In 1995, Geraldine Rendler applied to Corus Bank to finance the purchase of a condominium and received both an adjustable rate note secured by a first mortgage and a home equity line of credit secured by a second mortgage under Corus Bank’s 80/20 loan program. Rendler subsequently sued Corus Bank under the Truth in Lending Act (“TILA”), alleging that the bank violated the Act by issuing two loans and two TILA disclosure statements in connection with a single credit transaction. The district court certified a class of individuals to whom Corus Bank issued two loans and two TILA disclosure statements in connection with the financing of a single purchase or the refinancing of a single piece of residential real estate. Following discovery, the district court granted Corus Bank summary judgment holding that it had not violated the TILA. Rendler appeals this decision and we affirm.
I. Background
On October 5, 1995, Geraldine Rendler entered into a contract with Corus Bank to finance a purchase of a condominium unit. 1 Under the financing agreement, Corus lent Rendler a total of $53,200 through two separate loans pursuant to its 80/20 loan program. Under the 80/20 program, customers, like Rendler, who sought to finance more than eighty percent of the purchase of residential real estate were offered two loans. The first loan was a closed-end transaction in the form of a fully amortizing note for eighty percent of the property’s value, and the second loan was a home equity line of credit. The home equity line of credit was a seven-year open-end loan for the remainder of the purchase price, meaning that the consumer could pay off the balance of the loan or borrow additional sums. Each loan was secured by a separate mortgage against the property, and both loans were offered as either stand-alone products or together: 2 Under the program, investors could finance the purchase of property without a down payment and avoid paying private mortgage insurance typically required for borrowers financing more than eighty percent of a home purchase. 3 Corus regularly offered loans to residential property consumers under the 80/20 program. At the time Rendler applied for financing to purchase her condominium, Corus did not offer a fully amortizing first mortgage loan for an amount in excess of eighty percent of the value of the property to be purchased.
Rendler’s primary loan transaction with Corus Bank was an adjustable rate note secured by a first mortgage on the property with a principal amount of $44,200 at an annual percentage rate of 8.61%. In addition, Rendler entered into a home equity line of credit secured by a second mortgage on the property, with a term of seven years, a maximum credit amount of $8,400
Almost one year later, on November 8, 1996, Rendler sued Corus claiming that Corus violated the TILA by not providing her with one disclosure statement for the combined loan. Rendler alleged that by offering two simultaneous loans and two sets of TILA disclosure statements, Corus violated the TILA’s requirements that disclosures be grouped together to allow easy comparison amongst different lenders.
In her complaint, Rendler sought to certify a class of consumers who had received financing from Corus under similar circumstances. After four years of litigation the district court certified a class of individuals who obtained a loan from Corus on or after November 5, 1998, where: (1) Corus files show that the credit was applied for the purchase or refinancing of residential property, and (2) Corus issued two loans and two TILA disclosure statements in connection with the financing of a single piece of residential real estate. Geraldine Rendler was named as the class representative. 4 Once the class was certified, both Corus Bank and Rendler moved for summary judgment on Rendler’s claim that Corus violated the TILA by providing two loans and two Truth in Lending disclosures in connection with the financing or refinancing of a single piece of real estate. 5 The district court granted Corus Bank’s motion and denied Rendler’s cross-motion for summary judgment, holding that nothing in the Truth in Lending Act would prohibit a lender from simultaneously entering into two loans and issuing two separate TILA disclosures for each transaction. The court also found that Rendler’s class of plaintiffs could not maintain a cause of action involving loan splitting because in this case the class was not defined to be limited to individuals who expected to enter into more than one transaction. Ren-dler appeals.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Rendler argues that the district court erred in granting Corus Bank summary judgment and denying her motion for summary judgment because the undisputed facts demonstrate that Corus violated the TILA. Specifically Rendler contends that Corus’ disclosures in the 80/20 program violate the TILA because Corus does not provide a single piece of paper summarizing the combined annual percentage rate that consumers will have to pay on the combined loans. In addition, Rendler claims that Corus violated the TILA by mischaracterizing a single credit transaction, namely the financing of a sin
A. The Disclosure Statement Claim
Corus makes no attempt to shade the purpose of its 80/20 program, which allows customers to finance more than eighty percent of the purchase price (or value) of their home through two loans. It adopted the program “in response to customer complaints about the cost of private mortgage insurance which was required for mortgage loans of more than eighty percent of the property’s value.” The alternative of a home equity line of credit for the balance of up to the remaining twenty percent of the property’s value apparently offered a less expensive substitute for the private mortgage insurance.
Rendler first argues that by failing to provide a single disclosure statement summarizing the combined annual percentage rate on both loans, Corus Bank violated the TILA’s disclosure requirements. The TILA is a disclosure statute. It does not substantively regulate consumer credit but rather “requires disclosure of certain terms and conditions of credit before consummation of a consumer credit transaction.”
Valencia v. Anderson Bros. Ford,
The TILA recognizes two general types of consumer credit transactions: open-end credit and closed-end credit.
See Benion v. Bank One, Dayton N.A.,
The TILA’s goal is to help consumers accurately compare credit rates. As the statute recites, “[i]t is the purpose of [the TILA] to assure a meaningful disclosure of credit terms so that the consumer will be able to compare more readily the various credit terms available to him and avoid the uninformed use of credit, and to protect the consumer against unfair credit billing and credit card practices.” 15 U.S.C. § 1601(a);
Williams v. Chartwell Fin. Servs.,
In her quest for more accuracy, Rendler requests this court to interpret
We disagree. The TILA anticipates situations where two parties will conduct multiple transactions necessitating multiple disclosures to achieve one goal. Under 12 C.F.R. § 226.17(c)(6)®, which applies to closed-end transactions, “[a] series of advances under an agreement to extend credit up to a certain amount may be considered as one transaction.” (emphasis added). This section, in addition to the official commentary
6
that accompanies the statute, makes, it clear that the regulation encompasses situations where multiple credit transactions with multiple disclosures would be used to finance a single piece of property. The official commentary to Regulation Z has been regarded as an “authoritative interpretation” of the TILA and Regulation Z by this court.
In re Dingledine,
Also, the facts of this case would not only make the task of providing a single disclosure statement very difficult, but it could even defeat the TILA’s purpose of keeping the comparison of rates simple.
Williams,
Ms. Rendler is correct in her assertion that a purpose of the TILA is to allow consumers to compare credit terms offered by various lending institutions.
Id.
Given these circumstances and based upon the disclosures presented, it would have been difficult for a consumer like Ms. Rendler to compare her 80/20 loan package to a single loan for the full value of her property that included private mortgage insurance from another lender. However, the purpose of the TILA is for consumers to be able to compare similar credit transactions.
9
It does not require that all credit transactions be similar. Ms. Rendler could have easily compared her primary mortgage loan for eighty percent of the property value with other lending institutions’ similar offerings. She also could have shopped around her second mortgage for a comparable rate. And finally, she could have had another institution compare
The ultimate adequacy of the clarity of TILA disclosures can only be judged by an objective reasonable person standard.
See Smith v. Check-N-Go of Ill., Inc.,
B. Loan Splitting
Rendler also argues that the district court erred in granting Corus Bank’s summary judgment motion and denying her motion based on her claim that Corus violated the TILA by splitting Rendler’s loan into two separate transactions. She claims that Corus engaged in “loan splitting” when it issued her two loans, on its own volition, when she only filled out one application and sought only one loan. Loan splitting may be defined “as the situation where the debtor wanted, requested and expected to receive a single loan, consummated in one transaction, but the lender documented and made disclosure for the loan as if it were two separate transae-tions.”
In re Buckles,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, we AffiRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment. Corus Bank’s 80/20 program did not violate the Truth in Lending Act’s disclosure requirements because the disclosures provided were adequate and there is no per se requirement in the Act that disclosures for multiple transactions be combined into one statement. Additional
Notes
. The original loan transactions in 1995 were made between Geraldine Rendler and.Aetna Bank, N.A. Aetna Bank, N.A. and Belmont National Bank of Chicago are both predecessor entities of Corus Bank, N.A. and the original complaint in this action was filed against Corus Bank in November 1996. For convenience, we will refer to the entity as Corus throughout the opinion.
. Seventy-four percent of borrowers under the 80/20 program with Corus Bank signed and submitted two loan applications, one for the mortgage loan and a second for the home equity line of credit. In this case, Geraldine Rendler submitted only one application for the entire financing of her condominium.
.The Charter Acts of the Federal National Mortgage Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Association normally require residential real estate consumers to buy mortgage insurance if the loan amount exceeds eighty percent of the appraised value. See 65 F.R. 12632, 12717 n. 208 (March 9, 2000).
. Corus Bank did not appeal the certification of the class and that issue was not raised in its subsequent summary judgment motion.
. In her complaint, Rendler also alleged that Corus Bank violated the TILA by offering consumers a home equity line of credit and open-end credit disclosures in connection with a condominium purchase financed by a closed-end loan. That count was dismissed and Rendler does not appeal that decision.
. Under the official commentary provided with the regulation, if there is a series of advances involved in a transaction:
1. Series of advances. ■ Section 226.17(c)(6)(i) deals with a series of advances under an agreement to extend credit up to a certain amount. A creditor may treat all of the advances as a single transaction or disclose each advance as a separate transaction. If these advances are treated as 1 transaction and the timing and amounts of advances are unknown, creditors must make disclosures based on estimates, as provided in § 226.17(c)(2). If the advances are disclosed separately, disclosures must be provided before each advance occurs, with the disclosures for the first advance provided by consummation. 12 C.F.R. § 226, Supp. I, Par. 17(c)(6) (2001).
. Corus argues that the. regulations regarding open-end and closed-end transactions, when read in concert, indicate that the TILA not only permits multiple disclosure statements but prohibits the combining of the disclosures for these transactions into a single disclosure. Corus cites
In re Gillespie,
. The fact that almost a quarter of the potential class members reborrowed on their home equity line of credit also nullifies Rendler's reliance on this court's statements in
Benion v. Bank One Dayton, N.A.,
.
See Brown v. Marquette S. & L. Ass’n,
.
See Harris v. Illinois Vehicle Premium Finance Co.,
