Tag Archives: HOA

CAI Law Firms Fight Back

CAI lawyers in Florida (and most likely elsewhere) are whining about one of the few court decisions that ever favored a homeowner against an HOA. It’s a case where the homeowner wrote a check for $840 with the notation, “in full and final satisfaction (of disputed amount).” The homeowner included a letter with the same basic language.

The HOA attorney instructed his clients to cash the check, but only apply part of it toward the original disputed amount. An Appellate Court has now ruled that since the check was cashed, the HOA cannot go after the $38,000 in additional fees it claimed was owed by the homeowner.

This is another one of those trashy HOA scams that have given the industry such a horrible reputation among American homeowners. If a homeowner claims, rightly or wrongly, that an HOA fine was improperly assessed, the HOA immediately begins tacking on late fees, fines, attorney’s fees, collection costs and interest. Florida law forces the homeowner to pay the most recent fees first. In other words, interest, collection costs, lawyers, fines, late fees, and only then can the homeowner ever repay the original debt.

It’s a beautiful system which has worked well for generations of Mafia families and for low-life debt collectors. While the debtor desperately tries to pay his original debt, the associated fines and interest keep rising, as do legal fees and collections. It’s a daisy chain that’s impossible to break. It’s a massive money maker for lawyers and collections agencies who, while doing absolutely no work, can raise their charges indiscriminately and perpetually until the homeowner is broken. Of course, the HOA prances in and seizes the home which it promptly puts up for auction. The lawyers then begin picking through the estate of the bankrupted homeowner. The system is fundamentally unfair to the individual homeowner who never has a chance to plead for his own day in court.

So in this rare decision where the Court ruled in favor of the homeowner, the tears and gnashing of teeth are being heard throughout the CAI community.

(CAI firm’s warning to the HOA industry)

 

Don’t Be Gay In A Texas HOA

One of the most fundamental problems with the American HOA system is that it actively encourages apathy among its residents. In a hostile neighborhood, homeowners are afraid of being targeted for public shaming or humiliation. It makes neighbors paranoid of each other, afraid to be activists. After all, most of us want to live in private homes in a human quest for peace and quiet. That, in turn, makes people unwilling to participate in the governing process. Stay home, don’t make waves, don’t stand out from the crowd. Beyond all else, don’t show up at HOA meetings.

Bam! That’s the dynamite!

Once you remove a majority of the neighborhood from the governing process, small-minded power-hungry dictators are free to threaten, defame, cheat, steal, and embezzle with pure abandon. It’s hog heaven for human swine. With tiny majorities behind them they rise to the top where they create neighborhood havoc, usually by finding and tormenting a handful of targeted ‘unwanteds.’ An unwanted homeowner can be anything from a single mom to a family with a Down’s Syndrome child, to unmarried couples, black families, Jews, gays, lesbians, essentially anyone the dictator on the board thinks can be easily targeted. It’s fundamentally good war strategy. Don’t give the enemy a reason to fight back, turn the enemy against itself. Churn up chaos and drive homeowners further behind their shield of apathy.

That brings us to a crazy situation in the Gilbert Homeowners Association in Dallas. A single man owned a condo for years but his domestic partner is not listed as an owner. He’s deemed by the HOA to be “a guest.” The HOA board in its lawsuit against the couple said, “Ken Ray (the guest) is not an owner of the condo….under current Texas law he is, therefore, not a member of the Association.”

It gets a whole lot crazier. The two men claim they tried to get the association to repair a leaking sprinkler back in 2008. The repair never happened. The two domestic partners began to get a little more aggressive in trying to get the HOA to fulfill its obligations to repair the damage. One of the men discovered the contractor who was supposed to do the repairs was a daughter of a board member. The homeowner demanded to see the HOA’s financial records.

That’s when the proverbial “ship hit the span.”

The two domestic partners claim they were indirectly threatened with “use of a firearm.” Their sprinklers were purposely turned off damaging their landscaping. The front gate entry code was changed so that the buzzer went to the management company, not to the mens’ condo. Threats were made to physically remove “the guest” from HOA property. The men were prohibited from hiring their own contractors to repair damage caused by the board’s neglect.

The lawsuits and counter-suits mean the eventual legal bills will stretch into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. A jury verdict against the HOA could conceivably stretch into the millions.

If so, one more American HOA could be forced into bankruptcy. It’s happened before.

“I see stupid people. They’re everywhere. They walk around like everyone else. They don’t even know that they’re stupid.”  -slight rewrite from The Sixth Sense, 2007

(link to Dallas Observer story)

 

Screaming, Hair-Pulling HOA Fist Fights

So you’re thinking of spending your ‘golden years’ in a beautiful peaceful retirement community? You want to live in a neighborhood where neighbors really care about each other?

You have so many really wonderful choices of communities to live, places like Mainlands 3 in Tamarac, Florida. Warm air, well-kept lawns, ocean breezes, bird songs filling the air, happy people wishing each other “Good morning,” or “Good afternoon.”

Before you get too excited, check out the video linked below. It would be hilarious if it wasn’t so tragic. It graphically demonstrates what’s going on in hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Homeowners Associations across the country.

(link to WPLG-ABC News, Miami)

 

“What Hath God Wrought?”

“What hath God wrought?”

It’s the anguished question from the fourth book of the Old Testament.

It was the astonished phrase that opened the first telegraph line between Baltimore and Washington in 1844.

It could also be used to express complete disgust at a current HOA news story from Detroit.

Waterford homeowner Natalie Forte bought a Chevy Volt which she charged from an outlet in her shared HOA garage. She had no problem with paying an extra charge for the power. But she says her HOA demanded four times the amount of power that her Chevy Volt actually used.

What did the HOA do? LOL! They just disconnected all the power to Natalie’s garage, forcing her to use a 100 foot extension cord to charge the Volt from her condo.

Really? Can HOA vindictiveness get any more ridiculous than this?

What hath God wrought?

(link to WXYZ-Detroit story)

(link to Green News)

 

HOAs As “Mini-Governments”

guest blog by Deborah Goonan

A recent article published at Virginia’s TimesDispatch.com, has summarized the proliferation of HOAs as follows:

“(Homeowners’) associations are nearly ubiquitous for new residential housing in the Richmond area, embraced by developers as a way to handle long-term care of common amenities and by local officials as “mini-governments” that can help maintain order and property value.”

The article’s author, Ted Strong, interviewed several county officials on the subject. For readers who may doubt claims of some home buyers that it is nearly impossible to find HOA-free housing in many parts of America, just feast your eyes on the following blatant admissions by Richmond, VA, area officials representing Henrico County:

Kirk Turner, Chesterfield County’s director of planning, said his county wants the associations in the vast majority of cases. “From our standpoint, we actually encourage the creation of an HOA….”

At this point, “probably 100 percent” of new subdivisions in Chesterfield County of at least 20 lots have associations, Turner said.

“To me, the HOA is like a mini-government,” said Henrico County Attorney Joseph P. Rapisarda Jr.

There you have it. The ubiquitous nature of HOA-Land is driven by supply-side expediency and economics. The Developer gets to increase housing density, and therefore, profits. Local planning boards encourage HOAs, because such organizations are viewed as extensions of local government.

Developers love to preserve their “visions” – i.e. perpetual control – of communities they have created. Local governments love the fact that they can just sit back and collect property tax revenue, and leave strict code enforcement to HOAs.

Says Attorney G. Elmore, of the Community Associations Institute (CAI)-member Community Association law firm:

“Associations often help to preserve developers’ visions for common features or aesthetics.”  Elmore is an attorney at Chadwick, Washington, Moriarty, Elmore & Bunn P.C., which represents community associations extensively.

“Well-kept common features help property values and a neighborhood’s livability,” he said. “And associations are necessary if a neighborhood hopes to maintain aesthetic standards stricter than those in county laws.”

Ah, CAI’s vision now becomes crystal clear: without HOAs, aesthetic standards would suffer and property values would plummet. Or would they?

Do we really buy Elmore’s premise?

I think it is true that HOAs can, and often do, enforce stricter aesthetic standards than counties. But, is that a good thing for residents? Not necessarily, when strict standards result in costly lawsuits over flagpoles or home-based businesses.

And taking it one step further, Elmore fails to mention that HOAs can, and often do, enforce standards that limit Constitutional rights of free speech and expression. He also forgot to mention that HOAs tend to fall short when it comes to upholding important government duties such as conducting fair elections and handling disputes over violations with sufficient due process.

Isn’t that the least residents should expect from “mini-governments?”

But wait a minute – back in 2007, CAI issued the following press release in regard to the Supreme Court decision in Committee for a Better Twin Rivers v. Twin Rivers Community Association. Back then, the court decided that HOAs are not governments, and CAI happily echoed the sentiment. Here’s a quick refresher:

• The Twin Rivers decision held that residents of an association not only have the right to express themselves; they also have the freedom to adopt reasonable policies regulating expression in their communities.

• Community Associations are not governments, but rather, private agreements among neighbors; the New Jersey Supreme Court ruling indicated that the government should be respectful of these private agreements.

• Homeowners’ rights of expression and speech are not changed in New Jersey or elsewhere by the Twin Rivers decision, but rather, the case affirmed residents’ freedom to adopt reasonable policies governing such expression.

• Although courts across the country may find the decision in Twin Rivers persuasive, it does not have the binding authority of precedent outside of New Jersey.

• At its core, the Twin Rivers decision supports the rights of residents within community associations to make reasonable decisions for themselves without being second-guessed by courts or politicians.

Well, CAI better get their local government allies on the same page. Are HOAs “contractual agreements” or “mini-governments?”

The last statement about residents making decisions for themselves is blatantly false on its face in most Associations. The Developer creates rules long before there are residents, even before construction begins. And the HOA Board – often controlled by Developers for many years – makes nearly all decisions on behalf of its residents. In reality, the Twin Rivers decision supports the rights of the HOA Board to make most, if not all, decisions, and not be second-guessed by any branch of US government.

Last but not least, note the veiled admission of classic CAI philosophy – that the HOA Board of Directors (aided and abetted by the Community Manager and/or the HOA Attorney) is absolutely essential to maintaining the “vision” by “taking the lead on enforcement, “ because individual owners cannot be relied upon to exercise good judgment.

“It’s a lot easier to maintain a certain style or look or quality if you have an organization taking the lead on enforcement as opposed to relying on individual owners,” Elmore said.

(link to Times Dispatch article on HOAs as mini-governments)

(link to CAI news release about Twin Rivers decision in 2007)