Marcia Langley said:What I have learned from this thread so far:
You should expect that the expert witness for the other side will do a review of your appraisal. Therefore, you can expect your report to be torn appart if it has not complied with USPAP and state law. If the basic scope of work elements are not properly documented including intended user and intended use, your credibility as an expert may be undermined right off the bat. How the judge/counsel/jury address/decide the legal points of the case may not hinge on whether you adhered to USPAP. But your credibility or ability to be considered "expert" does hinge on whether you adhered to USPAP. Edd, I understand you have been looking for cases where the intended user is one of the legal points being decided in the case. Have you found any? I would not find it surprising if a judge/court found for a side in a case contrary to USPAP's definition of intended user or confidentiality. I think there are cases where judges/courts did not find as we would expect in other types of confidientiality such as doctors, lawyers, CPAs, journalists, or engineers. I don't think that is really the point of USPAP. I don't think that adhering to USPAP protects you from judgements that hinge on points of law that are also addressed by USPAP. But I do think that failure to follow USPAP could cause a judgement against an appraiser.
You make a good point!! Perhaps that is what Steven meant by saying that failure to identify the intended user(s) by name or type might have some connecting to the word "Daubert". I agree that any expert witness needs to be prepared to be dismembered and the failure to include something so obviously required by USPAP, like intended user(s), could prove fatal to an appraiser's credibility in court.
As for my research, I am particularly interested in finding court cases that have interpreted anything about USPAP. So far I have found one. It said the word "feasibility" as used in USPAP has the same meaning as the word does in Webster's and Black's. Along the lines of what you have observed, I have found cases where a judge uses the words of an expert regarding an appraiser's USPAP compliance. I'm still looking.
I have no idea how confidentiality got in here or what it has to do with anything we are discussing. So I should probably shut up about it. It seems to come up like some kind of a mantra whenever we get into court. You're better than I am at reading between the lines. How did confidentiality get into this discussion? What does it have to do with anything?
As for the original question. I still think the attorney should be the intended user and the intended use is litigation for this situation, for reasons other than USPAP. The point I was trying to make is that in case like the one we are talking about the court will care less about USPAP intended user, but will be concerned with the rules of procedure and evidence. Bring up another case and maybe USPAP matters a lot. We never got to purpose, but it sort of sounded like market value. Could be liquidation value though. It's any body's guess who will use it or who will hold the appraiser accountable for what is in the appraisal. Once you publish it under these circumstances it is a runaway. Intended users or otherwise.
Don't fool yourself that only intended users are going to hold you accountable if your appraisal lands in court, but you're ahead of that by recognizing that lack of USPAP compliance begs a credibility question.
Good call. Helpful to us all. Thanks.