- Joined
- Jan 15, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
No it doesn't. The point I'm trying to make is that HBU may or may not be to sell the parcel separately, however most people here have chosen to turn off their brain after performing just the first test (legally permissible). There is no "one size fits all" approach to these assignments, but that doesn't negate the fact that the second parcel can always be valued "in use" (what value does it contribute to the whole) and that figure applied to the market value of both parcels when sold as one subject property.
Fannie isn't allowed to lend on VIU appraisals. But even if they were allowed to do it, them requesting appraisers do VIU without disclosing it as such in their reports amounts to an unreasonable assignment condition. The same for skipping the EA that the 2-parcel assemblage is worth the same as the 1 parcel properties, and for not even disclosing the various other elements of HBU which are of effect on this property. None of that meets our minimum standards of conduct for an appraiser.
As for the value of the house+extra, appraisers who don't provide even 1 comparable with that attribute and just pull whatever reconciliation they're using for that - if any at all - out of thin air, that's even worse than skipping the remainder of an HBU analysis. There are ways to actually analyze for that attribute and develop the opinion, so there's no reason to make the unsupported assumption.
To repeat, not one of the sales transactions in the dataset you posted for the appraisal on Garfield was a house+extra, which means not one of them was directly comparable to the Garfield property in terms of that particular attribute. Garfield is a "B" type property that was apparently appraised as if it was an "A" type property. Probably out of expediency. We have no way of telling *from those sales* what the value of a "B" property is in that market.
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