ZZGAMAZZ
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2007
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- California
Subject of the re-fi assignment is a 106-year-old SFR recently guttted and re-built by owner who is an architect, on a lot in a prestigious subdivision, but fronting a busy public road that defines a neighborhoodd border, adjacent to the vehicular entrance to perhaps the largest recreational venue in Southern Cali. Owner provided an itemized list of renovaion factors "confirmed by the visual observation of the appraiser," who also provided variou comps including a few that were far away but that reflected the externality.
ROV arrives with specific addesses as well as a list of $250,000 of expenses overlooked in the original list, which enhance the subject condition in the SCA, as well as the reproduction expenses in the CA dialogue box.
Comps recommended by the ROV, as well as the ROV conncers about the dissimilarity betweeen the appraiser's opinion of maket value and the insurable value cited in his policy, could easily have been the basis of a well-conceived 15-minute response that debunked the ROV in its entirety.
HOWEVER, after about 5 hours of analysis, the appraiser provided a very thorough explanation of his decision to revise the original OV significanty, by about 14%--presumably enhancing Public Trust without comproming his integrity because of the "complexity" of the improvemements, as well as the previously-unknown renovation factors.
POINT OF THIS POST is that I'm kinda haunted by JG's perspective a few months ago that to change an OV exposes an appraiser to the liability based upon his or her "admission" that the original OV was incorrect. IMO the reponse I submitted was textbook example of the potential ROV functionality. Won't ever happen of course but it seeems that the practitioner could be shielded from potential liability when responding "favorably" to a ROV. That' all I have to say.
ROV arrives with specific addesses as well as a list of $250,000 of expenses overlooked in the original list, which enhance the subject condition in the SCA, as well as the reproduction expenses in the CA dialogue box.
Comps recommended by the ROV, as well as the ROV conncers about the dissimilarity betweeen the appraiser's opinion of maket value and the insurable value cited in his policy, could easily have been the basis of a well-conceived 15-minute response that debunked the ROV in its entirety.
HOWEVER, after about 5 hours of analysis, the appraiser provided a very thorough explanation of his decision to revise the original OV significanty, by about 14%--presumably enhancing Public Trust without comproming his integrity because of the "complexity" of the improvemements, as well as the previously-unknown renovation factors.
POINT OF THIS POST is that I'm kinda haunted by JG's perspective a few months ago that to change an OV exposes an appraiser to the liability based upon his or her "admission" that the original OV was incorrect. IMO the reponse I submitted was textbook example of the potential ROV functionality. Won't ever happen of course but it seeems that the practitioner could be shielded from potential liability when responding "favorably" to a ROV. That' all I have to say.