Federal Housing Administration: Prohibited Sources of Minimum Cash Investment Under the National Housing Act-Interpretive Rule, 72219-72223 [2012-29361]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 234 / Wednesday, December 5, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1107
Business and industry, Children,
Consumer protection, Imports, Product
testing and certification, Records,
Record retention, Toys.
Dated November 29, 2012.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2012–29204 Filed 12–4–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
Accordingly, the Commission amends
16 CFR part 1107 as follows:
PART 1107—TESTING AND LABELING
PERTAINING TO PRODUCT
CERTIFICATION
1. The authority citation for part 1107
continues to read as follows:
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 203
[Docket No. FR–5679–N–01]
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2063, Sec. 3, 102 Pub.
L. 110–314, 122 Stat. 3016, 3017, 3022.
Subpart C—Certification of Children’s
Products
Periodic testing.
*
*
*
*
(f) A manufacturer must select
representative product samples to be
submitted to the third party conformity
assessment body for periodic testing.
The procedure used to select
representative product samples for
periodic testing must provide a basis for
inferring compliance about the
population of untested products
produced during the applicable periodic
testing interval. The number of samples
selected for the sampling procedure
must be sufficient to ensure continuing
compliance with all applicable
children’s product safety rules. The
manufacturer must document the
procedure used to select the product
samples for periodic testing and the
basis for inferring the compliance of the
product manufactured during the
periodic testing interval from the results
of the tested samples.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Add paragraph (a)(4) to § 1107.26 to
read as follows:
■
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Recordkeeping.
(a) * * *
(4) Records documenting the testing
of representative samples, as set forth in
§ 1107.21(f), including the number of
representative samples selected and the
procedure used to select representative
samples. Records also must include the
basis for inferring compliance of the
product manufactured during the
periodic testing interval from the results
of the tested samples;
*
*
*
*
*
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Office of the General Counsel,
HUD.
Interpretive rule.
HUD is issuing this
interpretive rule to clarify the scope of
the provision in the National Housing
Act that prohibits certain sources of a
homebuyer’s funds for the required
minimum cash investment for single
family mortgages to be insured by the
Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
Uncertainty has arisen as to the effect of
this provision on State and local
governments and their agencies’ and
instrumentalities’ homeownership
programs that provide funds for the
minimum cash investment. This rule
provides HUD’s interpretation that this
statutory provision does not remove the
availability of FHA insurance for use in
conjunction with State and local
government programs that provide
funds toward the required minimum
cash investment. Although interpretive
rules are exempt from public comment
under the Administrative Procedure
Act, HUD nevertheless invites public
comment on the interpretation provided
in this rule.
DATES: Effective Date: November 29,
2012. Comment Due Date: January 4,
2013.
SUMMARY:
*
§ 1107.26
AGENCY:
ACTION:
2. Add paragraph (f) to § 1107.21 to
read as follows:
■
§ 1107.21
Federal Housing Administration:
Prohibited Sources of Minimum Cash
Investment Under the National
Housing Act—Interpretive Rule
Interested persons are
invited to submit comments regarding
this rule to the Regulations Division,
Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development,
451 7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410–0500.
Communications must refer to the above
docket number and title. There are two
methods for submitting public
comments. All submissions must refer
to the above docket number and title.
1. Submission of Comments by Mail.
Comments may be submitted by mail to
the Regulations Division, Office of
General Counsel, Department of
ADDRESSES:
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Housing and Urban Development, 451
7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410–0500.
2. Electronic Submission of
Comments. Interested persons may
submit comments electronically through
the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly
encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic
submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare
and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to
make them immediately available to the
public. Comments submitted
electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be
viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public.
Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to
submit comments electronically.
Note: To receive consideration as public
comments, comments must be submitted
through one of the two methods specified
above. Again, all submissions must refer to
the docket number and title of the rule.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile
(FAX) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public
Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications
submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the above
address. Due to security measures at the
HUD Headquarters building, an
appointment to review the public
comments must be scheduled in
advance by calling the Regulations
Division at 202–708–3055 (this is not a
toll-free number). Individuals with
speech or hearing impairments may
access this number via TTY by calling
the Federal Relay Service at 800–877–
8339. Copies of all comments submitted
are available for inspection and
downloading at www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Millicent Potts, Associate General
Counsel for Insured Housing, Office of
General Counsel, U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development Room
9226, 202–708–2212. Hearing or speech
impaired individuals may access these
numbers via TTY by calling the toll free
Federal Relay Service at 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. The National Housing Act
Prohibition on Certain Sources of Cash
Investment
To qualify a mortgage for FHA
mortgage insurance, section 203(b)(9)(A)
of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C.
1709(b)(9)) requires the homebuyer to
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pay ‘‘in cash or equivalent on account
of the property an amount equal to not
less than 3.5 percent of the appraised
value of the property.’’ Some
homebuyers obtain this minimum
amount from sources other than their
own earnings or savings; for example, a
relative may give or loan them this
money or some part of it. However,
section 203(b)(9)(C) of the National
Housing Act provides that no part of
this required minimum investment may
consist of funds provided by the seller
of the property or any other person or
entity who benefits financially from the
sale of the property, or any person who
is reimbursed by any such person or
entity.
B. Federally Funded Homeownership
Programs
Governments—Federal, State, and
local—and their agencies and
instrumentalities have provided
assistance toward the minimum cash
investment as part of homeownership
programs from various public funds,
including appropriated funds, operating
tax revenues, taxable and tax-exempt
general obligation bonds, and surplus
revenues (for example, excess reserves).
Federal homeownership assistance
programs that have a cash investment
component include HUD’s
Neighborhood Stabilization Program,
Community Development Block Grant
(CDBG) program, and HOME Investment
Partnerships program, as well as the
Department of Veterans Affairs Home
Loan Guaranty Service and U.S.
Department of Agriculture’s Rural
Development Housing and Community
Facilities program. These Federal
homeownership assistance programs
have specified public purposes, such as
revitalizing communities affected by
foreclosures and vacancy, increasing the
homeownership rate in particular
geographies, making homeownership
affordable to underserved populations
and in high-cost markets.
For these Federal assistance programs,
Congress has authorized funds to be
distributed from the Treasury, often
through State and local governments or
their instrumentalities, for purposes of
supporting homeownership programs.
At the same time, section 203(b)(9)(C) of
the National Housing Act raises the
question whether the distribution of
these same Federal funds would cause
the mortgages originated on the basis of
support from such funds not to qualify
for FHA insurance. Reading the
prohibition in section 203(b)(9)(C) to
include other Federal agencies, State
and local governments, or their
instrumentalities disbursing government
funds in accordance with the
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requirements of government assistance
programs would place these
governments and instrumentalities in an
untenable position of having
governmental authority to provide
assistance toward the minimum cash
investment on the one hand, but being
unable to use FHA-insured mortgage
financing on the other. To do so would
also frustrate the statutory purpose of
these programs and of the FHA to
encourage and support
homeownership.1
C. Other Government Funded
Homeownership Assistance Programs
Another key source of
homeownership assistance programs,
such as assistance with closing costs, or
rehabilitation, is provided by State and
local governments, primarily through
housing finance agencies (HFAs).
According to the National Council of
State Housing Finance Agencies, HFAs
are generally State-chartered authorities
established by State governments to
help meet the affordable housing needs
of State residents.2 Although HFAs vary
widely in characteristics such as their
relationship to State government, most
are independent entities that operate
under the direction of a board of
directors appointed by their respective
State governors. They administer a wide
range of affordable housing and
community development programs.3
Using housing bonds, low-income
housing tax credits, HOME program
funds, and other Federal and State
resources, HFAs have crafted hundreds
of housing programs, including
homeownership, rental, and all types of
special-needs housing. HFAs have
provided affordable mortgages to 2.6
million families to buy their first homes
through mortgage revenue bond
programs.4
A recent study of HFAs found that
100 percent of the 51 HFAs surveyed
said that part of their mission is ‘‘to
assist low- and moderate-income
residents to purchase homes and be
1 In providing an overview of the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act if 2008 (HERA), the
Congressional Research Service in an August 19,
2008 report for Congress on HERA [RL34623] notes
that HERA authorizes $4 billion for state and local
governements to purchase and rehabilitate
abandoned and foreclosed houisng and that this
housing would be sold or rented to low- and
moderate-income individuals and families. See
https://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/
RL34623_20080819.pdf.
2 See https://answers.usa.gov/system/self
service.controller?CONFIGURATION=1000&
PARTITION_ID=1&CMD=VIEW_ARTICLE&
USERTYPE=1&LANGUAGE=en&COUNTRY=US&
ARTICLE_ID=10182.
3 See https://www.ncsha.org/about-hfas/hfaprograms.
4 See https://www.ncsha.org/about-hfas.
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successful homeowners.’’ 5 A majority of
those programs—in 2011, 88 percent (45
of 51) of State HFAs—include minimum
cash investment as a part of advancing
their mission.6 Federally backed
mortgage insurance is also a critical part
of the HFAs’ strategy. Of HFA loan
production in 2011, 86 percent involved
FHA, Veterans Administration (VA), or
Rural Housing Service loan or loan
insurance programs.
Many HFAs administer other State
and Federal housing assistance
programs such as homeless assistance,
CDBG, and State housing trust funds.
Local housing finance agencies operate
similarly but at the county, city, or other
municipal-entity level. In many cases, a
local agency may be the local
government itself. HFAs provide various
services to assist citizens within their
jurisdictions in attaining affordable
housing options. These services include
providing access to affordable mortgage
loans for purchasing a home,
counseling, money and other resources
for closing costs, and assistance for any
required investment in the mortgaged
property. Such funds come from
numerous sources. Program
beneficiaries are usually low- and
moderate-income individuals and
families who have gone through
homeownership counseling through
which they receive training on money
management, use of credit, and home
maintenance.
D. FHA and Minimum Cash Investment
Requirements
Since its enactment, the National
Housing Act (NHA) has required the
mortgagor to have a minimum
investment in the property being
purchased. For many years, the required
minimum investment was 3 percent of
the cost of acquisition, and is currently
3.5 percent of the home’s appraised
value. Prior to 2008, the statute and
regulations regarding the required
investment were silent, with minor
exceptions, as to permissible sources of
the mortgagor’s required investment.
However, FHA’s single family mortgage
credit handbook, Handbook 4155.1,7
provided administrative guidance to
approved mortgagees as to permissible
sources of the funds that a homebuyer
could use for the required minimum
investment. HUD’s policy under the
handbook provisions was to permit the
minimum cash investment to be
financed by sources including a family
5 See https://www.chfainfo.com/documents/HFA_
HEC_Report_March2012.pdf at 1.
6 Id. at 1.
7 See https://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/hudclips/
handbooks/hsgh/4155.1/41551HSGH.pdf.
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member, the borrower’s employer or
labor union, a governmental entity, a
charitable organization, or a close friend
with a clearly defined and documented
interest in the borrower. HUD’s policies
have always expressly prohibited the
seller from financing or providing a gift
of the required investment.
In the 1990s, several nonprofit entities
developed an approach to funding
homebuyers’ cash investments that
circumvented the handbook prohibition.
These entities obtained charitable status
from the Internal Revenue Service, and
then encouraged home sellers to use
their services and provided homebuyers
with all or part of the required cash
investment amount. After the funds
were provided by the nonprofit entity to
the homebuyer, the seller made a
donation to the nonprofit entity of the
amount of the assistance plus a fee. The
donated funds were directed to
subsequent homebuyers for the cash
investment on their homes. The
nonprofit does not conduct broad-based
fundraising but instead relies on sellers
and other businesses in real estate for
financial support. In effect, sellers and
other donors were indirectly funding
the homebuyer’s required minimum
investment by reimbursing the nonprofit
entity for each transaction.8
As the prevalence of channeling funds
from sellers through nonprofit entities
increased, FHA became concerned that
this practice as applied to homebuyers
with FHA-insured mortgages could
result in FHA insuring riskier loans. In
response, FHA published a proposed
rule in 1999 to prohibit this source of
the minimum cash investment.9 Under
the proposed rule, a gift of the buyer’s
required minimum cash investment
would disqualify the loan from FHA
insurance if the entity providing the gift
received funds directly or indirectly
from the seller of the property.
However, the proposed rule expressly
included funds provided by a ‘‘State or
local government agency or
instrumentality’’ in the category of
permissible sources of funds that the
homebuyer can apply toward the
minimum investment requirement.10
HUD withdrew the rule in January 2001
in light of widespread opposition to the
rule as proposed.11
The direct and indirect financing of
homebuyers’ minimum cash investment
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8 See
IRS Ruling 2006–27, available at https://
www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rr-06–27.pdf.
9 See Sources of Homeowner Downpayment, 64
FR 49956 (proposed Sept. 14, 1999).
10 See id. at 49958.
11 See Withdrawal of Proposed Rule on Sources
of Homeowner Downpayment Pursuant to Section
203 of the National Housing Act, 66 FR 2851
(January 12, 2001).
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by sellers continued to be a source of
concern following the withdrawal of the
proposed rule. In 2005, the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) published
a report on the risks raised by the
reimbursement of nonprofit entities by
sellers.12 The GAO findings noted that
sales prices were increased
commensurately to cover the cost
incurred by the seller, and thus resulted
in homeowners having less actual
equity in the newly acquired home.13
The GAO report also found that the
default and claim rate for homes
purchased with charitable gifts where
the nonprofit entity was reimbursed by
the seller was much higher than in those
cases where the homebuyer provided
his or her own money for the required
investment.14
Moreover, the IRS found that
organizations claiming to be charities
were being used to funnel money from
sellers to buyers through self-serving,
circular-financing arrangements, and
that in a typical scheme, there is a direct
correlation between the amount of the
funds provided to the buyer and the
payment received from the seller.15 On
May 4, 2006, the IRS issued Revenue
Ruling 2006–27, which determined that
organizations that indirectly provide
cash investments funded by sellers to
homebuyers do not qualify as taxexempt charities.16 In the press
announcement accompanying the
ruling, the IRS stated that the ruling
makes clear that organizations operating
seller-funded programs are not charities
because they do not meet the
requirements of section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code.17 The IRS also
found that the seller pays the
organization only if the sale closes, and
the organization usually charges an
additional fee for its services.18
On May 11, 2007, HUD again
published a proposed rule that
prohibited funds provided by the seller
as a source for the minimum cash
investment.19 This provision, entitled
‘‘Restrictions on Seller Funding,’’
12 See United States Government Accountability
Office, ‘‘Mortgage Finance—Additional Action
Needed to Manage Risk of FHA-Insured Loans with
Down Payment Assistance,’’ (Nov. 2005) available
at https://www.gao.gov/new.items/d0624.pdf.
13 See id. at 25.
14 See id. at 3–4.
15 See https://www.irs.gov/Charities-&-Non-Profits/
Seller-Funded-Down-Payment-Assistance-Programs
-Are-Not-Tax-Exempt.
16 See https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rr-0627.pdf.
17 See https://www.irs.gov/uac/IRS-Targets-DownPayment-Assistance-Scams;-Seller-FundedPrograms-Do-Not-Qualify-As-Tax-Exempt.
18 Id.
19 See Standards for Mortgagor’s Investment in
Mortgaged Property, 72 FR. 27048 (proposed May
11, 2007).
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72221
proposed to prohibit cash investment
amounts that consists, in whole or in
part, of funds provided by any of the
following parties before, during or after
closing of the property sale: ‘‘(1) The
seller, or any other person or entity that
financially benefits from the transaction;
or (2) any third party or entity * * *
that is reimbursed directly or indirectly
by any of the parties listed in clause
(1).’’ 20 Once again, the May 2007
proposed rule expressly exempted funds
from ‘‘a federal, state, or local
government agency or instrumentality’’
from the category of prohibited sources
for funds toward the required minimum
investment.21 HUD published its final
rule on October 1, 2007.22 On the
effective date of the rule, a lawsuit
challenging the rule was filed against
HUD in the U.S. district court for the
Eastern District of California, and in
February 2008 the court set aside the
final rule.23
The 2005 GAO report, the 2006 IRS
Ruling, and the judicial invalidation of
HUD’s final rule eventually led to
congressional action on the issue in
2008. Section 2113 of the Housing and
Economic Recovery Act of 2008 (HERA),
signed into law on July 30, 2008,
amended the NHA with language that is
identical in relevant part to the language
in HUD’s 2007 final rule. Section 2113
of HERA amended section 203(b)(9) of
the NHA to provide that mortgages
eligible for FHA insurance must ‘‘[b]e
executed by a mortgagor who shall have
paid in cash or its equivalent, on
account of the property an amount equal
to not less than 3.5 percent of the
appraised value of the property or such
larger amount as the Secretary may
determine.’’ Section 203(b)(9) was also
amended to include a new subparagraph
(9)(C), which specifies prohibited
sources for a mortgagor’s minimum
investment. Section 203(b)(9)(C) of the
NHA states:
PROHIBITED SOURCES.—In no case shall
the funds required by subparagraph (A)
consist, in whole or in part, of funds
provided by any of the following parties
before, during, or after closing of the property
sale:
(i) The seller or any other person or entity
that financially benefits from the transaction.
(ii) Any third party or entity that is
reimbursed, directly or indirectly, by any of
the parties described in clause (i).
Since HERA’s enactment, FHA has
not replaced the regulation that was
20 See
id. at 27049.
id. at 27051.
22 See Standards for Mortgagor’s Investment in
Mortgaged Property, 72 FR 56002 (final Oct. 1,
2007).
23 See Nehemiah Corp. of America v. Jackson, 546
F. Supp. 2d 830, 848 (E.D. Cal. 2008).
21 See
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vacated by the district court in February
2008. However, Mortgagee Letter 2008–
23 provides notification of the statutory
revisions to the cash investment
requirements imposed by HERA.24
Instead of 3 percent of the cost of
acquisition, the required investment
was changed by HERA to 3.5 percent of
the appraised value of the property.
Aside from the statement that closing
costs (i.e., the present allowed seller
incentive of 6 percent) could not be
used to meet the 3.5 percent appraised
value minimum investment
requirement, the Mortgagee Letter is
silent regarding the source of the
required cash investment by the
mortgagor.
II. This Interpretive Issue
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A. Conjunction of Government Housing
Assistance Programs and FHA-Insured
Mortgages
It is HUD’s interpretation that section
203(b)(9)(C) of the NHA does not
prohibit FHA from insuring mortgages
originated as part of the homeownership
programs of Federal, State, or local
governments or their agencies or
instrumentalities when such agencies or
instrumentalities also directly provide
funds toward the required minimum
cash investment.25 The addition of a
statutory provision on prohibited
sources of cash investment funds, as
part of the amendments to section
203(b)(9) of the NHA enacted in HERA,
was intended to preclude the abuse of
the program where a seller (or other
interested or related party) funded the
homebuyer’s cash investment after the
closing by reimbursing third-party
entities and added the cost of this
reimbursement to the sales price of the
home, thus inflating the price of the
home beyond its market value. It is
HUD’s interpretation that the amended
section 203(b)(9) does not exclude as a
permissible source of cash investment,
funds provided directly by Federal,
24 See Mortgagee Letter 2008–23, available at
https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/
huddoc?id=DOC_19737.pdf.
25 In Mortgagee Letter 94–2, FHA defined a
government agency or instrumentality for purposes
of section 528 of the NHA. See https://
portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/
huddoc?id=DOC_16755.txt. This definition applies
here. That definition provides that the entity must
have been established by a governmental body or
with governmental approval or under special law to
serve a particular public purpose or designated as
an instrumentality by law (statute or court opinion)
and the majority of governing board and/or
principal officers named or approved by
governmental body/officials, or the government
body approves all major decisions and/or
expenditures, or the government body provides
funds through direct appropriations/grants/loans,
with related controls applicable to all activities of
entity.
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State, or local governments, or their
agencies or instrumentalities as part of
their respective homeownership
programs.
HUD finds support for this
interpretation in the surrounding
provisions in HERA and in the
legislative history of the amendment to
section 203(b)(9). First, HERA itself
authorized governmental
homeownership programs that include a
cash investment component, and
interpreting section 203(b)(9)(C) to deny
FHA insurance to mortgages resulting
from such programs would frustrate
their statutory purpose. In section 2301
of HERA, Congress authorized the first
increment of funding for the
Neighborhood Stabilization Program
(NSP). NSP provides funds to low- and
moderate-income homebuyers for the
cash investment on purchasing lenderforeclosed single family properties
when the property will be the buyer’s
primary residence and is located in an
eligible target area. NSP funds are
distributed through State and local
government agencies and
instrumentalities. NSP funds are also
used to purchase vacant or distressed
properties, which may then be resold by
the purchasing agency or
instrumentality to low- or moderateincome buyers with funds toward the
minimum cash investment. Access to
FHA mortgage insurance is often
essential to making such programs
work.26 Thus, an interpretation of
section 203(b)(9)(C) that precludes
governments and their agencies and
instrumentalities government agencies
from providing funding toward the
minimum cash investment for an FHAinsured mortgage would undercut a
central purpose of NSP and similar
Federal, State, and local government
programs.27
26 HERA was enacted in 2008. FHA data shows
that in that year, there was a dramatic increase in
FHA’s market share. From 2005 through 2007,
FHA’s market share ranged from 2.6 to 3.9% of the
national mortgage market. In 2008, it rose to almost
20% of the market share. See ‘‘FHA-Insured Single
Family Mortgage Originations and Market Share
Report, 2009–Q4, https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/
documents/huddoc?id=DOC_16681.pdf (last visited
7–3–2012). See also FHA’s Annual Report to
Congress on the Fiscal Year 2012 Financial Status
of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund,
issued November 16, 2012, which has updated
information on FHA’s market share, at https://
portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/
press_releases_media_advisories/2012/HUDNo.12171.
27 See United Savings Ass’n v. Timbers of Inwood
Forest Assocs., Ltd., 484 U.S. 365, 371 (1988)
(statutory provisions should be interpreted to avoid
interpreting inconsistencies between provisions);
see also Babitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of
Communities for a Great Oregon, 515 U.S. 687
(1995); Gade v. Nat’l Solid Waste Management
Ass’n, 505 U.S. 88, 100–01 (1992).
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Second, the legislative history of the
amendment to section 203(b)(9)(C) also
supports HUD’s interpretation that it
does not exclude State and local
government home ownership programs
from FHA insurance eligibility. In a
statement supporting the amendment to
section 203(b)(9)(C), Senator Dodd
explained that ‘‘this bill eliminates the
seller-funded downpayment assistance
program.’’ 28 There is no indication that
State and local governments or their
agencies or instrumentalities were to be
within the scope of the amendment. The
Senate Committee Report accompanying
a 2007 bill containing statutory
language 29 identical to what was
eventually enacted in HERA further
support this interpretation. The report
explained that the ‘‘section also
prohibits seller-funded downpayment
entities from providing any of this
required cash investment.’’ 30 It noted
that ‘‘[s]ince this legislation was passed
by the Committee, HUD has
promulgated a regulation that also
prohibits these entities from providing
downpayment assistance funds.’’ 31 As
discussed above, the 2007 HUD rule to
which the Senate Report refers
expressly excluded State and local
government agencies and
instrumentalities from the category
prohibited sources for the minimum
cash investment. The report’s
identification of ‘‘seller-funded
downpayment entities’’ as the targets of
both HUD’s proposed rule and of the
bill indicates that the provision, which
is identical to what was enacted in
HERA, does not include State and local
governments or their agencies or
instrumentalities.
B. Scope of Interpretive Rule
Under section 203(b)(9)(A) of the
NHA, the homebuyer’s investment in
the property must be at least 3.5 percent
of its appraised value. So long as the
homebuyer makes this minimum
required investment from his or her own
(or other approved) funds, any person,
even one associated with the
transaction, may contribute additional
funds towards the borrower’s costs
without violating section 203(b)(9)(C).
This interpretive rule only applies to
funds that constitute all or part of the
28 See 154 Cong. Rec. S6354–S6356 (July 7, 2008)
available at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CREC2008-07-07/html/CREC-2008-07-07-pt1-PgS63542.htm.
29 See FHA Modernization Act of 2007, S. 2338,
(2007) § 103.
30 S. Rep. No. 110–227, at 6 (Nov.13, 2007),
available at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CRPT110srpt227/pdf/CRPT-110srpt227.pdf.
31 Id. (emphasis added).
E:\FR\FM\05DER1.SGM
05DER1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 234 / Wednesday, December 5, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
3.5 percent minimum investment
requirement.
C. Conclusion
Accordingly, HUD interprets NHA
section 203(b)(9)’s ‘‘prohibited sources’’
provision in subsection (C) as not
including funds provided directly by
Federal, State, or local governments, or
their agencies and instrumentalities in
connection with their respective
homeownership programs.
D. Solicitation of Comment
This interpretive rule represents
HUD’s interpretation of section
203(b)(9)(C) and is exempt from the
notice and comment requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act. See 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(A). Nevertheless, HUD
is interested in receiving feedback from
the public on this interpretation,
specifically with respect to clarity and
scope.
Dated: November 29, 2012.
Helen R. Kanovsky,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2012–29361 Filed 12–4–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210–67–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 180
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2012–0202; FRL–9371–6]
Clodinafop-Propargyl; Pesticide
Tolerance
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
This regulation reduces the
established tolerance for residues of
clodinafop-propargyl in or on wheat,
grain. Syngenta Crop Protection, LLC
requested this tolerance change under
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act (FFDCA).
DATES: This regulation is effective
December 5, 2012. Objections and
requests for hearings must be received
on or before February 4, 2013 and must
be filed in accordance with the
instructions provided in 40 CFR part
178 (see also Unit I.C. of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION).
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPP–2012–0202, is
available at https://www.regulations.gov
or at the Office of Pesticide Programs
Regulatory Public Docket (OPP Docket)
in the Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West
Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:02 Dec 04, 2012
Jkt 229001
NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001. The
Public Reading Room is open from 8:30
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, excluding legal holidays. The
telephone number for the Public
Reading Room is (202) 566–1744, and
the telephone number for the OPP
Docket is (703) 305–5805. Please review
the visitor instructions and additional
information about the docket available
at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mindy Ondish, Registration Division
(7505P), Office of Pesticide Programs,
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW., Washington,
DC 20460–0001; telephone number:
(703) 605–0723; email address:
ondish.mindy@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you are an agricultural
producer, food manufacturer, or
pesticide manufacturer. The following
list of North American Industrial
Classification System (NAICS) codes is
not intended to be exhaustive, but rather
provides a guide to help readers
determine whether this document
applies to them. Potentially affected
entities may include:
• Crop production (NAICS code 111).
• Animal production (NAICS code
112).
• Food manufacturing (NAICS code
311).
• Pesticide manufacturing (NAICS
code 32532).
B. How can I get electronic access to
other related information?
You may access a frequently updated
electronic version of EPA’s tolerance
regulations at 40 CFR part 180 through
the Government Printing Office’s e-CFR
site at https://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/
text/text-idx?&c=ecfr&tpl=/ecfrbrowse/
Title40/40tab_02.tpl. To access the
OCSPP test guidelines referenced in this
document electronically, please go to
https://www.epa.gov/ocspp and select
‘‘Test Methods and Guidelines.’’
C. How can I file an objection or hearing
request?
Under FFDCA section 408(g), 21
U.S.C. 346a, any person may file an
objection to any aspect of this regulation
and may also request a hearing on those
objections. You must file your objection
or request a hearing on this regulation
in accordance with the instructions
provided in 40 CFR part 178. To ensure
proper receipt by EPA, you must
identify docket ID number EPA–HQ–
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
72223
OPP–2012–0202 in the subject line on
the first page of your submission. All
objections and requests for a hearing
must be in writing, and must be
received by the Hearing Clerk on or
before February 4, 2013. Addresses for
mail and hand delivery of objections
and hearing requests are provided in 40
CFR 178.25(b).
In addition to filing an objection or
hearing request with the Hearing Clerk
as described in 40 CFR part 178, please
submit a copy of the filing (excluding
any Confidential Business Information
(CBI)) for inclusion in the public docket.
Information not marked confidential
pursuant to 40 CFR part 2 may be
disclosed publicly by EPA without prior
notice. Submit the non-CBI copy of your
objection or hearing request, identified
by docket ID number EPA–HQ–OPP–
2012–0202, by one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
• Mail: OPP Docket, Environmental
Protection Agency Docket Center (EPA/
DC), (28221T), 1200 Pennsylvania Ave.
NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001.
• Hand Delivery: To make special
arrangements for hand delivery or
delivery of boxed information, please
follow the instructions at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.htm.
Additional instructions on
commenting or visiting the docket,
along with more information about
dockets generally, is available at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
II. Summary of Petitioned-for Tolerance
In the Federal Register of October 17,
2012 (77 FR 63782) (FRL–9366–2), EPA
issued a document pursuant to FFDCA
section 408(d)(3), 21 U.S.C. 346a(d)(3),
announcing the filing of a pesticide
petition (PP 1F7955) by Syngenta Crop
Protection, LLC, P.O. Box 18300,
Greensboro, NC 27419–8300. The
petition requested that 40 CFR 180.559
be amended by lowering the established
tolerance for residues of the herbicide
clodinafop-propargyl in or on wheat,
grain from 0.1 to 0.02 parts per million
(ppm). That document referenced a
summary of the petition prepared by
Syngenta Crop Protection, LLC, the
registrant, which is available in the
docket, https://www.regulations.gov.
Comments were received on the notice
of filing. EPA’s response to these
comments is discussed in Unit IV.C.
Finally, EPA is revising the tolerance
E:\FR\FM\05DER1.SGM
05DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 234 (Wednesday, December 5, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 72219-72223]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-29361]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENT
24 CFR Part 203
[Docket No. FR-5679-N-01]
Federal Housing Administration: Prohibited Sources of Minimum
Cash Investment Under the National Housing Act--Interpretive Rule
AGENCY: Office of the General Counsel, HUD.
ACTION: Interpretive rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: HUD is issuing this interpretive rule to clarify the scope of
the provision in the National Housing Act that prohibits certain
sources of a homebuyer's funds for the required minimum cash investment
for single family mortgages to be insured by the Federal Housing
Administration (FHA). Uncertainty has arisen as to the effect of this
provision on State and local governments and their agencies' and
instrumentalities' homeownership programs that provide funds for the
minimum cash investment. This rule provides HUD's interpretation that
this statutory provision does not remove the availability of FHA
insurance for use in conjunction with State and local government
programs that provide funds toward the required minimum cash
investment. Although interpretive rules are exempt from public comment
under the Administrative Procedure Act, HUD nevertheless invites public
comment on the interpretation provided in this rule.
DATES: Effective Date: November 29, 2012. Comment Due Date: January 4,
2013.
ADDRESSES: Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding
this rule to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel,
Department of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room
10276, Washington, DC 20410-0500. Communications must refer to the
above docket number and title. There are two methods for submitting
public comments. All submissions must refer to the above docket number
and title.
1. Submission of Comments by Mail. Comments may be submitted by
mail to the Regulations Division, Office of General Counsel, Department
of Housing and Urban Development, 451 7th Street SW., Room 10276,
Washington, DC 20410-0500.
2. Electronic Submission of Comments. Interested persons may submit
comments electronically through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov. HUD strongly encourages commenters to submit
comments electronically. Electronic submission of comments allows the
commenter maximum time to prepare and submit a comment, ensures timely
receipt by HUD, and enables HUD to make them immediately available to
the public. Comments submitted electronically through the
www.regulations.gov Web site can be viewed by other commenters and
interested members of the public. Commenters should follow the
instructions provided on that site to submit comments electronically.
Note: To receive consideration as public comments, comments
must be submitted through one of the two methods specified above.
Again, all submissions must refer to the docket number and title of
the rule.
No Facsimile Comments. Facsimile (FAX) comments are not acceptable.
Public Inspection of Public Comments. All properly submitted
comments and communications submitted to HUD will be available for
public inspection and copying between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays at the
above address. Due to security measures at the HUD Headquarters
building, an appointment to review the public comments must be
scheduled in advance by calling the Regulations Division at 202-708-
3055 (this is not a toll-free number). Individuals with speech or
hearing impairments may access this number via TTY by calling the
Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Copies of all comments submitted
are available for inspection and downloading at www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Millicent Potts, Associate General
Counsel for Insured Housing, Office of General Counsel, U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development Room 9226, 202-708-2212. Hearing or
speech impaired individuals may access these numbers via TTY by calling
the toll free Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. The National Housing Act Prohibition on Certain Sources of Cash
Investment
To qualify a mortgage for FHA mortgage insurance, section
203(b)(9)(A) of the National Housing Act (12 U.S.C. 1709(b)(9))
requires the homebuyer to
[[Page 72220]]
pay ``in cash or equivalent on account of the property an amount equal
to not less than 3.5 percent of the appraised value of the property.''
Some homebuyers obtain this minimum amount from sources other than
their own earnings or savings; for example, a relative may give or loan
them this money or some part of it. However, section 203(b)(9)(C) of
the National Housing Act provides that no part of this required minimum
investment may consist of funds provided by the seller of the property
or any other person or entity who benefits financially from the sale of
the property, or any person who is reimbursed by any such person or
entity.
B. Federally Funded Homeownership Programs
Governments--Federal, State, and local--and their agencies and
instrumentalities have provided assistance toward the minimum cash
investment as part of homeownership programs from various public funds,
including appropriated funds, operating tax revenues, taxable and tax-
exempt general obligation bonds, and surplus revenues (for example,
excess reserves). Federal homeownership assistance programs that have a
cash investment component include HUD's Neighborhood Stabilization
Program, Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program, and HOME
Investment Partnerships program, as well as the Department of Veterans
Affairs Home Loan Guaranty Service and U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Rural Development Housing and Community Facilities program. These
Federal homeownership assistance programs have specified public
purposes, such as revitalizing communities affected by foreclosures and
vacancy, increasing the homeownership rate in particular geographies,
making homeownership affordable to underserved populations and in high-
cost markets.
For these Federal assistance programs, Congress has authorized
funds to be distributed from the Treasury, often through State and
local governments or their instrumentalities, for purposes of
supporting homeownership programs. At the same time, section
203(b)(9)(C) of the National Housing Act raises the question whether
the distribution of these same Federal funds would cause the mortgages
originated on the basis of support from such funds not to qualify for
FHA insurance. Reading the prohibition in section 203(b)(9)(C) to
include other Federal agencies, State and local governments, or their
instrumentalities disbursing government funds in accordance with the
requirements of government assistance programs would place these
governments and instrumentalities in an untenable position of having
governmental authority to provide assistance toward the minimum cash
investment on the one hand, but being unable to use FHA-insured
mortgage financing on the other. To do so would also frustrate the
statutory purpose of these programs and of the FHA to encourage and
support homeownership.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In providing an overview of the Housing and Economic
Recovery Act if 2008 (HERA), the Congressional Research Service in
an August 19, 2008 report for Congress on HERA [RL34623] notes that
HERA authorizes $4 billion for state and local governements to
purchase and rehabilitate abandoned and foreclosed houisng and that
this housing would be sold or rented to low- and moderate-income
individuals and families. See https://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/RL34623_20080819.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Other Government Funded Homeownership Assistance Programs
Another key source of homeownership assistance programs, such as
assistance with closing costs, or rehabilitation, is provided by State
and local governments, primarily through housing finance agencies
(HFAs). According to the National Council of State Housing Finance
Agencies, HFAs are generally State-chartered authorities established by
State governments to help meet the affordable housing needs of State
residents.\2\ Although HFAs vary widely in characteristics such as
their relationship to State government, most are independent entities
that operate under the direction of a board of directors appointed by
their respective State governors. They administer a wide range of
affordable housing and community development programs.\3\ Using housing
bonds, low-income housing tax credits, HOME program funds, and other
Federal and State resources, HFAs have crafted hundreds of housing
programs, including homeownership, rental, and all types of special-
needs housing. HFAs have provided affordable mortgages to 2.6 million
families to buy their first homes through mortgage revenue bond
programs.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See https://answers.usa.gov/system/selfservice.controller?CONFIGURATION=1000&PARTITION_ID=1&CMD=VIEW_ARTICLE&USERTYPE=1&LANGUAGE=en&COUNTRY=US&ARTICLE_ID=10182.
\3\ See https://www.ncsha.org/about-hfas/hfa-programs.
\4\ See https://www.ncsha.org/about-hfas.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A recent study of HFAs found that 100 percent of the 51 HFAs
surveyed said that part of their mission is ``to assist low- and
moderate-income residents to purchase homes and be successful
homeowners.'' \5\ A majority of those programs--in 2011, 88 percent (45
of 51) of State HFAs--include minimum cash investment as a part of
advancing their mission.\6\ Federally backed mortgage insurance is also
a critical part of the HFAs' strategy. Of HFA loan production in 2011,
86 percent involved FHA, Veterans Administration (VA), or Rural Housing
Service loan or loan insurance programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ See https://www.chfainfo.com/documents/HFA_HEC_Report_March2012.pdf at 1.
\6\ Id. at 1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Many HFAs administer other State and Federal housing assistance
programs such as homeless assistance, CDBG, and State housing trust
funds. Local housing finance agencies operate similarly but at the
county, city, or other municipal-entity level. In many cases, a local
agency may be the local government itself. HFAs provide various
services to assist citizens within their jurisdictions in attaining
affordable housing options. These services include providing access to
affordable mortgage loans for purchasing a home, counseling, money and
other resources for closing costs, and assistance for any required
investment in the mortgaged property. Such funds come from numerous
sources. Program beneficiaries are usually low- and moderate-income
individuals and families who have gone through homeownership counseling
through which they receive training on money management, use of credit,
and home maintenance.
D. FHA and Minimum Cash Investment Requirements
Since its enactment, the National Housing Act (NHA) has required
the mortgagor to have a minimum investment in the property being
purchased. For many years, the required minimum investment was 3
percent of the cost of acquisition, and is currently 3.5 percent of the
home's appraised value. Prior to 2008, the statute and regulations
regarding the required investment were silent, with minor exceptions,
as to permissible sources of the mortgagor's required investment.
However, FHA's single family mortgage credit handbook, Handbook
4155.1,\7\ provided administrative guidance to approved mortgagees as
to permissible sources of the funds that a homebuyer could use for the
required minimum investment. HUD's policy under the handbook provisions
was to permit the minimum cash investment to be financed by sources
including a family
[[Page 72221]]
member, the borrower's employer or labor union, a governmental entity,
a charitable organization, or a close friend with a clearly defined and
documented interest in the borrower. HUD's policies have always
expressly prohibited the seller from financing or providing a gift of
the required investment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See https://www.hud.gov/offices/adm/hudclips/handbooks/hsgh/4155.1/41551HSGH.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the 1990s, several nonprofit entities developed an approach to
funding homebuyers' cash investments that circumvented the handbook
prohibition. These entities obtained charitable status from the
Internal Revenue Service, and then encouraged home sellers to use their
services and provided homebuyers with all or part of the required cash
investment amount. After the funds were provided by the nonprofit
entity to the homebuyer, the seller made a donation to the nonprofit
entity of the amount of the assistance plus a fee. The donated funds
were directed to subsequent homebuyers for the cash investment on their
homes. The nonprofit does not conduct broad-based fundraising but
instead relies on sellers and other businesses in real estate for
financial support. In effect, sellers and other donors were indirectly
funding the homebuyer's required minimum investment by reimbursing the
nonprofit entity for each transaction.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ See IRS Ruling 2006-27, available at https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rr-06-27.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the prevalence of channeling funds from sellers through
nonprofit entities increased, FHA became concerned that this practice
as applied to homebuyers with FHA-insured mortgages could result in FHA
insuring riskier loans. In response, FHA published a proposed rule in
1999 to prohibit this source of the minimum cash investment.\9\ Under
the proposed rule, a gift of the buyer's required minimum cash
investment would disqualify the loan from FHA insurance if the entity
providing the gift received funds directly or indirectly from the
seller of the property. However, the proposed rule expressly included
funds provided by a ``State or local government agency or
instrumentality'' in the category of permissible sources of funds that
the homebuyer can apply toward the minimum investment requirement.\10\
HUD withdrew the rule in January 2001 in light of widespread opposition
to the rule as proposed.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See Sources of Homeowner Downpayment, 64 FR 49956 (proposed
Sept. 14, 1999).
\10\ See id. at 49958.
\11\ See Withdrawal of Proposed Rule on Sources of Homeowner
Downpayment Pursuant to Section 203 of the National Housing Act, 66
FR 2851 (January 12, 2001).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The direct and indirect financing of homebuyers' minimum cash
investment by sellers continued to be a source of concern following the
withdrawal of the proposed rule. In 2005, the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) published a report on the risks raised by the
reimbursement of nonprofit entities by sellers.\12\ The GAO findings
noted that sales prices were increased commensurately to cover the cost
incurred by the seller, and thus resulted in homeowners having less
actual equity in the newly acquired home.\13\ The GAO report also found
that the default and claim rate for homes purchased with charitable
gifts where the nonprofit entity was reimbursed by the seller was much
higher than in those cases where the homebuyer provided his or her own
money for the required investment.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See United States Government Accountability Office,
``Mortgage Finance--Additional Action Needed to Manage Risk of FHA-
Insured Loans with Down Payment Assistance,'' (Nov. 2005) available
at https://www.gao.gov/new.items/d0624.pdf.
\13\ See id. at 25.
\14\ See id. at 3-4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, the IRS found that organizations claiming to be charities
were being used to funnel money from sellers to buyers through self-
serving, circular-financing arrangements, and that in a typical scheme,
there is a direct correlation between the amount of the funds provided
to the buyer and the payment received from the seller.\15\ On May 4,
2006, the IRS issued Revenue Ruling 2006-27, which determined that
organizations that indirectly provide cash investments funded by
sellers to homebuyers do not qualify as tax-exempt charities.\16\ In
the press announcement accompanying the ruling, the IRS stated that the
ruling makes clear that organizations operating seller-funded programs
are not charities because they do not meet the requirements of section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.\17\ The IRS also found that the
seller pays the organization only if the sale closes, and the
organization usually charges an additional fee for its services.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See https://www.irs.gov/Charities-&-Non-Profits/Seller-Funded-Down-Payment-Assistance-Programs-Are-Not-Tax-Exempt.
\16\ See https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/rr-06-27.pdf.
\17\ See https://www.irs.gov/uac/IRS-Targets-Down-Payment-Assistance-Scams;-Seller-Funded-Programs-Do-Not-Qualify-As-Tax-
Exempt.
\18\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 11, 2007, HUD again published a proposed rule that
prohibited funds provided by the seller as a source for the minimum
cash investment.\19\ This provision, entitled ``Restrictions on Seller
Funding,'' proposed to prohibit cash investment amounts that consists,
in whole or in part, of funds provided by any of the following parties
before, during or after closing of the property sale: ``(1) The seller,
or any other person or entity that financially benefits from the
transaction; or (2) any third party or entity * * * that is reimbursed
directly or indirectly by any of the parties listed in clause (1).''
\20\ Once again, the May 2007 proposed rule expressly exempted funds
from ``a federal, state, or local government agency or
instrumentality'' from the category of prohibited sources for funds
toward the required minimum investment.\21\ HUD published its final
rule on October 1, 2007.\22\ On the effective date of the rule, a
lawsuit challenging the rule was filed against HUD in the U.S. district
court for the Eastern District of California, and in February 2008 the
court set aside the final rule.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ See Standards for Mortgagor's Investment in Mortgaged
Property, 72 FR. 27048 (proposed May 11, 2007).
\20\ See id. at 27049.
\21\ See id. at 27051.
\22\ See Standards for Mortgagor's Investment in Mortgaged
Property, 72 FR 56002 (final Oct. 1, 2007).
\23\ See Nehemiah Corp. of America v. Jackson, 546 F. Supp. 2d
830, 848 (E.D. Cal. 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2005 GAO report, the 2006 IRS Ruling, and the judicial
invalidation of HUD's final rule eventually led to congressional action
on the issue in 2008. Section 2113 of the Housing and Economic Recovery
Act of 2008 (HERA), signed into law on July 30, 2008, amended the NHA
with language that is identical in relevant part to the language in
HUD's 2007 final rule. Section 2113 of HERA amended section 203(b)(9)
of the NHA to provide that mortgages eligible for FHA insurance must
``[b]e executed by a mortgagor who shall have paid in cash or its
equivalent, on account of the property an amount equal to not less than
3.5 percent of the appraised value of the property or such larger
amount as the Secretary may determine.'' Section 203(b)(9) was also
amended to include a new subparagraph (9)(C), which specifies
prohibited sources for a mortgagor's minimum investment. Section
203(b)(9)(C) of the NHA states:
PROHIBITED SOURCES.--In no case shall the funds required by
subparagraph (A) consist, in whole or in part, of funds provided by
any of the following parties before, during, or after closing of the
property sale:
(i) The seller or any other person or entity that financially
benefits from the transaction.
(ii) Any third party or entity that is reimbursed, directly or
indirectly, by any of the parties described in clause (i).
Since HERA's enactment, FHA has not replaced the regulation that
was
[[Page 72222]]
vacated by the district court in February 2008. However, Mortgagee
Letter 2008-23 provides notification of the statutory revisions to the
cash investment requirements imposed by HERA.\24\ Instead of 3 percent
of the cost of acquisition, the required investment was changed by HERA
to 3.5 percent of the appraised value of the property. Aside from the
statement that closing costs (i.e., the present allowed seller
incentive of 6 percent) could not be used to meet the 3.5 percent
appraised value minimum investment requirement, the Mortgagee Letter is
silent regarding the source of the required cash investment by the
mortgagor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ See Mortgagee Letter 2008-23, available at https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=DOC_19737.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. This Interpretive Issue
A. Conjunction of Government Housing Assistance Programs and FHA-
Insured Mortgages
It is HUD's interpretation that section 203(b)(9)(C) of the NHA
does not prohibit FHA from insuring mortgages originated as part of the
homeownership programs of Federal, State, or local governments or their
agencies or instrumentalities when such agencies or instrumentalities
also directly provide funds toward the required minimum cash
investment.\25\ The addition of a statutory provision on prohibited
sources of cash investment funds, as part of the amendments to section
203(b)(9) of the NHA enacted in HERA, was intended to preclude the
abuse of the program where a seller (or other interested or related
party) funded the homebuyer's cash investment after the closing by
reimbursing third-party entities and added the cost of this
reimbursement to the sales price of the home, thus inflating the price
of the home beyond its market value. It is HUD's interpretation that
the amended section 203(b)(9) does not exclude as a permissible source
of cash investment, funds provided directly by Federal, State, or local
governments, or their agencies or instrumentalities as part of their
respective homeownership programs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ In Mortgagee Letter 94-2, FHA defined a government agency
or instrumentality for purposes of section 528 of the NHA. See
https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=DOC_16755.txt.
This definition applies here. That definition provides that the
entity must have been established by a governmental body or with
governmental approval or under special law to serve a particular
public purpose or designated as an instrumentality by law (statute
or court opinion) and the majority of governing board and/or
principal officers named or approved by governmental body/officials,
or the government body approves all major decisions and/or
expenditures, or the government body provides funds through direct
appropriations/grants/loans, with related controls applicable to all
activities of entity.
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HUD finds support for this interpretation in the surrounding
provisions in HERA and in the legislative history of the amendment to
section 203(b)(9). First, HERA itself authorized governmental
homeownership programs that include a cash investment component, and
interpreting section 203(b)(9)(C) to deny FHA insurance to mortgages
resulting from such programs would frustrate their statutory purpose.
In section 2301 of HERA, Congress authorized the first increment of
funding for the Neighborhood Stabilization Program (NSP). NSP provides
funds to low- and moderate-income homebuyers for the cash investment on
purchasing lender-foreclosed single family properties when the property
will be the buyer's primary residence and is located in an eligible
target area. NSP funds are distributed through State and local
government agencies and instrumentalities. NSP funds are also used to
purchase vacant or distressed properties, which may then be resold by
the purchasing agency or instrumentality to low- or moderate-income
buyers with funds toward the minimum cash investment. Access to FHA
mortgage insurance is often essential to making such programs work.\26\
Thus, an interpretation of section 203(b)(9)(C) that precludes
governments and their agencies and instrumentalities government
agencies from providing funding toward the minimum cash investment for
an FHA-insured mortgage would undercut a central purpose of NSP and
similar Federal, State, and local government programs.\27\
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\26\ HERA was enacted in 2008. FHA data shows that in that year,
there was a dramatic increase in FHA's market share. From 2005
through 2007, FHA's market share ranged from 2.6 to 3.9% of the
national mortgage market. In 2008, it rose to almost 20% of the
market share. See ``FHA-Insured Single Family Mortgage Originations
and Market Share Report, 2009-Q4, https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=DOC_16681.pdf (last visited 7-3-2012). See also
FHA's Annual Report to Congress on the Fiscal Year 2012 Financial
Status of the FHA Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund, issued November
16, 2012, which has updated information on FHA's market share, at
https://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD?src=/press/press_releases_media_advisories/2012/HUDNo.12-171.
\27\ See United Savings Ass'n v. Timbers of Inwood Forest
Assocs., Ltd., 484 U.S. 365, 371 (1988) (statutory provisions should
be interpreted to avoid interpreting inconsistencies between
provisions); see also Babitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Communities
for a Great Oregon, 515 U.S. 687 (1995); Gade v. Nat'l Solid Waste
Management Ass'n, 505 U.S. 88, 100-01 (1992).
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Second, the legislative history of the amendment to section
203(b)(9)(C) also supports HUD's interpretation that it does not
exclude State and local government home ownership programs from FHA
insurance eligibility. In a statement supporting the amendment to
section 203(b)(9)(C), Senator Dodd explained that ``this bill
eliminates the seller-funded downpayment assistance program.'' \28\
There is no indication that State and local governments or their
agencies or instrumentalities were to be within the scope of the
amendment. The Senate Committee Report accompanying a 2007 bill
containing statutory language \29\ identical to what was eventually
enacted in HERA further support this interpretation. The report
explained that the ``section also prohibits seller-funded downpayment
entities from providing any of this required cash investment.'' \30\ It
noted that ``[s]ince this legislation was passed by the Committee, HUD
has promulgated a regulation that also prohibits these entities from
providing downpayment assistance funds.'' \31\ As discussed above, the
2007 HUD rule to which the Senate Report refers expressly excluded
State and local government agencies and instrumentalities from the
category prohibited sources for the minimum cash investment. The
report's identification of ``seller-funded downpayment entities'' as
the targets of both HUD's proposed rule and of the bill indicates that
the provision, which is identical to what was enacted in HERA, does not
include State and local governments or their agencies or
instrumentalities.
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\28\ See 154 Cong. Rec. S6354-S6356 (July 7, 2008) available at
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CREC-2008-07-07/html/CREC-2008-07-07-pt1-PgS6354-2.htm.
\29\ See FHA Modernization Act of 2007, S. 2338, (2007) Sec.
103.
\30\ S. Rep. No. 110-227, at 6 (Nov.13, 2007), available at
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CRPT-110srpt227/pdf/CRPT-110srpt227.pdf.
\31\ Id. (emphasis added).
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B. Scope of Interpretive Rule
Under section 203(b)(9)(A) of the NHA, the homebuyer's investment
in the property must be at least 3.5 percent of its appraised value. So
long as the homebuyer makes this minimum required investment from his
or her own (or other approved) funds, any person, even one associated
with the transaction, may contribute additional funds towards the
borrower's costs without violating section 203(b)(9)(C). This
interpretive rule only applies to funds that constitute all or part of
the
[[Page 72223]]
3.5 percent minimum investment requirement.
C. Conclusion
Accordingly, HUD interprets NHA section 203(b)(9)'s ``prohibited
sources'' provision in subsection (C) as not including funds provided
directly by Federal, State, or local governments, or their agencies and
instrumentalities in connection with their respective homeownership
programs.
D. Solicitation of Comment
This interpretive rule represents HUD's interpretation of section
203(b)(9)(C) and is exempt from the notice and comment requirements of
the Administrative Procedure Act. See 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(A).
Nevertheless, HUD is interested in receiving feedback from the public
on this interpretation, specifically with respect to clarity and scope.
Dated: November 29, 2012.
Helen R. Kanovsky,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2012-29361 Filed 12-4-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4210-67-P