The Oklahoman

Court penalizes Quicken

- Kenneth Harney kenharney@earthlink.net

WASHINGTON — Quicken Loans arguably has the mortgage industry’s squeakiest-clean image — named by J.D. Power as No. 1 in home loan customer satisfacti­on for seven years in a row and No. 1 in loan servicing for three years straight. It also has a reputation as a technology innovator.

So it might come as a surprise that a federal district court last week levied nearly $11 million in fines and damages against the company for homeowners who the court said were victims of an alleged appraisal tampering scheme by Quicken during the housing boom and bust years in West Virginia.

Quicken allegedly provided appraisers advance “estimates” of property values in assignment­s on home financing, effectivel­y communicat­ing the amounts Quicken needed to fund the loan.

Plaintiffs in a class action suit affecting 2,770 homeowners said appraisers working for Quicken had overstated the market worth of their properties, putting them underwater on their loans from the start.

One home-owning couple said in the original complaint that Quicken’s appraiser had reported their property was worth $151,000, significan­tly higher than its actual value of $115,500.

The court determined that Quicken’s practices constitute­d “unconscion­able” conduct under the West Virginia Consumer Credit and Protection Act.

“Once an appraisal is tainted by the implicatio­n of influence over the appraiser, especially by the party compensati­ng the appraiser,” the court said, “the resulting appraisal cannot by any establishe­d standard be fair, valid and reasonable.”

The court also found that by “concealing” what it did, Quicken “deceived the plaintiffs.”

In a statement for this column, Quicken strongly disputed the court’s conclusion­s. It said it plans to appeal the decision and that “there is no evidence” that provision of estimates of value in advance “impacted the opinion of local independen­t, licensed, profession­al home appraisers in West Virginia.”

Quicken added that “there is also no evidence that the valuations the appraisers issued at the time were inflated in any way or caused any damages whatsoever to a single plaintiff in the class. The facts of this case are clear and we are confident that both the judge’s ruling and the damages assessed will be overturned on appeal.”

David Stevens, President and CEO of the Mortgage Bankers Associatio­n, defended Quicken, a prominent member of the trade group, arguing that “it was a common industry practice during the time these loans were made to provide (an) owner’s estimate of value to appraisers, until the law changed nationwide in 2009.”

But was supplying advance estimates of value a commonplac­e industry practice back then? Appraisers I spoke with had differing opinions on the matter.

Lori Noble, an appraiser with Real Property Consulting Group in Charleston, West Virginia, told me, “I never saw other companies do it” — that is, include “owner’s estimate” dollar figures to appraisers along with order forms offering the assignment of work.

But Pat Turner, an appraiser in Richmond, Virginia, said that during the boom years, before federal appraisal reforms were enacted, lenders and loan officers weren’t shy about revealing the target value they needed to close a loan. In fact, he said, they got their message across far more bluntly than simply labeling the number needed as an “owner’s estimate.”

So what to make of this decision, which touches on one of the most sensitive issues in real estate?

Clearly this case is not over, given Quicken’s plans to appeal. The final judgment is not in. But it illustrate­s a fundamenta­l point: Consumers expect and pay for accurate and independen­t valuations of their homes and the equity they have in it, totally free of outside influences, from any source.

WASHINGTON POST

WRITERS GROUP

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