Dear Associates:
Effective July 1, 2002, a settlement agent who pays off a deed of trust or
mortgage on Virginia property may release the lien of the deed of trust or
mortgage by following the specific procedures enacted as a change to Virginia
Code §55-66.3. To do so, the settlement agent must:
1. Send to the lien creditor, by certified mail or guaranteed overnight delivery,
a notice of intent to release the lien. The notice may be sent with payment
in full, or subsequently, and must be accompanied by a copy of the payoff
statement and a copy of the release or certificate of satisfaction.
2. Include in the Notice of Intent to Release the name of the lien creditor
of record, the name of the servicer (if any), date of the notice, the name,
address,
telephone number, and CRESPA registration number of the settlement agent. The
Notice should be in substantially the form prescribed by the statute, a copy
of which is available through the references section at the end of this bulletin.
After ninety days, the settlement agent may then proceed to file the certificate
of satisfaction or release unless the lien creditor has, by certified mail
or guaranteed overnight delivery, either:
1. Notified the settlement agent that the release has been recorded in the
clerk's
office of the circuit court in the county or city in which the property
is located;
2. Notified the settlement agent that the debt, note, or obligation has not
been paid in full; or,
3. Notified the settlement agent that the creditor otherwise objects to the
release of the lien by the settlement agent.
If none of the aforesaid notices are received, the settlement agent may record
the certificate of satisfaction together with a copy of the notice sent to
the creditor, AND an affidavit which must be in substantially the form, a
copy of which is available through the references section at the end of this
bulletin. (NOTE: "Satisfactory evidence of payment," as referenced
in the Affidavit available through the forms references at the end of this
bulletin, is defined as either: (1) the canceled check, payable to the lien
creditor or servicer, with all endorsements shown thereon; (2) written or
electronic confirmation of a wire transfer to the bank account of the lien
creditor; or, (3) a bank statement showing a debit for the check or wire
transfer; AND, in addition to one of the preceding, a payoff statement or
other evidence that the payment was in satisfaction of the mortgage or deed
of trust being released by the settlement agent.)
Upon recordation, the lien should be considered as released as though the
certificate of satisfaction had been signed by the noteholder, and subsequent
transactions may be insured without exception.
IMPORTANT: The Settlement Agent Release is valid only for full releases of
mortgages and/or deeds of trust on one-to-four family residential property.
It is not valid for releases on commercial property or construction loans,
and may not be used for any partial release of mortgages/deeds of trust.
The Act applies to any qualifying mortgage or deed of trust, whether created
and recorded before or after the effective date of July 1, 2002.
A settlement agent releasing a lien under the Act may not take an assignment
from a borrower of the right to collect the $500.00 penalty prescribed in §55-66.3(A),
assessed against a lien creditor who fails to provide a release of lien within
ninety days of payment in full.
This is an optional procedure, and a settlement agent who chooses not to release
a lien in accordance with the Act incurs no liability to the borrower, the
creditor, or any successor in interest to either.