Honorable Robert A. Young Missouri Senate, 24th District 3500 Adie Road St. Ann, Missouri 63074
Dear Senator Young:
This is in response to your request for an opinion on the following question:
"Because of the restrictions set forth in Section
408.052 (1), RSMo., 1969, in addition to a one (1) point origination fee, may a lender charge a borrower on residential real estate (other than a construction loan) for bona fide expenses paid by the lender to a third party who is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the lender, for services actually performed by such subsidiary in connection with the loan?"
In your opinion request you further point out:
"Lenders throughout the State of Missouri have wholly-owned subsidiaries who are capable of rendering services such as appraisals and credit investigations in connection with real estate loans. There is confusion as to whether a lender may charge borrower for such services actually performed by the wholly-owned subsidiary and paid for by the lender."
With respect to residential real estate loans, Section
"No lender shall charge, require or receive, on any residential real estate loan, any points or other fees of any nature whatsoever, excepting a one percent origination fee, whether from the buyer or the seller or any other person, except that the lender may charge bona fide expenses paid by the lender to third parties for services actually performed in connection with a loan. . . ."
Our answer to your opinion request is based on the assumption that the subsidiary corporation is wholly owned and that the fees charged by the lender are for credit investigations and appraisals conducted by the subsidiary corporation. While this opinion is not limited to wholly-owned savings and loan service corporations, it is applicable to such corporations. The opinion is not applicable to corporations, including a savings and loan service corporation, which are not wholly owned by the lender.
We must determine whether wholly-owned subsidiaries are "third parties" as that term is used in Section
1. Appraisals and credit investigations in connection with a residential real estate loan are primarily for the benefit of the lender rather than the borrower.
2. It is not an uncommon practice for the lender to make its own appraisal or credit investigation rather than engaging a third party to do the same.
3. Prior to the enactment of Section
4. Savings and loan associations, which are substantial residential real estate lenders in this state, are permitted to own stock in loan service corporations, Section
Absent compelling circumstances, the courts of this state will give effect to the separate identity of a subsidiary corporation not withstanding the fact that it is entirely owned by its parent. See, i.e., State v. Shell Pipeline Corporation,
In May Department Stores Co. v. Union Electric, Light Power Co.,
We find the rate regulation analogy appropriate. It would frustrate the intent of legislation which is intended to prohibit lenders from charging for credit investigations and appraisals in connection with residential real estate loans to permit such charges to be exacted through the use of wholly-owned subsidiaries. We hold that with respect to credit investigations and appraisals a wholly-owned subsidiary of the lender is not a third party as contemplated by Section
It is our view that Section
Very truly yours,
JOHN C. DANFORTH Attorney General
