Summary: Licensee violated the governing law and the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice ("USPAP") in the course of performing 44 appraisals for a particular client in a 1-month period. "The most important mistake committed by the Respondent was her poor choice in accepting the assignment in the first place both because several of the properties were of a complex nature and therefore outside the scope of her basic appraiser's license and also the number of properties to be appraised in one month was grossly excessive." See the Decision and Order for a detailed discussion of the violations found.
And I do believe that once you add in the full text and intent of the ruling that it falls into perspective as it should rather than just a "selectively chosen snippet" here and there to make YOUR point.Originally posted by Bill Rose@Feb 4 2005, 10:48 AM
"..and also grossly excessive....."
"The most important mistake committed by the Respondent was her poor choice in accepting the assignment in the first place both because several of the properties were of a complex nature and therefore outside the scope of her basic appraiser's license and also the number of properties to be appraised in one month was grossly excessive."
Dear Sir,Originally posted by Bill Rose@Feb 3 2005, 11:39 PM
Typical state agency. Making up rules as they go. That's a rank amateur charge and I'd take it to a real court instead of the kangaroo court.