Grant Mitchell, Mr. RESPA, Dies at 76

Grant Mitchell, the former assistant general counsel at the Department of Housing and Urban Development known throughout the industry as Mr. RESPA, died on Monday, Sept. 10. He was 76.

He was with HUD for 34 years, but as he recalled in an interview which appeared in the May 10, 1999 issue of National Mortgage News shortly after he left the agency, it was in 1984 when he got the task for which he said, “My life was never the same again.”

Mitchell’s then-boss John Knapp gave him responsibility over the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act. But things really got interesting in the fall of 1992.

Right before the presidential election that year, HUD issued RESPA regulations written by Mitchell, including the one which required mortgage brokers to disclose the yield-spread premium received for the first time.

Mitchell noted the rule came about from the merger of Bank of America and Security Pacific, where one wholesaler did disclose the information on the HUD-1 and one didn’t and they were looking for some guidance.

After he left HUD, Mitchell first worked at the law firm of Reed Smith Shaw & McClay before going to Lotstein Buckman.

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Originations Law and regulation Career moves
MORE FROM NATIONAL MORTGAGE NEWS