hastalavista
Elite Member
- Joined
- May 16, 2005
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- California
Denis-
...
Are we on the same page here?
-Lee
Lee, we are on the same page, but that page is muddied and unintelligible. :laugh:
I'll have to respectively disagree with you on this until TAF clarifies it further. My current interpretation of the Q&A is this:
You cannot accept a new assignment if the only change is the client's name. The reason is because it is the client who is directing the entire SOW process in this new assignment and that violates USPAP.
We haven't even talked about the retroactive nature of the request (a new assignment with an effective date in the past).
Or, how client identification is part of the first step in the valuation process (before SOW decision/development process).
And, as others have pointed out, acceptance of this new assignment opens a potential minefield of additional assignment-requirements which may be impractical or impossible given the retroactive nature of the value.
The title of ML2009-29 is "Appraisal Portability". In the letter, HUD already states
(my bold)In cases where a borrower has switched lenders, the first lender must, at the borrower’s request, transfer the case to the second lender. FHA does not require that the client name on the appraisal be changed when it is transferred to another lender.
so the name change is an unnecessary step in Lender B's acceptance of the appraisal if Lender B intends to accept it as-is. However, if Lender B has additional requirements that the original report does not meet, then the SOW change is more than just a client-name, is it not? And, if the SOW change is more than just a client-name change, then it is inconsistent with the intent and specific wording of ML2009-29 which appears to be limited to changes of the client name only.
I would call this announcement confusing at best and self-contradicting at worst. :Eyecrazy:
I could be wrong. My guess is that some entity (I'd argue it is TAF) will need to clarify exactly what is and is not allowable and do so in a manner that does not require one to be an appraisal-process contortionist.
