- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Arkansas
Well...not necessarily. Again, if I know what the building cost when new...then I can get a book value from a cost book plus use the historical index to double check that. I know what land is worth "as if vacant and available for its HBU"... and so...the issue is depreciation. But isn't that an issue with the sales approach too? I mean how many times in using comps that are somewhat different are we at a loss to account for one thing or another?if you're doing a CA only appraisal,
Log homes. I was asked today about a log home that a guy had tried to finance, and the lender refused to lend the money because it was log. And how many comps will we have for a geodesic dome? And underground home? A mansion? I know a place on a lake with 200 acres at the time. Cost north of $30 million. 20 years later the builder died. The estate tried to sell for $8 million. They ended up auctioning and it brought $3 million which was rejected. Several years later it was butchered up into lots and sold with an educational provider and Walmart executive buying the house and a few surrounding acres. There is and was no way to accurately value the property CA, SA, IA...nothing worked to be "accurate."
You could guess at depreciation using the CA with as much accuracy as you could guess the functionality and externalities at play. Perhaps more. Unique estates are a dart board exercise and the best you can do is to warn the client that there is a huge element of guessimation in your estimate, or for that matter, anyone else's estimate.
Another one I remember. An old retired superintendent turned Realtor, up in his 80s, predicted that a nearby historical ranch would bring $5000 an acre. The ranch, known as the Colcord Ranch and home of an early Oklahoma developer (the Colcord Building in OKC is his brainchild) and rancher, sold for a fraction that at auction. Not a distressed sale. Several other Realtors has also estimated that there would be a premium for being such a historic place. As it turned out, didn't make any difference. What would have been a good pre-auction estimate? Well probably just the typical large tract value LESS about 10% (since auction prices are often less...) would have been a good guess. About half the high prediction.