This case study walks an illustrative private lender through a periodic-statement breakdown on the Regulation Z framework under 12 CFR §1026.41, a borrower notice-of-error cycle, and the corrective framework against the periodic-statement framework. The facts are illustrative and run against a composite of recurring statement breakdowns on the private-lending framework.
The lender
A private lender runs a residential-mortgage framework against a consumer-purpose first-position note on a fixed-rate framework. The lender runs the loan-servicing framework on the lender’s in-house servicing framework. The lender runs the periodic-statement framework against the borrower on the recurring billing cycle.
The statement breakdown
The lender runs the periodic-statement framework against the amount-due framework on the principal-and-interest framework. The lender runs no escrow-framework line item against the amount-due framework and runs no late-fee-after-grace-period framework line item against the amount-due framework. The lender runs no transaction-activity framework against the prior-billing-cycle escrow-disbursement framework. The lender runs no partial-payment-information framework against the suspense-account framework on a prior partial-payment cycle.
The notice-of-error cycle
The borrower runs the notice-of-error framework against the lender on the Regulation X framework under 12 CFR §1024.35. The notice-of-error framework runs the lender into a five-day acknowledgment framework against the borrower and runs the lender into a thirty-day response framework against the borrower-error inquiry on the framework. The lender runs the response framework on a thin discipline against the periodic-statement framework — the lender runs no audit-trail framework against the amount-due framework, the transaction-activity framework, or the partial-payment-information framework on the periodic statement.
The CFPB cycle
The borrower runs the CFPB consumer-complaint framework against the lender on the consumerfinance.gov framework. The CFPB framework runs the consumer-complaint framework against the lender on a fifteen-day acknowledgment framework and runs the lender into a sixty-day response framework on the consumer-complaint framework. The CFPB framework runs the consumer-complaint framework on a supervisory-examination framework against the lender’s periodic-statement framework on the recurring cycle.
The corrective framework
The lender runs the corrective framework against the periodic-statement framework. First, the lender runs the periodic-statement framework against the amount-due framework on the principal-and-interest framework, the escrow framework, the late-fee-after-grace-period framework, and the fees framework on each statement cycle. Second, the lender runs the transaction-activity framework against the payment-received framework, the fee-assessed framework, and the escrow-disbursement framework on each billing cycle. Third, the lender runs the partial-payment-information framework against the suspense-account framework on each partial-payment cycle. Fourth, the lender runs the audit-trail framework against the periodic-statement framework on the lender’s servicing platform.
The recurring lessons
Three lessons run against the lender’s framework. First, the amount-due framework runs the periodic-statement framework against the note framework, the deed-of-trust framework, and the escrow-analysis framework on the standard — the amount-due framework runs no shortcut against the principal-and-interest framework on the periodic statement. Second, the transaction-activity framework runs the periodic-statement framework against the prior-billing-cycle framework on each statement. Third, the partial-payment-information framework runs the periodic-statement framework against the suspense-account framework on each partial-payment cycle.
Related Topics
- Borrower Statements That Pass Compliance Review
- Identity Verification at Loan Boarding
- Five Wire Fraud Defenses for Private Lenders
- Impound and Escrow Accounts for Private Lenders
- Mortgage Fund Subservicing Done Right
This article is educational and does not constitute legal or regulatory advice. The borrower-statement framework runs against the Regulation Z framework under 12 CFR §1026.41. The framework runs against the small-servicer-exemption framework on the CFPB framework. The framework runs against the business-purpose-loan-exemption framework under 12 CFR §1026.3(a) on the recurring compliance cycle. Consult qualified legal counsel on the specific borrower-statement framework against any private-lending operation.
Sources
- 12 CFR §1026.41 — Periodic Statements for Residential Mortgage Loans. Electronic Code of Federal Regulations.
- 12 CFR §1026.3 — Exempt Transactions. Electronic Code of Federal Regulations.
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — Mortgage Servicing Rules. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
- Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act. U.S. Congress.
- CFPB Supervisory Highlights — Mortgage Servicing. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
