SmilingDog
Member
- Joined
- Apr 22, 2003
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- California
Lately I'm getting conditions to state whether or not the sales are "arms length" transactions.
Based on Barron's Dictionary of Real Estate Terms (5th Editiion): an arms length transaction is A TRANSACTION AMONG PARTIES, EACH OF WHO ACTS IN HIS OR HER OWN BEST INTEREST.
Well, let's see in an REO or short sale are not each party acting to their best ineterest? The lender wants to get rid of the house for as much as they can and the buyer wants it for as cheap as he can get it. SOUNDS ARMS LENGTH TO ME.
In fact Barron's goes further to state that transactions NOT considered arms's length would be a sale:
*** between husband and wife
*** a father and son
*** a corporation and one of its subsidiaries
I've now started to boilerplate this statement for the U/W:
BARRON'S DICTIONARY OF REAL ESTATE TERMS (FIFTH EDITION) DEFINES ARMS LENGTH TRANSACTION AS "A TRANSACTION AMONG PARTIES, EACH OF WHO ACTS IN HIS OR HER OWN BEST INTEREST". THEREFORE, UNLESS THE PARTIES ARE RELATED AS IN A FAMILY OR EMPLOYEE/EMPLOYER RELATIONSHIP, A TRANSACTION IS DEEMED TO BE "ARM'S LENGTH" BY DEFINITION.
THUS, BASED ON THE PUBLIC RECORDS TRANSFER HISTORY AND MLS RECORDS THE SALES USED IN THIS APPRAISAL WERE CONSIDERED "ARMS LENGTH", AS THERE IS NO EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY. THERE WAS NO EVIDENCE FOUND TO SUGGEST THAT THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE CLOSED SALES WERE BETWEEN RELATED PARTIES.
FURTHERMORE, THE SALES AND LISTINGS DO NOT APPEAR TO BE SHORT SALES OR FORECLOSURES. IN ANY EVENT SUCH SALES ARE STILL CONSIDERED ARMS LENGTH BASED ON THE DEFINITION OF THE TERM AS DEFINED IN BARRON'S DICTIONARY OF REAL ESTATE TERMS (FIFTH EDITION).
Any thoughts? Comments? Raves? Rants?
And they still talk about lender and appraiser reforms. What a joke.
Based on Barron's Dictionary of Real Estate Terms (5th Editiion): an arms length transaction is A TRANSACTION AMONG PARTIES, EACH OF WHO ACTS IN HIS OR HER OWN BEST INTEREST.
Well, let's see in an REO or short sale are not each party acting to their best ineterest? The lender wants to get rid of the house for as much as they can and the buyer wants it for as cheap as he can get it. SOUNDS ARMS LENGTH TO ME.
In fact Barron's goes further to state that transactions NOT considered arms's length would be a sale:
*** between husband and wife
*** a father and son
*** a corporation and one of its subsidiaries
I've now started to boilerplate this statement for the U/W:
BARRON'S DICTIONARY OF REAL ESTATE TERMS (FIFTH EDITION) DEFINES ARMS LENGTH TRANSACTION AS "A TRANSACTION AMONG PARTIES, EACH OF WHO ACTS IN HIS OR HER OWN BEST INTEREST". THEREFORE, UNLESS THE PARTIES ARE RELATED AS IN A FAMILY OR EMPLOYEE/EMPLOYER RELATIONSHIP, A TRANSACTION IS DEEMED TO BE "ARM'S LENGTH" BY DEFINITION.
THUS, BASED ON THE PUBLIC RECORDS TRANSFER HISTORY AND MLS RECORDS THE SALES USED IN THIS APPRAISAL WERE CONSIDERED "ARMS LENGTH", AS THERE IS NO EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY. THERE WAS NO EVIDENCE FOUND TO SUGGEST THAT THE TRANSACTIONS OF THE CLOSED SALES WERE BETWEEN RELATED PARTIES.
FURTHERMORE, THE SALES AND LISTINGS DO NOT APPEAR TO BE SHORT SALES OR FORECLOSURES. IN ANY EVENT SUCH SALES ARE STILL CONSIDERED ARMS LENGTH BASED ON THE DEFINITION OF THE TERM AS DEFINED IN BARRON'S DICTIONARY OF REAL ESTATE TERMS (FIFTH EDITION).
Any thoughts? Comments? Raves? Rants?
And they still talk about lender and appraiser reforms. What a joke.