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A real estate appraiser must be unbiased in developing and reporting an opinion of value for real estate. If a real estate appraiser accepts an assignment where the client agrees to pay an appraisal fee based on a percentage of the final appraised value, the appraiser would be in violation of Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practices and the code of ethics of any appraisal organization to which he or she is a member.
The purchase price of the home is not the value of the home. It is what you paid for the home. The value of the home is the appraised value. A lender would look only at the appraised value of a home for lending purposes. If you paid more or less for the home, that is on you.
There is no specific time frame in Georgia. The executor has to insure the estate is inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
Unfortunately each estate is unique and there is no specific time frame. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
In Massachusetts has no specific time frame. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
There is no specific time frame it will depend on how complex the estate is in Montreal. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
That will depend on the complexity of the estate. There is no definitive answer.
There is no specific time frame in Pennsylvania. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
There is no specific time frame in South Carolina. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
There is no time frame specified for Tennessee. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.
The executor's fee is based on the value of the estate. Money owed is not a part of the estate, it is a claim against the estate.
There is no specific time frame in Missouri. The estate has to be inventoried and appraised, the debts collected, taxes paid and the terms of the will meet.