Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER V— - MISCELLANEOUS › § 1735f–15
Allows the Secretary to fine owners, partners, officers, or certain managers of apartment properties with 5 or more units that have mortgages insured, coinsured, or held under this law when they knowingly and seriously break written promises or rules about using nonproject income, money handling, property upkeep, transfers, or management. Examples include moving or mortgaging the property without written approval; spending or giving away rents or project assets except for normal expenses; refusing access to books or records; missing the required annual financial report within 90 days after the fiscal year ends; failing to make mortgage or reserve payments when there is enough project income; poor maintenance; improper security deposit rules (only first month’s rent plus a security deposit up to 1 month’s rent, and deposits must be kept separate and at least equal to obligations); and payments over $500 that are much higher than local normal rates. Penalties add to any other civil or criminal actions and cannot be used when the Department, its agent, or a public housing agency is the main cause of the problem. The Secretary sets rules for how fines are decided and must give the person a chance for a hearing. If no hearing is asked for within 15 days after notice, the fine becomes final. The Secretary may review the decision within 90 days. For the special broken promises in the loan or transfer agreements, a fine cannot be more than the loss the Secretary would face at a foreclosure sale. For the other listed violations, a fine cannot exceed $25,000. Fines cannot be paid from project income. After using all agency appeals, a fined person can ask a U.S. court of appeals to review the penalty within 20 days of the final order. The Secretary can ask the Attorney General to sue to collect a final unpaid penalty. The Secretary may reduce or cancel fines, must write rules to run this process, defines “knowingly” as actual knowledge or deliberate ignorance/reckless disregard, and must send collected fines to the fund under section 1715z–1a(j). An “identity of interest” management agent is a manager that the owner also owns or controls.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1735f–15
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73