularly true when the purported disclosure is made, as it often is, after the referral—for example, when it is buried among the dozens of pages that the parties must sign when ratifying the purchase agreement— and in language that is impenetrable to the average consumer. Indeed, the Bureau has previously brought claims for abusive conduct despite disclosures that consumers had little time to review and were unlikely to understand.[24] And the Bureau’s policy statement cites favorably to a Treasury Department report that observed that consumers “may retain faith that [an] intermediary is working for them and placing their interests above his or her own, even if the conflict of interest is disclosed.”[25] In those situations, the Bureau seems to believe, “consumers may reasonably but mistakenly rely on advice from conflicted intermediaries.”[26]

Conclusion

Real-estate agents who participate in joint ventures subject themselves to the authority of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, state attorneys general, and other state regulators, all of which may enforce the CFPA’s prohibition on abusive conduct. And given the Bureau’s aggressive interpretation of this statute, real-estate agents participating in joint ventures might reconsider their involvement, particularly in states like Arizona and New York and in the District of Columbia, where existing laws already forbid joint-venture title companies from compensating real-estate agents.

(https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/real-estate-agents-who-participate-in-8281165/)


[1] CFPB, Policy Statement on Abusive Acts or Practices, (April 3, 2023), https://www.consumerfinance.gov/compliance/supervisory-guidance/policy-statement-on-abusiveness/.

[2] Statement of Policy Regarding Prohibition on Abusive Acts or Practices, 88 Fed. Reg. 21,883 (Apr. 12, 2023), https://www.regulations.gov/document/CFPB-2023-0018-0001/comment.

[3] See 12 U.S.C. § 5536(a)(1)(B).

[4] See 12 U.S.C. § 5517(b).

[5] See 12 U.S.C. § 5481(6), (15)(A)(i) & (iii).

[6] See 12 U.S.C. § 5481(25)(C)(ii).

[7] See 12 U.S.C. § 5481(25)(B).

[8] CFPB v. D & D Mktg., CV 15–9692 PSG (Ex), 2016 WL 8849698 (C.D. Cal. Nov. 17, 2016) (holding that a company that provided leads to lenders could be a “service provider”).

[9] See 12 U.S.C. § 5481(26).

[10] See 12 U.S.C. § 5552(a)(1) (authorizing state attorneys general and regulators to enforce the CFPA).

[11] See 12 U.S.C. § 5531(d)(2)(C).

[12] 88 Fed. Reg. at 21,889.

[13] Id.

[14] Id.

[15] Id. at 21,889–90.

[16] See, e.g., Straight v. Approved Fed. Sav. Bank, No. 05-5187, 2005 WL 1288091, at *2 (W.D. Wash. May 27, 2005) (“An escrow agent serves [as] a neutral depository for the monies and documents involved in a real estate deal.”); In re Davis, 172 B.R. 437, 452 (Bankr. D.C. 1994) (holding that “the settlement agent . . . had a fiduciary responsibility to each of the parties to the transaction”); Red Lobster Inns v. Lawyers Title Ins. Corp., 492 F. Supp. 933, 941 (E.D. Ark. 1980) (“Where a person acts as escrow agent for parties to a land sale, he becomes agent of both buyer and seller and this agency creates a fiduciary relationship.”), rev’d in part on other grounds, 656 F.2d 381 (8th Cir. 1981); Aranki v. RKP Invs., Inc., 979 P.2d 534, 536 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1999) (recognizing that “escrow agents . . . act as fiduciaries for buyers and sellers alike”); Donovan v. Kirchner, 641 A.2d 961, 969 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1994) (“The third party, or escrow agent, is uninterested in the transaction and acts as a fiduciary to both the grantor and the grantee.”); Zimmerman v. First Am. Title Ins. Co., 790 S.W.2d 690, 695 (Tex. App. 1990) (observing that “[a]n escrow agent is in a fiduciary relationship with the contracting parties” to a real-estate transaction); Wagman v. Lee, 457 A.2d 401, 404 (D.C. 1983) (acknowledging the “unique position” that an escrow agent occupies “in the ‘triangular’ relationship between purchaser and seller”) (citation omitted). 

[17] See S. Drucker, “Disclosure of Common Ownership Interest Between Agent and Title Company,” Nov. 13, 2020, https://www.aaronline.com/2020/11/13/disclosure-of-common-ownership-interest-between-agent-and-title-company/.

[18] Id.

[19] Id.

[20] Ariz. Rev. Stat. § 20-1585.

[21] N.Y. Ins. Law § 6409(d).

[22] Id.

[23] D.C. Code § 31–5031.15.

[24] CFPB v. Freedom Stores, Inc., 2:14-cv-643 (E.D. Va., filed Dec. 18, 2014), Compl. ⁋⁋ 51, 72–78, https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/201412_cfpb_complaint_freedom-stores_va-nc.pdf

[25] 88 Fed. Reg. 21,883, 21,890 n.76 (citing to U.S. Department of Treasury, Financial Regulatory Reform, A New Foundation: Rebuilding Financial Supervision and Regulation 68 (June 2009), https://fraser.stlouisfed.org/title/financial-regulatory-reform-5123).

[26] Id.

Tags:  abusive practices  CFPB  JD Supra  Real estate agents 

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Tell it to the CFPB

Posted By Robert Treuber, Tuesday, August 2, 2016
Updated: Tuesday, August 2, 2016

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is proposing changes to the "Know Before You Owe Mortgage Rule", formerly known as TRID.

  

There is a public comment period, which ends in October.

  

Click here to read the announcement on the CFPB site.

  

Click here to read the proposed rule changes. 

 

 

Tags:  CFPB  Consumer protection  TILA-RESPA  TRID 

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"Oops, sorry" says CFPB

Posted By Robert Treuber, Wednesday, February 10, 2016
Updated: Wednesday, February 10, 2016

CFPB corrected a typo (hey, these things happen) in the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure Rule.

  

See it here - https://federalregister.gov/a/2016-02630

 

The CFPB Regulatory Implementation Team said, " Today we published a notice in the Federal Register to correct a typo regarding tolerances for property taxes and certain other property-related costs that was found in the “Supplementary Information” to the TILA-RESPA Integrated Disclosure rule."

 

Tags:  CFPB  Correction  TILA-RESPA  TRID 

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