Mortgage Broker

Spring 2019

Mortgage Broker is the magazine of the Canadian Mortgage Brokers Association and showcases the multi-billion dollar mortgage-broking industry to all levels of government, associated organizations and other interested individuals.

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CMB MAGAZINE cmba-achc.ca spring 2019 | 19 if they had a different understanding between them, they could deal with that separately. e broker testified that, notwithstanding all of this, it was his understanding both the son and mother were buyers. (Curiously the Court accepted the broker's explanation without noting Clearly the son was enriched by the monies provided by his mother toward the purchase of the property and his mother was correspondingly deprived of those funds. e question is whether there is any juristic reason for the enrichment and deprivation. e burden is on the son to provide a juristic reason that his mother intended the funds as a gi to her son. e son says the juristic reason is that his mother gied the money to him to purchase the house to be his alone. e onus of proving the gi falls on the son. e transaction was structured as it was on the advice of the mortgage broker. e mother had the down payment but would not qualify for the needed mortgage because of her debts, credit rating, and lack of income history. e son had no down payment but had a good job with a decent income. e broker suggested putting the application in the name of the son, for the mother to be cast as a tenant to enhance the son's income, and designating the mother's down payment as a gi (supported by a gi letter). e broker explained that both parties would have to say it was a gi, but that his description could amount to involving mortgage application fraud. Notably the Court had declined to believe the son's explanation as to an earlier transfer because it could amount to involving fraudulent conveyance.) e mortgage broker's evidence was important in the Court's deciding that the mother had made an investment, not a gi. e son had failed to show that the monies were intended as a gi. e Court then proceeded to determine the contributions of each party and divided the ownership accordingly. e property was to be sold and the proceeds divided, unless the son bought out the mother. TAKEAWAYS Determine and document the true intention of the parties as to whether the advancement of monies is a gi, loan, or investment. It can spare the client a difficult and upsetting litigation process. When the relationship unravelled, the mother claimed she was joint owner of the property; the son claimed he was the sole owner and that his mother had gifted him the down payment."

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