Peter LeQuire
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 3, 2005
- Professional Status
- Retired Appraiser
- State
- Tennessee
In this are we not haunted by the lack of clarification in what is meant by "analyze"?
Even if one accepted your argument (and I don't), it does not matter. You are analyzing a prior sale because you do have an assignment.Why do you say one could never violate the Standards Rules? Of course you can, when you have an appraisal assignment. If you don't have an appraisal assignment to break, then no, rules don't apply. Rules are applied to appraisal assignments in 1 & 2. I highlighted in yellow just some of the example. They are not applied to an appraiser saying that some house is a REO and appeared to have sold below market value; no one ordered it, there is no client and no intended user relying on it. Sorry, but me saying that REOs typically sell below market value is not a mass appraisal. And to suggest as such, is a massive, non-supported error on your part.
You can have both at the same time. An appraisal is an opinion of value. When analyzing, you can find that it sold below market value because it was a distressed sale. that is both an analysis and an opinion of value. However, that analysis on that comp is not is an appraisal assignment. A client did not order an appraisal on that comp. That's merely an explanation of the conditions of the sale and it's affects. (ie analysis).Wow, appraisers that cant grasp the difference between an appraisal and an analysis of comparable sales... Who would have imagined?
In a review assignment. If you say that the value opinion is "too low" or "too high,". That is an appraisal opinion. The same is true when you are analyzing a prior sale. Is this a big deal? That probably depends on whether you are sitting in front of a state board or not.