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Inquiring minds are
investigating sheer lunacy regarding the appraisal process in Illinois,
Maryland, Missouri and Nevada.
Please consider Four States
Consider Legislation Barring Distressed Sales as Comparables
Four states –
Illinois, Maryland, Missouri and Nevada – are considering legislation
that would prohibit or restrict the use of “distressed sales,”
such as foreclosures and short sales, as comparable sales as a part of a
residential real estate appraisal.
The Missouri legislation, known as House Bill 292, would prohibit appraisers
from using a property that has been sold at a foreclosure sale as a
comparable. Similar to the Missouri proposal, the Illinois legislation would
prohibit appraisers for the next five years from using as a comparable sale
“a residential property that was sold at a judicial sale at any time
within 12 months.”
The Nevada legislation would prohibit the use of foreclosures and short
sales. The prohibitions contained in the Maryland legislation are somewhat
broader and include any property that was sold under “duress or unusual
circumstances, such as a foreclosure or short sale.”
There is, however, conflicting language in the Maryland legislation that
appears to allow for the use of distressed properties as comparables if the
appraiser takes into account factors such as the motivation of the seller,
the condition of the property and the property’s history or disposition
before the sale. Appraisers in Maryland will oppose this legislation during a
hearing March 29.
If these bills were enacted into law, appraisers would be put in the
difficult position of having to choose which law to violate. Appraisers are
required to adhere to comply with the Uniform Standards of Professional
Appraisal Practice in federally related transactions. The standard mandates
that appraisers “must analyze such comparables sales as are
available.” Further, the standard cannot be voided by a state or local
government.
Not following USPAP could subject the appraiser to having action taken
against their license. Therefore, appraisers would have to make the decision
to commit a USPAP violation – which in the case of federally related
transactions would be a violation of state law – or to violate the law
prohibiting the consideration of distressed sales as comparables.
Admittedly
appraisers blew it in 2004-2006 with absurd valuations. However, the market
rectified that situation quite nicely.
Let the appraisers do their jobs. They are the ones who ought to know what to
include in comparables or not. If perchance some don't, the one thing we know
with absolute certainty is that virtually 100% of legislators don't know
either. If they did, they would have acted to prevent appraisal fraud six
years ago.
Such laws would be bad enough as is, but conflicting standards makes the
legislation considered by Illinois, Maryland, Missouri and Nevada complete
lunacy.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
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