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September 19th, 2005
Complaint /
Real Estate Appraiser
Filed against
John Dyson, Jr (a/k/a Jack)
Colorado
Board of Real Estate Appraisers
1900 Grant St, #600
Denver, CO 80203
Attn: Enforcement
Re: My File Number -- 5036
Subject Property:
2761 Eppinger Blvd, Thornton, CO 80229
This is a complaint against John Dyson, Jr. (a/k/a Jack), License
Number CR01319648.
I have not contacted the appraiser. This matter is not under litigation.
Statement Section:
John Dyson has/is:
Violated the USPAP ethics rule.
Violated a standard(s) for the development or communication of a real estate
appraisal, specifically standards 1 and 2.
Guilty of breech of trust in a business transaction.
Comments:
The appraiser, John W Dyson is currently under sanction by HUD.
The subject property has a large church sign on the corner of the property. The
sign is about 15 feet tall (see photo). The church is located nearby, but the
sign is definitely located on the subject property. There is no mention (or
photo) of the sign in the report.
USPAP Ethics Rule: An appraiser must perform assignments ethically. An appraiser
must perform assignments with impartiality, objectivity, and independence,
without accommodation of personal interests.
An appraiser must not accept an assignment that includes the reporting of
predetermined opinions and conclusions.
An appraiser must not communicate assignment results in a misleading or
fraudulent manner. [Note: Fraud = Intentional deception to cause a person to
give up money. Something said or done to deceive.]
It is unethical for an appraiser to accept compensation for performing an
assignment when it is contingent upon:
1) the reporting of a predetermined result (e.g.,
opinion of value);
2) a direction in assignment results that favor the cause of the client;
3) the amount of a value opinion;
4) the attainment of a stipulated result; or
5) the occurrence of a subsequent event (i.e., loan approval)
It is readily apparent that John Dyson violated all of the above cited
portions of the USPAP Ethics Rule. John Dyson is a competent appraiser. John
Dyson is also an unethical appraiser. He set out to produce a report that
allowed the loan to close. He began the process with a requested minimum value,
and worked backwards to support that figure. He did so in a manner that was as
competent and as unethical as necessary to accomplish the primary objective –
allow the loan to close.
Pursuant to USPAP Standards Rule 1-5(a) and 2-2(b)(ix), the appraiser is
required to review and analyze the contract and the listing (market exposure)
and to “summarize the information analyzed, the appraisal procedures followed,
and the reasoning that supports the analyses, opinions and conclusions.”
Pursuant to USPAP AO-1, the appraiser must take into account the listing [market
exposure], the agreed price, and the pending sale of the subject. The
appraiser’s failure to analyze these facts may exclude important
information....(See AO-1, lines 32-39).
Pursuant to USPAP Standards Rule 1-5(a) and 2-2(b)(ix), if a copy of the
contract was unobtainable, a statement on the efforts undertaken by the
appraiser to obtain a copy of the contract is required. If the contract is
irrelevant, a statement acknowledging the existence of the information and
citing its lack of relevance is required. It is unclear if the appraiser (John
Dyson) reviewed a copy of the contract. If he did not review a copy of the
contract, the required statement is not in the report.
Page #1 of the URAR says seller concession is “ None”. The sales contract (copy
attached) says the contract price is $165,000 and the seller concession is 6%
Neighborhood Gold. The MLS listing says the contract price is $165,000 and the
concession is $8,047.
If he did review a copy of the contract, the report violates the USPAP
requirement to “summarize the information analyzed and appraisal procedures
followed”, i.e., clearly state that he did review a copy of the contract. If he
did review the contract, he either missed the concession or he lied about it.
How could John Dyson conclude that the market value was $165,000 when it was
obvious that you, I, or anyone else could have bought the property for $159,500?
The appraisal report does not answer this question.
USPAP AO-1 requires the appraiser to consider the pending sale of the subject.
There is nothing in the report to suggest compliance with AO-1.
The plain meaning of USPAP Standards Rule 2-2(b)(ix) requires the report to
provide sufficient detail for the intended user(s) to understand the reasoning
and the rationale for how the market value could be higher than the publicly
stated asking price.
In the appraisal report, there is no mention of the appraisal procedures
followed with regard to analysis of the sales contract, market exposure, the
agreed price, and the pending sale of the subject – this is a violation of USPAP
Standards Rule 1-5(a) and 2-2(b)(ix), and AO-1.
Per my dictionary: Analysis = An examination of the parts to find out their
nature, proportion, interrelationship, etc. A detailed examination. A statement
of the results of this process.
What is the interrelationship of the asking price to the market value of the
subject property? The report does not examine this issue.
USPAP dictates the report must include a reconciliation of the difference
between the asking price and the appraised value, i.e., a stated and plausible
reason. There is no reasoning and there is no rationale – this is a violation of
USPAP Standards Rule 1-5(a) and 2-2(b)(ix).
Certification:
I certify that the statements and information supplied by me in this
complaint including the attachments are true and correct to the best of my
knowledge and belief.
Philip G Rice
11268 E Linvale Dr
Aurora, CO 80014
720-282-3376
Attachments:
Appraisal Report (5 pages)
My Photo of the Subject Church Sign
(1 page)
HUD Printout Showing Sanction (1 page)
Contract Worksheet (1 page)
Sales Contract (3 pages)
MLS Listing (1 page)
MLS Listing History (1 page)
Deeds Report (1 page)
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