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Mortgage
Discrimination
February 1998
The
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA) and the Fair Housing Act (FHA) protect
you against discrimination when you apply for a mortgage to purchase,
refinance, or make home improvements.
Your Rights
Under ECOA
The ECOA prohibits discrimination
in any aspect of a credit transaction based on:
- race or color;
- religion;
- national origin;
- sex;
- marital status;
- age (provided the
applicant has the capacity to contract);
- the applicants
receipt of income derived from any public assistance program; and
- the applicants
exercise, in good faith, of any right under the Consumer Credit Protection
Act, the umbrella statute that includes ECOA.
Your
Rights Under FHA
The FHA prohibits
discrimination in all aspects of residential real-estate related transactions,
including:
- making loans to
buy, build, repair, or improve a dwelling;
- selling, brokering,
or appraising residential real estate; and
- selling or renting
a dwelling.
It also prohibits
discrimination based on:
- race or color;
- national origin;
- religion;
- sex;
- familial status
(defined as children under the age of 18 living with a parent or legal
guardian, pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under
18); and
- handicap.
Lender
Dos and Donts
Lenders
must:
- consider reliable
public assistance income in the same way as other income.
- consider reliable
income from part-time employment, Social Security, pensions, and annuities.
- consider reliable
alimony, child support, or separate maintenance payments, if you choose
to provide this information. A lender may ask you for proof that this
income is received consistently.
- if a co-signer
is needed, accept someone other than your spouse. If you own the property
with your spouse, he or she may be asked to sign documents allowing
you to mortgage the property.
Lenders
cannot:
- discourage you
from applying for a mortgage or reject your application because of your
race, national origin, religion, sex, marital status, age, or because
you receive public assistance income.
- consider your race,
national origin, or sex, although you will be asked to voluntarily disclose
this information to help federal agencies enforce anti-discrimination
laws. A creditor may consider your immigration status and whether you
have the right to remain in the country long enough to repay the debt.
- impose different
terms or conditions, such as a higher interest rate or larger down payment,
on a loan based on your race, sex, or other prohibited factors.
- consider the racial
composition of the neighborhood where you want to live. This also applies
when the property is being appraised.
- ask about your
plans for having a family. Questions about expenses related to your
dependents are permitted.
- refuse to purchase
a loan or set different terms or conditions for the loan purchase based
on discriminatory factors.
- require a co-signer
if you meet the lenders standards.
Strengthening
Your Application
Not everyone
who applies for a mortgage will get one. Lenders can use factors such
as income, expenses, debts, and credit history to evaluate applicants.
There are steps you
can take to ensure that your application gets full consideration. Give
the lender all information that supports your application.
For example, stable
employment is important to many lenders. Perhaps youve recently
changed jobs but have been employed steadily in the same field for several
years. If so, include that information on your application.
Get a copy of your
credit report before you apply for a mortgage. Reports sometime
contain inaccurate information. For example, accounts might be reported
that dont belong to you or paid accounts might be reported as unpaid.
If you find errors, dispute them with the credit bureau and tell the lender
about the dispute.
If youve had
past bill-paying problems, such as a lost job or high medical expenses,
write a letter to the lender explaining what caused your past credit problems.
Lenders must consider this information at your request.
Try For
the Best Loan Terms
Some
mortgage lenders may try to charge some borrowers more than others for
the same loan product offered at the same time. This may include higher
interest rates or origination fees or more points. Ask the lender if the
rate youre being quoted is the lowest offered that day. The lender
is probably basing the loan offer on the list of mortgage rates frequently
issued by that institution to its loan officers. Ask to see this list.
If the lender refuses and you suspect you are not being offered the lowest
rates or points available, you may want to negotiate for better terms
or shop for another lender. Even if you decide to accept terms that are
not the lowest available, ask the lender why you did not qualify for better
terms. The answer may help you to correct errors and to become more creditworthy.
If
Your Application Is Rejected
If your mortgage is denied, the lender must give you specific
reasons why or tell you of your right to ask for them. Under the law,
you have the right to:
- Know within 30
days of the date of your completed application whether your mortgage
loan is approved. The lender must make a reasonable effort to obtain
all necessary information, such as credit reports and property appraisals.
If your application is rejected, the lender must tell you in writing.
- Know specifically
why your application was rejected. The lender must tell you the specific
reason for the rejection or your right to learn the reason if you ask
within 60 days. An acceptable response might be: "your income was
too low" or "you havent been employed long enough."
A response of "you didnt meet our minimum standards"
is not specific enough.
- Learn the specific
reason why you were offered less favorable terms than you applied for,
but only if you reject these terms. For example, if the lender offered
you a smaller mortgage or a higher interest rate, you have the right
to know why if you did not accept the lenders counter offer.
- Find out what is
in your credit report. The lender may have rejected your application
because of negative information in your credit report. If so, the lender
must tell you this and give you the name, address, and phone number
of the credit bureau. You can get a free copy of that report from the
credit bureau if you request it within 60 days. Otherwise, the credit
bureau can charge up to $8.
- If your report
contains inaccurate information, the credit bureau is required to investigate
items that you dispute. Those companies furnishing inaccurate information
to the credit bureaus also must reinvestigate items that you dispute.
If you still dispute the credit bureaus account after a reinvestigation,
you can include your summary of the problem in your credit report.
- Get a copy of the
property appraisal from the lender. Mortgage applications may be turned
down because of poor appraisals. Review the appraisal. Check that it
contains accurate information and determine whether the appraiser considered
illegal factors, such as the racial composition of the neighborhood.
If You
Suspect Discrimination
Take action if you think
youve been discriminated against.
- Complain to the
lender. Sometimes you can persuade the lender to reconsider your application.
- Check with your
state Attorney Generals office to see if the creditor violated
state laws. Many states have their own equal credit opportunity laws.
- Contact a local
private fair housing group and report violations to the appropriate
government agency. If your mortgage application is denied, the lender
must give you the name and address of the agency to contact.
- Consider suing
the lender in federal district court. If you win, you can recover your
actual damages and be awarded punitive damages if the court finds that
the lenders conduct was willful. You also may recover reasonable
lawyers fees and court costs. You also might consider joining
with others to file a class action suit.
A number of federal
agencies share enforcement responsibility for the ECOA and the FHA. Determining
which agency to contact depends, in part, on the type of financial institution
you dealt with.
For ECOA
violations involving mortgage and consumer finance companies:
Federal Trade Commission
Consumer Response Center
Washington, DC 20580
202-326-2222; TDD: 202-326-2502
While the FTC generally
does not intervene in individual disputes, the information you provide
may indicate a pattern of violations requiring action by the Commission.
The Center also can
provide you with a copy of Best Sellers, a complete list of FTC
consumer and business publications. Or, visit us at ftc.gov on
the World Wide Web.
For violations
of the FHA:
Office of Fair Housing
and Equal Opportunity
US Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), Room 5204
Washington, DC 20410-2000
Toll-free hotline: 1-800-424-8590
TDD: 1-800-543-8294
You have one year
to file a complaint with HUD, but you should file as soon as possible.
Your complaint to HUD should include:
- Your name and address;
- The name and address
of the person or company who is the subject of the complaint;
- The address or
other identification of the housing involved;
- A short description
of the facts that caused you to believe your rights were violated; and
- The dates of the
alleged violation.
HUD will notify you
when it receives your complaint. Normally, HUD also will:
- Notify the alleged
violator of your complaint and permit the person to submit an answer;
- Investigate your
complaint and determine whether there is a reasonable cause to believe
the Fair Housing Act has been violated; and
- Notify you if it
cannot complete an investigation within 100 days of receiving your complaint.
For violations
of the ECOA and the FHA:
For nationally-charted
banks:
Comptroller of the
Currency
Compliance Management
Mail Stop 7-5
Washington, DC 20219
For state-chartered
banks insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, but not members
of the Federal Reserve System:
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
Consumer Affairs Division
Washington, DC 20429
For federally-chartered
or federally-insured savings and loans:
Office of Thrift Supervision
Consumer Affairs Program
Washington, DC 20552
For federally-chartered
credit unions:
National Credit Union
Administration
Consumer Affairs Division
Washington, DC 20456
For state
member banks of the Federal Reserve System:
Consumer and Community
Affairs
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
20th & C Streets, NW
Washington, DC 20551
For discrimination
complaints against all kinds of creditors:
Department of Justice
Civil Rights Division
Washington, DC 20530
For a free copy of
Best Sellers, a complete listing of the FTC's consumer publications or
to file a complaint, contact:
Consumer Response
Center
Federal Trade Commission
Washington, D.C. 20580
(202) 326-2222
TDD: (202) 326-2502
Reproduced
with permission from The Federal Trade Commission.
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