Pennsylvania Code & Bulletin
COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA

• No statutes or acts will be found at this website.

The Pennsylvania Code website reflects the Pennsylvania Code changes effective through 54 Pa.B. 488 (January 27, 2024).

12 Pa. Code § 31.201. Definitions.

§ 31.201. Definitions.

 The following words and terms, when used in this subchapter, have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

   Act 91 Notice—The notice of intention to foreclose required to be sent to a mortgagor prior to the filing of a foreclosure action under the act in the form prescribed in this subchapter.

   Applicant—A person who has received the notice described in Appendix A and who has submitted an application to the Agency under this subchapter.

   Consumer credit counseling agency—A nonprofit corporation or governmental entity located in this Commonwealth which has been designated by the Agency to provide Homeowner’s Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program counseling. A qualified consumer credit counseling agency shall either be certified as a housing counseling agency by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development or otherwise be determined acceptable by the Agency. A list of counseling agencies approved by the Agency is set forth in Appendix C. This list was last updated and includes all changes through April 1, 2016. Future updates of this list will only appear on the Agency’s web site at www.phfa.org, and will be updated on a periodic basis as changes occur. The Agency will annually publish a schedule for updates to the list, and mortgagees will be expected to update their lists in accordance with the schedule.

   Face-to-face meeting—A meeting conducted either in-person or remotely using technological means, through which the applicant and consumer credit counseling agency communicate with each other contemporaneously, both audibly and visually.

   Gross household income—The total income of the applicant, all other owners-occupants of the residence, any spouse and children residing in the same household as the applicant and other residents of the household declared by the mortgagor as dependents for Federal tax purposes. The term does not include the income of minor children. The income of adult children or other unrelated individuals residing in the household shall be considered part of gross household income only to the extent that their income is available to the household.

   Homeowner—The owner occupant of a one- or two-family residential structure or the owner-occupant of a cooperative or condominium unit who is also the borrower, debtor or obligor on a mortgage encumbering the residence. The term is interchangeable with the term ‘‘mortgagor.’’

   Installment sales contract or agreement—An agreement or contract under which the seller of residential real property conveys ownership of or an equitable interest in real estate which constitutes the principal residence of the buyer wherein the seller finances the purchase by the buyer through contract, agreement, note or other security interest, if that contract or agreement does not constitute a default under the terms of a pre-existing mortgage between the seller and the seller’s mortgagee.

   Mortgage—A lien, other than a judgment, on a fee simple or leasehold interest in real property which constitutes the principal residence of the mortgagor, obligor or debtor, located in this Commonwealth together with credit instruments secured thereby. The term includes an installment sales agreement or installment sales contract. The term also includes an obligation evidenced by a security lien on real property upon which an owner-occupied mobile home is located.

   Mortgagee—A lender whose debt is secured by a mortgage.

   Mortgagor—The owner occupant of a one- or two-family residential structure or the occupant of a cooperative or condominium unit who is also the borrower, debtor or obligor on a mortgage encumbering the residence. This term is interchangeable with the term ‘‘homeowner.’’

   Net effective income—Gross household income less city, State and Federal income and Social Security taxes.

   Noncorporate seller—A person holding a mortgage who is not a bank, a savings and loan association, a mortgage bank, a consumer discount company or other entity in the mortgage lending business.

   Reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs—Fees for legal services and reasonable and necessary costs related thereto, which are actually incurred by a mortgagee, in commencing or pursuing an action of mortgage foreclosure. The Agency will reimburse lenders for reasonable attorneys’ fees and reasonable and necessary costs, which are actually incurred by a mortgagee, in commencing or pursuing an action of mortgage foreclosure and which meet the requirements or limitations on the Agency’s web site at www.phfa.org. The Agency will reimburse lenders based upon a reasonable hourly rate as may be established by the Agency annually and published by the Agency in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

   Total housing expense—The sum of the mortgagor’s monthly mortgage payments, including escrows, utility costs, hazard insurance expenses, real property taxes and, in the case of cooperatives and condominiums, the maintenance expense shall consist of the monthly amount the unit is assessed for the maintenance of common elements.

Source

   The provisions of this §  31.201 amended through June 13, 1986, effective June 14, 1986, 16 Pa.B. 2126; amended July 1, 1994, effective July 2, 1994, 24 Pa.B. 3224; amended June 4, 1999, effective June 5, 1999, 29 Pa.B. 2859; amended August 29, 2008, effective September 6, 2008, 38 Pa.B. 4859; amended April 29, 2016, effective April 30, 2016, 46 Pa.B. 2171; amended April 2, 2021, effective April 3, 2021, 51 Pa.B. 1824. Immediately preceding text appears at serial pages (380293) to (380295).

Notes of Decisions

   Ownership

   While the Pennsylvania Housing Finance Agency may not base a determination of ownership on compliance with the recording laws for purposes of 35 P.S. §  1680.402(c) governing mortgage assistance they may require recordation as evidence of ownership under the housing finance regulations in the Pennsylvania Code. Land v. Housing Finance Agency, 515 A.2d 1024 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1986).



No part of the information on this site may be reproduced for profit or sold for profit.


This material has been drawn directly from the official Pennsylvania Code full text database. Due to the limitations of HTML or differences in display capabilities of different browsers, this version may differ slightly from the official printed version.