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N.Y. BNK. LAW § 6-l : NY Code - Section 6-L: High-cost home loans

Search N.Y. BNK. LAW § 6-l : NY Code - Section 6-L: High-cost home loans

1. Definitions. The following definitions
  apply for the purposes of this section:
    (a)  "Affiliate" means any company that controls, is controlled by, or
  is under common control with another company, as set forth in  the  Bank
  Holding  Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. § 1841 et seq.), as amended from
  time to time.
    (b) "Annual percentage rate" means the annual percentage rate for  the
  loan   calculated   according   to   the   provisions   of  the  Federal
  Truth-in-Lending Act (15 U.S.C. § 1601, et seq.),  and  the  regulations
  promulgated  thereunder  by  the  federal reserve board (as said act and
  regulations are amended from time to time).
    (c) "Bona fide  loan  discount  points"  means  loan  discount  points
  knowingly  paid  by  the  borrower  funded  through  any source, for the
  purpose of reducing, and which in fact result in a bona  fide  reduction
  of, the interest rate or time-price differential applicable to the loan,
  provided that the amount of the interest rate reduction purchased by the
  discount points is reasonably consistent with established industry norms
  and  practices  for secondary mortgage market transactions. For purposes
  of this section, it shall be presumed that a point is a bona  fide  loan
  discount  point  if  it  reduces  the  interest  rate  by  a  minimum of
  twenty-five basis points provided all other terms of the loan remain the
  same.
    (d) A "High-cost home loan" means a home loan in which  the  terms  of
  the  loan  exceed  one or more of the thresholds as defined in paragraph
  (g) of this subdivision.
    (e) "Home loan" means a home loan, including an open-end credit  plan,
  other than a reverse mortgage transaction, in which:
    (i)  The  principal  amount of the loan does not exceed the conforming
  loan size limit for a comparable dwelling as established  from  time  to
  time by the federal national mortgage association;
    (ii) The borrower is a natural person;
    (iii)  The  debt  is  incurred by the borrower primarily for personal,
  family, or household purposes;
    (iv) The loan is secured by a mortgage or deed of trust on real estate
  upon which there is located or there is to be  located  a  structure  or
  structures  intended  principally  for  occupancy  of  from  one to four
  families which is or will be occupied by the borrower as the  borrower's
  principal dwelling; and
    (v) The property is located in this state.
    (f) "Points and fees" means:
    (i)  All  items  listed  in 15 U.S.C. § 1605(a)(1) through (4), except
  interest or the time-price differential;
    (ii) All charges for items listed under § 226.4(c)(7) of title  12  of
  the  code of federal regulations, as amended from time to time, but only
  if the lender receives direct or  indirect  compensation  in  connection
  with  the  charge  or  the charge is paid to an affiliate of the lender;
  otherwise, the charges are not included within the meaning of the phrase
  "points and fees";
    (iii) All compensation paid  directly  or  indirectly  to  a  mortgage
  broker,  including  a broker that originates a loan in its own name in a
  table-funded transaction, not otherwise included  in  subparagraphs  (i)
  and (ii) of this paragraph;
    (iv)  The  cost  of  all  premiums financed by the lender, directly or
  indirectly, for any credit life, credit disability, credit unemployment,
  or credit property insurance, or any other life or health insurance,  or
  any  payments financed by the lender directly or indirectly for any debt
  cancellation or suspension agreement or contract, except that  insurance

  premiums  calculated and paid on a monthly basis shall not be considered
  financed by the lender.
    (g) "Thresholds" means:
    (i)  For a first lien mortgage loan, the annual percentage rate of the
  home loan at consummation of the transaction  exceeds  eight  percentage
  points  over  the yield on treasury securities having comparable periods
  of maturity to the loan maturity measured as of the fifteenth day of the
  month immediately preceding the month in which the application  for  the
  extension  of  credit  is  received  by the lender; or for a subordinate
  mortgage  lien,  the  annual  percentage  rate  of  the  home  loan   at
  consummation of the transaction equals or exceeds nine percentage points
  over  the  yield  on  treasury  securities  having comparable periods of
  maturity on the fifteenth day of the  month  immediately  preceding  the
  month  in  which  the application for extension of credit is received by
  the lender; as determined by the following rules: if the  terms  of  the
  home  loan  offer  any  initial  or  introductory period, and the annual
  percentage rate is less than that which will apply after the end of such
  initial or introductory period, then the  annual  percentage  rate  that
  shall  be  taken  into account for purposes of this section shall be the
  rate which applies after the initial or introductory period; or
    (ii) The total points and fees exceed: five percent of the total  loan
  amount  if  the  total loan amount is fifty thousand dollars or more; or
  six percent of the total loan amount if the total loan amount  is  fifty
  thousand  dollars  or  more  and  the  loan  is  a  purchase  money loan
  guaranteed  by  the  federal  housing  administration  or  the  veterans
  administration;  or  the greater of six percent of the total loan amount
  or fifteen hundred dollars, if the total loan amount is less than  fifty
  thousand  dollars;  provided,  the  following  discount  points shall be
  excluded from the calculation of the total points and  fees  payable  by
  the borrower:
    (1)  Up to and including two bona fide loan discount points payable by
  the borrower in connection with the loan transaction, but  only  if  the
  interest  rate  from  which  the loan's interest rate will be discounted
  does not exceed by more than one percentage point the  yield  on  United
  States  treasury securities having comparable periods of maturity to the
  loan maturity measured as of the fifteenth day of the month  immediately
  preceding the month in which the application is received;
    (2)  Any  and  all  bona  fide loan discount points funded directly or
  indirectly through a grant from a federal,  state  or  local  government
  agency or 501(c)(3) organization.
    (h)  "Total  loan  amount" means the principal of the loan minus those
  points and fees as defined in paragraph (f) of this subdivision that are
  included in the principal amount.
    (i) "Lender" means a mortgage banker as defined in  paragraph  (f)  of
  subdivision  one  of  section  five hundred ninety of this chapter or an
  exempt organization as defined in paragraph (e) of  subdivision  one  of
  section five hundred ninety of this chapter.
    2.  Limitations  and  prohibited practices for high-cost home loans. A
  high-cost home loan shall be subject to the following limitations:
    (a) No call provisions. No high-cost home loan may contain a provision
  that permits the lender, in  its  sole  discretion,  to  accelerate  the
  indebtedness.  This provision does not prohibit acceleration of the loan
  in good faith due to the borrower's failure to  abide  by  the  material
  terms of the loan.
    (b)  No  balloon  payments.  No  high-cost  home  loan  may  contain a
  scheduled payment that is more than twice as large  as  the  average  of
  earlier  scheduled payments, unless such balloon payment becomes due and
  payable at least  fifteen  years  after  the  loan's  origination.  This

  provision  does  not  apply when the payment schedule is adjusted to the
  seasonal or irregular income of the borrower.
    (c)  No  negative  amortization.  No high-cost home loan may contain a
  payment schedule with regular periodic payments that cause the principal
  balance to increase. A loan is considered to have such a schedule if the
  borrower is given the option to  make  regular  periodic  payments  that
  cause  the  principal  balance to increase, even if the borrower is also
  given the option to make regular periodic payments that do not cause the
  principal  balance  to  increase.  This  paragraph  shall  not  prohibit
  negative amortization as a result of a temporary forbearance sought by a
  borrower.
    (d)  No  increased interest rate. No high-cost home loan may contain a
  provision  which  increases  the  interest  rate  after  default.   This
  provision  does  not  apply  to interest rate changes in a variable rate
  loan otherwise consistent with the provisions  of  the  loan  documents;
  provided  that  the  change in the interest rate is not triggered by the
  event of default or the acceleration of the indebtedness.
    (e) Limitation on advance payments. No high-cost home loan may include
  terms under which more than two periodic  payments  required  under  the
  loan  are  consolidated  and  paid  in  advance  from  the loan proceeds
  provided to the borrower.
    (f) No modification or deferral  fees.  A  lender  may  not  charge  a
  borrower  any  fees  to modify, renew, extend, or amend a high-cost home
  loan or to defer any payment due under the terms  of  a  high-cost  home
  loan  if,  after  the modification, renewal, extension or amendment, the
  loan is still a high-cost loan or, if no longer a high-cost  home  loan,
  the  annual  percentage  rate  has  not  been  decreased by at least two
  percentage points. For  purposes  of  this  paragraph,  fees  shall  not
  include  interest  that  is  otherwise  payable  and consistent with the
  provisions of the loan documents. This paragraph shall  not  prohibit  a
  lender  from  charging points and fees in connection with any additional
  proceeds received by the borrower in connection with  the  modification,
  renewal,  extension  or  amendment (over and above the current principal
  balance of the existing high-cost home loan) provided  that  the  points
  and fees charged on the additional sum must reflect the lender's typical
  point and fee structure for high-cost home loans.
    (g)  No  oppressive  mandatory  arbitration clauses. No high-cost home
  loan  may  be  subject  to  a  mandatory  arbitration  clause  that   is
  oppressive,  unfair,  unconscionable,  or substantially in derogation of
  the rights of consumers.
    (h) No financing of insurance or other  products  sold  in  connection
  with  the  loan.  No  high-cost  home  loan  shall  finance, directly or
  indirectly, any credit life, credit disability, credit unemployment,  or
  credit  property  insurance,  or  any  other  life  or  health insurance
  premiums,  or  any  payments  directly  or  indirectly  for   any   debt
  cancellation  or  suspension  agreement  or  contract, or any product or
  service that is not necessary or related to the high-cost home loan such
  as auto club memberships or credit report monitoring, but not  including
  fees  paid  to the lender, broker, or closing agent, fees related to the
  recording of the mortgage, title insurance  or  other  settlement  fees.
  Insurance  premiums  or  debt cancellation or suspension fees calculated
  and paid on a monthly basis shall not be considered financed.
    (i) No "loan  flipping".  No  lender  or  mortgage  broker  making  or
  arranging a high-cost home loan may engage in the unfair act or practice
  of  "loan flipping". "Loan flipping" is making a home loan to a borrower
  that refinances an existing home loan when the new loan does not have  a
  tangible   net   benefit   to   the  borrower  considering  all  of  the

  circumstances, including the terms of both the new and refinanced loans,
  the cost of the new loan, and the borrower's situation.
    (j)  No refinancing of special mortgages. No lender or mortgage broker
  making or arranging a high-cost home loan may refinance an existing home
  loan that is a special mortgage originated, subsidized or guaranteed  by
  or   through   a   state,  tribal  or  local  government,  or  nonprofit
  organization, which either bears a below-market  interest  rate  at  the
  time  of origination, or has nonstandard payment terms beneficial to the
  borrower, such as payments that vary  with  income,  are  limited  to  a
  percentage  of income, or where no payments are required under specified
  conditions, and where, as a result of the refinancing, the borrower will
  lose one or more of the benefits of the  special  mortgage,  unless  the
  lender is provided prior to loan closing documentation by a HUD approved
  housing counselor or the lender who originally made the special mortgage
  that  a  borrower  has  received  home  loan  counseling  in  which  the
  advantages and disadvantages of the refinancing has been received.
    (k) No lending without due regard to repayment ability.  A  lender  or
  mortgage  broker shall not make or arrange a high-cost home loan without
  due regard  to  repayment  ability,  based  upon  consideration  of  the
  resident  borrower  or  borrowers'  current and expected income, current
  obligations, employment status, and  other  financial  resources  (other
  than  the  borrower's  equity in the dwelling which secures repayment of
  the loan), as verified by  detailed  documentation  of  all  sources  of
  income  and  corroborated by independent verification. However, a lender
  making a high-cost home loan shall benefit from a rebuttable presumption
  that the loan was made with due  regard  to  repayment  ability  if  the
  lender  demonstrates  that  at  the  time  the  loan is consummated, the
  resident borrower or borrowers' total monthly debts,  including  amounts
  owed  under  the  loan,  do  not  exceed  fifty  percent of the resident
  borrower or borrowers' monthly gross income; and the lender follows  the
  residual  income guidelines established in 38 C.F.R. § 36.4337(e) and VA
  Form 26-6393.
    (l)  (i)  No  lending  without  counseling  disclosure  and  list   of
  counselors.    A  lender  or  mortgage broker must deliver, place in the
  mail, fax or electronically transmit the following notice  in  at  least
  twelve  point  type  to  the  borrower  at the time of application: "You
  should consider financial counseling prior to executing loan  documents.
  The  enclosed  list  of  counselors  is  provided  by the New York State
  Banking Department". In  the  event  of  a  telephone  application,  the
  disclosures must be made immediately after receipt of the application by
  telephone.    Such  disclosure  shall be on a separate form. In order to
  utilize an electronic transmission, the  lender  or  broker  must  first
  obtain  either written or electronically transmitted permission from the
  borrower. A list of approved counselors, available  from  the  New  York
  state  banking  department,  shall  be  provided  to the borrower by the
  lender or the mortgage broker at the time that this disclosure is given.
    * (ii) A lender or  mortgage  broker  shall  not  make  or  arrange  a
  high-cost  home  loan  unless  either  the lender or mortgage broker has
  given the following notice in writing to the borrower within three  days
  after  determining  that  the loan is a high-cost home loan, but no less
  than ten days before closing:
 
           "CONSUMER CAUTION AND HOME OWNERSHIP COUNSELING NOTICE
 
    If you obtain this loan, which pursuant to New York  State  Law  is  a
  High-Cost  Home  Loan, the lender will have a mortgage on your home. You
  could lose your home, and any money you have put into it, if you do  not
  meet your obligations under the loan.

    You  should shop around and compare loan rates and fees. Mortgage loan
  rates and closing costs and fees vary based on many  factors,  including
  your  particular  credit  and  financial  circumstances,  your  earnings
  history, the loan-to-value requested, and the type of property that will
  secure  your  loan.  The  loan  rate  and fees could vary based on which
  lender or mortgage broker you select.  Higher  rates  and  fees  may  be
  related  to  the  individual  circumstances  of  a particular consumer's
  application.
    You  should  consider  consulting  a  qualified   independent   credit
  counselor  or  other  experienced  financial adviser regarding the rate,
  fees, and provisions of this  mortgage  loan  before  you  proceed.  The
  enclosed  list  of  counselors is provided by the New York State Banking
  Department.
    You are not required to complete any loan agreement merely because you
  have received these disclosures or have signed a  loan  application.  If
  you  proceed  with this mortgage loan, you should also remember that you
  may face serious financial risks if you use this loan to pay off  credit
  card  debts and other debts in connection with this transaction and then
  subsequently incur significant new credit card charges or  other  debts.
  If  you  continue  to accumulate debt after this loan is closed and then
  experience financial difficulties, you could  lose  your  home  and  any
  equity you have in it if you do not meet your mortgage loan obligations.
    Property  taxes and homeowner's insurance are your responsibility. Not
  all lenders provide escrow services for these payments. You  should  ask
  your lender about these services.
    Your payments on existing debts contribute to your credit ratings. You
  should  not  accept  any  advice to ignore your regular payments to your
  existing creditors. Accordingly, it is important that you  make  regular
  payments to your existing creditors."
    * NB Effective until July 1, 2010
    * (ii)  A  lender  or  mortgage  broker  shall  not  make or arrange a
  high-cost home loan unless either the  lender  or  mortgage  broker  has
  given  the following notice in writing to the borrower within three days
  after determining that the loan is a high-cost home loan,  but  no  less
  than ten days before closing:
 
           "CONSUMER CAUTION AND HOME OWNERSHIP COUNSELING NOTICE
 
    If  you  obtain  this  loan, which pursuant to New York State Law is a
  High-Cost Home Loan, the lender will have a mortgage on your  home.  You
  could  lose your home, and any money you have put into it, if you do not
  meet your obligations under the loan.
    You should shop around and compare loan rates and fees. Mortgage  loan
  rates  and  closing costs and fees vary based on many factors, including
  your  particular  credit  and  financial  circumstances,  your  earnings
  history, the loan-to-value requested, and the type of property that will
  secure  your  loan.  The  loan  rate  and fees could vary based on which
  lender or mortgage broker you select.  Higher  rates  and  fees  may  be
  related  to  the  individual  circumstances  of  a particular consumer's
  application.
    You  should  consider  consulting  a  qualified   independent   credit
  counselor  or  other  experienced  financial adviser regarding the rate,
  fees, and provisions of this  mortgage  loan  before  you  proceed.  The
  enclosed  list  of  counselors is provided by the New York State Banking
  Department.
    You are not required to complete any loan agreement merely because you
  have received these disclosures or have signed a  loan  application.  If
  you  proceed  with this mortgage loan, you should also remember that you

  may face serious financial risks if you use this loan to pay off  credit
  card  debts and other debts in connection with this transaction and then
  subsequently incur significant new credit card charges or  other  debts.
  If  you  continue  to accumulate debt after this loan is closed and then
  experience financial difficulties, you could  lose  your  home  and  any
  equity you have in it if you do not meet your mortgage loan obligations.
    Your payments on existing debts contribute to your credit ratings. You
  should  not  accept  any  advice to ignore your regular payments to your
  existing creditors."
    * NB Effective July 1, 2010
    (m) Financing of points and fees. In making a high-cost home  loan,  a
  lender shall not, directly or indirectly, finance any points and fees as
  defined  in  paragraph  (f)  of  subdivision  one of this section, in an
  amount that exceeds three percent of the principal amount of the loan.
    (n) Restrictions on home improvement contracts. A lender shall not pay
  a contractor under a home improvement contract from the  proceeds  of  a
  high-cost home loan other than: by an instrument payable to the borrower
  or jointly to the borrower and the contractor; or at the election of the
  borrower,  through  a  third-party escrow agent in accordance with terms
  established in a written agreement signed by the borrower,  the  lender,
  and the contractor prior to the disbursement.
    (o)  No  encouragement  of default. In making or arranging a high-cost
  home loan, a lender or mortgage broker shall not recommend or  encourage
  default  on  an  existing  loan or other debt prior to and in connection
  with the closing or planned  closing  of  a  high-cost  home  loan  that
  refinances all or any portion of such existing loan or debt.
    (p)  Prohibited payments to mortgage brokers. In making or arranging a
  high-cost home loan, no lender or mortgage broker shall accept  or  give
  any  fee,  kickback,  thing  of  value,  portion, split or percentage of
  charges, other than  as  payment  for  goods  or  facilities  that  were
  actually  furnished  or  services  that  were  actually  performed. Such
  payment must be  reasonably  related  to  the  value  of  the  goods  or
  facilities  that  were actually furnished or services that were actually
  performed.
    (q) No points and fees when a lender refinances its own high-cost home
  loan with a new high-cost  home  loan.  A  lender  shall  not  charge  a
  borrower points and fees in connection with a high-cost home loan if the
  proceeds  of  the  high-cost home loan are used to refinance an existing
  high-cost home loan held by the lender or an affiliate of the lender.
    (r) No prepayment penalties. No prepayment penalties or fees shall  be
  charged or collected on a high-cost home loan. A prepayment penalty in a
  high-cost home loan shall be unenforceable.
    (s)  No  abusive  yield spread premiums. In arranging a high-cost home
  loan, the mortgage broker shall, at the time  of  application,  disclose
  the  exact  amount and methodology of total compensation that the broker
  will receive. Such amount may be paid as direct  compensation  from  the
  lender,  direct  compensation from the borrower, or a combination of the
  two. The provisions of this paragraph shall not restrict the ability  of
  a  borrower  to utilize a yield spread premium in order to offset any up
  front costs by accepting a higher interest rate. If the borrower chooses
  this option, any compensation from the lender which  exceeds  the  exact
  amount  of total compensation owed to the broker must be credited to the
  borrower.  The  superintendent  shall  prescribe  the  form  that   such
  disclosure  shall  take. This provision shall not restrict a broker from
  accepting a lesser amount.
    (t) Mandatory escrow of taxes and insurance. No  high-cost  home  loan
  shall  be  made  after  July  first,  two thousand ten unless the lender
  requires and collects the monthly escrow of property  taxes  and  hazard

  insurance.  With  respect to a high-cost home loan, a borrower may waive
  escrow requirements by notifying the lender in writing  after  one  year
  from  consummation  of  the loan. The provisions of this paragraph shall
  not  apply  to a high-cost home loan that is a subordinate lien when the
  taxes and insurance are escrowed through another home loan or where  the
  borrower can demonstrate a record of twelve months of timely payments of
  taxes and insurance on a previous home loan.
    (u) Mandatory disclosure of taxes and insurance payments. With respect
  to  a  high-cost home loan, the first time a borrower is informed of the
  anticipated or actual periodic  payment  amount  in  connection  with  a
  first-lien residential mortgage loan for a specific property, the lender
  or  mortgage  broker shall inform the borrower that an additional amount
  will be due for taxes and insurance and shall disclose to  the  borrower
  as  soon  as  reasonably  possible the approximate amount of the initial
  periodic payment for property taxes and hazard insurance.
    (v) No teaser rates. No  lender  or  mortgage  broker  shall  make  or
  arrange  a high-cost home loan which has an initial or introductory rate
  with a duration of less than six months.
    2-a. (a) High-cost home loan mortgages shall include a legend  on  top
  of  the  mortgage  in  twelve-point  type stating that the mortgage is a
  high-cost home loan subject to this section.
    (b) The lender shall report both the favorable and unfavorable payment
  history of the borrower  to  a  nationally  recognized  consumer  credit
  bureau  at  least  annually  during  such  period as the lender holds or
  services the high-cost home loan.
    3. The provisions of this section shall apply to any person who in bad
  faith  attempts  to  avoid  the  application  of  this  section  by  any
  subterfuge,  including but not limited to splitting or dividing any loan
  transaction  into  separate  parts  for  the  purpose  of  evading   the
  provisions of this section.
    4.  A lender of a high-cost home loan that, when acting in good faith,
  fails to comply with the provisions of this section, will not be  deemed
  to have violated this section if the lender establishes that either:
    (a)  Within  thirty  days  of  the  loan  closing  and  prior  to  the
  institution of any action under this section, the borrower  is  notified
  of the compliance failure, appropriate restitution is made, and whatever
  adjustments  are necessary are made to the loan to either, at the choice
  of  the  borrower,  (i)  make  the  high-cost  home  loan  satisfy   the
  requirements  of this section, or (ii) change the terms of the loan in a
  manner beneficial to the borrower so  that  the  loan  is  no  longer  a
  high-cost home loan subject to the provisions of this section; or
    (b)   The   compliance   failure  resulted  from  a  bona  fide  error
  notwithstanding the maintenance  of  procedures  reasonably  adapted  to
  avoid  such  errors  and,  within  sixty days after the discovery of the
  compliance failure and prior to the institution of any action under this
  section or the receipt of written notice of the compliance failure,  the
  borrower  is notified of the compliance failure, appropriate restitution
  is made, and whatever adjustments are necessary are made to the loan  to
  either,  at the choice of the borrower, (i) make the high-cost home loan
  satisfy the requirements of this section, or (ii) change  the  terms  of
  the  loan  in a manner beneficial to the borrower so that the loan is no
  longer a high-cost home loan subject to the provisions of this  section.
  Examples  of  a  bona fide error include clerical, calculation, computer
  malfunction and programming, and printing  errors.  An  error  of  legal
  judgment  with  respect  to a person's obligations under this section is
  not a bona fide error.
    5. The attorney  general,  the  superintendent,  or  any  party  to  a
  high-cost home loan may enforce the provisions of this section.

    6.  A private action against the lender or mortgage broker pursuant to
  this section must be commenced within six years of  origination  of  the
  high-cost home loan.
    7.  Any  person  found  by  a  preponderance  of  the evidence to have
  violated this section shall be liable to the borrower for the following:
    (a) actual damages, including consequential  and  incidental  damages;
  and
    (b)  statutory  damages  as follows (i) all of the interest, earned or
  unearned, points and fees, and closing costs charged on the  loan  shall
  be  forfeited  and  any amounts paid shall be refunded; except that this
  element of statutory damages shall not be awarded for violations of:
    (1) paragraph (i) of subdivision two of this  section  regarding  loan
  flipping; and
    (2)  paragraph  (k)  of  subdivision  two  of  this  section regarding
  ensuring the borrower's ability to repay the loan, so long as the lender
  demonstrates that at the time of  the  loan,  it  verified  by  detailed
  documentation  all  sources of the borrower's income and corroborated it
  with independent verification; or
    (ii) five thousand dollars per violation or twice the amount of points
  and fees and closing costs as defined  in  this  section,  whichever  is
  greater, for violations of:
    (1)  paragraph  (i)  of subdivision two of this section regarding loan
  flipping; and
    (2) paragraph  (k)  of  subdivision  two  of  this  section  regarding
  ensuring the borrower's ability to repay the loan, where the borrower is
  not entitled to relief under subparagraph (i) of this paragraph.
    8.  A  court may also award reasonable attorneys' fees to a prevailing
  borrower.
    9. A borrower may be granted injunctive, declaratory  and  such  other
  equitable  relief as the court deems appropriate in an action to enforce
  compliance with this section.
    10. Upon a finding by the court of an  intentional  violation  by  the
  lender  of  this  section,  or  regulation  thereunder,  the  home  loan
  agreement shall be rendered void, and the lender shall have no right  to
  collect,  receive  or  retain  any principal, interest, or other charges
  whatsoever with respect to the loan, and the borrower  may  recover  any
  payments made under the agreement.
    11.  Upon  a  judicial finding that a high-cost home loan violates any
  provision of this section,  whether  such  violation  is  raised  as  an
  affirmative  claim  or  as  a  defense,  the  loan  transaction  may  be
  rescinded. Such remedy of rescission shall be  available  as  a  defense
  without time limitation.
    12.  The  remedies provided in this section are not intended to be the
  exclusive remedies available to a borrower of a high-cost home loan.
    13. In any action by an assignee to enforce a loan against a  borrower
  in default more than sixty days or in foreclosure, a borrower may assert
  any claims in recoupment and defenses to payment under the provisions of
  this  section  and  with  respect to the loan, without time limitations,
  that the borrower could assert against the original lender of the loan.
    14. The provisions of this section shall  be  severable,  and  if  any
  phrase,  clause, sentence, or provision is declared to be invalid, or is
  preempted by federal law or regulation, the validity of the remainder of
  this section shall not be affected thereby. If  any  provision  of  this
  section  is  declared to be inapplicable to any specific category, type,
  or kind of points  and  fees,  the  provisions  of  this  section  shall
  nonetheless continue to apply with respect to all other points and fees.


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