Dear Associates:
Recent days have seen a flurry of activity from the insurance department,
with the approval of several new and modified endorsements, some rate changes,
and amendments to the TIRSA Rate Manual.
This Bulletin is limited in scope to the changes related to Reverse Mortgages.
Rate Manual Part 1, Section 6 (Minimum Insurance: Mortgage Policy) has been
amended by the addition of new subsection (C) as follows:
(C) A mortgage policy of title insurance insuring a Reverse Mortgage (as defined
in §§280 and 280-a of the Real Property Law) may not be issued in
an amount less than the greater of (1) the fair market value of the insured
premises at the time the mortgage is made, or (2) the maximum amount of principal
as stated in the mortgage.
This new provision eliminates the possibility of the application of the provisions
of subsection (B) (which deals with minimum insurance where there is negative
amortization toinsurance of reverse mortgages. Reverse mortgages generally
have no cap on negative amortization, and would have been impossible to insure
if subsection (B) applied. (Our underwriting position was that it could not
apply, but we welcome the explicit clarification.)
Also approved was the form of the Reverse Mortgage Endorsement, which is to
be issued when insuring a reverse mortgage, at a charge of $25.00. The insurance
afforded by the endorsement relates to the validity of the loan documentation,
but does not provide the lender with coverage against a violation by the lender
of other requirements of the statutes.
With the exception of reverse mortgages made on standard forms under the federal
HECM program (which qualify under the New York Reverse Mortgage statute), the
lender's forms of loan documentation (all loan documents, and not just
the mortgage) must be reviewed by counsel for compliance with §§280
and 280-a of the Real Property Law before insuring a reverse mortgage.
A copy of the endorsement for interim use is available through the reference
section at the end of this bulletin.
If lender requires policy to be issued at closing, a recording endorsement
must be issued promptly upon obtaining recording information.
ALTA '92 Loan Policy Schedule A - Amount of Insurance - Effective
August 15, 1994, the amount of insurance must be in compliance with new Section
6 (C) added to Part 1 of the TIRSA Rate Manual, which reads as follows:
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(C) A mortgage policy of title insurance insuring a
Reverse Mortgage (as defined in §§ 280 and 280-a of the Real Property Law) may
not be issued in an amount less than the greater of (1) the fair market value
of the insured premises at the time the mortgage is made, or (2) the maximum
amount of principal as stated in the mortgage.
In order to establish the fair market
value, a copy of the lender's appraisal should be obtained, or some other evidence of
the present fair market value.
ALTA '92 Loan Policy, Schedule A Item 4, describing the insured
mortgage can read as follows:
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Mortgage dated __/__/__, made by
______________________ to the Insured and to be recorded in
_________________________________________________,
The face amount of the mortgage is not stated in
this section of the policy.
The following endorsements are to be issued in all cases. If any
of the endorsements cannot be issued, that must be noted on the initial issuance
of the title report:
Some lenders may require:
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TIRSA Environmental Lien Endorsement 8.1 (9/1/93) or
TIRSA Environmental Lien Endorsement 8.1 (New York City ) (8/15/94)
premium $25.00
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ALTA Endorsement 9 (Restrictions, Encroachments, Minerals (10/27/92) NY (9/1/93)
premium 10% of regular loan policy.
Readers Must Note on reader sheet if
there is a problem issuing an ALTA-9
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TIRSA Survey Endorsement (Loan Policy) (9/1/93)
premium 10% of regular loan policy.
Affidavit must be signed by borrower
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In appropriate cases (condominiums, PUDs, etc.), the
appropriate endorsement should be pointed out to the lender, and the
appropriate charge
shown on the bill.
Closer Instructions
Reverse Mortgages - Transamerica HomeFirst, Inc.
Most proofs should have been obtained prior to closing, and the report should
be pre-marked to so indicate. Your main concerns should be:
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obtaining photo I.D. and an attendance
sheet;
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taking acknowledgments;
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obtaining any proofs not previously
obtained;
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counting pages on the mortgage and completing the
title bill; make sure that any taxes to be paid, escrows, and mortgage payoffs
are appropriately noted;
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making sure you obtain two (2) original executed
§252-a affidavits (exemption from mortgage tax for reverse mortgages), as well
as the original mortgage; and
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delivering the original policy and marked up report.
If there is a mortgage payoff, pickup charges are limited to the amount set
forth on the title bill.
The marked-up report and closing papers must be returned to us promptly, and
arrangements for the second continuation must be made.