You can not determine conformity by reading a logbook. Logbooks are nothing more than the story someone wants to tell.
You determine conformity by performing an inspection of the aircraft, and IF you find a repair suspect, then research whether that repair meets the approving data, which should be outlined in block 8 of the 337.
In the (likely) event that a 337 went missing from the logs, AND it was miss-filed by the FAA admin person, then we must do a bit more research. Cessna manual has a pretty good chapter on many structural repairs. Then there’s AC43.13. And Finally, if you don’t find what makes you feel good, then we go down the road of requesting engineering data, from DER or Cessna (who will likely refer to DER)
NOTICE how nowhere in there do we reach out to the FAA for anything other than the records they may/might/maybe have in their system. They don’t have the time, man-power, knowledge, or give-a-f@#$ to do your engineering data research. That’s on you.
If your research through approved data, or get DER data, finds the repair to be in compliance, then you fill out a 337 describing the work done “by persons unknown and time unknown”.
If you ultimately find said repair to not be in compliance, then you remove and repair it, so as to meet compliance, filing the appropriate paperwork of work accomplished.
So, Step ONE is…. Exercise that shiny new “Inspection Authorization” of yours, and look at the plane.
And, when in the very likely event that you don’t find anything at all, and the 182 looks like and smells like a 182 that Cessna built, than you just verified that the airplane complies with type design.