J Grant
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2003
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Florida
I'd appreciate it if you can paste the FAQ you refer to since I am unable to isolate them for reference. However, USPAP is a minimal set of standards and often does not explicitly address how every appraisal problem is handled.An HC is not required for appraising a physical segment. It's not prohibited either. What is required in your report is clarity about which property is being included in the valuation. FAQs 195, 196, and 197 are applicable.
I did not say an HC is required in USPAP, I said a URAR lending form is either marked subject to completion / repair or made "as is", and that the URAR does not allow any additional HC ( such as excluding a physical segment ) Since most residential appraisals /lending work is reported on a URAR form, recognizing what it does and does not permit is critical to the results.
WRT clarity about which property is being included in the valuation, therein lies the problem. How would one clearly identify which property is being included in the valuation on a URAR?
One can do it at the top of form which identifies the subject property ( s stated as a WHOLE property one legal description, one folio number etc ). So a place to clearly identify only a segment is being valued would be on the top line which identifies the subject. : "Legal description: The identified property excluding the existing ADU" But, I bet almost nobody reports it like that to identify the subject on the URAR form ( because if they did, the client or UW would most likely reject the appraisal )
So, if it is not spelled out upfront on the URAR a portion is excluded, then what other way is there to report with clarity/without being misleading? Make an HC - which fits , since the ADU physically exists, yet we are making a hypothetical condition not to value it/to exclude it. But the URAR form does not allow us to make this HC, which leads back to a client asking for it is an unacceptable assignment condition - of course, an appraiser can do it anyway with no HC but make a disclosure, and keep fingers crossed that nobody on the client/user/review chain flags it. Some clients do not understand the issue of being misleading/what is permitted on the URAR so they accept anything, or they know better but look the other way if it suits their agenda knowing it is the appraiser, not the lender who will take the fall should it ever be challenged.
PS an exception is FHA requiring excess land be excluded from value, the rationale being it is a govt entity requirement as an assignment condition.
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