7 Tex. Admin. Code § 81.202

Current through Reg. 49, No. 45; November 8, 2024
Section 81.202 - Prohibition on False, Misleading, or Deceptive Practices and Improper Dealings
(a) False, Misleading or Deceptive Practices. The following conduct by a mortgage banker or an originator constitutes fraudulent and dishonest dealings for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §157.009(d) and §157.024(a)(3), deceptive practices for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(2), and a scheme to defraud a person for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(1):
(1) knowingly misrepresenting the mortgage banker's or originator's relationship to a residential mortgage loan applicant or any other party to an actual or proposed residential mortgage loan transaction;
(2) knowingly misrepresenting or understating any cost, fee, interest rate, or other expense in connection with a residential mortgage loan applicant's applying for or obtaining a residential mortgage loan;
(3) knowingly overstating, inflating, altering, amending or disparaging any source or potential source of residential mortgage loan funds in a manner which disregards the truth or makes any knowing and material misstatement or omission;
(4) knowingly participating in or permitting the submission of false or misleading information of a material nature to any person in connection with a decision by that person whether or not to make or acquire a residential mortgage loan;
(5) as provided for by the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act and Regulation X, brokering, arranging, or making a residential mortgage loan in which the originator retains fees or receives other compensation for services which are not actually performed or where the fees or other compensation received bear no reasonable relationship to the value of services actually performed;
(6) recommending or encouraging default or delinquency or continuation of an existing default or delinquency by a residential mortgage applicant on any existing indebtedness prior to closing a residential mortgage loan which refinances all or a portion of such existing indebtedness;
(7) altering any document produced or issued by the Department, unless otherwise permitted by statute or a rule of the Department.
(8) engaging in any other practice which the Commissioner, by published interpretation, has determined to be false, misleading, or deceptive.
(b) Improper and Unfair Dealings. The following conduct by a mortgage banker or an originator constitutes improper dealings for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §157.009(d) and §157.024(a)(3), and unfair practices for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(2):
(1) Acting negligently in performing an act for which a person is required under Finance Code, Chapter 157 to hold a license;
(2) Violating any provision of a local, State of Texas, or federal, constitution, statute, rule, ordinance, regulation, or final court decision that governs the same activity, transaction, or subject matter that is governed by the provisions of Finance Code, Chapter 157 or Chapter 180, or this chapter, including, but not limited to, the following:
(A) Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act ( RSA 2601 et seq.);
(B) Regulation X ( 12 C.F.R. § 1024 et seq.);
(C) Consumer Credit Protection Act, Truth in Lending Act ( RSA 1601 et seq.);
(D) Regulation Z ( 12 C.F.R. § 1026 et seq.);
(E) Equal Credit Opportunity Act ( RSA 1691 et seq.);
(F) Regulation B ( 12 C.F.R. § 1002 et seq.); and
(G) Texas Constitution, Article XVI, §50.
(3) Representing to a mortgage applicant that a charge or fee which is payable to the mortgage banker or originator is a "discount point" or otherwise confers a financial benefit on the mortgage applicant unless the loan closes and:
(A) the mortgage banker or mortgage company sponsoring the originator is the lender in the transaction. For purposes of this paragraph, the mortgage banker or mortgage company sponsoring the originator is deemed to be the lender if such entity is the payee as evidenced on the face of the note or other written evidence of indebtedness; or
(B) the mortgage banker or mortgage company sponsoring the originator is not the lender, but demonstrates by clear and convincing evidence that the lender has charged or collected discount point(s) or other fees which the mortgage banker or mortgage company sponsoring the originator has actually paid to the lender on behalf of the mortgage applicant, to buy down the interest rate on a residential mortgage loan.
(4) Failing to accurately respond within a reasonable time period to reasonable questions from a mortgage applicant concerning the scope and nature of the mortgage banker's or originator's services and any costs.
(c) Related Transactions. A mortgage banker or originator engages in a fraudulent and deceptive dealings for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §157.009(d) and §157.024(a)(3), deceptive practices for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(2), and a scheme to defraud a person for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(1) if, when in connection with the origination of a mortgage loan:
(1) The mortgage banker or originator offers other goods or services to a consumer in a separate but related transaction and the mortgage banker or originator engages in a false misleading or deceptive practice in the related transaction; or
(2) The mortgage banker or originator affiliates with another person that provides goods or services to a consumer in a separate but related transaction and the affiliated person performs false, misleading or deceptive acts, and the mortgage banker or originator to the mortgage transaction knew or should have known of the false, misleading or deceptive acts.
(d) Sharing or Splitting Origination Fees with the Mortgage Applicant. A mortgage banker or originator must not offer or agree to share or split any loan origination fees with a mortgage applicant, rebate all or a part of an origination fee to a mortgage applicant, reduce their established compensation to benefit a mortgage applicant, or otherwise provide money, a cash equivalent, or anything of value to a mortgage applicant in connection with providing mortgage loan origination services unless otherwise allowable as provided by Regulation X. An originator acting in the dual capacity of an originator and real estate sales broker or agent licensed under Occupations Code, Chapter 1101 may rebate his or her fees legitimately earned and derived from his or her real estate brokerage or sales agent services to the extent allowable under applicable law governing real estate brokers or sales agents; provided, the payment or other transfer described herein occurs as a part of closing and is properly reflected in the closing disclosure for the transaction. If a payment or other transfer described herein by an originator acting in the dual capacity of an originator and real estate broker or sales agent occurs after closing, a rebuttable presumption exists that the payment or transfer is derived from the originator's fees for mortgage origination services, and constitutes an improper sharing or splitting of fees with the mortgage applicant. The rebuttable presumption created by this subsection may only be overcome by clear and convincing evidence established by the mortgage banker or originator that the payment or transfer is instead derived from fees for real estate brokerage or sales agent services. A violation of this subsection (d) is be deemed to constitute improper dealings for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §157.009(d) and §157.024(a)(3), and unfair practices for purposes of Tex. Fin. Code §180.153(2).

7 Tex. Admin. Code § 81.202

The provisions of this §81.202 adopted to be effective July 5, 2012, 37 TexReg 4873; amended to be effective September 5, 2013, 38 TexReg 5703; Amended by Texas Register, Volume 46, Number 01, January 1, 2021, TexReg 0160, eff. 1/3/2021