Tiffany Gibbons
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 6, 2004
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Tennessee
Isn't it just too awfully bad that these 2 appraisals can't be made public for "teaching purposes"? How else will all of us appraisers ever learn? Maybe a much admired and highly qualified instructor type who is in favor of proving the GSE's idea of appraiser bias could someday be the steward of these two reports sometime after any final judgment is rendered if there are any appraisers left to be "taught", that is. Whatever the circumstances, I do hope the appraisal profession as a whole is able to gain access someday to these 2 different reports. I think most of us who have reviewed appraisals professionally would immediately know which is the better supported, more reliable value. However, as both went through AMCs, the cheapest appraisal bid was the winning bid in both cases, am I right? Not to mention the "additions and renovations" that happened within the months between the appraisals. Think of the changes we have seen just with the Fed raising rates recently. The market is not static. I am sick of this endless speculation. I am not familiar with the area at all but via GIS imagery and zoning, I can tell it would be a difficult assignment for any appraiser. I don't see how an unlicensed property inspector would help in this case. Am I the only one in my thinking?I've said before that my primary suspect for unreasonable outcomes in appraisals is appraisers not working to their capabilities. Not malice or racial bias. TO ME, that means the first logical step is for appraisers to put more effort into the problem identification phase of their assignments.
IMO and based on all of the examples I've seen so far, if the appraisers had written up a decent summary of the composition and pricing trends of the neighborhoods - inclusive of the entire range of residential properties therein - and a more detailed summary of their subject's market segment and its pricing trends, that combination would have made it a lot more difficult for a 2nd appraiser to get away with coming in and presenting less similar properties to "support" their higher valuation.
As as far as appraisers who are operating with personal bias are concerned, if they had provided that analysis it would have also made it harder for THEM to proceed with an unreasonable SC that directly contradicted their own neighborhood and market analyses. Either way there's nothing but upside to putting a little more time/effort into their problem identification phase.
Take the Marin City situation as an example. If an appraisal report had noted there were a limited number of SFRs in that area, about evenly split between the lower quality "pole houses" like the subject vs the superior quality/appeal conventional slab foundation homes; and if the report had noted the pricing trends for this neighborhood had always been lower than the neighborhoods within the city limits to the s/e and the unincorporated Mill Valley area to the n/w, then that would have made it very difficult for the 2nd appraiser to get away with ignoring those facts as a means of saying the superior quality/location sales were direct comparables for the subject without making the necessary adjustments.
