silker
Freshman Member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2012
- Professional Status
- Real Estate Agent or Broker
- State
- Michigan
Hi All
Thank you for this great website J
I have a question about the authority of an appraiser.
I am a Realtor and have the Buyer. The Lender (conventional loan) requested an appraisal through third party. The appraiser went out and appraised the house at agreed upon purchase price but stated this in his appraisal:
*** Repairs Required - **
The bath was observed to require the following;
New shower doors.
Remove balance of wallpaper and paint or re wallpaper.
Repaint entire bath including shower.
Test bath walls for mold as evidence of discoloration was observed (see attached photographs). Remediate and correct.
Report is subject to this condition being completed with a subsequent mold test by a licensed, professional (individual or
company) that results in there being no evidence of any such mold problems not only in the bathroom but throughout the
home as if it may have been present in one location within the home, this may have traveled to others.
Laundry room flooring to be replaced.
Needless to say, that the report came in on a Friday night, closing was supposed to be on the following Wednesday afternoon. This was the last day we could have closed because the house fell back to the bank the following day – yes, foreclosure.
Now, my thought is… did this appraiser overstep his boundaries by making a statement about mold that he is not qualified to make? The home inspector, a capacity when it comes to mold…. did not have any issue with the condition of the home or the discoloration in the bathroom of a house, vacant for 6 months and not aired out and he stated this in his re-inspection report too. Since there are no homes without mold – yes, yours and mine have mold spores too, so does the yard and street… I wonder if there is anything I can do to prevent someone loosing a home, a lender loosing a loan, two agents loosing commission and yes, the seller was in Bankruptcy so he lost quiet a bit of money too.
Remember if a lender hears mold,,, they run but a mold test can not be completed in the time we had to close, it takes sending samples out overnight, 24 hrs to cultivate the spores, then time for the facility to write a report and get back to inspector - and again there is no such thing as a house without any kind of mold.
I am grateful for any info you can provide, even if I am wrong. Thank you very much.
SilkeR
Thank you for this great website J
I have a question about the authority of an appraiser.
I am a Realtor and have the Buyer. The Lender (conventional loan) requested an appraisal through third party. The appraiser went out and appraised the house at agreed upon purchase price but stated this in his appraisal:
*** Repairs Required - **
The bath was observed to require the following;
New shower doors.
Remove balance of wallpaper and paint or re wallpaper.
Repaint entire bath including shower.
Test bath walls for mold as evidence of discoloration was observed (see attached photographs). Remediate and correct.
Report is subject to this condition being completed with a subsequent mold test by a licensed, professional (individual or
company) that results in there being no evidence of any such mold problems not only in the bathroom but throughout the
home as if it may have been present in one location within the home, this may have traveled to others.
Laundry room flooring to be replaced.
Needless to say, that the report came in on a Friday night, closing was supposed to be on the following Wednesday afternoon. This was the last day we could have closed because the house fell back to the bank the following day – yes, foreclosure.
Now, my thought is… did this appraiser overstep his boundaries by making a statement about mold that he is not qualified to make? The home inspector, a capacity when it comes to mold…. did not have any issue with the condition of the home or the discoloration in the bathroom of a house, vacant for 6 months and not aired out and he stated this in his re-inspection report too. Since there are no homes without mold – yes, yours and mine have mold spores too, so does the yard and street… I wonder if there is anything I can do to prevent someone loosing a home, a lender loosing a loan, two agents loosing commission and yes, the seller was in Bankruptcy so he lost quiet a bit of money too.
Remember if a lender hears mold,,, they run but a mold test can not be completed in the time we had to close, it takes sending samples out overnight, 24 hrs to cultivate the spores, then time for the facility to write a report and get back to inspector - and again there is no such thing as a house without any kind of mold.
I am grateful for any info you can provide, even if I am wrong. Thank you very much.
SilkeR