Let us assume the following:
A house exists in an zoning district where only houses can exist. This house happens to have an addition (family room) that was added on in a style/quality that conforms to the market tastes. When it was added, no permits were pulled. As-is, the improvements contribute value to the site, and the estimated remaining economic life is 40-45 years.
As-vacant, the H&BU of the site is residential and there is demand for newly constructed homes in this market. To build one is financially feasible. The ideal improvement on this site would call for a house with a family room. In fact, except for the physical deterioration, the subject matches the ideal improvement in terms of size, floor plan configuration, design and appeal. Therefore, H&BU as vacant is to build a new home that matches what exists on site; this use reasonably probable and legally permissible use, and it is financially feasible; there are no competing uses, so it is maximally productive.
Mike's post# 97 said:
• Highest and best use. The reasonably probable and legal use of vacant land or an improved property, which is physically possible, appropriately supported, financially feasible, and that results in the highest value. The four criteria the highest and best use must meet are legal permissibility, physical possibility, financial feasibility, and maximum profitability.4
4 Appraisal Institute, The Dictionary of Real Estate Appraisal, 4th ed. (Chicago: Appraisal Institute, 2002), 135. 5 Ibid. 6 Ibid., 135-136.
(my underscore for emphasis)
As-is, the site has a home on it with a design and appeal that matches the ideal improvement. The family room does not have a permit.
H&BU as-improved...
Mike's post# 97 said:
In analyzing highest and best use, consider legally permissible uses, then physically possible uses, then financially feasible uses. Finally, of those, determine which use is maximally productive (that is, brings the highest economic return). Another way of analyzing highest and best use is to examine which of the three following possibilities makes the most sense for the subject property:
1. Demolish the existing improvements and redevelop
2. Remodel, add on, or otherwise modify the existing improvements ( MEK *which would include modifications if any to comply with local, county, or state Building Ordinances)
3. Keep the improvements as they currently exist
The use, as-is, is legally permissible. Except for the physical deterioration, the site is improved with
the ideal improvement; by definition, it would need to be legally permissible (nothing unreasonable about that) and by virtue of its existence, it is evident that it is physically possible.
So then, what is left in the as-improved analysis?
1. Should the improvement be demolished?
NO. Existing improvements contribute value and are estimated to continue to do so for the next 40-45 years.
2. Remodel, add on, or otherwise modify the existing improvements?
NO. The improvements, as-they-are, already reflect the ideal improvement configuration; the only difference is physical deterioration. Nothing needs to be added, remodeled, or modified. Mike add's his interpretation to the point #2 in his quote. That's his interpretation, not the source he cites. However, I'll agree that an unsafe condition would fail the H&BU test and modification would be necessary. But pulling a paper permit is not the same as modifying an existing improvement that somehow changes its "use".
With or without the permit for the family room, if that family room is permissible (able to be permitted), than the current use is legal.
3. Keep the improvements as they currently exist?
YES.
The H&BU of the property as improved is "as is".
The lender may require permits; that's their prerogative.
The appraiser may tell the lender the only way she/he will appraise the property is to make it subject-to; that's his/her prerogative.
But neither the lender's preference for permits, nor the appraiser's insistence of permits, changes the simple fact that H&BU of the site as-improved is "as is" and in no way does the lack of a permit for a legally permissible use create an "illegal use".
It simply creates a condition that needs to be evaluated in an as-is market value appraisal.
Finally, no one (except Mike, as a
straw man argument, IMO) is arguing that full disclosure shouldn't be included in the appraisal regarding the permit status or the steps the appraiser took to verify the permit status.
I will add this, however: I've long argued that an appraisal reported on the GSE form should include a summary of the as-vacant and as-improved H&BU conclusions.
I'd say if there is a question of permits, a summary of the as-vacant H&BU is a necessity because it sets the foundation for making the determination that the as-improved H&BU is "as is" even if the family room is not permitted (but is legally permissible).
