1980.376—Loss payments.

Settlement of the guarantee will be processed in accordance with this section.
(a) Loss payment. Loss payments will be made within 60 days of the Lender's properly filed claim. The Lender must submit its loss claim within 30 calendar days of loan liquidation. The claim may include interest on the unpaid principal accrued to final loss settlement. RHS will pay interest within the limits of the guarantee to the date the claim is paid when the Lender promptly and properly files the claim.
(1) Determination of loss payment. To calculate the loss payment, first determine the unpaid debt by adding the unpaid principal and interest on the loan and the unpaid balance for principal and interest on authorized protective advances. The net proceeds from the property will be first applied to the unpaid debt. Any other proceeds recovered by the Lender from other sources shall also be applied to the total unpaid debt. Determination of net proceeds will be different depending on which of the following circumstances are involved.
(i) If, at liquidation, title to the property is conveyed to a bona fide third-party purchaser, then final loss payment will be based on the net sales proceeds received for the property.
(ii) If, at liquidation, title to the property is conveyed to the Lender, then the Lender must prepare and submit a property disposition plan to RHS for RHS concurrence. The plan will address the Lender's proposed method for sale of the property, the estimated value and minimum sale price, itemized estimated costs of the sale, and any other information that could impact the amount of loss on the loan. The Lender is allowed up to 6 months from the date the property is acquired to sell the property. Upon the Lender's written request, RHS will authorize one extension not to exceed 30 days to close the sale of a purchase offer accepted near the end of the 6-month period. Net proceeds will be based on the net proceeds received for the property when the sale is conducted in accordance with the plan as approved by RHS. If no sale offer is accepted within the 6-month period, then the RHS approval official will obtain and use a liquidation value appraisal of the property. When an appraisal is obtained, the amount of the net proceeds from the security is then determined by subtracting a cost factor, which is found in exhibit D of FmHA Instruction 1980-D (available in any RHS office), from the current market value.
(iii) If a deficiency judgment is obtained, the Lender must enforce the judgment against the borrower before loss settlement if the current situation provides a reasonable prospect of recovery. A loss payment will be made when the Lender holds a deficiency judgment but there are not current prospects of collection, even if there may be in the future.
(2) Payment procedure. RHS will pay losses on the loan according to the terms of the loan note guarantee unless RHS has determined there is cause for reduction of the loss amount. See § 1980.377 for future recovery by the Lender.
(i) If there is no dispute between RHS and the Lender regarding the amount of the loss and the Lender's eligibility for payment of loss, RHS will pay the loss within the limits of the guarantee.
(ii) If RHS and the Lender do not agree on the amount of the loss, or RHS has determined that part of the loss is not payable to the Lender under the terms of the loan note guarantee, RHS will pay the undisputed portion. The disputed portion of the claim will be treated as an adverse decision and the Lender may appeal.
(iii) When RHS has cause to believe that Lender fraud or other lender actions negating the guarantee exist, no loss payment may be made unless the situation is resolved.
(3) The RHS approval official will conduct an audit of the account and review the loan in its entirety to determine why the loan failed and whether any reason exists for reducing or denying the loss claim. This information will be documented in the RHS casefile.
(4) If a Lender's loss claim is denied or reduced, the RHS approval official will notify the Lender of all of the reasons for the action within 10 days of the decision and the Lender may appeal in accordance with § 1980.399 and subpart B of part 1900.
(5) The RHS approval official is authorized to approve loss payments in amounts of up to 50 percent of his/her delegated loan approval authority in accordance with exhibit D of FmHA Instruction 1901-A (available in any RHS office).
(b) Denial or reduction of loss claims. The RHS approval official will fully document any loss claim which is denied or reduced including an analysis of how the amount of the reduction was determined. A connection must be made between the Lender's action or failure to act and the loss amount on the loan. The amount of loss occasioned by such action will be established. This information will be made available to the Lender upon request. A Lender's loss claim may be denied or reduced by RHS when:
(1) The Lender has committed fraud. (Denial of claim.)
(2) The Lender claims items not authorized under RHS regulations. (Reduced by amount of unauthorized claim.)
(3) The Lender violated usury laws. (Reduction for amount of loss caused by the violation.)
(4) The Lender failed to obtain required security or maintain the security position. (Reduction for loss attributed to failure.)
(5) Loan funds were used for unauthorized purposes. (Reduction by unauthorized amount.)
(6) The Lender was negligent in loan servicing. Negligent servicing is a failure to perform those services which a reasonably prudent Lender would perform in servicing its own portfolio of loans that are not guaranteed. The term includes a failure to act, a failure to act in a timely manner, or acting in a manner contrary to that in which a reasonably prudent Lender would act. (Reduction for loss amount attributable to Lender negligence.) Examples of negligent servicing include:
(i) A failure to contact the borrower in a timely manner when the borrower's account goes into default.
(ii) A failure to pay real estate taxes or hazard insurance when due.
(iii) A failure to notify RHS within required time limits when the borrower defaults on the loan.
(iv) A failure to request loan subsidy when the borrower was eligible for loan subsidy and loan subsidy was available (subsidized loans only).
(v) A failure to protect security during the liquidation phase.
(7) The Lender delayed filing the loss claim. (Reduction in claim for interest accrued because the claim was not filed.)