residentialguy
Elite Member
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2009
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Minnesota
@timd354
I disagree with this Tim. The intent of that was to keep the appraiser from boosting/exceeding market value in order to get a higher fee... e.g. Fee for a MV up to $350k is $400. Fee for a home with a MV of $351k to 500k is $550. Fee for a home with a MV over $500k is $700, and so on. The MV of the property has NOTHING to do with the complexity of the assignment. It's completely bogus fee setting that encouraged inflated values.
Charging for ROVs are simply a fee charged for additional work requested by the client that is added from the original SOW. If the appraiser finds that they made a mistake, then obviously that should have been included in the original report, thus no fee would be warranted. This is nowhere near the intent of the management section of the ethics rule.
However, as a side note, it is very pertinent the lender's choice to pressure the appraiser for value...a violation I highly doubt they want to face. just sayin...
It does not matter why, but a contingent fee structure whereby your compensation is contingent in whole or part on the results of your analysis violates the Management section of the ethics rule (IMO). Additionally, maybe you are not biased, but such an arrangement certainly opens you up to a claim of bias
I disagree with this Tim. The intent of that was to keep the appraiser from boosting/exceeding market value in order to get a higher fee... e.g. Fee for a MV up to $350k is $400. Fee for a home with a MV of $351k to 500k is $550. Fee for a home with a MV over $500k is $700, and so on. The MV of the property has NOTHING to do with the complexity of the assignment. It's completely bogus fee setting that encouraged inflated values.
Charging for ROVs are simply a fee charged for additional work requested by the client that is added from the original SOW. If the appraiser finds that they made a mistake, then obviously that should have been included in the original report, thus no fee would be warranted. This is nowhere near the intent of the management section of the ethics rule.
However, as a side note, it is very pertinent the lender's choice to pressure the appraiser for value...a violation I highly doubt they want to face. just sayin...
Last edited: