Peter LeQuire
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2005
- Professional Status
- Retired Appraiser
- State
- Tennessee
I believe that we are discussing the owner of Record.
If we are discussing the owner of Record, then it's reasonable to assume that it must be Recorded to be a Record.
So you would disregard information that isn't of record?
But, the initial question came about because an appraiser had been asked to do something that is not illegal, nor unethical, nor fattening, nor morally reprehensible. As long as the date of the appraisal is the date of death of the record owner, or subsequent to it, why not accommodate a client dealing with an admittedly superfluous request? (And maybe get a fee for the change?)
"Who--or, what--is in title via the applicable public record source and within the normal SOW--is what (or, who) I report as being in title via the public source."
Lee - I understand; we're not a lot of things. Again, the "it ain't in the normal scope of work so I ain't gonna' do it 'cause you can't make me" may be defensible. It does have a certain ostrich-like QED finality that excuses refusing to do what the OP was asked to do. That said, the client made a request that can be accommodated without compromising law, regulation or ethics: I see no reason not to make the change.