01-001086PL
Department Of Business And Professional Regulation, Division Of Real Estate vs.
Dale Smalley
Status: Closed
Recommended Order on Friday, August 31, 2001.
Recommended Order on Friday, August 31, 2001.
1STATE OF FLORIDA
4DIVISION OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS
8DEPARTMENT OF BUSINESS AND )
13PROFESSIONAL REGULATION , )
16DIVISION OF REAL ESTATE , )
21)
22Petitioner , )
24)
25vs. ) Case No. 01-1086PL
30)
31DALE SMALLEY , )
34)
35Respondent. )
37_________________________________)
38RECOMMENDED ORDER
40Pursuant to notice, a formal hearing was held in this case
51on May 21, 2001, by video teleconference, in Miami and
61Tallahassee, Florida, before Patricia Hart Malono, a duly-
69designated Administrative Law Judge of the Division of
77Administrative Hearings.
79APPEARANCES
80For Petitioner : Rania A. Soliman, Esquire
87Department of Business and
91Professional Regulation
93400 West Robinson Street, Suite N-308
99Hurston Building, North Tower
103Orlando, Florida 32801
106For Respondent : Harold M. Braxton
112Qualified Representative
1149132 Southwest 78th Place
118Miami, Florida 33156
121STATEMENT OF THE ISSUE
125Whether the Respondent committed the violations alleged in
133the Administrative Complaint dated May 3, 2000, and, if so, the
144penalty that should be imposed.
149PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
151In an Administrative Complaint dated May 3, 2000, the
160Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Division of
168Real Estate, ("Department") charged in Count I that Dale Smalley
180violated a standard for the development or communication of a
190real estate appraisal or other provision of the Uniform
199Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice, in violation of
207Section 475.624(14), Florida Statutes (1999); the Department
214charged in Count II of the Administrative Complaint that
223Mr. Smalley is guilty of culpable negligence or a breach of
234trust in a business transaction, in violation of
242Section 475.624(2), Florida Statutes (1999). These violations
249are based on the factual allegations that Mr. Smalley knew or
260should have known that the signature of the supervisory
269appraiser on an appraisal report was not genuine and that he
280failed to maintain a workfile for the appraisal report.
289Mr. Smalley timely filed a request for a formal hearing, and the
301Department transmitted the matter to the Division of
309Administrative Hearings for assignment of an administrative law
317judge. The formal hearing was held on May 21, 2001.
327At the hearing, the Department presented the testimony of
336Brian A. Piper and Lance Campbell, and Petitioner's Exhibits 1
346through 4 were offered and received into evidence. Mr. Smalley
356testified in his own behalf, and Respondent's Exhibit 1 was
366offered and received into evidence but was then withdrawn. At
376the Department's request, official recognition was taken of
384Chapters 120, 455, and 458, 1 Florida Statutes (1999). Subsequent
394to the hearing, after notice and an opportunity to be heard, the
406undersigned, on her own motion, took official recognition of
415that portion of the Ethics Rule contained in the 1999 edition of
427the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice
434("USPAP") promulgated by the Appraisal Standards Board of the
445Appraisal Foundation entitled " Record Keeping ."
451The one-volume transcript of the proceedings was filed with
460the Division of Administrative Hearings on June 25, 2001, and
470the parties timely filed proposed findings of fact and
479conclusions of law, which have been considered in preparing this
489Recommended Order.
491FINDINGS OF FACT
494Based on the oral and documentary evidence presented at the
504final hearing and on the entire record of this proceeding, the
515following findings of fact are made:
5211. The Department is the state agency responsible for
530investigating complaints filed against registered, licensed, or
537certified real estate appraisers and for prosecuting
544disciplinary actions against such persons. Section 455.225,
551Florida Statutes (2000). The Florida Real Estate Appraisal
559Board is the state agency charged with regulating, licensing,
568and disciplining real estate appraisers registered, licensed, or
576certified in Florida. Section 475.613(2), Florida Statutes
583(2000).
5842. At the times material to this proceeding, Mr. Smalley
594was a registered assistant real estate appraiser in Florida.
603Since November 1999, Mr. Smalley has been a certified
612residential real estate appraiser in Florida.
6183. Mr. Lance Campbell was registered with the Department
627as Mr. Smalley's su pervisory appraiser from approximately
635October 1997 to October 1999; 2 both Mr. Campbell and Mr. Smalley
647were employed at the time by Southeastern Property Appraisals.
656In order for a licensed or certified appraiser to be registered
667as the supervisory appraiser for a registered assistant
675appraiser, a form furnished by the Department must be completed
685and signed by both the registered assistant appraiser and the
695certified appraiser, and the form must be filed with the
705Department. In order for Mr. Campbell to become registered with
715the Department as his supervisory appraiser, Mr. Smalley
723completed the portion of the registration form to be completed
733by the registered assistant appraiser and gave it to
742Mr. Campbell so he could complete the remaining portion of the
753form. Mr. Campbell submitted the completed form to the
762Department.
7634. After the first few months of their professional
772relationship, Mr. Campbell was not necessarily aware of
780Mr. Smalley's appraisal assignments because Mr. Smalley usually
788received assignments directly from the client. Once Mr. Smalley
797completed an appraisal report, it was his practice to hand in
808the report and the accompanying workfile for Mr. Campbell's
817review and signature. It was Mr. Campbell's practice to review
827Mr. Smalley's ap praisal reports and workfiles, sign the reports,
837process them, and send them to the clients.
8455. As Mr. Smalley's supervisory appraiser, Mr. Campbell
853found that Mr. Smalley always did a thorough job on his
864appraisal reports and maintained complete workfiles that
871included the data necessary to support his appraisal reports.
880In Mr. Campbell's opinion, Mr. Smalley is a very qualified
890appraiser.
8916. In June 1999, Mr. Smalley was retained by Allstate
901Mortgage Corporation ("Allstate") to appraise residential
909property located at 15315 Southwest 178th Terrace, Miami,
917Florida. Allstate requested that Frank Otero sign the appraisal
926as Mr. Smalley's supervisory appraiser.
9317. At the times material to this proceeding, Mr. Otero was
942a state-certified residential real estate appraiser who was
950employed by Southeastern Property Appraisals. Mr. Otero was not
959registered as a supervisory appraiser for Mr. Smalley when
968Allstate requested that he act as Mr. Smalley's supervisory
977appraiser for the subject appraisal. Consequently, Mr. Smalley
985obtained a copy of the Department registration form from
994Mr. Campbell, completed his portion of the form, and gave it to
1006Mr. Otero so he could complete his portion of the form.
1017Mr. Smalley assumed that Mr. Otero had done so and that
1028Mr. Ot ero had submitted the form to the Department.
10388. The USPAP contain a provision requiring real estate
1047appraisers to keep records of each appraisal they perform. The
1057Ethics Rules of the 1999 edition of the USPAP include the
1068following provision:
1070Record Keeping
1072An appraiser must prepare a workfile for
1079each assignment. The workfile must include
1085the name of the client and the identity, by
1094name or type, of any other intended users;
1102true copies of any written reports,
1108documented on any type of media; summaries
1115of any oral reports or testimony, or a
1123transcript of testimony, including the
1128appraiser's signed and dated certification;
1133all other data, information, and
1138documentation necessary to support the
1143appraiser's opinions and conclusions and to
1149show compliance with this rule and all other
1157applicable Standards, or references to the
1163location(s) of such other documentation.
1168An appraiser must retain the workfile for a
1176period of at least five (5) years after
1184preparation or at least two (2) years after
1192final disposition of any judicial proceeding
1198in which testimony was given, whichever
1204period expires last, and have custody of his
1212or her workfile, or make appropriate
1218workfile retention, access, and retrieval
1223arrangements with the party having custody
1229of the workfile.
1232Comment: A workfile preserves evidence of
1238the appraiser's consideration of all
1243applicable data and statements required by
1249USPAP and other information as may be
1256required to support the findings and
1262conclusions of the appraiser. For example,
1268the content of a workfile for a Complete
1276Appraisal must reflect consideration of all
1282USPAP requirements applicable to the
1287specific Complete Appraisal assignment.
1291However, the content of a workfile for a
1299Limited Appraisal need only reflect
1304consideration of the USPAP requirements from
1310which there has been no departure and that
1318are required by the specific Limited
1324Appraisal assignment.
1326A photocopy or an electronic copy of the
1334entire actual written appraisal, review, or
1340consulting report sent or delivered to a
1347client satisfies the requirement of a true
1354copy. As an example, a photocopy or
1361electronic copy of the Self-Contained
1366Appraisal Report, Summary Appraisal Report,
1371or Restricted Use Appraisal Report actually
1377issued by an appraiser for a real property
1385Complete Appraisal or Limited Appraisal
1390assignment satisfies the true copy
1395requirement for that assignment.
1399Care should be exercised in the selection of
1407the form, style, and type of medium for
1415written records, which may be handwritten
1421and informal, to ensure they are retrievable
1428by the appraiser throughout the prescribed
1434record retention period.
1437A workfile must be in existence prior to and
1446contemporaneous with the issuance of a
1452written or oral report. A written summary
1459of an oral report must be added to the
1468workfile within a reasonable time after the
1475issuance of the oral report.
1480A workfile must be made available by the
1488appraiser when required by state enforcement
1494agencies or due process of law. In
1501addition, a workfile in support of a
1508Restricted Use Appraisal Report must be
1514available for inspection by the client in
1521accordance with the Comment to Standards
1527Rule 2-2(c)(ix).
15299. As he went about preparing the subject appraisal,
1538Mr. Smalley compiled a workfile consisting of the data on which
1549he based his appraisal, including photographs, diagrams, maps,
1557and printouts on the property sales in the neighborhood, known
1567as "comparables." Mr. Smalley maintained a hard copy of the
1577workfile, and he also put the workfile into the office computer.
158810. In reporting the results of his appraisal of the
1598subject property, Mr. Smalley used the "Uniform Residential
1606Appraisal Report," which is identified as "Freddie Mac Form 70."
1616Mr. Smalley entered the data on which he based his appraisal and
1628his conclusion regarding the value of the property on the form,
1639he typed his name on the line on the second page of the form
1653reserved for the name of the appraiser, and he typed "Franky
1664Otero" on the line on the second page of the form reserved for
1677the name of the supervisory appraiser. The date of "July 1 5,
16891999" was typed in the space below the typed names.
169911. Mr. Smalley signed his name on the line above his
1710typed name. Then, as was his usual practice with Mr. Campbell,
1721Mr. Smalley left the report and the workfile in a designated
1732area for Mr. Otero to pick up so he could review the appraisal
1745report and the workfile and sign the appraisal report.
175412. After he completed the appraisal report, Mr. Smalley
1763included in the hard-copy of the workfile a copy of the two-page
1775report. The copy of the appraisal report Mr. Smalley retained
1785in the workfile was printed from the workfile he maintained on
1796the computer, and this copy of the report did not contain either
1808his signature or that of Mr. Otero.
181513. On August 12, 1999, the Department received an
1824anonymous complaint in which it was asserted that the value
1834assigned in the appraisal report to the property located at
184415315 Southwest 178th Terrace, Miami, Florida, was too high; a
1854copy of the appraisal report containing signatures purporting to
1863be those of Mr. Small ey and Mr. Otero was attached to the
1876complaint filed with the Department. The Department forwarded a
1885copy of the complaint to Mr. Otero.
189214. At some point after he received notification of the
1902complaint, Mr. Otero telephoned Mr. Campbell to advise
1910Mr. Ca mpbell that he, Mr. Otero, was being investigated by the
1922Department with respect to a complaint it had received about an
1933appraisal report prepared by Mr. Smalley. Mr. Campbell set up a
1944meeting with Mr. Otero and Mr. Smalley. Prior to the meeting,
1955Mr. Ote ro sent Mr. Campbell a copy of the subject appraisal
1967report by facsimile transmittal. The copy of the report that
1977Mr. Otero sent to Mr. Campbell contained signatures above the
1987typed names of Mr. Smalley and of Mr. Otero.
199615. Mr. Otero's primary concern a t the meeting, and the
2007focus of the discussion, was the allegation in the complaint
2017that the value assigned to the property in the appraisal report
2028was too high. There was also some discussion about whether
2038Mr. Otero had signed the appraisal report.
204516. The first time Mr. Smalley saw a copy of the report
2057containing a signature above Mr. Otero's typed name was at the
2068meeting with Mr. Campbell and Mr. Otero.
207517. The Department's investigator interviewed Mr. Smalley
2082on March 9, 2000. During the interview, the investigator
2091reviewed Mr. Smalley's workfile on the subject appraisal and
2100copied selected documents from the file, with Mr. Smalley's
2109assistance. One document that the investigator copied from
2117Mr. Smalley's workfile was the copy of the two-page apprai sal
2128report that Mr. Smalley had printed from the workfile he
2138maintained on the computer, which copy did not contain
2147signatures of Mr. Smalley and Mr. Otero.
215418. The Department's investigator obtained a computer
2161printout of Mr. Smalley's licensure file. A ccording to the
2171Department's investigator, the printout did not show that
2179Mr. Otero was registered with the Department as a supervisory
2189appraiser for Mr. Smalley in July 1999. As a result, the
2200Department issued to Mr. Smalley a Uniform Disciplinary Citati on
2210dated March 13, 2000, charging that a Uniform Residential
2219Appraisal Report was submitted to Mr. Smalley's client with the
2229signature of a supervisory appraiser who was not registered with
2239the Department.
2241Summary
224219. The evidence presented by the Department is not
2251sufficient to establish with the requisite degree of certainty
2260that Mr. Smalley failed to maintain a workfile for the subject
2271appraisal, that he failed to maintain a workfile while he was
2282preparing the appraisal that contained the data on which he
2292relied in completing the appraisal, or that he was required to
2303include in the workfile a copy of the signed appraisal report.
231420. The evidence presented by the Department is not
2323sufficient to establish with the requisite degree of certainty
2332that the signature on the appraisal report was not Mr. Otero's
2343signature, that Mr. Smalley signed Mr. Otero's signature to the
2353subject appraisal report, or that Mr. Smalley knew or should
2363have known that Mr. Otero was not registered as one of his
2375supervisory appraisers.
2377CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
238021. The Division of Administrative Hearings has
2387jurisdiction over the subject matter of this proceeding and of
2397the parties thereto pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57(1),
2406Florida Statutes (2000).
240922. In its Administrative Complaint, the Department seeks
2417to impose penalties against Mr. Smalley that include suspension
2426or revocation of his license and/or the imposition of an
2436administrative fine. Therefore, the Department has the burden
2444of proving by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Smalley
2454committed the violations alleged in the Administrative
2461Complaint. Department of Banking and Finance, Division of
2469Securities and Investor Protection v. Osborne Stern and Co. , 670
2479So. 2d 932 (Fla. 1996); and Ferris v. Turlington , 510 So. 2d 292
2492(Fla. 1987).
249423. In Evans Packing Co. v. Department of Agriculture and
2504Consumer Services , 550 So. 2d 112, 116, n. 5 (Fla. 1st DCA
25161989), the court defined clear and convincing evidence as
2525follows:
2526[C ]lear and convincing evidence
2531requires that the evidence must be found to
2539be credible; the facts to which the
2546witnesses testify must be distinctly
2551remembered; the evidence must be precise and
2558explicit and the witnesses must be lacking
2565in confusion as to the facts in issue. The
2574evidence must be of such weight that it
2582produces in the mind of the trier of fact
2591the firm belief or conviction, without
2597hesitancy, as to the truth of the
2604allegations sought to be established.
2609Slomowitz v. Walker , 429 So. 2d 797, 800
2617(Fla. 4th DCA 1983).
262124. Judge Sharp, in her dissenting opinion in Walker v.
2631Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation , 705
2639So. 2d 652, 655 (Fla. 5th DCA 1998)(Sharp, J., dissenting),
2649reviewed recent pronouncements on clear and convincing evidence:
2657Clear and convincing evidence requires more
2663proof than preponderance of evidence, but
2669less than beyond a reasonable doubt. In re
2677Inquiry Concerning a Judge re Graziano ,
2683696 So. 2d 744 (Fla. 1997). It is an
2692intermediate level of proof that entails
2698both qualitative and quantative [sic]
2703elements. In re Adoption of Baby E.A.W. ,
2710658 So. 2d 961, 967 (Fla. 1995), cert.
2718denied , 516 U.S. 1051, 116 S. Ct. 719, 133
2727L. Ed. 2d 672 (1996). The sum total of
2736evidence must be sufficient to convince the
2743trier of fact without any hesitancy. Id.
2750It must produce in the mind of the trier of
2760fact a firm belief or conviction as to the
2769truth of the allegations sought to be
2776established. Inquiry Concerning Davie , 645
2781So. 2d 398, 404 (Fla. 1994).
278725. Section 475.624, Florida Statutes (1999), provides
2794that the Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board may, inter alia ,
2804revoke or suspend the license, registration, or certification of
2813a real estate appraiser or may reprimand, fine, or put on
2824probation any such appraiser if the appraiser has committed any
2834one of several acts enumerated in the statute.
284226. Section 475.624 is a penal statute and, as such, must
2853be strictly construed in favor of Mr. Smalley. See Munch v.
2864Department of Professional Regulation, Division of Real Estate ,
2872592 So. 2d 1136, 1138 (Fla. 1st DCA 1992),
288127. Section 475.628, Florida Statutes (1999), provides:
2888Each appraiser registered, licensed, or
2893certified under this part shall comply with
2900the Uniform Standards of Professional
2905Appraisal Practice. Statements on appraisal
2910standards which may be issued for the
2917purpose of clarification, interpretation,
2921explanation or elaboration through the
2926Appraisal Foundation shall also be binding
2932on any appraiser registered, licensed, or
2938certified under this part.
294228. Section 475.624(14), Florida Statutes (1999 ), provides
2950that disciplinary action may be taken against an appraiser who
"2960[h ]as violated any standard for the development or
2969communication of a real estate appraisal or other provision of
2979the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice." The
2987Department included in its Administrative Complaint the factual
2995allegation that Mr. Smalley "failed to maintain a workfile for
3005the appraisal report." This factual allegation is the basis for
3015the charge in Count I of the Administrative Complaint that
3025Mr. Sma lley "violated a standard for the development or
3035communication of a real estate appraisal or other provision of
3045the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice,
3052specifically the conduct portion of [the] Ethics Rule, in
3061violation of § 475.624(14), Fla. Stat . (1999)." 3 Based on the
3073findings of fact herein and for the reasons set forth below, the
3085Department has failed to satisfy its burden of proving by clear
3096and convincing evidence that Mr. Smalley violated
3103Section 475.624(14), Florida Statutes (1999 ), as alleged in the
3113Administrative Complaint or as argued by the Department in its
3123Proposed Recommended Order.
312629. Although the Administrative Complaint alleges only
3133that Mr. Smalley failed to maintain a workfile and the
3143Department stipulated at the hearing that Mr. Smalley maintained
3152a workfile on the subject appraisal, the Department takes the
3162position in its Proposed Recommended Order that
3169[t ]hough Respondent was able to produce a
3177complete workfile at the hearing,
3182Inv[estigator] Piper testified that wh en he
3189reviewed the subject file, the workfile did
3196not contain signed copies of the appraisal
3203report or supporting data. . . . Though
3211Respondent maintained a workfile, he failed
3217to maintain a complete workfile containing a
3224signed appraisal report at the time he
3231developed and communicated the appraisal
3236report.
323730. First, the Department has failed to prove by clear and
3248convincing evidence the factual allegation that Mr. Smalley
3256failed to include in his workfile for the subject appraisal the
3267data required by the USPAP record-keeping rule. At the hearing,
3277the Department stipulated that Mr. Smalley maintained a workfile
3286for the subject appraisal, and it stipulated that the workfile
3296contained those documents identified by Mr. Smalley during his
3305testimony, which documents included data to support the
3313appraisal. 4 The testimony of the Department's investigator that
3322Mr. Smalley's workfile did not contain the data to support the
3333appraisal and/or that the data in the workfile was accumulated
"3343after the fact" does not meet the standard for clear and
3354convincing evidence : The investigator's testimony was not
3362precise and explicit regarding the documents that were contained
3371in the file, and his bare assertion in his testimony that the
3383data in the workfile he examined was collected "after the fact"
3394is without any point of temporal reference and is unsupported by
3405any explanation of the basis for his conclusion.
341331. Second, although the Department has proven by clear
3422and convincing evidence that the workfile maintained by
3430Mr. Smalley did not contain a signed copy of the appraisal
3441report, this proof is not sufficient to establish that
3450Mr. Smalley violated the record-keeping provision of the USPAP.
3459The provision contains a series of items that must be included
3470in an appraiser's workfile, and each item in the series is set
3482off from the others by a semi-colon. By its terms, the
3493provision requires that an appraiser keep "true copies of any
3503written reports, documented on any type of media"; the
3512requirement that an appraiser must provide a "signed and dated
3522certification" applies only to "summaries of any oral reports or
3532testimony, or a transcript of testimony." The Comment to the
3542USPAP provision explains that the true copy maintained in the
3552workfile must be "of the entire actual written appraisal . . .
3564sent or delivered to the client."
357032. The only evidence offered by the Department to support
3580its contention that the USPAP provision requires an appraiser to
3590include in his workfile a signed copy of the appraisal report
3601is, again, the bare assertion of the Department's investigator
3610in his testimony at the hearing. The Department did not present
3621any evidence to establish that it is the practice in the
3632industry to keep a signed copy of the appraisal report in the
3644workfile, and neither the USPAP provision nor the Comment
3653contains any such requirement. The Department did not allege in
3663the Administrative Complaint, and there was no evidence to
3672establish, that the contents of the copy of the appraisal the
3683Department's investigator obtained from Mr. Smalley's workfile
3690were any different from the contents of the copy of the
3701appraisal sent to the Department with the anonymous complaint. 5
3711Therefore, the Department has failed to prove that Mr. Smalley's
3721workfile did not contain a "true copy" of the appraisal report
3732sent to Mr. Smalley's client.
373733. Section 475.624(2), Florida Statutes (1999), provides
3744that disciplinary action may be taken against an appraiser when
3754the appraiser "[h ]as been guilty of . . . culpable negligence,
3766or breach of trust in any business transaction in this
3776state . . . ." The Department included in its Administrative
3787Complaint the factual allegation that Mr. Smalley "knew or
3796should have known that the signature of the supervisory
3805appraiser was not the genuine signature of the person it
3815purported to represent." This factual allegation is the basis
3824for the Department's charge in Count II of the Administrative
3834Complaint that Mr. Smalley "is guilty of culpable negligence or
3844breach of trust in a business transaction in violation of
3854§ 475.624(2), Fla. Stat. (1999)." Based on the findings of fact
3865herein and for the reasons set forth below, the Department has
3876failed to satisfy its burden of proving by clear and convincing
3887evidence that Mr. Smalley violated Section 475.624(2) , Florida
3895Statutes (1999), as alleged in the Administrative Complaint or
3904as argued by the Department in its Proposed Recommended Order.
391434. In its Proposed Recommended Order, the Department took
3923the position that Mr. Smalley committed culpable negligence or a
3933breach of trust with respect to the subject appraisal, first,
3943because he forged Mr. Otero's signature to the appraisal report
3953and, second, because he knew or should have known that Mr. Otero
3965was not his supervisory appraiser.
397035. The Department has failed to prove by clear and
3980convincing evidence that the signature on the appraisal report
3989was not Mr. Otero's signature. The Department's investigator
3997testified that Mr. Otero's attorney told him that Mr. Otero said
4008he did not sign the subject appraisal report, and the
4018investigator further testified that Mr. Otero sent him a letter
4028in which he denied having signed the report; this letter was not
4040offered into evidence, nor was any document purportedly
4048containing Mr. Otero's signature offered into evidence to
4056provide a point of comparison with the signature on the
4066appraisal report purported to be that of Mr. Otero.
4075Mr. Campbell testified that Mr. Otero told him that he
4085(Mr. Otero) had not signed the appraisal report. The testimony
4095of both the Department's investigator and Mr. Campbell is
4104hearsay; it would not be admissible over objection in a civil
4115action; and it does not supplement or explain other evidence.
4125This testimony is not sufficient, therefore, to support a
4134finding of fact that the signature on the appraisal report is
4145not Mr. Otero's signature. See Section 120.57(1)(c), Florida
4153Statutes (2000).
415536. Furthermore, even if the Department had proven that
4164the signature on the appraisal report is that of Mr. Otero, the
4176Department has failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence
4186that Mr. Smalley affixed the signature to the report.
4195Mr. Campbell's testimony that Mr. Smalley admitted during the
4204meeting with Mr. Campbell and Mr. Otero that he had signed
4215Mr. Otero's name to the appraisal was precise and explicit,
4225however, he did not distinctly remember other details of the
4235discussion that took place during the meeting. Weighed against
4244Mr. Campbell's testimony is the testimony of the Department's
4253investigator that, during his interview with Mr. Smalley on
4262March 9, 2000, Mr. Smalley denied that he signed Mr. Otero's
4273signature to the appraisal report and Mr. Smalley's testimony
4282that he did not sign Mr. Otero's name to the report. Having
4294considered all of the evidence of record and assessed the
4304credibility of the witnesses and the persuasiveness of the
4313testimony, the undersigned is not firmly convinced that
4321Mr. Smalley signed Mr. Otero's name to the subject appraisal
4331report, especially since the Department offered no cognizable
4339proof to establish that the signature on the appraisal report
4349was not Mr. Otero's signature.
435437. Finally, the Department has failed to prove by clear
4364and convincing evidence that Mr. Smalley knew or should have
4374known that Mr. Otero was not registered with the Department as
4385his supervisory appraiser. The Department offered no cognizable
4393proof to establish that Mr. Otero was not registered with the
4404Department as a supervisory appraiser for Mr. Smalley. The only
4414evidence offered to support this contention was the absence of
4424any mention of Mr. Otero in the "certified" summary of the
4435contents of the Department's licensure file and the testimony of
4445the Department's investigator that the computer printout of
4453Mr. Smalley's licensure file did not show that Mr. Otero was
4464registered as Mr. Smalle y's supervisory appraiser. The
4472certified summary of the contents of Mr. Smalley's licensure
4481file is uncorroborated hearsay, 6 and the investigator's
4489testimony, likewise, was uncorroborated hearsay, based as it was
4498solely on the investigator's review of a computer printout that
4508was not offered into evidence at the hearing, much less
4518established as a business record maintained by the Department.
452738. Even if the Department had presented clear and
4536convincing evidence that Mr. Otero was not registered with the
4546Department as a supervisory appraiser for Mr. Smalley, the
4555Department failed to present any evidence to establish that
4564Mr. Smalley knew that Mr. Otero was not registered as one of his
4577supervisory appraisers, and it failed to present any evidence
4586from which it could be inferred that Mr. Smalley should have
4597known that Mr. Otero was not registered as one of his
4608supervisory appraisers. In any event, the Department is
4616precluded from disciplining Mr. Smalley on the basis of this
4626allegation both because it did not allege facts in its
4636Administrative Complaint relating to this charge, 7 and because
4645the Department has already issued Mr. Smalley a citation
4654charging him with submitting an appraisal report to a client
4664with the signature of a supervisory appraiser not registered
4673with the Department.
4676RECOMMENDATION
4677Based on the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of
4687Law, it is RECOMMENDED that the Florida Real Estate Appraisal
4697Board enter a final order dismissing the Administrative
4705Complaint filed against Dale Smalley.
4710DONE AND ENTERED this 31st day of August, 2001, in
4720Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida.
4724___________________________________
4725PATRICIA HART MALONO
4728Administrative Law Judge
4731Division of Administrative Hearings
4735The DeSoto Building
47381230 Apalachee Parkway
4741Tallahassee, Florida 32399-3060
4744(850) 488- 9675 SUNCOM 278-9675
4749Fax Filing (850) 921-6847
4753www.doah.state.fl.us
4754Filed with the Clerk of the
4760Division of Administrative Hearings
4764this 31st day of August, 2001.
4770ENDNOTES
47711 / The relevant chapter is actually Chapter 475, Florida
4781Statutes.
47822 / Section 475.611(1)(l), Florida Statutes (1999), defines a
"4791registered assistant appraiser" as "a person who is registered
4800with the department as qualified to perform appraisal services
4809under the supervision of a licensed or certified appraiser."
4818Rule 61J1-7.006, Florida Administrative Code, provides:
"4824Whenever a registered appraiser signs an appraisal report, the
4833registered appraiser's primary or secondary supervising licensed
4840or certified appraiser(s) must also sign the appraisal report."
48493 / Although the Department did not specify in the Administrative
4860Complaint the specific provision of the USPAP allegedly violated
4869by Mr. Smalley, he did not request a more definite statement of
4881the charges against him.
48854 / Mr. Smalley offered his workfile into evidence, and it was
4897received over the objection of the Department as Respondent's
4906Exhibit 1. Counsel for the Department then stated: "I will
4916stipulate to everything that's maintained in the file, it does
4926not have to be admitted, . . . . I don't have a problem with it
4942not being admitted as actual evidence. I will stipulate to
4952Mr. Smalley['s] maintaining a workfile." (Tr. at 95.) In
4961consideration of the Department's stipulation, Mr. Smalley
4968withdrew Respondent's Exhibit 1.
49725 / In fact, a comparison of the first two pages of Petitioner's
4985Exhibit 2, the copy of the appraisal report the Department's
4995investigator obtained from Mr. Smalley's workfile, and the first
5004two pages of Petitioner's Exhibit 4, which was purportedly sent
5014to the Department attached to the anonymous complaint, reveals
5023that the contents of the two documents are identical; the only
5034difference is that Petitioner's Exhibit 4 contains what purport
5043to be the signatures of Mr. Smalley and Mr. Otero.
50536 / The information recited in the "certified" summary of the
5064contents of Mr. Smalley's licensure file is hearsay when it is
5075offered to prove the contents of the file. A certification is
5086properly used to certify the authenticity of the documents
5095contained in the licensure file and attached to the
5104certification, see Section 90.902(4), Florida Statutes, and the
5112hearsay nature of the documents can be overcome by the testimony
5123of a qualified witness establishing that the documents are
5132business records. See Section 90.803(8), Florida Statutes.
51397 / See Cottrill v. Department of Insurance , 685 So. 2d 1371,
51511372 (Fla. 1st DCA 1996)("Predicating disciplinary action
5159against a licensee on conduct never alleged in an administrative
5169complaint or some comparable pleading violates the
5176Administrative Procedure Act.")
5180COPIES FURNISHED:
5182Rania A. Soliman, Esquire
5186Department of Business and
5190Professional Regulation
5192400 West Robinson Street, Suite N-308
5198Hurston Building, North Tower
5202Orlando, Florida 32801
5205Harold M. Braxton
5208Qualified Representative
52109132 Southwest 78th Place
5214Miami, Florida 33156
5217Patricia J. Birch, Chairperson
5221Florida Real Estate Appraisal Board
5226400 West Robinson Street
5230Post Office Box 1900
5234Orlando, Florida 32802-1900
5237Hardy L. Roberts, III, General Counsel
5243Department of Business and
5247Professional Regulation
52491940 North Monroe Street
5253Tallahassee, Florida 32399-22202
5256NOTICE OF RIGHT TO SUBMIT EXCEPTIONS
5262All parties have the right to submit written exceptions within
527215 days from the date of this recommended order. Any exceptions
5283to this recommended order should be filed with the agency that
5294will issue the final order in this case.
- Date
- Proceedings
- PDF:
- Date: 09/17/2001
- Proceedings: Petitioner`s Exceptions to Recommended Order (filed via facsimile).
- PDF:
- Date: 08/31/2001
- Proceedings: Recommended Order issued (hearing held May 21, 2001) CASE CLOSED.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/31/2001
- Proceedings: Recommended Order cover letter identifying hearing record referred to the Agency sent out.
- PDF:
- Date: 08/24/2001
- Proceedings: Notice of Taking Official Recognition and Time Within Which a Response Must Be Filed filed.
- Date: 06/25/2001
- Proceedings: Transcript filed.
- Date: 05/21/2001
- Proceedings: CASE STATUS: Hearing Held; see case file for applicable time frames.
- PDF:
- Date: 05/17/2001
- Proceedings: Amended Notice of Video Teleconference issued. (hearing scheduled for May 21, 2001; 9:00 a.m.; Miami and Tallahassee, FL, amended as to video, location, and time).
- PDF:
- Date: 05/15/2001
- Proceedings: Motion to Excuse Witness from Subpeona (L. Campbell) filed by B. Fink via facsimile.
- PDF:
- Date: 04/17/2001
- Proceedings: Notice of Substitution of Counsel (for R. Soliman) filed via facsimile.
- PDF:
- Date: 03/26/2001
- Proceedings: Notice of Hearing issued (hearing set for May 21, 2001; 9:30 a.m.; Miami, FL).
- PDF:
- Date: 03/19/2001
- Proceedings: Order Granting Request for Representation by Qualified Representative issued.
- Date: 03/16/2001
- Proceedings: Request for Formal Proceeding filed.
Case Information
- Judge:
- PATRICIA M. HART
- Date Filed:
- 03/16/2001
- Date Assignment:
- 05/18/2001
- Last Docket Entry:
- 07/15/2004
- Location:
- Miami, Florida
- District:
- Southern
- Agency:
- ADOPTED IN PART OR MODIFIED
- Suffix:
- PL
Counsels
-
Harold M. Braxton
Address of Record -
Brian L Fink, Esquire
Address of Record -
Rania A Soliman, Esquire
Address of Record