28 Tex. Admin. Code § 5.4218 - Appraisal Process - Umpire Obligations
(a) Conflicts. An umpire must disclose to
both parties any potential conflicts of interest. Conflicts of interest are
listed in §
5.4214 of this title (relating to
Appraisal Process - Umpire Qualifications and Conflicts of Interest). The
umpire must disclose the conflicts of interest no later than the fifth day
after being hired, and before the umpire begins work. A person may not serve as
umpire in an appraisal for which the person has a disqualifying conflict of
interest.
(b) Work. The umpire may
begin work only if the association's appraiser and the claimant's appraiser
fail to reach an agreement on the appraisal amount and tell the umpire in
writing to begin work.
(c) Review
information. The parties and appraisers may request the umpire to review any
information related to the claim, including itemized estimates and supporting
documents such as photographs and diagrams. The umpire must review in detail
all information the appraisers and parties submit related to the dispute,
including the itemized appraisals. At a party's request, the umpire may also
consider any conflicts of interest or objections to appraisers. The umpire must
allow each appraiser a fair opportunity to present evidence and argument. The
umpire may ask questions, and request documents or other evidence, including
expert reports.
(d) Limited scope.
The umpire's work may only cover items about which the two appraisers disagree.
The umpire must review the differences and seek agreement with one or both
appraisers regarding the disputed items. The umpire may accept either
appraiser's scope, quantities, values, or costs on items in dispute or may
develop an independent decision on an item. The umpire may not visit the
claimant's property without agreement from both appraisers.
(e) Decision. An itemized decision agreed to
by both appraisers or by one appraiser and the umpire is binding on the parties
as to the amount of loss the association will pay for the claim. The umpire may
enter into an itemized decision with one or both appraisers on a compromise
basis. The umpire can issue a decision if agreement is reached on the final
total, even if there is disagreement on some of the individual items. The
umpire must promptly give the parties and the appraisers an itemized written
decision.
(f) Ethics. After
accepting the responsibility to be the umpire for an appraisal, the umpire:
(1) may not withdraw or abandon the appraisal
unless compelled to do so by unanticipated circumstances that would render it
impossible or impractical to continue;
(2) may not be present or participate in
settlement discussions unless requested by both parties; and
(3) must decide all matters fairly,
exercising independent judgment and utmost integrity. An umpire may not permit
outside pressure to affect the appraisal and may not delegate the umpire's
decision under subsection (e) of this section to any other person.
(g) Fees. The umpire must disclose
all fees and must state whether the umpire charges for a minimum number of
hours. The umpire may specify different charges for different types or values
of claims. The parties may not pay the umpire on a contingent fee basis,
percentage of the decision, barter arrangement, gift, favor, or in-kind
exchange. This subsection does not apply to department-selected umpires under §
5.4217 of this title (relating to
Appraisal Process - Umpire Selection by Department).
Notes
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