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Perhaps we expect appraisers to do too much

Sometimes, you just have to feel for real estate appraisers. They get hammered by salespersons for making out-of-area valuations when they are contracted to do so, draw the ire of sellers for providing outdated comparable property sales and are criticized by buyers for not discovering structural flaws.

(They are appraisers, folks, not structural inspectors or engineers.)

The subject of appraisers and a structural flaw came up again last week when a friend asked if an appraiser should have known and disclosed appearances of dry rot in a wood-framed carport.

"Not their job," I said. "They are supposed to give you their best idea of what the property is worth, not what's wrong with the place."

My friend then said, "Wasn't there a court case about the same thing?"

The case - a Washington State Supreme Court case more than a decade ago - definitely added confusion to the role of an appraiser in a residential sale.

In a capsule, the case - Schaaf v. Highfield - centered around the sale of a home that had a leaky roof. John Schaaf alleged that Paul Olson, an appraiser hired by the Department of Veterans Affairs, conducted a negligent appraisal of the home and did not reveal the leaky roof to Schaaf.

The trial court held that a VA appraiser owes no duty to a prospective purchaser like Schaaf. The appeals court, however, held that a real estate appraiser owes a "duty of care" to third parties like Schaaf. Olson, though, was not held liable in this case because Schaaf did not rely on Olson's appraisal when he bought the house.

"The court ruled that duty was owed to the third party,'' said Rob Keefe, attorney, at the time of the appeal. "But the appraiser was let off the hook because Schaaf did not see the report until more than a year later."

In addition, Schaaf said that he already knew that the home needed a new roof before he bought it. According to court papers, Schaaf stated that he "offered the lower price because the house was 16-years old and thought the house would need a new roof."

"It brings up the idea of detrimental reliance,'' Keefe said. "You can't rely on something to your detriment when you already know about it."

A typical appraisal on a single-family home costs about $450-$700, more for huge homes with specific amenities like timber, swimming pool, view or waterfront. An appraisal is an estimate, or opinion, of value the market would bring if the property were exposed for sale. The appraisal usually includes comparable sales from other homes in the immediate area.

One of the main issues in Schaaf v. Highfield was the possible exception of liability for an appraiser hired by the VA. Should there be a loophole when the government was involved? And, was duty owed only to the VA or to the veteran/buyer?

According to the court, "when an prospective house purchaser applies to the Veteran's Administration for a loan guaranty and the Veteran's Administration hires an appraiser to appraise the house solely because of the prospective house purchaser's application, the appraiser owes a duty of care to the prospective house purchaser. Federal statutes and regulations do not preempt the appraiser's common-law duties owed to the purchaser."

But will appraisers also be expected to know about dry rot in wood-framed carports?

Tom Kelly's new novel "Cold Crossover" is now available in print at bookstores everywhere and in both print and Ebook form on Amazon.com. Follow real estate agent and former basketball coach Ernie Creekmore as investigates the disappearance of his star player on a late-night ferry boat. Check out the national reviews and put "Cold Crossover" on your list.


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  • Real Estate Appraiser wrote...
    Dry Rot
    I am a state certified appraiser holding a license to appraise residential real estate in the state of Washington. The dry rot, structural integrity, roofs etc concern is beyond the scope of my license. The state of Washington has licensed pest/home inspectors, licensed structural inspectors, licensed roofers etc,these folks are the licensed professionals in these fields. An appraiser's report is most often for a lender for the basis of a home loan. These are limited summary reports, limited only to a walk through visual of the subject property in order to give an estimate of value, the estimate is based mainly off competitive property sales within a given market area. The summary appraisal is not based off the individual component condition on a nail by nail basis. Real estate valuation is not a perfect science; I like to example to folks, “perceivably, a house could sell for more on a sunny day then a rainy day in some cases”. If the appraiser is out calling dry rot and building concerns without the proper license to do so, happens turns a buyer or lender away from a sale because of the appraisal report, the seller of the property could most likely sue the appraiser if the issue is found to be otherwise. The appraiser can state the obvious adverse condition if glaring/obvious/readily observed, the appraiser can report these in the appraisal for further inspection by a license professional in that field
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • jstumbo wrote...
    If you want an inspection...
    get an inspector. Appraisers appraise, they don't inspect and tell you the stat of a home.
    { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }
  • { "Thumbs Up":"1","Thumbs Down":"-1" }