© AERONUVO, The Professional and Expert Aircraft Appraisal and Valuation Services Company - All Rights Reserved 2002-2018
AIRCRAFT APPRAISER ETHICS
AND COMPLIANCE RULES
Service You Can Trust and Count On
Conduct, Management, Confidentiality and Record Keeping
To promote and preserve the public trust inherent in professional appraisal practice, an aircraft
appraiser must observe the highest standards of professional ethics. The following Ethics and
Compliance Rules are divided into four sections:
Conduct, Management, Confidentiality, and Record Keeping. The first three sections apply to all
aircraft appraisal practices and all four sections apply to appraisal practice performed under Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) and membership in the National Aircraft
Appraisers Association (NAAA).
Since 1980 the NAAA has been the Certification entity and has established the standards and Code of
Ethics for professional aircraft appraisers in the United States and abroad. NAAA appraisals are
accepted by financial institutions, governement agencies, and the courts as the true value of the
aircraft we appraise.
Conduct:
Compliance with USPAP is required when the aircraft appraiser is obligated by law or regulation, or by
agreement with the client or intended users, to comply. In addition to these requirements, an
individual should comply any time that individual represents that AERONUVO is performing an
appraisal service.
AERONUVO must not misrepresent their role when providing valuation services that are outside of
appraisal practice.
Honesty, impartiality, and professional competency are required of all appraisers under these Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). To document recognition and acceptance of his
or her USPAP-related responsibilities in communicating an appraisal, appraisal review, or appraisal
consulting assignment completed under USPAP, an appraiser is required to certify compliance with
USPAP.
•
An appraiser must perform assignments ethically and competently, in accordance with USPAP.
•
An appraiser must not engage in criminal conduct.
•
An appraiser must perform aircraft appraisal assignments with impartiality, objectivity, and
independence, and without accommodation of personal interests.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not advocate the cause or interest of any party or issue.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not accept an assignment that includes the reporting of
predetermined opinions and conclusions.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not communicate assignment results in a misleading or fraudulent
manner. An appraiser must not use or communicate a misleading or fraudulent report or
knowingly permit an employee or other person to communicate a misleading or fraudulent
report.
•
An appraiser must not use or rely on unsupported conclusions relating to characteristics such
as race, color, religion, national origin, gender, marital status, familial status, age, receipt of
public assistance income, handicap, or an unsupported conclusion that homogeneity of such
characteristics is necessary to maximize value.
Management:
The payment of undisclosed fees, commissions, or things of value in connection with the procurement
of an assignment is unethical.
Disclosure of fees, commissions, or things of value connected to the procurement of an assignment
must appear in the certification and in any transmittal letter in which conclusions are stated. In groups
or organizations engaged in appraisal practice, intra-company payments to employees for business
development are not considered unethical.
Competency, rather than financial incentives, should be the primary basis for awarding an
assignment.
It is unethical for an appraiser to accept an assignment, or to have a compensation arrangement for
an assignment, that is contingent on any of the following:
1.
the reporting of a predetermined result (e.g., opinion of value);
2.
a direction in assignment results that favors 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 directly related to the appraiser’s opinions and specific to
the assignment’s purpose.
Advertising for or soliciting assignments in a manner that is false, misleading, or exaggerated is
unethical.
In groups or organizations engaged in appraisal practice, decisions concerning finder or referral fees,
contingent compensation, and advertising may not be the responsibility of an individual appraiser,
but for a particular assignment, it is the responsibility of the individual appraiser to ascertain that
there has been no breach of ethics, that the assignment is prepared in accordance with these
Standards, and that the report can be properly certified when required by Standards Rules.
Confidentiality:
•
An aircraft appraiser must protect the confidential nature of the appraiser-client relationship.
•
An aircraft appraiser must act in good faith with regard to the legitimate interests of the client
in the use of confidential information and in the communication of assignment results.
•
An aircraft appraiser must be aware of, and comply with, all confidentiality and privacy laws
and regulations applicable in an assignment.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not disclose confidential information or assignment results prepared
for a client to anyone other than the client and persons specifically authorized by the client;
state enforcement agencies and such third parties as may be authorized by due process of law;
and a duly authorized professional peer review committee except when such disclosure to a
committee would violate applicable law or regulation. It is unethical for a member of a duly
authorized professional peer review committee to disclose confidential information presented
to the committee.
•
When all confidential elements of confidential information are removed through redaction or
the process of aggregation, client authorization is not required for the disclosure of the
remaining information, as modified.
Record Keeping:
An appraiser must prepare a workfile for each appraisal, appraisal review, or appraisal consulting
assignment. The workfile must include:
1.
the name of the client and the identity, by name or type, of any other intended users;
2.
true copies of any written reports, documented on any type of media;
3.
summaries of any oral reports or testimony, or a transcript of testimony, including the
appraiser’s signed and dated certification; and
4.
all other data, information, and documentation necessary to support the appraiser’s opinions
and conclusions and to show compliance with this Rule and all other applicable Standards, or
references to the location(s) of such other documentation.
•
An aircraft appraiser must retain the workfile for a period of at least five (5) years after
preparation or at least two (2) years after final disposition of any judicial proceeding in which
the appraiser provided testimony related to the assignment, whichever period expires last.
•
An aircraft appraiser must have custody of his or her workfile, or make appropriate workfile
retention, access, and retrieval arrangements with the party having custody of the workfile.
The Aircraft Appraisal
and
Valuation Company
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AIRCRAFT APPRAISER ETHICS AND COMPLIANCE
RULES
Service You Can Trust and Count On
Conduct, Management, Confidentiality and Record Keeping
To promote and preserve the public trust inherent in professional appraisal practice, an aircraft
appraiser must observe the highest standards of professional ethics. The following Ethics and
Compliance Rules are divided into four sections:
Conduct, Management, Confidentiality, and Record Keeping. The first three sections apply to all
aircraft appraisal practices and all four sections apply to appraisal practice performed under Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) and membership in the National Aircraft
Appraisers Association (NAAA).
Since 1980 the NAAA has been the Certification entity and has established the standards and Code of
Ethics for professional aircraft appraisers in the United States and abroad. NAAA appraisals are
accepted by financial institutions, governement agencies, and the courts as the true value of the
aircraft we appraise.
Conduct:
Compliance with USPAP is required when the aircraft appraiser is obligated by law or regulation, or by
agreement with the client or intended users, to comply. In addition to these requirements, an
individual should comply any time that individual represents that AERONUVO is performing an
appraisal service.
AERONUVO must not misrepresent their role when providing valuation services that are outside of
appraisal practice.
Honesty, impartiality, and professional competency are required of all appraisers under these Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP). To document recognition and acceptance of his
or her USPAP-related responsibilities in communicating an appraisal, appraisal review, or appraisal
consulting assignment completed under USPAP, an appraiser is required to certify compliance with
USPAP.
•
An appraiser must perform assignments ethically and competently, in accordance with USPAP.
•
An appraiser must not engage in criminal conduct.
•
An appraiser must perform aircraft appraisal assignments with impartiality, objectivity, and
independence, and without accommodation of personal interests.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not advocate the cause or interest of any party or issue.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not accept an assignment that includes the reporting of
predetermined opinions and conclusions.
•
An aircraft appraiser must not communicate assignment results in a misleading or fraudulent
manner. An appraiser must not use or communicate a misleading or fraudulent report or
knowingly permit an employee or other person to communicate a misleading or fraudulent
report.
•
An appraiser must not use or rely on unsupported conclusions relating to characteristics such
as race, color, religion, national origin, gender, marital status, familial status, age, receipt of
public assistance income, handicap, or an unsupported conclusion that homogeneity of such
characteristics is necessary to maximize value.
Management:
The payment of undisclosed fees, commissions, or things of value in connection with the procurement
of an assignment is unethical.
Disclosure of fees, commissions, or things of value connected to the procurement of an assignment
must appear in the certification and in any transmittal letter in which conclusions are stated. In groups
or organizations engaged in appraisal practice, intra-company payments to employees for business
development are not considered unethical.
Competency, rather than financial incentives, should be the primary basis for awarding an
assignment.
It is unethical for an appraiser to accept an assignment, or to have a compensation arrangement for
an assignment, that is contingent on any of the following:
•
the reporting of a predetermined result (e.g., opinion of value);
•
a direction in assignment results that favors the cause of the client;
•
the amount of a value opinion;
•
the attainment of a stipulated result; or
•
the occurrence of a subsequent event directly related to the appraiser’s opinions and specific to
the assignment’s purpose.
•
Advertising for or soliciting assignments in a manner that is false, misleading, or exaggerated is
unethical.
In groups or organizations engaged in appraisal practice, decisions concerning finder or referral fees,
contingent compensation, and advertising may not be the responsibility of an individual appraiser,
but for a particular assignment, it is the responsibility of the individual appraiser to ascertain that
there has been no breach of ethics, that the assignment is prepared in accordance with these
Standards, and that the report can be properly certified when required by Standards Rules.
Confidentiality:
An aircraft appraiser must protect the confidential nature of the appraiser-client relationship.
An aircraft appraiser must act in good faith with regard to the legitimate interests of the client in the
use of confidential information and in the communication of assignment results.
An aircraft appraiser must be aware of, and comply with, all confidentiality and privacy laws and
regulations applicable in an assignment.
An AERONUVO aircraft appraiser must not disclose confidential information or assignment results
prepared for a client to anyone other than the client and persons specifically authorized by the client;
state enforcement agencies and such third parties as may be authorized by due process of law; and a
duly authorized professional peer review committee except when such disclosure to a committee
would violate applicable law or regulation. It is unethical for a member of a duly authorized
professional peer review committee to disclose confidential information presented to the committee.
When all confidential elements of confidential information are removed through redaction or the
process of aggregation, client authorization is not required for the disclosure of the remaining
information, as modified.
Record Keeping:
An appraiser must prepare a workfile for each appraisal, appraisal review, or appraisal consulting
assignment. The workfile must include:
•
the name of the client and the identity, by name or type, of any other intended users;
•
true copies of any written reports, documented on any type of media;
•
summaries of any oral reports or testimony, or a transcript of testimony, including the
appraiser’s signed and dated certification; and
•
all other data, information, and documentation necessary to support the appraiser’s opinions
and conclusions and to show compliance with this Rule and all other applicable Standards, or
references to the location(s) of such other documentation.
An aircraft appraiser must retain the workfile for a period of at least five (5) years after preparation or
at least two (2) years after final disposition of any judicial proceeding in which the appraiser provided
testimony related to the assignment, whichever period expires last.
An aircraft appraiser must have custody of his or her workfile, or make appropriate workfile
retention, access, and retrieval arrangements with the party having custody of the workfile.