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NAAA Ethics Rules And Practices
NAAA Ethics Rules And Practices
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Rule #1. All NAAA members will perform
ethically when accepting an assignment from a potential client. An appraiser may
not accept any job that he or she is not qualified to complete. It is acceptable
for the appraiser to contact another appraiser who is qualified to do that
particular job and assign it to that person. However, the appraiser who is
qualified to complete the job will have control over every aspect of it, though
the unqualified appraiser may take part in it and assist the qualified appraiser
through mutual agreement.
Rule #2. An NAAA appraiser will not
accept any job that requires that a predetermined opinion or conclusion will be
reported. An NAAA member will, under no circumstance, accept a job where the
appraiser’s fee is contingent upon the outcome of the appraisal report.
Rule #3. An NAAA appraiser will not
accept any job that will result in a conflict of interest, real or perceived,
with regard to that appraiser. A conflict of interest exists any time an
appraiser has any type of interest in the airplane being appraised. Personal
interest may include, but is not limited to, an aircraft that the appraiser owns
or partially owns, or that he or she may receive or is receiving compensation in
any form from its rental, sale, or use.
Rule #4. NAAA members will not offer an
NAAA Certified Appraisal or NAAA Market Analysis on aircraft that are not
included in the NAAA database.
Rule #5. NAAA members performing Certified Appraisals are not advocates for
their clients' causes. They must act as an independent, objective, unbiased
party at all times. An NAAA member may be an advocate only to the extent that he
or she supports his or her appraisal reports.
Rule #6. When acting as a Buyer’s Agent
and an NAAA or NAAA/USPAP Appraisal is a component of the service, an NAAA
member’s fee for acquisition services may not be based on a percentage of the
purchase price.
Rule #7. NAAA members may not engage in criminal conduct inside or outside of
their appraisal practice. Criminal conduct of any type may call into question
the reliability and credibility of any appraisal that person is responsible for.
Rule #8. NAAA members must maintain the confidential nature of the
appraiser-client relationship. Under no circumstance will an NAAA member
disclose the results of any appraisal report, or any information gathered in the
conduct of that appraisal, to anyone without the express permission of his
client. There are two exceptions. The first is the transmittal of the appraisal
work to NAAA headquarters whose members and employees work under the same
confidentiality constraints. Appraisals transmitted to NAAA headquarters will be
used for internal purposes only and then destroyed. The second is when the
appraiser is compelled by state or local enforcement agencies to disclose the
subject appraisal under due process of law.
Rule #9. Members who are endorsed as NAAA/USPAP appraisers will adhere to the
USPAP standards and operational requirements as published in the Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice when conducting NAAA/USPAP
appraisals.
Rule #10. An NAAA appraiser will
utilize the most current, accurate, and relevant market data in the preparation
of the appraisal report with respect to the subject aircraft and the purpose of
the appraisal, as identified by the client and the appraiser, and the scope of
work as identified by the appraiser.
Rule #11. NAAA
appraisers must disclose in the appraisal report any employer/employee
relationship that extends beyond the client/appraiser association.
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