hastalavista
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
A few days ago, there was an active discussion regarding the use of a Hypothetical Condition to value 10+-acre lot as a 5-acre property.
One of the questions was, "When making an HC, should the report be made 'subject to' the HC?". There were opinions for both "yes" and "no".
I emailed the ASB with that question- here is the original question and the response:
The question-
Dear Mr. Brenan,
I have a question regarding the use of Hypothetical Conditions (HC) in completing an appraisal report to be USPAP compliant.
Assuming that the HC used:
1. Results in a reliable and credible value for its intended use/user
2. Is reported in a manner that is not misleading and clearly states an HC was employed in the analysis, and that subsequent reported value may not reflect the actual market value of the subject
3. Its inclusion in the analysis does not violate any Supplemental Standards
Is the value reported made “subject to” (conditioned upon) the HC? Or is, by definition, the inclusion of the HC a basic underlying fact in the valuation analysis, and therefore a “subject to” condition is redundant, or worse, misleading?
I have this discussion with numerous colleagues and have read the Standards and Advisory Opinions, but I cannot conclude a definitive answer to this specific question.
Thank you for your consideration
The answer-
Hello Denis,
“As-is” and “subject to” appraisals are not defined by USPAP and as such, we cannot say whether or not it is possible to perform an “as is” appraisal when using a hypothetical condition. We suggest you check for any supplemental standards requirements (i.e. Fannie Mae guidelines) to determine under what conditions appraisals should be made “as is” versus “subject to.”
So I guess the debate goes on.
One of the questions was, "When making an HC, should the report be made 'subject to' the HC?". There were opinions for both "yes" and "no".
I emailed the ASB with that question- here is the original question and the response:
The question-
Dear Mr. Brenan,
I have a question regarding the use of Hypothetical Conditions (HC) in completing an appraisal report to be USPAP compliant.
Assuming that the HC used:
1. Results in a reliable and credible value for its intended use/user
2. Is reported in a manner that is not misleading and clearly states an HC was employed in the analysis, and that subsequent reported value may not reflect the actual market value of the subject
3. Its inclusion in the analysis does not violate any Supplemental Standards
Is the value reported made “subject to” (conditioned upon) the HC? Or is, by definition, the inclusion of the HC a basic underlying fact in the valuation analysis, and therefore a “subject to” condition is redundant, or worse, misleading?
I have this discussion with numerous colleagues and have read the Standards and Advisory Opinions, but I cannot conclude a definitive answer to this specific question.
Thank you for your consideration
The answer-
Hello Denis,
“As-is” and “subject to” appraisals are not defined by USPAP and as such, we cannot say whether or not it is possible to perform an “as is” appraisal when using a hypothetical condition. We suggest you check for any supplemental standards requirements (i.e. Fannie Mae guidelines) to determine under what conditions appraisals should be made “as is” versus “subject to.”
So I guess the debate goes on.
