VA appraisers are assigned on a rotational basis and the assigned appraiser MUST personally inspect the subject and comparable properties.
IF the assigned VA appraiser did not personally inspect the subject, that is a major problem and should be reported the VA regional loan center. The appraiser could very well be removed from the panel.
HOWEVER, at this point, all we know is that someone, who may not be the assigned appraiser, visited the property. What we don't know is if the person who visited the property was even at the property for the appraisal purposes. Was a home inspection performed? It is not uncommon for an appraiser to visit a property to be told that another appraiser has already been at the property. Further inquiry generally revealed that the other person was a home inspector or a surveyor or someone else.
Was the home on a lock box and might the appraiser have used his lock box key to enter the property? Sometimes a combo box is placed on a property. Agents have been known to place combos and gate codes in non-public portions of listings. I routinely used a lock box key to access a vacant property, often without notifying the agent that I would be doing so. I would leave a business card at the property, although there were probably occasions I forgot to do so. I might call the agent, who might be unavailable, whereupon I would advise the person answering who I was and what I was doing and ask if there was someone else to help me. Sometimes the duty agent/receptionist/whoever I was talking to COULD give me the information I needed and the agent might never be aware when and if I had been to the property.
There are too many unknowns right now to throw darts at the appraiser. However, if it can be definitely ascertained that the assigned appraiser had someone else inspect the property in his place, yes, that is a problem and it needs to be reported to VA.
Inspection was done on a separate date. We were personally in the house for that so we know the difference.
There is a lock box on the house. But Mr. X came to the house and was met by our realtor. Mr. X is indeed a licensed real estate appraiser in our state, as is Mr. Z. I suppose it is remotely possible that Mr. X, an appraiser, came to the house but then did not write an appraisal. Then on a separate occasion unbeknownst to us Mr. Z came to the house and did write an appraisal-- the only party that could have organized this is the seller or his agent. There has been such a brouhaha over the apprasied value, however, that it seems unlikely the seller would not have mentioned this if it had happened.
It does not seem to me that there are really that many unknowns here.
But again, I definately hear what everybody is saying. Be reasonable and fair and be sure of our facts. Thanks for eveybody's willingness to help us see the other possible explanations for what is going on.
H