Wells Fargo accused of scamming borrowers on rate lock fees

Wells Fargo forced borrowers to pay millions of dollars in fees to extend interest rate locks that expired due to the bank's delays in processing mortgage applications, a lawsuit claims.

It's a common industry practice for lenders to charge fees to extend expired rate locks when late paperwork or other borrower issues delay processing. But Wells Fargo charged the fee even when rate locks expired because of the bank's own processing delays, claims the lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of California.

A Wells Fargo spokesperson declined to comment on the lawsuit's allegations, but defended the bank's rate-lock practices.

"Our current processes are designed to ensure that our rate lock extension fee policy is interpreted and applied consistently," Tom Goyda, senior vice president in consumer lending communications at Wells Fargo, said in an email. "We continue to work through a comprehensive review of our past practices regarding rate-lock extensions that will help us evaluate the facts, and will address additional steps for our customers as appropriate."

wellsfargobuilding-bloomberg.jpg
12/13/12 - CHARLOTTE, N.C.: Wells Fargo opened new trading floors in the Duke Energy building in Charlotte, N.C. The Duke Energy building is located in an area of uptown Charlotte that has seen a great deal of new construction, in the hopes of attracting more business to the city. Bank of America's headquarters, in the buidling second from right, are just blocks away. Wells Fargo opened their new public trading floor on December 10, 2012. (photo by Davis Turner)

Managers at Wells Fargo were engaged in a "systematic effort" to "wrongly offload the cost of … interest rate extensions onto borrowers," the lawsuit claims.

"Wells Fargo managers pressure employees to blame customers for the delays so that the Bank can charge rate-lock extension fees. Wells Fargo also made it difficult to not assign borrowers the fee," the lawsuit adds. "For example, while Bank-paid rate-lock extension fees appear to have required the approval of a regional manager, determinations of borrower-caused delays did not. Moreover, if mortgage consultants accumulated too many borrower-charged extension fees in their files, they were reportedly subject to reprimand."

The plaintiff, first-time home buyer Victor Muniz, alleges he was charged $287.50 to extend his expired rate lock, despite being told by a Wells Fargo employee he would not have to pay the fee.

The lawsuit relies heavily on news accounts and complaints to banking regulators to substantiate its claims. It alleges Wells Fargo violated the federal Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act, Truth in Lending Act and various state laws.

Keller Rohrback LLP in Seattle, which previously filed a lawsuit against Wells related to its unauthorized-accounts scandal, is representing Muniz and requesting the case be certified as a class action. It claims at least 100 borrowers were forced to pay similar fees that total in excess of $5 million.

The lawsuit follows a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau investigation into Wells' rate-lock extension practices.

"The CFPB has commenced an investigation into the Company's policies and procedures regarding the circumstances in which the Company required customers to pay fees for the extension of interest rate lock periods for residential mortgages," Wells Fargo disclosed in its 10-Q filing earlier this month.

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Lawsuits Underwriting Mortgage rates First time home buyers Mortgage applications Wells Fargo CFPB California
MORE FROM AMERICAN BANKER