Fannie Mae Selling Guide C1-2-06 — Bailee Letters
Fannie Mae Selling Guide C1-2-06 — Bailee Letters.
Verbatim regulatory text
Verbatim provisions from Fannie Mae Selling Guide C1-2-06 — Bailee Letters — each quote is a verified substring of the regulator-published source snapshot, not retyped. Quoted for reference; this is not legal advice. The operational layer (P&P updates, prompts) lives in the regulation update kits.
Fannie Mae Selling Guide C1-2-06 — Bailee Letters
C1-2-06, Bailee Letters (04/06/2022) Introduction This topic provides information on bailee letters, including: Bailee Letters Resolution of Mismatched Delivery Instructions Liability for Losses Incurred by a Mortgage Seller or any Other Party Published May 6, 2026 941 Bailee Letters Bailee letters typically state that: the notes identified in the letter are pledged to the named third party, the lien of the third party’s security interest will be released only if the proceeds from the transfer of the mortgages to Fannie Mae are delivered to the third party in accordance with the delivery instructions in the letter, and the recipient holds the notes as a “bailee” (or in trust) for the third party until the third party either receives the proceeds (cash or securities) or receives back the notes for any mortgages that were not purchased or securitized. The term “bailee letter” includes any communication that notifies a document custodian of any of the following: the notes are pledged to a third party; the notes are subject to a security interest or lien held by a third party; the notes are owned by, or titled in the name of, a third party (for example, mortgages that are subject to a sale and repurchase arrangement); or the notes are subject to some other claim or interest held by a third party that would, if it were not released, result in Fannie Mae’s acquiring less than clear, unencumbered, and exclusive title to the mortgage notes. The requirements for processing bailee letters and other notification of third-party interests in mortgage loans can be found in Fannie Mae’s RDC guide. Resolution of Mismatched Delivery Instructions Fannie Mae will undertake to identify mismatches and to achieve matches in delivery instructions promptly, in good faith, and in accordance with reasonable business practices. Liability for Losses Incurred by a Mortgage Seller or any Other Party Fannie Mae will not be liable for any losses that a mortgage seller or any other party incurs as the result of Fannie Mae’s actions or omissions related to these procedures, including Fannie Mae’s execution of (or failure to execute) specific steps, and any resulting delay. A mortgage seller is obligated to ensure that Fannie Mae takes free and clear title to the mortgages it delivers to Fannie Mae; therefore, it must make sure that its delivery instructions match those of its warehouse lender before it delivers the mortgage to Fannie Mae. Because of this obligation, the mortgage seller will be fully responsible for any trading or settlement delays (including those Fannie Mae experiences) that arise as the result of mismatches in delivery instructions. (See C3-7-06, Settling the Trade, for information on how to settle different delivery instructions.) Further, the execution of these procedures will not constitute a waiver of any of the rights and remedies Fannie Mae has under the mortgage seller’s representation and warranty that the title Published May 6, 2026 942 to any mortgage note it delivers to Fannie Mae is free and clear of any security interest, lien, pledge, or other encumbrance. Recent Related Announcements The table below provides references to recently issued Announcements that are related to this topic. Announcements Issue Date Announcement SEL-2022-03 April 06, 2022 Chapter C1-3, Loan Remittance Types Overview Introduction When selling loans to Fannie Mae, lenders must decide if they will service the loans or release the servicing to another Fannie Mae-approved lender. They must also select a method for remitting borrower payments to Fannie Mae. This chapter provides an overview regarding remitting payments to Fannie Mae.