By Joe Light 

The U.S. Justice Department sued Quicken Loans Inc., alleging the mortgage lender lied to the government when making loans backed by the Federal Housing Administration.

The Justice Department said that between September 2007 and December 2011, Detroit-based Quicken originated hundreds of FHA-insured loans that shouldn't have been eligible for federal backing. Among other allegations, the complaint said Quicken pushed back on appraisals when a home got too low a valuation to qualify for a loan, and that Quicken's own management team was concerned about some of its loan-underwriting practices.

"Those who do business with the United States must act in good faith, including lenders that participate in the FHA mortgage insurance program, " said Justice Department Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Benjamin C. Mizer. "To protect the housing market and the FHA fund, we will continue to hold responsible lenders that knowingly violate the rules."

In a statement, Quicken Loans said the Justice Dept.'s lawsuit relied on "on a handful of out-of-context email conversations skimmed from the communication between Quicken Loans employees."

"Today's DOJ filing is simply the continuation of the abusive actions and a make-good on the DOJ's threats since their witch-hunt began three years ago, as detailed in the lawsuit Quicken Loans filed against the DOJ last week," Quicken Loans' statement said.

Quicken Loans last year surpassed Wells Fargo & Co. to become the biggest FHA lender by volume, issuing $6.7 billion of FHA loans, according to trade publication Inside Mortgage Finance. Unlike larger traditional lenders, such as Wells Fargo and Bank of America Corp., Quicken isn't a bank.

The Justice Department complaint comes less than a week after Quicken filed a pre-emptive lawsuit against the department and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, alleging the government had attempted to twist its arm into admitting to claims of fraud that Quicken executives say it didn't commit.

That claim alleged the Justice Department based its large settlement demands on a sampling of just 55 of 246,000 loans, and that the defects included minor errors such as miscalculating a borrower's income by $17 and lending a borrower $26 too much.

After filing its lawsuit against the Justice Department last week, Quicken Chief Executive Bill Emerson in a statement said, "It's a shame the DOJ would choose to attack the country's largest and highest-quality FHA lender providing government lending for home buyers and homeowners across all 50 states at the very time our nation needs expanded access to credit for middle-class Americans who benefit most from the FHA program."

The Justice Department has reached several multimillion-dollar settlements with other large lenders, some of which have said they are being unfairly punished for minor transgressions rather than material mistakes.

Thursday's new complaint alleges the faulty underwriting practices caused HUD to pay millions of dollars in insurance claims. The lawsuit claims Quicken violated the False Claims Act, which would make the lender liable for treble damages.

Too-generous appraisals were at the center of the Justice Department's allegations. The complaint cited a Quicken vice president's email regarding the company's appraisal processes that said: "I don't think the media or any other mortgage company...would like the fact we have a team who is responsible to push back on appraisers."

The lawsuit also said that in one instance, Quicken approved a loan for a borrower who had "requested a refund of the $400 mortgage application fee so that the borrower would be able to feed her family."

The Justice Department since the financial crisis has reached several settlements with major lenders, including J.P. Morgan Chase & Co., SunTrust Banks Inc. and U.S. Bancorp, related to poorly underwritten FHA loans.

Some lenders have said the harsh and uncertain penalties have led them to pull back from the FHA program, which could have the effect of limiting consumers' access to mortgages, though it has also led many small lenders to pick up market share.

Write to Joe Light at joe.light@wsj.com

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