"Regulation
B"
Regulation
B was issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System to
implement the provisions of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA). The
law was enacted in 1974 to make it unlawful for creditors to discriminate
in any aspect of a credit transaction on the basis of sex or marital
status. In 1976, through amendments to the Act, it became unlawful to
also discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin,
age, receipt of public assistance and the good faith exercise of rights
under the Consumer Credit Protection Act.
The
primary purpose of the ECOA is to prevent discrimination in the granting
of credit by requiring banks and other creditors to make extensions of
credit equally available to all creditworthy applicants with fairness,
impartiality and without discrimination on any prohibited basis. The
regulation applies to consumer and other types of credit transactions.
This discussion will be limited to those provisions of ECOA that relate
specifically to the mortgage lending process, including:
-
Rules
Concerning Taking of Applications
-
Rules
Concerning the Evaluation of Applications
-
Rules
Concerning Extension of Credit
-
Consumer
Notifications
-
Consumer
Information for Monitoring Purposes
Rules
Concerning Taking of Applications:
- Oral
or Written Statements:
-
The
regulation specifically prohibits a lender from making any oral or
written statement, in advertising or otherwise, to applicants or
prospective applicants that would discourage on a prohibited basis a
responsible person from making or pursuing an application.
- Collection
of Information:
-
With
regards to collection of information, a lender may request any
information in connection with an application, with certain exceptions
discussed below:
-
Required
collection of information: The
lender is required to request information for monitoring purposes for
credit transactions secured by the applicant's dwelling.
-
Information
about a spouse or former spouse: The
lender is permitted under the regulation to request any information
concerning an applicant's spouse that is requested about the
applicant, if the applicant resides in a community property state,
like California, or property on which the applicant is relying as a
basis for repayment of the credit requested is located in a community
property state. Information regarding a former spouse may be
requested if the request can also be made to the applicant, if the
applicant is relying upon alimony, child support or separate
maintenance payments from a spouse (no longer residing with the
applicant) or former spouse as a basis for repayment of the credit
requested.
-
-
Marital
status: In California, a
lender may inquire about an applicant's marital status, due to the
fact that California is a community property state. A lender may only
use the terms "married", "unmarried" and
"separated".
-
Disclosure
about income from alimony, child support or separate maintenance: Under
the regulation, a lender may inquire whether an applicant's income is
derived in whole or part from alimony, child support or separate
maintenance only if the lender first discloses to the applicant that
the income from these sources need not be revealed unless the
applicant wishes to rely on it to establish creditworthiness. This
disclosure must be given to any co-applicant as well.
-
Sex:
Lender is prohibited from
inquiring about the sex of an applicant. An applicant may be
requested to designate a title in an application form (such as Ms.,
Mr., Mrs. or Miss) if the form discloses that the title designation
is optional. Otherwise, the application form must use terms that are
neutral to sex.
-
Childbearing,
childrearing: The lender is
prohibited from requesting or considering information concerning the
applicant's plan or expectations of having children, their
childbearing capabilities or birth-control practices. The lender is
permitted to inquire about the number and ages of an applicant's
dependents or about dependent-related financial obligations or
expenditures, provided such information is requested without regard
to any prohibited basis.
-
Race,
color, religion, national origin: A
lender may not inquire about the race, color, religion or national
origin of any applicant or any other person in connection with a
credit transaction. A lender may inquire about an applicant's
permanent residence and immigration status.
Rules
Concerning Evaluation of Applications:
- Evaluation
of Information:
-
The
regulation allows a lender to consider any information properly
obtained, so long as the information is not used to discriminate
against an applicant on a prohibited basis.
- Specific
Rules Concerning the Use of Information:
-
-
A
lender may not take a prohibited basis into account in any system of
evaluating the creditworthiness of applicants.
-
Age
and/or receipt of public assistance may only be used for the purpose
of determining a pertinent element of creditworthiness. Furthermore,
age may be considered when such age is used to favor the elderly
applicant in extending credit.
-
Childbearing,
childrearing assumptions or aggregate statistics relating to the
likelihood that any group of persons will bear or rear children or
will, for that reason, receive diminished or interrupted income in
the future, may not be used by the lender.
-
A
lender may not take into account whether there is a telephone listing
in the name of the applicant for the consumer credit, but may take
into account whether there is a telephone in the applicant's
residence.
-
A
lender may not discount or exclude from consideration the income of
an applicant or the spouse of an applicant on a prohibited basis or
because the income is derived from part-time employment or is an
annuity, pension or other retirement benefit. A lender may consider
that amount and the probable continuance of any such income in
evaluating an applicant's creditworthiness.
-
To
the extent that a lender considers credit history in evaluating the
creditworthiness of similarly qualified applicants for a similar type
and amount of credit in evaluating an applicant's creditworthiness, a
lender may consider:
-
The
credit history, when available, of accounts designated as accounts
that the applicant and that applicant's spouse are permitted to use
or for which both are contractually liable;
-
On
the applicant's request, any information the applicant may present
that tends to indicate that the credit does not accurately reflect
the applicant's creditworthiness; and
- On the applicant's
request, the credit history, when available, of any account
reported in the name of the applicant's spouse or former spouse
that the applicant can demonstrate accurately reflects the
applicant's creditworthiness.
Rules Concerning
Extension of Credit:
- Extension of Credit:
- A lender may not refuse
to grant an individual account to a creditworthy applicant on the basis
of sex, marital status or any other prohibited basis.
- Applicant's Name(s):
- A lender may not refuse
to allow an applicant to open or maintain an account in a birth-given
first name and surname that is the applicant's birth-given surname, the
spouse's surname or a combined surname.
- Signature of
Applicant's Spouse or Other Person:
- In general, a lender may
not require the signature of an applicant's spouse or other person,
other than a joint applicant, on any credit instrument if the applicant
qualifies under the lender's standards of creditworthiness for the
amount and terms of the credit requested. If an individual applicant
requests credit to be secured, the lender may require the signature of
the applicant's spouse or other joint owner of the collateral on any
instrument necessary or reasonably believed to be necessary under state
law to make the property being offered as security available to satisfy
the debt in the event of a default. In California, applicable state law
requires all owners of personal property to sign in order to encumber
the property. Therefore, the lender may request the non-applicant
spouse or other parties to sign a security agreement or other
instrument to secure a lien on the property, but not the promissory
note. With transactions involving community real property, both spouses
must sign the deed of trust in order for the lien to be perfected for
the lender. Non-applicant spouse's signature should never be requested
on the application or the promissory note.
Consumer
Notifications:
- Appraisal
Notification:
- Effective December 14,
1993, the Federal Reserve Board issued amendments to Regulation B,
Equal Credit Opportunity Act. These amendments require the lender to
notify the applicant of their right to receive a copy of their
appraisal on loans secured by one-to-four family dwellings.
- Action Taken:
- A lender must notify an
applicant of action taken generally within 30 days after receiving a
completed application. A notification given to an applicant when
adverse action is taken is required to be in writing and must contain:
a statement of action taken; the name and address of the lender; a
statement of the provisions known commonly as the ECOA Notice; the name
and address of the federal agency that administers compliance with
respect to the lender; and either a statement of specific reasons for
the action taken or a disclosure of the applicant's right to a
statement of specific reasons within 30 days of a specified period of
time.
Information for
Monitoring Purposes:
A lender that receives an
application for credit primarily for the purchase or refinancing of a
dwelling occupied or to be occupied by the applicant as a principal
residence, where the extension of credit will be secured by the dwelling,
is required to request as part of the application the following
information regarding the applicant: race or national origin (using the
categories American Indian or Alaskan Native; Asian or Pacific Islander;
Black; White; Hispanic; Other (specify)); sex; marital Status (using the
categories Married, Unmarried, and Separated); and age.
The applicant(s) are not
required to supply the requested information. If the applicant(s) chooses
not to provide the requested information or any part of it, that fact
will be noted on the form. The lender then is required to note on the
form, to the extent possible, the race and national origin and sex of the
applicant(s) on the basis of visual observation or surname.
The lender is required to
inform the applicant(s) that the governmental information is being
requested by the federal government for the purpose of monitoring
compliance with the federal statutes that prohibit lender from
discriminating against applicants on the basis of race or national
origin, sex, martial status and age. The lender should also inform the
applicant(s) that if the applicant chooses not to provide the
information, the lender is required to note the race or national origin
and sex on the basis of visual observation.
|