HOUSE BILL No. 4343

 

February 17, 2005, Introduced by Reps. Hunter, Tobocman, Gonzales, Cheeks, Farrah, McConico and Murphy and referred to the Committee on Banking and Financial Services.

 

     A bill to amend 2002 PA 660, entitled

 

"Consumer mortgage protection act,"

 

by amending the title and sections 1, 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 10, 12, and 15

 

(MCL 445.1631, 445.1632, 445.1634, 445.1635, 445.1638, 445.1639,

 

445.1640, 445.1642, and 445.1645); and to repeal acts and parts of

 

acts.

 

THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN ENACT:

 

TITLE

 

     An act to prohibit certain lending practices; to require

 

disclosure of certain information for home loans and high-cost home

 

loans; to prescribe certain duties and obligations of the lender in

 

a home loan or high-cost home loan transaction;  to prescribe the

 

powers and duties of certain state agencies and officials;  and to


 

prescribe penalties and provide for remedies.

 

     Sec. 1. This act shall be known and may be cited as the  

 

"consumer mortgage  "home loan protection act".

 

     Sec. 2. (1) As used in this act:

 

      (a) "Commissioner" means the commissioner of the office of

 

financial and insurance services of the department of consumer and

 

industry services.

 

     (b) "Depository institution" means a bank, savings and loan

 

association, savings bank, or a credit union chartered under state

 

or federal law.

 

     (c) "Home improvement installment contract" means an agreement

 

of 1 or more documents covering the sale of goods or furnishing of

 

services to a buyer for improvements to the buyer's principal

 

dwelling located in this state used for occupancy of 4 or fewer

 

families under which the buyer promises to pay in installments all

 

or any part of the price of the goods or services.

 

     (d) "Mortgage loan" means a loan or home improvement

 

installment contract secured by a first or subordinate mortgage or

 

any other form of lien or a land contract covering real property

 

located in this state used as the borrower's principal dwelling and

 

designed for occupancy by 4 or fewer families. Mortgage loan does

 

not include any of the following:

 

     (i) Loans in which the proceeds are used to acquire the

 

dwelling.

 

     (ii) Reverse-mortgage transactions.

 

     (iii) An open-end credit plan being a loan in which the lender

 

reasonably contemplates repeated advances.


 

     (e) "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership,

 

association, governmental entity, or any other legal entity.

 

     (f) "Reverse-mortgage" means a nonrecourse loan under which

 

both of the following apply:

 

     (i) A mortgage or other form of lien securing 1 or more

 

advances is created in the borrower's principal dwelling.

 

     (ii) The principal, interest, or shared appreciation or equity

 

is payable only after the borrower dies, the dwelling is

 

transferred, or the borrower ceases to occupy the dwelling as a

 

principal dwelling.

 

     (g) "Regulated lender" means a depository institution or a

 

licensee or a registrant under the consumer financial services act,

 

1988 PA 161, MCL 487.2051 to 487.2072, 1984 PA 379, MCL 493.101 to

 

493.114, the secondary mortgage loan act, 1981 PA 125, MCL 493.51

 

to 493.81, or the mortgage brokers, lenders, and servicers

 

licensing act, 1987 PA 173, MCL 445.1651 to 445.1684, and a seller

 

under the home improvement finance act, 1965 PA 332, MCL 445.1101

 

to 445.1431.

 

     (h) "State and federal laws" means, individually and

 

collectively, 1 or more of the laws or regulations of this state or

 

the federal government which regulate or are applicable to a

 

mortgage loan or a person when brokering, making, servicing, or

 

collecting a mortgage loan, including, without limitation, the

 

federal truth in lending act, title I of the consumer credit

 

protection act, Public Law 90-321, 15 U.S.C. 1601 to 1608, 1610 to

 

1613, 1615, 1631 to 1635, 1637 to 1649, and 1661 to 1667f, real

 

estate settlement procedures act of 1974, Public Law 93-533, 88


 

Stat. 1724, equal credit opportunity act, title VII of the consumer

 

credit protection act, Public Law 90-321, 15 U.S.C. 1691 to 1691f,

 

fair housing act, title VIII of the civil rights act of 1968,

 

Public Law 90-284, 82 Stat. 81, fair credit report act, title VI of

 

the consumer credit protection act, Public Law 90-321, 15 U.S.C.

 

1681 to 1681v, the homeowners protection act of 1998, Public Law

 

105-216, 112 Stat. 897, the fair debt collection practices act,

 

title VIII of the consumer credit protection act, Public Law 90-

 

321, 15 U.S.C. 1601nt and 1692 to 1692o, consumer financial

 

services act, 1988 PA 161, MCL 487.2051 to 487.2072, mortgage

 

brokers, lenders, and servicers licensing act, 1987 PA 173, MCL

 

445.1651 to 445.1684, the secondary mortgage loan act, 1981 PA 125,

 

MCL 493.51 to 493.81, 1977 PA 135, MCL 445.1601 to 445.1614, and

 

home improvement finance act, 1965 PA 332, MCL 445.1101 to

 

445.1422.

 

     (a) "Affiliate" means a company that controls, is controlled

 

by, or is under common control with another company.

 

     (b) "Annual percentage rate" means an annual percentage rate

 

for a loan determined under 12 CFR part 226.

 

     (c) "Bona fide discount points" means an amount paid by a

 

borrower that meets all of the following:

 

     (i) It is knowingly paid by the borrower for the express

 

purpose of reducing the interest rate applicable to a home loan.

 

     (ii) It actually reduces the interest rate applicable to the

 

home loan.

 

     (iii) It is paid in connection with a home loan for which the

 

undiscounted interest rate does not exceed the conventional


 

mortgage rate by 2 or more percentage points for a home loan

 

secured by a first lien or by 3-1/2 or more percentage points for a

 

home loan secured by a subordinated lien.

 

     (d) "Borrower" means any natural person obligated to repay a

 

loan, including a coborrower, cosigner, or guarantor.

 

     (e) "Company" means a person other than a natural person.

 

     (f) "Conventional mortgage rate" means the most recently

 

published annual yield on conventional mortgages published by the

 

board of governors of the federal reserve system in statistical

 

release H.15, or any publication that may supersede it, as of the

 

applicable time set forth in 12 CFR 226.32(a)(1)(i).

 

     (g) "Conventional prepayment penalty" means a prepayment

 

penalty or fee that is collected or charged in a home loan and that

 

is authorized by law other than this act, if the home loan does not

 

have an annual percentage rate that exceeds the conventional

 

mortgage rate by more than 2 percentage points and does not permit

 

any prepayment fees or penalties that exceed 2% of the amount

 

prepaid.

 

     (h) "Creditor" means a lender, as that term is defined in 24

 

CFR 3500.2, or a mortgage broker.

 

     (i) "Excluded points and fees" means, in connection with a

 

home loan, 1% of the total loan amount attributable to bona fide

 

fees paid to a federal or state government agency that insures

 

payment of some portion of a home loan, plus an amount that does

 

not exceed 2% of the loan amount attributable to either bona fide

 

discount points or a conventional prepayment penalty, but not both.

 

     (j) "High-cost home loan" means a home loan in which the terms


 

of the loan meet or exceed 1 or more thresholds.

 

     (k) "Home loan" means an open-end credit plan or extension of

 

credit that meets all of the following:

 

     (i) It does not exceed the maximum original principal

 

obligation as set forth in and from time to time adjusted under

 

section 305(a)(2) of the federal home loan mortgage act, 12 USC

 

1454(a)(2).

 

     (ii) It meets the requirements for a federally related mortgage

 

loan under 24 CFR 3500.2.

 

     (iii) It is not a reverse mortgage transaction or a loan

 

primarily for business, agricultural, or commercial purposes.

 

     (l) "Mortgage broker" means that term as defined in 24 CFR

 

3500.2.

 

     (m) Subject to subsection (2), "points and fees" means all of

 

the following:

 

     (i) All items included in the definition of finance charge in

 

12 CFR 226.4(a) and 12 CFR 226.4(b), except interest or the time

 

price differential.

 

     (ii) All items described in 12 CFR 226.32(b)(1)(iii).

 

     (iii) All compensation paid directly or indirectly to a mortgage

 

broker from any source, including a mortgage broker that originates

 

a loan in its own name in a table-funded transaction.

 

     (iv) The cost of all premiums directly or indirectly financed

 

by the creditor for any credit life, credit disability, credit

 

unemployment, or credit property insurance, or any other life or

 

health insurance, or any payments directly or indirectly financed

 

by the creditor for any debt cancellation or suspension agreement


 

or contract. However, insurance premiums paid on a monthly basis or

 

debt cancellation or suspension fees calculated and paid on a

 

monthly basis are not considered financed by the creditor.

 

     (v) The maximum prepayment fees and penalties that may be

 

charged or collected under the terms of the loan documents.

 

     (vi) All prepayment fees or penalties that are incurred by the

 

borrower if the loan refinances a previous loan originated or

 

currently held by the same creditor or an affiliate of the

 

creditor.

 

     (vii) For an open-end loan, points and fees are calculated by

 

adding the total points and fees known at or before closing,

 

including the maximum prepayment penalties that may be charged or

 

collected under the terms of the loan documents, plus the minimum

 

additional fees the borrower must pay to draw down an amount equal

 

to the total credit line.

 

     (n) "Rate threshold" means an annual percentage rate

 

calculated under 12 CFR 226.32(a)(1)(i), whether the home loan is a

 

"residential mortgage transaction" or an extension of "open-end

 

credit" as those terms are defined in 12 CFR 226.2.

 

     (o) "Servicer" means that term as defined in 24 CFR 3500.2.

 

     (p) "Servicing" means that term as defined in 12 CFR 3500.2.

 

The term also includes any other activities or responsibilities

 

undertaken in connection with a home loan by a person who acts as a

 

servicer with respect to that home loan, including, but not limited

 

to, collection and default management functions.

 

     (q) "Threshold" means a rate threshold or a total points and

 

fees threshold.


 

     (r) "Total loan amount" means the principal of the loan minus

 

those points and fees that are included in the principal amount of

 

the loan. For an open-end loan, the total loan amount is calculated

 

using the total line of credit allowed under the home loan at

 

closing.

 

     (s) "Total points and fees threshold" means 1 of the

 

following, as applicable:

 

     (i) For a home loan in which the total loan amount is

 

$20,000.00 or more, the total points and fees payable in connection

 

with the home loan exceed 4% of the total loan amount.

 

     (ii) For a home loan in which the total loan amount is less

 

than $20,000.00, the total points and fees payable in connection

 

with the home loan exceed $800.00 or 7% of the total loan amount,

 

whichever is less.

 

     (t) "Truth in lending act" means the federal truth in lending

 

act, 15 USC 1601 to 1667f.

 

     (2) Points and fees do not include any of the following:

 

     (a) Taxes, filing fees, recording fees, or other charges or

 

fees paid to or required by a public official for determining the

 

existence of or for perfecting, releasing, or satisfying a security

 

interest.

 

     (b) Bona fide and reasonable fees paid to a person other than

 

a creditor or an affiliate of the creditor for any of the

 

following:

 

     (i) Tax payment services.

 

     (ii) Flood certification.

 

     (iii) Pest infestation or flood determination.


 

     (iv) Appraisal.

 

     (v) Inspections performed before the closing.

 

     (vi) Credit reports.

 

     (vii) Surveys.

 

     (viii) Attorney fees, if the borrower has the right to select

 

the attorney from an approved list or otherwise.

 

     (ix) Notary fees.

 

     (x) Escrow charges in addition to any paid under subdivision

 

(a).

 

     (xi) Title insurance premiums.

 

     (xii) Fire and hazard insurance and flood insurance premiums,

 

if the conditions in 12 CFR 226.4(d)(2) are met.

 

     Sec. 4.  (1) A person offering to make or making a mortgage

 

loan shall not do either of the following:

 

     (a) Charge a fee for a product or service if the product or

 

service is not actually provided to the customer.

 

     (b) Misrepresent the amount charged by or paid to a third

 

party for a product or service.

 

     (2) A lender in making a mortgage loan shall not finance as

 

part of the loan single premium coverage for any credit life,

 

credit disability, or credit unemployment.

 

     (3) A person, appraiser, or real estate agent shall not make,

 

directly or indirectly, any false, deceptive, or misleading

 

statement or representation in connection with a mortgage loan

 

including, but not limited to, the borrower's ability to qualify

 

for a mortgage loan or the value of the dwelling that will secure

 

repayment of the mortgage loan.


 

     (4) A lender shall not insert or change information on an

 

application for a mortgage loan if the lender knows that the

 

information is false and misleading and intended to deceive a third

 

party that the borrower is qualified for the loan when in fact the

 

third party would not approve the loan without the insertion or

 

change.

 

     (5) A statement or representation is deceptive or misleading

 

if it has the capacity to deceive or mislead a borrower or

 

potential borrower. The commissioner shall consider any of the

 

following factors in deciding whether a statement or

 

misrepresentation is deceptive or misleading:

 

     (a) The overall impression that the statement or

 

representation reasonably creates.

 

     (b) The particular type of audience to which the statement is

 

directed.

 

     (c) Whether it may be reasonably comprehended by the segment

 

of the public to which the statement is directed.

 

     (6) A lender shall not condition the payment of an appraisal

 

upon a predetermined value or the closing of the mortgage loan

 

which is the basis of the appraisal.

 

     (7) A person shall not directly or indirectly compensate,

 

coerce, or intimidate an appraiser for the purpose of influencing

 

the independent judgment of the appraiser with respect to the value

 

of the dwelling offered as security for repayment of the mortgage

 

loan.

 

     (8) A mortgage loan note shall not contain blanks regarding

 

payments, interest rates, maturity date, or amount borrowed to be


 

filled in after the note is signed by the borrower.

 

     (1) A creditor making a home loan shall not directly or

 

indirectly finance any credit life, credit disability, credit

 

unemployment, or credit property insurance, any other life or

 

health insurance, or any payments directly or indirectly for any

 

debt cancellation or suspension agreement or contract. However,

 

insurance premiums or debt cancellation or suspension fees

 

calculated and paid on a monthly basis are not considered financed

 

by the creditor.

 

     (2) A creditor shall not engage in flipping a home loan. As

 

used in this subsection, "flipping" means making a home loan to a

 

borrower that refinances an existing home loan when the new loan

 

does not have reasonable, tangible net benefit to the borrower

 

considering all of the circumstances, including, but not limited

 

to, the terms of both the new and refinanced loans, the cost of the

 

new loan, and the borrower's circumstances.

 

     (3) A creditor shall not recommend or encourage default on an

 

existing loan or other debt prior to and in connection with the

 

closing or planned closing of a home loan that refinances all or

 

any portion of that existing loan or debt.

 

     (4) A creditor or servicer shall not do any of the following:

 

     (a) Charge a borrower a late payment fee unless the loan

 

documents specifically authorize the fee, the fee is not imposed

 

unless the payment is past due for 10 days or more, and the fee

 

does not exceed 5% of the amount of the late payment.

 

     (b) Charge more than 1 late payment fee with respect to any

 

single late payment.


 

     (c) Charge a late payment fee for a default on a loan payment

 

if the default is the result of the creditor or servicer deducting

 

a late payment fee from a previous payment made on the home loan.

 

However, a creditor or servicer may apply any payment made to any

 

unpaid balances of payments due in the order of maturity, even if

 

the result is a late payment charge accruing on 1 or more

 

subsequent unpaid balances.

 

     (5) A home loan may not contain a provision that permits the

 

creditor, in its sole discretion, to accelerate the indebtedness.

 

This subsection does not prohibit acceleration of the loan in good

 

faith due to the borrower's failure to abide by the material terms

 

of the loan.

 

     (6) A lender shall not charge a fee for informing or

 

transmitting to any person the balance due to pay off a home loan

 

or to provide a release upon prepayment. A lender shall provide a

 

payoff balance within a reasonable time or within 7 business days

 

after the request, whichever is earlier.

 

     Sec. 5.  A mortgage loan with a term of less than 5 years

 

shall not have a payment schedule with regular periodic payments

 

that when aggregated do not fully amortize the outstanding

 

principal balance. This section does not apply to loans with

 

maturities of less than 1 year, if the purpose of the loan is a

 

"bridge" loan connected with the acquisition or construction of a

 

dwelling intended to become the borrower's principal dwelling.  In

 

addition to the requirements of this act, a high-cost home loan is

 

subject to the following additional limitations and prohibited

 

practices:


 

     (a) A creditor or originator shall not directly or indirectly

 

finance any points or fees in connection with a high-cost home

 

loan.

 

     (b) A creditor or originator shall not include in the loan

 

documents for a high-cost home loan or charge a borrower in a high-

 

cost home loan any prepayment fees or penalties.

 

     (c) A high-cost home loan shall not contain a scheduled

 

payment that is more than twice as large as the average of earlier

 

scheduled payments. This subdivision does not apply when the

 

payment schedule is adjusted to the seasonal or irregular income of

 

the borrower.

 

     (d) A high-cost home loan shall not include payment terms

 

under which the outstanding principal balance or accrued interest

 

will increase at any time over the course of the loan because the

 

regularly scheduled periodic payments do not cover the full amount

 

of interest due.

 

     (e) A high-cost home loan shall not contain a provision that

 

increases the interest rate after default. This subdivision does

 

not apply to interest rate changes in a variable rate loan

 

otherwise consistent with the provisions of the loan documents, if

 

the change in the interest rate is not triggered by the event of

 

default or the acceleration of the indebtedness.

 

     (f) A high-cost home loan shall not include terms under which

 

more than 2 periodic payments required under the loan are

 

consolidated and paid in advance from the loan proceeds provided to

 

the borrower.

 

     (g) A creditor shall not make a high-cost home loan without


 

first receiving certification from a counselor from an independent

 

nonprofit organization approved by the United States department of

 

housing and urban development, a state housing financing agency, or

 

the regulatory agency that has jurisdiction over the creditor, that

 

the borrower has received counseling on the advisability of the

 

loan transaction.

 

     (h) A creditor shall not extend a high-cost home loan to a

 

borrower residing in a home unless a reasonable creditor would

 

believe at the time the loan is closed that the borrower will be

 

able to make the scheduled payments associated with the loan based

 

upon a consideration of his or her current and expected income,

 

current obligations, employment status, and other financial

 

resources other than the borrower's equity in the collateral that

 

secures repayment of the loan. There is a rebuttable presumption

 

that a borrower residing in a home is able to make the scheduled

 

payments associated with a high-cost home loan if at the time the

 

loan is consummated the borrower's total monthly debts, including

 

amounts under the loan, do not exceed 50% of the borrower's monthly

 

gross income as verified by tax returns, payroll receipts, and

 

other independent income verification.

 

     (i) A creditor shall not pay a contractor under a home-

 

improvement contract from the proceeds of a high-cost home loan,

 

unless both of the following are met:

 

     (i) The creditor is presented with a signed and dated

 

completion certificate showing that the home improvements have been

 

completed.

 

     (ii) The instrument is payable to the borrower or jointly to


 

the borrower and the contractor or, at the election of the

 

borrower, through a third-party escrow agent in accordance with

 

terms established in a written agreement signed by the borrower,

 

the creditor, and the contractor before the disbursement.

 

     (j) A creditor shall not charge a borrower a fee or other

 

amount to modify, renew, extend, or amend a high-cost home loan or

 

to defer any payment due under the terms of a high-cost home loan.

 

     (k) A high-cost home loan document that creates a debt or an

 

interest in property to secure a debt shall include the following

 

notice on the face of the document, printed prominently in at least

 

12-point boldfaced type:

 

     "Notice: This is a high-cost home loan subject to special

 

rules under state law. A purchaser or assignee of this high-cost

 

home loan may be liable for all claims and defenses of the borrower

 

with respect to the home loan.".

 

     Sec. 8.  The commissioner may conduct examinations and

 

investigations of a person over whom the commissioner has

 

regulatory authority as necessary to determine whether the person

 

is brokering, making, servicing, or collecting mortgage loans as

 

required by this act.

 

     (1) If a creditor or servicer asserts that grounds for

 

acceleration exist and requires the payment in full of all sums

 

secured by the security instrument, the borrower, or anyone

 

authorized to act on the borrower's behalf, has the right at any

 

time up to the time title is transferred by means of foreclosure by

 

judicial proceeding and sale or otherwise to cure the default, and

 

reinstate the home loan by tendering the amount or performance


 

specified in this section. A cure of default under this section

 

reinstates the borrower to the same position as if the default had

 

not occurred and nullifies any acceleration of any obligation under

 

the security instrument or note arising from the default as of the

 

date of the cure.

 

     (2) Before a foreclosure or other legal action is filed to

 

foreclose on a loan subject to this act, the person who intends to

 

file the action shall deliver a notice of the right to cure the

 

default to the borrower informing the borrower of all of the

 

following:

 

     (a) The nature of default claimed on the home loan, and of the

 

borrower's right to cure the default by paying the sum of money

 

required to cure the default. A creditor or servicer shall accept

 

any partial payment made or tendered in response to the notice. If

 

the amount necessary to cure the default will change during the 30-

 

day period after the effective date of the notice, due to the

 

application of a daily interest rate or the addition of any late

 

fees allowed under this act, the notice shall give sufficient

 

information to enable the borrower to calculate the amount at any

 

point during the 30-day period.

 

     (b) The date by which the borrower must cure the default to

 

avoid acceleration and initiation of foreclosure, or other action

 

to seize the home, that is 30 days or more after the date the

 

notice is effective, and the name, address, and telephone number of

 

a person to whom the borrower may make payment or tender.

 

     (c) That if the borrower does not cure the default by the date

 

specified, the creditor may take steps to terminate the borrower's


 

ownership in the property by requiring payment in full of the home

 

loan and commencing a foreclosure proceeding or other action to

 

seize the home.

 

     (d) The name and address of the creditor or servicer and the

 

telephone number of a representative of the creditor or servicer

 

whom the borrower may contact if the borrower disagrees with the

 

assertion that a default has occurred or the correctness of the

 

creditor's calculation of the amount required to cure the default.

 

     (3) To cure a default described in this section, a borrower is

 

not required to pay any charge, fee, or penalty attributable to the

 

exercise of the right to cure a default under this section, other

 

than the fees specifically allowed by this section. The borrower is

 

not liable for any attorney fees relating to the borrower's default

 

that are incurred by the creditor or servicer before the 30-day

 

period in subsection (2)(b). After the creditor or servicer files a

 

foreclosure action or takes other action to seize or transfer

 

ownership of the home, the borrower is only liable for attorney

 

fees that are reasonable and actually incurred by the creditor or

 

servicer, based on a reasonable hourly rate and a reasonable number

 

of hours.

 

     (4) If a default is cured after the initiation of any action

 

to foreclose, the creditor shall take the steps necessary to

 

terminate the foreclosure proceeding or other action.

 

     Sec. 9.  If the commissioner determines that a person is

 

brokering, making, servicing, or collecting mortgage loans in

 

violation of this act, the commissioner shall do 1 or more of the

 

following:


 

     (a) Initiate a cause of action under section 10.

 

     (b) If the person is chartered, licensed, registered,

 

regulated, or administered by the commissioner under a law of this

 

state, the commissioner shall enforce the penalties and remedies

 

under that law.

 

     (c) Forward a complaint to the appropriate regulatory or

 

investigatory authority.

 

     (1) A person who purchases or is otherwise assigned a high-

 

cost home loan is subject to any claims and defenses with respect

 

to the loan that the borrower could assert against a creditor or

 

mortgage broker of the loan, unless the purchaser or assignee

 

demonstrates by a preponderance of the evidence that all of the

 

following are met:

 

     (a) The purchaser or assignee has in place at the time of the

 

purchase or assignment of the loan a policy that expressly

 

prohibits its purchase or acceptance of assignment of any high-cost

 

home loans.

 

     (b) The purchaser or assignee requires by contract that a

 

seller or assignor of home loans to the purchaser or assignee

 

represents and warrants to the purchaser or assignee that either

 

the seller or assignor will not sell or assign any high-cost home

 

loans to the purchaser or assignee, or that the seller or assignor

 

is a beneficiary of a representation and warranty from a previous

 

seller or assignor to that effect.

 

     (c) The purchaser or assignee exercises reasonable due

 

diligence at the time of purchase or assignment of any home loans,

 

or within a reasonable period of time after the purchase or


 

assignment of any home loans, intended by the purchaser or assignee

 

to prevent the purchaser or assignee from purchasing or taking

 

assignment of any high-cost home loans. As used in this

 

subdivision, "reasonable due diligence" includes sampling and does

 

not include loan-by-loan review.

 

     (2) Limited to amounts required to reduce or extinguish the

 

borrower's liability under the high-cost home loan plus amounts

 

required to recover costs, including reasonable attorney fees, a

 

borrower acting only in an individual capacity may assert claims

 

that the borrower could assert against a creditor of the high-cost

 

home loan against any subsequent holder or assignee of the high-

 

cost home loan under either or both of the following, as

 

applicable:

 

     (a) Within 5 years of the closing of a high-cost home loan, a

 

violation of this act in connection with the loan as an original

 

action.

 

     (b) At any time during the term of a high-cost home loan,

 

after an action to collect on the home loan or foreclose on the

 

collateral securing the home loan has been initiated or the debt

 

arising from the home loan has been accelerated or the home loan

 

has become 60 days in default, any defense, claim, or counterclaim

 

or action to enjoin foreclosure or preserve or obtain possession of

 

the home that secures the loan.

 

     (3) The provisions of this section shall be effective

 

notwithstanding any other provision of law, provided that nothing

 

in this section shall be construed to limit the substantive rights,

 

remedies, or procedural rights available to a borrower against any


 

creditor, assignee, or holder under any other law. The rights

 

conferred on borrowers by subsections (1) and (2) are independent

 

of each other and do not limit each other.

 

     Sec. 10.  The attorney general or the prosecuting attorney for

 

the county where an alleged violation occurred may bring an action

 

against a person to do 1 or more of the following:

 

     (a) Obtain a declaratory judgment that a method, act, or

 

practice of the person is a violation of this act.

 

     (b) Enjoin a person who is engaging or about to engage in a

 

method, act, or practice that is a violation of this act.

 

     (c) Obtain a civil fine of not more than $10,000.00 for the

 

first offense and not more than $20,000.00 for the second and any

 

subsequent offense.

 

     (1) A violation of this act is an unfair and deceptive trade

 

practice and a violation of section 3 of the Michigan consumer

 

protection act, 2002 PA 613, MCL 445.903. However, a borrower may

 

not recover damages under both that act and subsection (2).

 

     (2) If a person is found in a civil action to have violated

 

this act, the court may award the borrower all of the following:

 

     (a) Actual damages, including consequential and incidental

 

damages. A borrower is not required to demonstrate reliance in

 

order to receive actual damages.

 

     (b) Statutory damages equal to 1 of the following:

 

     (i) If the violation is committed by a mortgage broker or

 

originator, 2 times the finance charge paid by the borrower under

 

the loan and forfeiture of the remaining interest under the loan.

 

     (ii) If the violation is committed by a mortgage servicer,


 

$5,000.00 per violation.

 

     (c) If the violation was malicious or reckless, punitive

 

damages.

 

     (d) Costs and reasonable attorney fees.

 

     (3) A court may grant a borrower injunctive, declaratory, and

 

any other equitable relief the court finds appropriate in an action

 

to enforce compliance with this act.

 

     (4) The right of rescission granted under the truth in lending

 

act, 15 USC 1601 to 1667f, for a violation of that law and all

 

other remedies provided under this act are available to a borrower

 

by way of recoupment against a party foreclosing on the home loan

 

or collecting on the loan, at any time during the term of the loan.

 

A recoupment claim asserted by a borrower under this subsection is

 

limited to an amount that reduces or extinguishes the borrower's

 

liability under the home loan, plus costs and reasonable attorney

 

fees. This subsection does not limit any recoupment right available

 

to a borrower under any other law.

 

     (5) A person, including a member, officer, or director of a

 

creditor, who knowingly violates this act or an order or rule made

 

or promulgated under this act is guilty of a misdemeanor punishable

 

by 1 of the following:

 

     (a) For a first violation, imprisonment for not more than 180

 

days, a fine of not more than $5,000.00, or community service of

 

not more than 500 hours, or a combination of these penalties.

 

     (b) For a second or subsequent violation, imprisonment for not

 

more than 1 year, a fine of not more than $10,000.00, or community

 

service of not more than 1,000 hours, or a combination of these


 

penalties.

 

     (6) A creditor in a home loan who, when acting in good faith,

 

fails to comply with the provisions of this act, is not in

 

violation of this section if the creditor establishes either of the

 

following:

 

     (a) Within 30 days of the loan closing, and before receiving

 

any notice of the compliance failure, the creditor made appropriate

 

restitution to the borrower and appropriate adjustments to the

 

loan.

 

     (b) Within 60 days of the loan closing and before receiving

 

any notice of the compliance failure, and the compliance failure

 

was not intentional and resulted from a bona fide error

 

notwithstanding the maintenance of procedures reasonably adapted to

 

avoid those errors, the borrower is notified of the compliance

 

failure, appropriate restitution is made to the borrower, and

 

appropriate adjustments are made to the loan. As used in this

 

subsection, a "bona fide error" includes, but is not limited to, a

 

computer malfunction or a clerical, calculation, computer

 

programming, or printing error. An error of legal judgment with

 

respect to a person's obligations under this section is not a bona

 

fide error.

 

     (7) The remedies provided in this section are cumulative and

 

are not the exclusive remedies available to a borrower. A borrower

 

is not required to exhaust any administrative remedies provided

 

under this act or any other applicable law before proceeding under

 

this section.

 

     (8) A provision in an agreement for a high-cost home loan that


 

allows a person to require a borrower, individually or on behalf of

 

similarly situated borrowers, to assert any legal claim or defense

 

in a forum located outside of this state or limits in any way a

 

claim or defense the borrower may have is void and unenforceable.

 

     (9) A person shall not attempt in bad faith to avoid the

 

application of this act by dividing any home loan transaction into

 

separate parts, structure a home loan transaction as an open-end

 

loan for the purpose of evading this act if the loan would have

 

been a high-cost home loan if the loan had been structured as a

 

closed-end loan, or engage in any other subterfuge with the intent

 

of evading this act.

 

     Sec. 12.  This act does not limit the authority of the

 

commissioner, the attorney general, or a county prosecutor to

 

enforce any law under which a person is chartered, organized,

 

licensed, registered, regulated, or otherwise authorized to do

 

business in this state.  The rights conferred by this act are

 

independent of and in addition to any other rights under other

 

laws.

 

     Sec. 15.  (1) The laws of this state relating to the

 

brokering, making, servicing, and collecting of mortgage loans

 

prescribe rules of conduct upon citizens generally, comprise a

 

comprehensive regulatory framework intended to operate uniformly

 

throughout the state under the same circumstances and conditions,

 

and constitute general laws of this state.

 

     (2) Silence in the statutes of this state with respect to any

 

act or practice in the brokering, making, servicing, or collecting

 

of mortgage loans shall not be interpreted to mean that the state


 

has not completely occupied the field or has only set minimum

 

standards in its regulation of brokering, making, servicing, or

 

collecting of mortgage loans.

 

     (3) It is the intent of the legislature to entirely preempt

 

municipal corporations and other political subdivisions from the

 

regulation and licensing of persons engaged in the brokering,

 

making, servicing, or collecting of mortgage loans in this state.  

 

This act applies to any transaction involving real property located

 

in this state.

 

     Enacting section 1.  Sections 3, 6, 7, 11, 13, and 14 of the

 

consumer mortgage protection act, 2002 PA 660, MCL 445.1633,

 

445.1636, 445.1637, 445.1641, 445.1643, and 445.1644, are repealed.