Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 13— - NATIONAL HOUSING › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER VI— - WAR HOUSING INSURANCE › § 1739
When a lender forecloses on, or with the Secretary’s OK otherwise takes, a property that had federal mortgage insurance, the lender can get insurance benefits if it quickly gives the Secretary a proper title deed and assigns its claims from the mortgage or foreclosure (except claims the Secretary agreed to release). After that transfer the lender stops paying insurance premiums. The Secretary will issue negotiable debentures equal to the “value of the mortgage” (the unpaid principal at the start of foreclosure or acquisition plus lender-paid taxes, liens, assessments, insurance, and mortgage insurance premiums, minus amounts later received on the loan or rent, with special rules for including foreclosure costs). In some cases the Secretary may add limited foreclosure costs: up to 2% of the unpaid principal but not more than $75, or up to two-thirds of actual costs, whichever is larger. For debentures issued on or after September 2, 1964, the Secretary may (with the lender’s consent) include up to one-third of approved foreclosure and acquisition costs. For loans covered by the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act, the Secretary may include an amount to cover interest and premium losses during military service and the three months after. Debentures come in multiples of $50, are signed in the name of the General Insurance Fund, guaranteed by the United States, and are mostly tax-exempt. The interest rate is set when the mortgage was insured but cannot exceed 3% per year, paid January 1 and July 1. Debentures issued for properties insured on or after May 26, 1942, mature ten years after issue; older ones follow earlier dating rules (with an option to elect a ten-year maturity). If cash paid by the Secretary plus proceeds from sale of the property exceed the debentures and interest, the extra is used to pay any certificate of claim and then, in some cases, returned to the borrower or kept by the Secretary under later rules. The Secretary may manage, repair, insure, rent, or sell such properties and may pursue assigned claims, but must start any suit against an assigned borrower within six months after the claim is assigned or after the last payment on it, whichever is later. After conveyance, neither lender nor borrower has any right to the property or assigned claims, and the Secretary owes them no duty in handling or selling them.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1739
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73