MortgageReverse

Nebraska Governor Signs Reverse Mortgage Bill

Nebraska Governor Dave Heineman signed Legislative Bill 892 into law on March 3, 2010. The bill makes revers mortgagee guidelines applicable to Nebraska Mortgage Bankers licensed under the Residential Mortgage Licensing Act said a statement from the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association.

Introduced by Senator Rich Pahls in January, LB 892 states that:

Sec. 24. Section 45-1068, Reissue Revised Statutes of Nebraska, is amended to read:

(1) For purposes of this section, reverse-mortgage loan means a loan made by a licensee which (a) is secured by residential real property, estate, (b) is nonrecourse to the borrower except in the event of fraud by the borrower or waste to the property residential real estate given as security for the loan, (c) provides cash advances to the borrower based upon the equity in the borrower’s owner-occupied principal residence, (d) requires no payment of principal or interest until the entire loan becomes due and payable, and (e) otherwise complies with the terms of this section.

(2) Reverse-mortgage loans shall be governed by the following rules without regard to the requirements set out elsewhere for other types of mortgage transactions: (a) Payment in whole or in part is permitted without penalty at any time during the period of the loan; (b) an advance and interest on the advance have priority over a lien filed after the closing of a reverse-mortgage loan; (c) an interest rate may be fixed or adjustable and may also provide for interest that is contingent on appreciation in the value of the property; residential real estate; and (d) the advance shall not be reduced in amount or number based on an adjustment in the interest rate when a reverse-mortgage loan provides for periodic advances to a borrower.

(3) Reverse-mortgage loans may be made or acquired without regard to the following provisions for other types of mortgage transactions: (a) Limitations on the purpose and use of future advances or any other mortgage proceeds; (b) limitations on future advances to a term of years or limitations on the term of credit line advances; (c) limitations on the term during which future advances take priority over intervening advances; (d) requirements that a maximum mortgage amount be stated in the mortgage; (e) limitations on loan-to-value ratios; (f) prohibitions on balloon payments; (g) prohibitions on compounded interest and interest on interest; and (h) requirements that a percentage of the loan proceeds must be advanced prior to loan assignment.

(4) A licensee may, in connection with a reverse-mortgage loan, charge to the borrower (a) a nonrefundable loan origination fee which does not exceed two percent of the appraised value of the home owner-occupied principal residence at the time the loan is made, (b) a reasonable fee paid to third parties originating loans on behalf of the licensee, and (c) such other fees as are necessary and required, including fees for inspections, insurance, appraisals, and surveys.

(5) Licensees failing to make loan advances as required in the loan documents and failing to cure the default as required in the loan documents shall forfeit an amount equal to the greater of two hundred dollars or one percent of the amount of the loan advance the licensee failed to make.

Legislative Bill 892

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