SB 1150, as amended, Leno. Mortgages and deeds of trust: mortgage servicers: successors in interest.
Existing law imposes various requirements to be satisfied prior to exercising a power of sale under a mortgage or deed of trust. Existing law gives a borrower, as defined, various rights and remedies against a mortgage servicer, mortgagee, trustee, beneficiary, and authorized agent in regards to foreclosure prevention alternatives, as defined, including loan modifications, which is commonly referred to as being part of the California Homeowner Bill of Rights. Existing law defines a mortgage servicer as a person or entity who directly services a loan, or is responsible for interacting with the borrower, and managing the loan account on a daily basis, as specified.
This bill would prohibit a mortgage servicer, upon notification that a borrower has died, from recording a notice of default until the mortgage servicer does certain things, including
requesting reasonable documentation of the death of the borrower from a claimant, who is someone claiming to be a successor in interest, who is not a party to the loan or promissory note and providing a reasonable period of time for the claimant to present the requested documentation. The bill would deem a claimant a successor in interest, as defined, upon receipt by a mortgage servicer of the reasonable documentation regarding the status of thebegin delete claimant.end deletebegin insert claimant as a successor in interest and the claimant’s ownership interest in the real property.end insertbegin delete Theend delete
begin insertTheend insert
bill would require a mortgage servicer, within 10 days of a claimant being deemed a successor in interest, to provide the successor in interest with information about the loan, as specified. The bill would require a mortgage servicer to allow a successor in interest to assume the deceased borrower’s loan or to apply for foreclosure prevention alternatives on an assumable loan, as specified.begin insert The bill would authorize a mortgage servicer, when there are multiple successors in interest who do not wish to proceed as coborrowers or coapplicants, to require any nonapplicant successor in interest to consent in writing to the application for a loan assumption.end insert The bill would provide that a successor in interest, as specified, who assumes an assumable loan and wishes to apply for a foreclosure prevention alternative has the same rights and remedies as a borrower under specified provisions of the California
Homeowner Bill of Rights. The bill would authorize a successor in interest to bring an action for injunctive relief to enjoin a material violation of specified provisions of law and would authorize a court to award a prevailing successor in interest reasonable attorney’s fees and costs for the action. The bill would define terms for these purposes and make various findings and declarations. The bill would deem a mortgage servicer, mortgagee, or beneficiary of the deed of trust, or an agent thereof, to be in compliance with the above-described provisions if they comply with specified federal laws. The bill would exemptbegin delete specifiedend deletebegin insert certainend insert depository institutions and persons from thesebegin delete provisions.end deletebegin insert
provisions, as specified.end insert
Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: no. State-mandated local program: no.
The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
The Legislature hereby declares all of the
2following:
3(a) Beginning in 2008, California faced a foreclosure crisis,
4with rapidly dropping home values and skyrocketing job losses.
5Indiscriminate foreclosure practices of major mortgage servicers
6compounded the problem as they created a labyrinth of red tape,
7lost documents, and erroneous information, and then they started
8foreclosure proceedings while borrowers and their families were
9in the middle of applying for a loan modification.
10(b) The California Legislature responded with a
11first-in-the-nation Homeowner Bill of Rights
(HBOR), which
12requires mortgage servicers to provide borrowers a fair and
13transparent process, a single point of contact, and the opportunity
14to finish applying for a loan modification before foreclosure
15proceedings can start. HBOR stabilized families, neighborhoods,
16and local communities by slowing down indiscriminate
17foreclosures.
18(c) Now, however, district attorneys and legal aid organizations
19are reporting an increasing number of cases in which mortgage
20servicers use a loophole in HBOR to foreclose on certain
21homeowners--people who survive the death of a borrower and
22have an ownership interest in the home but are not named on the
23mortgage loan. Most often, the “survivor” is the borrower’s spouse
24and is over 65 years of age.
25(d) When the surviving widow or widower,
domestic partner,
26children, or other heirs attempt to obtain basic information about
27the loan from the servicer, they face the same kind of barriers and
28abuses--and, finally foreclosure--that convinced the Legislature
29to pass HBOR.
30(e) Home ownership is the primary avenue for most Americans
31to build generational wealth. Indiscriminate foreclosures on
32surviving heirs destroy a family’s ability to build for its financial
33future. Foreclosures also exacerbate the racial wealth gap--and
34overall wealth inequality--in society, and force seniors who want
P4 1to “age in place” into the overheated rental market instead, with
2devastating health impacts.
3(f) Surviving heirs deserve the same transparency and
4opportunity to save their home as HBOR gave the original
5borrower. This act would
stem a disturbing nationwide trend and
6help keep widows and widowers, children, and other survivors in
7their homes--without requiring mortgage servicers to do anything
8more than they already do for other homeowners.
9(g) It is the intent of the Legislature that this act work in
10conjunction with federal Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
11servicing guidelines.
Section 2920.7 is added to the Civil Code, to read:
(a) Upon notification by someone claiming to be a
14successor in interest that a borrower has died, and where that
15claimant is not a party to the loan or promissory note, a mortgage
16servicer shall not record a notice of default pursuant to Section
172924 until the mortgage servicer does both of the following:
18(1) Requests reasonable documentation of the death of the
19borrower from the claimant, including, but not limited to, a death
20certificate or other written evidence of the death of the borrower.
21A reasonable period of time shall be provided for the claimant to
22
present this documentation, but no less than 30 days from the date
23of a written request by the mortgage servicer.
24(2) Requests reasonable documentation from the claimant
25begin delete regarding the statusend deletebegin insert demonstrating the ownership interestend insert of that
26claimantbegin delete as a successor in interestend delete in the real property. A reasonable
27period of time shall be provided for the claimant to present this
28documentation, but no less than 90 days from the date of a written
29request by the mortgage servicer.
30(b) (1) Upon receipt by the mortgage
servicer of the reasonable
31documentation of the status of a claimant as successor in interest
32and that claimant’sbegin delete relation toend deletebegin insert ownership interest inend insert the real
33property, that claimant shall be deemed a “successor in interest.”
34(2) There may be more than one successor in interest. A
35mortgage servicer shall apply the provisions of this section to
36multiple successors in interest in accordance with the terms of the
37loan and federal and state laws and regulations.begin insert When there are
38multiple successors in interest who do not wish to proceed as
39coborrowers or coapplicants, a mortgage servicer may require
P5 1any nonapplicant successor
in interest to consent in writing to the
2application for loan assumption.end insert
3(3) Being a successor in interest under this section does not
4impose an affirmative duty on a mortgage servicer or alter any
5obligation the mortgage servicer has to provide a loan modification
6to the successor in interest. If a successor in interest assumes the
7loan, he or she may be required to otherwise qualify for available
8foreclosure prevention alternatives offered by the mortgage
9servicer.
10(c) Within 10 days of a claimant being deemed a successor in
11interest pursuant to subdivision (b), a mortgage servicer shall
12provide the successor in interest with information in writing about
13the loan. This information shall include, at a minimum, loan
14balance, interest rate and interest reset
dates and amounts, balloon
15payments if any, prepayment penalties if any, default or
16delinquency status, the monthly payment amount, and payoff
17amounts.
18(d) A mortgage servicer shall allow a successor in interestbegin delete to:end delete
19
begin insert to either:end insert
20(1) Apply to assume the deceased borrower’s loan. The mortgage
21servicer may
evaluate the creditworthiness of the successor in
22interest, subject to applicable investor requirements and guidelines.
23(2) If a successor in interest of an assumable loan also seeks a
24foreclosure prevention alternative, simultaneously apply to assume
25the loan and for a foreclosure prevention alternative that may be
26offered by, or available through, the mortgage loanbegin delete servicer.end delete
27begin delete(3)end deletebegin delete end deletebegin deleteIfend deletebegin insert servicer. Ifend insert
the successor in interest qualifies for the
28foreclosure prevention alternative, assume the loan. The mortgage
29servicer may evaluate the creditworthiness of the successor in
30interest subject to applicable investor requirements and guidelines.
31(e) (1) A successor in interest shall have all the same rights and
32remedies as a borrower under subdivision (a) of Section 2923.4
33and under Sections 2923.6, 2923.7, 2924, 2924.9, 2924.10,
342924.11, 2924.12, 2924.15, 2924.17, 2924.18, and 2924.19. For
35the purposes of Section 2924.15, “owner-occupied” means that
36the property was the principal residence of the deceased borrower
37and is security for a loan made for personal, family, or household
38purposes.
39(2) If a trustee’s deed upon sale has not been recorded, a
40successor
in interest may bring an action for injunctive relief to
P6 1enjoin a material violation of subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (d). Any
2injunction shall remain in place and any trustee’s sale shall be
3enjoined until the court determines that the mortgage servicer has
4corrected and remedied the violation or violations giving rise to
5the action for injunctive relief. An enjoined entity may move to
6dissolve an injunction based on a showing that the material
7violation has been corrected and remedied.
8(3) After a trustee’s deed upon sale has been recorded, a
9mortgage servicer shall be liable to a successor in interest for actual
10economic damages pursuant to Section 3281 resulting from a
11material violation of subdivision (a), (b), (c), or (d) by that
12mortgage servicer if the violation was not corrected and remedied
13prior to the recordation of the trustee’s
deed upon sale. If the court
14finds that the material violation was intentional or reckless, or
15
resulted from willful misconduct by a mortgage servicer, the court
16may award the successor in interest the greater of treble actual
17damages or statutory damages of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).
18(4) A court may award a prevailing successor in interest
19reasonable attorney’s fees and costs in an action brought pursuant
20to this section. A successor in interest shall be deemed to have
21prevailed for purposes of this subdivision if the successor in interest
22obtained injunctive relief or damages pursuant to this section.
23(5) A mortgage servicer shall not be liable for any violation that
24it has corrected and remedied prior to the recordation of the
25trustee’s deed upon sale or that has been corrected and remedied
26by third parties working on its behalf prior to the recordation of
27the
trustee’s deed upon sale.
28(f) Consistent with their general regulatory authority, and
29notwithstanding subdivisions (b) and (c) of Section 2924.18, the
30Department of Business Oversight and the Bureau of Real Estate
31may adopt regulations applicable to any entity or person under
32their respective jurisdictions that are necessary to carry out the
33purposes of this section.
34(g) The rights and remedies provided by this section are in
35addition to and independent of any other rights, remedies, or
36procedures under any other law. This section shall not be construed
37to alter, limit, or negate any other rights, remedies, or procedures
38provided by law.
39(h) Except as otherwise provided, this act does not affect the
40obligations
arising from a mortgage or deed of trust.
P7 1(i) For purposes of this section, all of the following definitions
2shall apply:
3(1) “Notification of the death of the mortgagor or trustor” means
4provision to the mortgage servicer of a death certificate or, if a
5death certificate is not available, of other written evidence of the
6death of the mortgagor or trustor deemed sufficient by the mortgage
7servicer.
8(2) “Mortgage servicer” shall have the same meaning as
9provided in Section 2920.5.
10(3) “Reasonable documentation” means copies of the following
11documents, as may be applicable, or, if the relevant documentation
12listed is
not available, other written evidence of the person’s status
13as successor in interest to the real property that secures the
14mortgage or deed of trust deemed sufficient by the mortgage
15servicer:
16(A) In the case of a personal representative, letters as defined
17in Section 52 of the Probate Code.
18(B) In the case of devisee or an heir, a copy of the relevant will
19or trust document.
20(C) In the case of a beneficiary of a revocable transfer on death
21deed, a copy of that deed.
22(D) In the case of a surviving joint tenant, an affidavit of death
23of the joint tenant or a grant deed showing joint tenancy.
24(E) In
the case of a surviving spouse where the real property
25was held as community property with right of survivorship, an
26affidavit of death of the spouse or a deed showing community
27property with right of survivorship.
28(F) In the case of a trustee of a trust, a certification of trust
29pursuant to Section 18100.5 of the Probate Code.
30(G) In the case of a beneficiary of a trust, relevant trust
31documents related to the beneficiary’s interest.
32(4) “Successor in interest” means a natural person who provides
33the mortgage servicer with notification of the death of the
34mortgagor or trustor and reasonable documentation showing that
35the person is the spouse, domestic partner, joint tenant as evidenced
36by
grant deed, parent, grandparent, adult child, adult grandchild,
37or adult sibling of the deceased borrower, who occupied the
38property as his or her principal residence within the last six
39continuous months prior to the deceased borrower’s death and who
40currently resides in the property.
P8 1(j) This section shall apply to first lien mortgages or deeds of
2trust that are secured by owner-occupied residential real property
3containing no more than four dwelling units. “Owner-occupied”
4means that the property was the principal residence of the deceased
5borrower.
6(k) (1) Any mortgage servicer, mortgagee, or beneficiary of
7the deed of trust, or an authorized agent thereof, who, with respect
8to the successor in interest or person claiming to be a successor in
9
interest, complies with the relevant provisions regarding successors
10in interest of Part 1024 of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
11Regulations (12 C.F.R. Part 1024), known as Regulation X, and
12Part 1026 of Title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations (12 C.F.R.
13Part 1026), known as Regulation Z, including any revisions to
14those regulations, shall be deemed to be in compliance with this
15section.
16(2) The provisions of paragraph (1) shall only become operative
17on the effective date of any revisions to the relevant provisions
18regarding successors in interest of Part 1024 of Title 12 of the
19Code of Federal Regulations (12 C.F.R. Part 1024), known as
20Regulation X, and Part 1026 of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
21Regulations (12 C.F.R. Part 1026), known as Regulation Z, issued
22by thebegin insert
federalend insert Consumer Financial Protection Bureau that revise
23the Final Servicing Rules in 78 Federal Register 10696, of February
2414th, 2013.
25(l) This section shall not apply to a successor in interest who is
26engaged in a legal dispute over the property that is security for the
27borrower’s outstanding mortgage loan and has filed a claim raising
28this dispute in a legal proceeding.
29(m) This section shall not apply to a depository institution
30chartered under state or federal law, a person licensed pursuant to
31Division 9 (commencing with Section 22000) or Division 20
32(commencing with Section 50000) of the Financial Code, or a
33person licensed pursuant to Part 1 (commencing with Section
34
10000) of Division 4 of the Business and Professions Code, that,
35during its immediately preceding annual reporting period, as
36established with its primary regulator, foreclosed on 175 or fewer
37residential real properties, containing no more than four dwelling
38units, that are located in California.
The provisions of this act are severable. If any
40provision of this act or its application is held invalid, that invalidity
P9 1shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given
2effect without the invalid provision or application.
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