- Joined
- Apr 4, 2007
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Tennessee
Actually, I think that was understood very well. Disagreement is not the same as not understanding. And, there are certainly two sides to the debate on that term and whether it should address unintentional acts.It wasn’t so long ago, we were all having heartburn caused by the definition of “misleading” in a revised USPAP.
E&O providers, appraiser organizations, AMCs, appraisers, and a few GSE personalities sent letters and expressed concerns about the inclusion of “unintentional” in that definition we had to live with for a minute.
Not sure anybody claimed to have an abundance of understanding about that.![]()
Real world example: An appraiser starts an appraisal report by cloning a report the he did two months ago for a home on the same street. The appraiser neglects to update the sketch in the cloned report. As a result, the size reported for the subject property is off by 500 square feet. This was not an intentional act by the appraiser; it was a mistake.
Should that be considered a misleading appraisal report?