Once the MB gets a hold of this, all there are going to see is the word "YES". They are going to ride it like a teenager with a new Mustang Convertible.
People are reading way to much into this and also misinterpreting was said. This issue of what is a "comp check" is sidestepped (which is has to be since there is no uniform definition) and the USPAP issues addressed.
I dont see this as an ethics issue. I see it as a educational problem. Many appraisers simply donot understand what makes an appraisal an "appraisal".
Remember K-man ZAIOISTA made the outlandish statement that his so-called pre-appraisals were not appraisals simply because he did not include a signed certification. What a crock!
William,
I have only received one comp check request in the past year and that was recently for an FHA. Unfortunately, they got smart at the last minute and would not fax it over so I could turn them in. Oral reports should be illegal as well.
No. The key is in the definitions of assignment and assignment results. After you send the results of the first appraisal to the client the assignment is over. If, as AO-3 indicates, the same client wants further analysis of the same property, like another appraisal with a more diligent scope, it is "simply a new assignment."Could all this comp check/second appraisal controversy be put to bed by the use of a properly defined staged assignment?
Putting them in quotes, as the ASB did, indicates to me they were using the same slang the people asking the questions use. It's the same slang thrown around on this forum.The problem as I see it is they were not careful enough in their wording. They used the terms "Comp check" and "Full" Appraisal, and did not define either.