Shenehon Company has one of the strongest consulting and litigation support teams in the appraisal industry. Clients engage us on an hourly basis for individual consultation or on a fee basis for larger assignments. We provide appraisals suitable for most IRS purposes, condemnation proceedings, business damages and loss, shareholder disputes, and marital dissolutions. Over the years, we have developed and tested effective strategies for use in the courtroom setting. Our experts provide accurate and reliable representation in litigation matters.
Before accepting a litigation appraisal assignment on your behalf, your appraiser will:
Once you have engaged the appraiser, let him or her strategically select support staff and experts who are fully qualified in the subject area and have the potential to testify in court.
During Phase I, your appraiser performs the necessary due diligence to arrive at a valid and supportable conclusion. The appraiser will make sure that he or she is up to speed on the appraisal issues in order to comply with the competency provision of USPAP. This is the opportunity to fine tune the appropriate methodology, identify the key issues, and understand the opposing positions or claims. Your appraiser will make sure that the valuation does not contradict any facts of the case and will interview both parties in litigation (if possible).
At the end of Phase I, the appraiser will meet with you and present a verbal summary of findings and a preliminary indication of value. If he or she cannot find the data necessary to support further action on the assignment, it is likely that the proceedings will end at this point. If the consensus is to continue, your litigation team will begin Phase II - the appraisal report which is tailored to fit the respective court system (i.e., Federal Tax Court, County Court, Divorce Court, Arbitration, etc.).
During Phase II, the appraiser prepares and presents the appraisal report. You may request a draft of the report in order to verify that the particulars of the case are correctly and clearly laid out (land and building sizes, dates of purchase/sale, conditions, etc.). At this point, For most litigation assignments, the Complete, Self Contained Report format is required. Once the facts, numbers and value conclusion are reviewed for accuracy, the report is admitted into evidence.
Your appraiser and your attorney act as your voice during the deposition and at trial. The purpose of a deposition is for both sides to gather information. The opposing side's litigation team interviews the appraiser in the presence of a court reporter. A copy of the transcript is sent to the appraiser who reads it, corrects any factual errors and signs off on it.
Following the deposition, both sides prepare for trial. Once again, it is your appraiser and legal counsel who prepare for testimony and cross-examination. Some cases settle quite quickly, while others go to trial. Your appraiser will keep you informed and advise you throughout the process.