lionfish
Junior Member
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2004
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Washington
much depends on the existing appraisal, work file and listing history on how flexible your analysis and your opinion is. was the original copy of the contract fully executed? how weak or strong are the original comps? the new contract sale price is new information that you did not have before. of course sales prices and sales agreements are not automatically the value (otherwise why have purchases appraised) however, they are valid pieces of market information. if after examining the new information you feel the value is higher than before then change the value, explain why, detail the changes made to the previous report, create a new file number, update your report/signature date, fully disclose changes, CYA and move on. if you dont believe in a value increase you still need to document the higher sale price and the analysis of it then repeat the process I just suggested with a new file number, report/signature date, etc.