[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 38, Volume 2]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 38CFR36.4225]

[Page 562-565]
 
            TITLE 38--PENSIONS, BONUSES, AND VETERANS' RELIEF
 
          CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS (CONTINUED)
 
PART 36--LOAN GUARANTY--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 36.4225  Authority to close manufactured home loans on the automatic 
basis.

    (a) Supervised lenders of the classes described in 38 U.S.C. 3702(d) 
(1) and (2) are authorized by statute to process VA guaranteed 
manufactured home loans on the automatic basis. This category of lenders 
includes any Federal land bank, national bank, State bank, private bank, 
building and loan association, insurance company, credit union or 
mortgage and loan company that is subject to examination and supervision 
by an agency of the United States or of any State or by any State.
    (b) Nonsupervised lenders of the class described in 38 U.S.C. 
3702(d)(3) must apply to the Secretary for authority to process 
manufactured home loans on the automatic basis. The following minimum 
requirements must be met:

[[Page 563]]

    (1) Minimum assets. A minimum of $50,000 of working capital must be 
maintained. Working capital is defined as the excess of current assets 
over current liabilities. Current assets are defined as cash or other 
assets that could readily be converted into cash within 1 year on the 
normal accounting or business cycle. Current liabilities are defined as 
obligations that would be paid within a year on a normal accounting or 
business cycle. The lender's latest financial statements (profit and 
loss statements and balance sheets), audited and certified by a CPA 
(certified public accountant), must accompany the application. If the 
date of the financial statement precedes that of the application by more 
than 6 months, the lender-applicant must also attach a copy of its 
latest internal quarterly report. In addition, the lender-applicant must 
agree that if the application is approved, the applicant will provide 
within 120 days following the end of each of its fiscal years an audited 
financial statement to the Director, Loan Guaranty Service for review.
    (2) Experience. The firm must have been actively engaged in 
originating manufactured home loans for at least the last 2 years. 
Alternately, each principal officer of the firm who is actively involved 
in managing origination functions must have a minimum of 2 recent years' 
total experience in the field of VA manufactured home mortgages in 
managerial functions in either the present company of employment or in 
companies other than that of his or her present employment. In either 
case, every principal officer (president and vice presidents) must 
submit a resume of his or her experience in the mortgage lending field. 
Should the secretary and/or treasurer participate in the management of 
origination functions, they too must submit a resume and meet the 
minimum experience requirement if the company does not meet the 
experience requirement. Should the lender or any of its directors or 
officers ever have been debarred or suspended by any Federal agency or 
department or any of its directors or officers have been a director or 
officer of any other lender or corporation that was so suspended, or if 
the lender-applicant ever had a servicing contract with an investor 
terminated for cause, a statement of the facts must also be submitted. 
Lender-applicants will submit individual requests for each branch office 
they wish to have approved. The parent organization must agree to accept 
full responsibility for the actions of branch offices.
    (3) Underwriter. If it is proposed that all loans to be made by the 
lender will be submitted to its home office for approval or rejection, 
the lender must have at least one full-time designated underwriter in 
its home office. If the loans will be approved or rejected by branch 
managers, the lender must have at least one full-time designated 
underwriter in each branch. In either event, the designated underwriters 
must be identified and a resume on each submitted to VA. The 
underwriters should have at least three years of experience in consumer 
installment finance. If changes in underwriting personnel occur, the 
lender must notify VA.
    (4) Lines of credit. The identity of the source(s) of warehouse 
lines of credit must be revealed to VA and the applicant must agree that 
VA may contact the named source(s) for the purpose of verifying the 
information.
    (5) Secondary market. If the lender-applicant customarily sells the 
manufactured home loans it originates, it must provide a listing of all 
permanent investors to whom the loans are sold, including the investor's 
address, telephone number and names of persons to contact.
    (6) Liaison. The lender-applicant must designate one employee to act 
as liaison on its behalf with the VA. If possible, the lender-applicant 
should select employees other than VA approved underwriters to act as 
liaison. Officers from branch or regional offices should also be 
appointed to act as liaison with local VA offices. The lender must 
notify VA of any changes in liaison personnel.
    (7) Courtesy closing. The lender-applicant must certify to VA that 
it will not close loans on an automatic basis as a courtesy or 
accommodation for other mortgage lenders whether or not such lenders are 
themselves approved to close on an automatic basis. The lender must 
agree that the processing of

[[Page 564]]

forms other than the initial credit application will not be delegated to 
the dealer or developer.
    (8) Subsidiaries/affiliates. A lender approved for automatic 
processing may not close manufactured home loans on the automatic basis 
involving any dealership or manufacturer in which it has a financial 
interest or which it owns, is owned by, or with which it is affiliated. 
This restriction may be eliminated for lenders that can provide 
documentation which demonstrates to VA's satisfaction that (i) the 
lender and the manufacturer and/or dealer are separate entities that 
operate independently for each other, and (ii) the percentage of all VA 
manufactured home loans originated by the lender during at least a one-
year period on which payments are past due 90 days or more is no higher 
than the national average for the same period for all mortgage loans.
    (9) Lender agents. A lender using an agent to perform a portion of 
the work involved in originating and closing a VA guaranteed loan on an 
automatic basis must take full responsibility by certification or 
corporate resolution for all acts, errors and omissions of the agent and 
its employees. Any such acts, errors or omissions will be treated as 
those of the lender and appropriate sanctions may be imposed against the 
lender and its agent.
    (10) Minimum use of automatic authority. If approved, lenders must 
use their automatic authority to the maximum extent possible. Any lender 
with automatic authority who submits a loan on the prior approval basis 
will be required to submit an explanation from the designated 
underwriter as to why the loan was not closed automatically. Such a 
statement will not be needed for loans that must be processed on the 
prior approval basis, e.g., joint loans.
    (11) Probation. Lender-applicants meeting the requirements of this 
section will be approved to close loans on an automatic basis for a 1-
year probationary period. Poor underwriting and/or consistently careless 
processing by the lender during the probationary period will be a basis 
for withdrawal of automatic authority.
    (12) Quality control system. In order to be approved as a 
nonsupervised lender for automatic processing authority, the lender must 
implement a written quality control system which ensures compliance with 
VA requirements. The lender must agree to furnish findings under its 
system to VA on demand. The elements of the quality control system must 
include the following:
    (i) Underwriting policies. Each office of the lender shall maintain 
copies of VA credit standards and all available VA underwriting 
guidelines.
    (ii) Corrective measures. The system should ensure the effective 
corrective measures are taken promptly when deficiencies in loan 
originations are identified by either the lender or VA. Any cases 
involving major discrepancies which are discovered under the system must 
be reported to VA.
    (iii) System integrity. The quality control system should be 
independent of the loan production function.
    (iv) Scope. The review of understanding decisions and certifications 
must include compliance with VA underwriting requirements, sufficiency 
of documentation and soundness of underwriting judgments.
    (c) A lender approved to close loans on the automatic basis who 
subsequently fails to meet the requirements of this section must report 
the circumstances surrounding the deficiency and the remedial action to 
be taken to cure it to VA.


(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 501, 1803(c)(1), and 1812(g))

    (d) To participate in VA's automatic program nonsupervised lenders 
of the class described in paragraph 3702(d)(3) of title 38 U.S. Code 
shall pay fees as follows:
    (1) $500 for new applications;
    (2) $200 for reinstatement of lapsed or terminated automatic 
authority;
    (3) $100 for each underwriter approval;
    (4) $100 for each agent approval;
    (5) $100 for each regional underwriting office approval;
    (6) A minimum fee of $100 for any other VA administrative action 
pertaining to a lender's participation in ALP;
    (7) $200 annually for certification of home offices;
    (8) $100 annually for certification of regional offices; and

[[Page 565]]

    (9) $100 annually for each agent renewal.
    (e) Supervised lenders of the classes described in paragraphs (d)(1) 
and (d)(2) of 38 U.S. Code 3702 participating in VA's Loan Guaranty 
Program shall pay fees as follows:
    (1) $100 fee for each agent approval; and
    (2) $100 annually for each agent renewal.


(Authority: 38 U.S.C. 3712(g))

    (f) Lenders participating in VA's Lender Appraisal Processing 
Program shall pay a fee of $100 for approval of each staff appraisal 
reviewer.

[56 FR 40559, Aug. 15, 1991, as amended at 57 FR 828, Jan. 9, 1992; 57 
FR 40616, Sept. 4, 1992]