Dear Associates:
The Texas Legislature in 2003 (SB531) made significant changes to manufactured
housing. Among the changes are 1. chattel loans are once again permitted; 2.
taxes are to be escrowed by lender, chattel or real estate; 3. titling rules
have been greatly simplified. The final section of this bulletin sets out in
detail the new rules and standards. The first sections of this bulletin set
out the standards for manufactured homes as they have evolved over the years
and how they are treated under the new law.
Homes installed before 1985:
Background: Essentially, these homes are unregulated in the sense
that even the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (TDHCA) may
not even have a record of them. We have applied a practical standard to these
homes. They must be attached to real property in such a manner as to constitute
real property as a matter of law.
Standards: The home must be located on a permanent foundation
and attached permanently to utilities. The exact type of foundation or number
of utilities is not mandatory. The wheels, tongue, hitch, axles and anything
else that make the home transportable on the highways must be removed. It is
mandatory that an inspection of the home be done and that someone competent
executes an affidavit that the home is permanently installed. Nothing is required
from the TDHCA nor sent to the TDHCA.
Title Insurance: T-31 endorsement is preferred but the T-31.1
is also available. The 2003 amendments do not affect these homes.
Homes installed after 1985 but before 1999:
Background: During this time, the certificate of attachment process
was devised as the means to legally ''turn'' a manufactured home from personal
property into real property. The mechanism for this conversion is the certificate
of attachment issued by the TDHCA. Unfortunately, the mechanism required to
convert the unit into a real property home (the certificate of attachment) does
not convert the chattel lien on the unit into a lien on real estate.
Standards: The home must be located on a permanent foundation
and attached permanently to utilities. The exact type of foundation or number
of utilities is determined by the TDHCA and confirmed by an inspection by either
the TDHCA or the lender. The wheels, tongue, hitch, axles and anything else
that make the home transportable on the highways must be removed. The certificate
of attachment from the TDHCA is required. It is obtained by sending the forms
required to the TDHCA.
Title Insurance: Homes with a certificate of attachment and no
chattel liens may be insured. Homes that were installed using a mechanic's lien
contract may be insured.
T-31 endorsement is preferred but the T-31.1 is also available. The 2003
amendments convert the certificate of attachment into a Statement of Ownership
and Location. Please see the 2003 amendment section for information on handling
SOLs. We do not require a new SOL in the case of a sale or refinance of a manufactured
home for which a certificate of attachment has been issued, although some owners
may wish to obtain the new form.
Homes installed after 9-1-99 but before 1-1-2002:
Background: The law was changed to provide a mechanism to convert
mhu liens into purchase money liens when the certificate of attachment was issued
by the TDHCA.
Standards: The home must be located on a permanent foundation
and attached permanently to utilities. The exact type of foundation or number
of utilities is determined by the TDHCA and confirmed by an inspection by either
the TDHCA or the lender. The wheels, tongue, hitch, axles and anything else
that make the home transportable on the highways must be removed. The certificate
of attachment from the TDHCA is required. It is obtained by sending the TDHCA
the forms required by it.
Title Insurance: Any type of chattel mortgage (usually called
a retail installment contract) was required. The deed of trust renews, extends
and converts the lien on the home from personal property lien to a real property
lien. T-31 endorsement used. The 2003 amendments convert the certificate
of attachment into a Statement of Ownership and Location. Please see the 2003
amendment section for information on handling SOLs. We do not require a new
SOL in the case of a sale or refinance of a manufactured home for which a certificate
of attachment has been issued, although some owners may wish to obtain the new
form.
Homes installed from 1-1-2002 to 9-1-03:
Background: During this period, prior excesses in the chattel
lending industry were causing many mhu loans to be foreclosed and homes to be
moved without taxes being paid. Additionally, the Texas Attorney General's office
had rendered an opinion that the lien conversion bill from the prior legislation
was probably unconstitutional because the process was not particularly set out
in the constitution. HB 1869 was passed that eliminated chattel loans except
on leased land, provided that homes were real property for tax purposes and
changed the titling rules.
Standards: The home must be located on a permanent foundation
and attached permanently to utilities. The exact type of foundation or number
of utilities is determined by the TDHCA and confirmed by an inspection by either
the TDHCA or the lender. The wheels, tongue, hitch, axels and anything else
that make the home transportable on the highways must be removed. Within 30
days after the installation of the home, a notice of installation must be filed
in the land records of the county where the home is located and a copy filed
with the TDHCA. While the law did not contemplate that any other action would
be required by the TDHCA, the agency did pass regulations requiring that it
issue a certificate of attachment. We did not require the certificate of attachment
but were willing obtain it if the lender or owner requested (at an additional
escrow fee).
Title Insurance: T-31.1 endorsement at $50.00 premium authorized
by Texas Insurance Department for use beginning Nov. 2003. This endorsement
insures that the manufactured home is located on the land, that it is real property,
that the owner of the home is the owner of the property, that there are no personal
property liens or unpaid tax liens against the property. And, for mortgagee
policies, that the lien is valid. The insuring provisions parallels the provisions
of the land making the home real estate when placed on land owned by the owner
of the home.
For units placed on land after 1-1-02, the document used should be a mechanic's
lien contract. If the home was placed on leased land after 1-1-02 and later
the lessee buys the land, the chattel lien can be converted to a real estate
lien using the renewal, extension and conversion features of Art. 16, sec. 50
a8 of the Texas Constitution. The 2003 amendments convert the certificate
of attachment into a Statement of Ownership and Location. Please see the 2003
amendment section for information on handling SOLs. We do not require a new
SOL in the case of a sale or refinance of a manufactured home for which a certificate
of attachment has been issued, although some owners may wish to obtain the new
form.
Units placed on owned land without a mechanic's lien contract create a special
problem since by law they are real estate but do not follow the constitutional
method for creating an improvement lien. In these cases the most appropriate
method to "refinance" the lien on the unit is by a home equity lien.
However, if the purchaser buys the land and the home simultaneously, no mechanic's
lien contract is necessary.
Home placed on land after 9-1-03
Background: The law was changed in 2003 in reaction to claims
by the Texas Manufactured Housing Association that HB 1869 was harming the manufactured
housing industry. The main change sought was to allow unfettered chattel lending.
Because Stewart Title had been instrumental in changing the constitution in
1999 to provide for conversion liens, Stewart avoided the philosophical battle
over chattel lending. The law was so changed.
Stewart concentrated on revamping, yet again, the licensing of manufactured
homes. Working with new management at the TDHCA, the law was amended to provide
that there are no longer certificates of attachment or notices of installation.
Instead, the department has created a multi-purpose form called the Statement
of Ownership and Location (SOL). This form has 4 sections. The form is attached
to this bulletin as example one.
- The first section contains the information about the home. It has the date
of the SOL, the certificate number, the label or serial number for each of
the sections of the home, the weight and size of the homes. It also contains
the name and signatures of the owners of the property, the county where the
home is located and the name and address of the lienholder.
- The second section is boxed off and allows the department to "X"
a line as to whether the home is real property, personal property, business
use or salvage use. If real property, the legal description of the land to
which the home is affixed is included. (Please understand that a partial description
is all that is required, a complete description as per the deed is not necessary.)
This section also contains a statement that the status of the home as real
property does not take effect until the SOL is recorded in the county records
where the home is located.
- The third section is a yes/no box for whether the home is shown title as
joint tenancy with right of survivorship. DO NOT RELY ON THIS SECTION. You
will need to make this determination for yourself based on Section 46 of the
Probate Code by reviewing a separate written agreement signed by the owners.
- The fourth section is the signature section for the TDHCA. It states that
the status of the home as real or personal stays that way until a new SOL
is issued by the TDHCA.
When the home is treated as personalty, all liens or notices dealing with the
home must be filed with the TDHCA. When treated as realty, documents must be
filed in the land records of the county where the home is located.
When the owner of a home shown as personalty elects to convert the home to
realty, the SOL will be turned into the TDHCA and a new SOL will be issued with
the realty section checked. The form for this is called the Application for
Statement of Ownership and Location. This form is also composed of 4 sections.
A copy of this form is attached to this bulletin as example two.
- Home and ownership information. The certificate number, the label or serial
number for each of the sections of the home, the weight and size of the homes
and the wind zone rating. It also contains the names, address and phone number
of the owners of the property, the physical address of the home, the name,
address and phone number of the applicant or transferee and a statement as
to whether the home has been moved and whether it is new or used.
- The second section is the home designation as real property, personal property
or business/salvage. A legal description must be attached to convert to real
property.
- Section three sets out the liens.
- Section four is for signatures of the owners and purchasers. They must
be acknowledged.
The department may not issue a new SOL until all liens against the home are
paid, except that the department may send the SOL to a title company that is
issuing a title policy covering (insuring against) the existing liens.
The final form is FORM B that is used releases of liens and foreclosures. You
will rarely be called upon to assist in filling out this form. A copy of this
form is attached to this bulletin as example three.
Effective September 1, 2003, all outstanding documents of title (manufacturer's
certificate of origin or certificates of attachment) are "converted"
into SOLs. Any action the department takes on homes with outstanding documents
of title will be handled by issuing a SOL.
Not later than 30 days after the home has been transferred to a new owner,
the seller must forward all documents to the buyer who shall apply for a SOL.
This applies to retailer as well as a residential seller. The new TDHCA regulations
require the retailer to complete the forms and send them to the TDHCA. The title
agent will probably need to assist with the forms in the case of sale of a home
that has not been previously attached.
To be real estate the home must be attached to a foundation that complies with
the regulations of the TDHCA and must be connected to at least one utility (water,
electric, natural gas, propane or wastewater).
Standards: All homes, whenever installed, will now be subject
to the Statement of Ownership and Location. All Manufacturer's certificates
of origin and certificates of attachment will be converted to SOL's as of September
1, 2003. We can insure a home only when a SOL has been issued with the section
of the form completed that treats the home as realty. Title companies may elect
to work with parties to transactions to convert either the prior documents into
a SOL or convert a SOL on personalty into a SOL on realty. The title company
may charge an additional escrow fee for such service. The TDHCA may send the
SOL on realty to the title company in advance of closing with the understanding
that the title company will obtain and file with the department all releases
of liens that affected home, whether realty or personalty.
Fees: The basic fee for a SOL is $55.00. Each time a new SOL
is requested there is a $55.00 fee. There is a separate $150 fee for a certification
for a home that is permanently affixed. There is a separate transaction fee
of $55 for the Quick Processing Service for an SOL to be issued within 3 days
after the complete application is received by the TDHCA. All requests for quick
processing must be delivered by overnight mail or delivered in-person. The normal
time for the TDHCA to handle the SOL is 10 working days.
Title Insurance: T-31.1 should be issued. Homes installed as
realty must use a mechanic's lien contract. Homes installed as personalty must
use a retail installment contract; conversion of these homes to realty requires
a SOL and a renewal, extension and conversion deed of trust. The language on
the deed of trust should read substantially as follows: This deed of trust
is given in renewal, extension and conversion under Art. 16, Section 50a8 of
the Texas Constitution of a retail installment contract in the amount of $____
payable to _______.