Mortgage Broker

Fall 2015

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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16 | fall 2015 mbabc.ca MORTGAGEBROKER Is a Mortgage Broker a Fiduciary? fiduciaryobligation COMPENSATION DISCLOSURE OBLIGATIONS on mortgage brokers do not end with the Mortgage Brokers Act. ere are common law obligations of disclosure which fall under the law relating to fiduciaries. A fiduciary has a legal and ethical relationship of trust with his or her client. Fiduciaries have the highest standard of care in law. ere must be no conflict of duty between the fiduciary and the client; further, the law requires that a fiduciary not profit from his of her position as a fiduciary without knowledge and consent from the client. If mortgage brokers are fiduciaries, then they must disclose all compensation and benefits received from parties other than their client to their client. is would include disclosing to mortgage borrowers the amount of lender commissions received. e question then is, "Are all mortgage brokers fiduciaries of their clients?" In 2009, the Supreme Court of Canada in Galambos v. Perez clarified that for a person to be a fiduciary, he or she must have undertaken to be one either expressly or implicitly. A person does not become a fiduciary of another person simply because they are in a position of power over the other person. e importance of this decision for mortgage brokers is straightforward: mortgage brokers may explicitly or implicitly by their conduct become fiduciaries but they are not inherently fiduciaries. Whether or not they are a fiduciary of their client depends on the nature of their relationship with their client, not on their job title. A fiduciary is someone who: ■ exercises discretion on behalf of clients rather than following instructions; and ■ makes decisions for clients rather than giving the client information and equipping them to make decisions for themselves. An example of the court ruling that a mortgage broker did not act as a fiduciary is found in the British Columbia Court of Appeal (2004) case in Lindner v. Williams. A couple lent money on a mortgage found by a mortgage broker. ey lost money on the mortgage, as the house at the time of foreclosure proceedings was devalued because it was a grow-op. e Court said that whether a fiduciary duty exists depends upon the nature of the relationship, not the occupation of the person said to be a fiduciary. e lenders were aware that the mortgage broker's job was to find mortgage financing for borrowers and that he was not their financial advisor. Based on his functions, the mortgage broker was not a fiduciary. Mortgage brokers are therefore not, by definition, fiduciaries. It is the nature of their relationship with a client which determines whether or not they BY SAMANTHA GALE

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