So do I; ok, I understand what you mean. New effective date but with no significant changes in data that would create any significant change in the analysis, results or the communication of the results.
I'm not finding anything that would prevent a conventional appraisal being updated for a new lender with their name as the client as long as the report has been released from one lender to another, and the appraisal report is incorporated into the update.
Let me delve into this a bit: anyone who disagrees, please chime-in!
The term "released" can cause confusion. The casual inference of the term "release" in the context that we are discussing is that a release is necessary to accept a new assignment. There is no such requirement.
However, in updating an assignment
for a new client that was
originally completed for different client, AO-3 (lines 80-85) make it clear that the appraiser must comply with the confidentiality requirements.
Most on this forum (myself included) believe that, at a minimum, the reported results (the value) is confidential; other things may be also confidential depending on the engagement agreement with the original client.
When completing an update on the current form, the update form states the appraiser has "updated the appraisal by incorporating the original appraisal report".
If the original report was completed for another client, then without obtaining
a release for disclosing confidential information to the new client, I don't see how one can complete the assignment without violating the confidentiality section of the Ethics Rule.
So, in your case, Carol, if you are completing an update of an assignment for client B that was originally completed for client A, I think you do need a release (and, that is indeed what you are doing). The release is not needed to accept the new assignment but needed to relieve you from maintaining the confidentiality of the original assignment.
That may sound like a difference with no distinction in practice, but in the arcane world of regulatory oversight, it is (IMO) the difference between compliance and non-compliance.
My two-cents.