Jo Ann Meyer Stratton
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Arizona
Who is ordering the appraisal assignment? A lender or the borrower or somebody else not associated with lending?
The lender should know at this point whether the financing will be FHA or conventional--if not it is going to cost them additional fees. If it is not the lender, the appraisal report should be on either the AI Residential form or the General Purpose form that some software offers.
I will make some guesses about the sequence of events if it is a lender that doesn't know which program to put the borrower in:
The lender orders an assignment for a conventional loan product. You complete the report on the 1004C "subject to" and send them an invoice. Then when things are complete, the lender orders a 1004D and you send them a second invoice. Don't do any thing else until those two invoices are paid.
If after you have submitted the 1004C for a conventional loan product, the lender changes their mind and decide they want to do a FHA loan, you prepare a new 1004C so that it meets FHA guidelines and make it subject to if you haven't completed the final. Depending on the time frame you may have a new effective date for your opinion of value and maybe even some new comparables/pendings/actives in your new report. The lender now owes you the appraisal fee for the original conventional report and also a new appraisal fee (your business decision for the amount) for the new appraisal report. They decide to stick with the FHA loan product, so you complete the CIR and another invoice. If they decide to use a conventional loan program after all that it would be a new 1004C "as is" because the home would be completed prior to the new effective date.
If at first they order a FHA product and then change to conventional, again they should be charged for two appraisal reports--again your business decision of the two fees plus a third fee for the final 1004D.
If they at first order a FHA and stay with the FHA all through the process, they will order a CIR and there will be two invoices, one for the 1004C and one for the CIR.
So you need to clarify your intended user and intended use prior to starting the project--much clearer chain of actions that way.
By the way--have you taken the manufactured home seminar taught by Rich Heyn for the Appraisal Institute yet? I highly recommend that seminar, a lot of your questions would be explained and answered during that seminar.
The lender should know at this point whether the financing will be FHA or conventional--if not it is going to cost them additional fees. If it is not the lender, the appraisal report should be on either the AI Residential form or the General Purpose form that some software offers.
I will make some guesses about the sequence of events if it is a lender that doesn't know which program to put the borrower in:
The lender orders an assignment for a conventional loan product. You complete the report on the 1004C "subject to" and send them an invoice. Then when things are complete, the lender orders a 1004D and you send them a second invoice. Don't do any thing else until those two invoices are paid.
If after you have submitted the 1004C for a conventional loan product, the lender changes their mind and decide they want to do a FHA loan, you prepare a new 1004C so that it meets FHA guidelines and make it subject to if you haven't completed the final. Depending on the time frame you may have a new effective date for your opinion of value and maybe even some new comparables/pendings/actives in your new report. The lender now owes you the appraisal fee for the original conventional report and also a new appraisal fee (your business decision for the amount) for the new appraisal report. They decide to stick with the FHA loan product, so you complete the CIR and another invoice. If they decide to use a conventional loan program after all that it would be a new 1004C "as is" because the home would be completed prior to the new effective date.
If at first they order a FHA product and then change to conventional, again they should be charged for two appraisal reports--again your business decision of the two fees plus a third fee for the final 1004D.
If they at first order a FHA and stay with the FHA all through the process, they will order a CIR and there will be two invoices, one for the 1004C and one for the CIR.
So you need to clarify your intended user and intended use prior to starting the project--much clearer chain of actions that way.
By the way--have you taken the manufactured home seminar taught by Rich Heyn for the Appraisal Institute yet? I highly recommend that seminar, a lot of your questions would be explained and answered during that seminar.