An Act to revitalize the housing industry by strengthening the financial stability of home mortgage lending institutions and ensuring the availability of home mortgage loans.
Nicknames
Alternative Mortgage Transaction Parity Act of 1982
Passed the Senate on September 24, 1982 (passed voice vote, in lieu of S. 2879)
Reported by the joint conference committee on September 30, 1982; agreed to by the Senate on September 30, 1982 (agreed voice vote) and by the House on October 1, 1982 (agreed voice vote)
Signed into law by President Ronald Reagan on October 15, 1982
The bill, whose full title was "An Act to revitalize the housing industry by strengthening the financial stability of home mortgage lending institutions and ensuring the availability of home mortgage loans," was a Reagan Administration initiative.[2]
An important consumer change was to allow anyone to place real estate, consisting of one to four dwelling units, into their own trust without triggering the due-on-sale clause. The due-on-sale clause allows lenders to foreclose on a current loan upon transfer to another. This greatly facilitates the use of trusts to pass property to heirs and minors. It may also protect the property of wealthy or risky owners against the possibility of future lawsuits or creditors, because the trust owns the property, not the individuals at risk. The bill states "... a lender may not exercise its option pursuant to a due-on-sale clause upon ... a transfer into an inter vivos trust in which the borrower is and remains a beneficiary and which does not relate to a transfer of rights of occupancy in the property[.]" (The Garn st Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, (U.S.C.) 1701j-3(d)(8).)[5]
The bill's passage is considered an important shift in the Democratic Party's positioning on economic regulation, as the party had historically defended New Deal era financial regulations, but had now come to favor financial deregulation. According to a 2022 study, this shift happened as a consequence of the congressional reforms of the 1970s, which undermined parochial and Southern populist interests within the Democratic Party. These parochial and populist interests favored a decentralized banking system. The party subsequently pursued deregulatory reforms that it perceived as beneficial to savers and consumers.[7]
Cornett, Marcia Millon; Tehranian, Hassan (1990). "An Examination of the Impact of the Garn–st Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982 on Commercial Banks and Savings and Loans". Journal of Finance. 45 (1): 95–111. doi:10.2307/2328811. JSTOR2328811.