Hi Susan,
This is a pickle, alright!
A few comments/questions...
1) Class B. You said that Class ceases 2 years after the first unit is sold. How long has it been?
2) Annual Elections. I'm not sure I agree with your attorney that you should boycott the annual election.
3) The Lawsuit. What, exactly, does the lawsuit allege? In California, ordinarily board members are covered by Directors and Officers ("D&O") Insurance, which covers them for errors and omissions associated with the performance of their duties. You said the lawsuit has to do with fiduciary issues, so unless the association has no D&O insurance, I don't understand how it is that the group of homeowners could be suing the board members as individuals.
But let me say something about D&O insurance in California: It is not true that directors' assets can't be touched, even in the case where there is a D&O insurance policy. D&O insurance does not cover everything. It covers board negligence, breach of fiduciary duties, etc., provided the errors or omissions were:
- within the scope of the officer or directors' duties,
- performed in good faith, and
- not willful, wanton, or grossly negligent.
Read more:
Directors and Officers Insurance from
Davis-Stirling.com by Adams Kessler PLC
4) The Recall Election. I need more info on this. When you say 7 votes were illegal, in exactly what way? It seems to me that if this matter of illegality is more than opinion, then the recall
was successful (regardless of what anyone says to the contrary) and the recalled directors are now
former directors. That means the board no longer has a quorum, and any voting they do at these so-called meetings is invalid, and any actions they take at any meeting they hold have no legal basis. In other words, the association has not had a meeting since the recall, despite the fact that these individuals sit in a room and pretend to conduct business. Ask your attorney about this.
5) New Petition. If I'm right, and the 7 ballots were clearly illegal (not just your opinion), then (depending on how the recall petition was worded) you would ordinarily have had an election at the special meeting at which the recall ballots were counted. If your recall petition did not specify that new directors would be elected that night, then you should now circulate a petition to compel the board to call a special membership meeting for the purpose of electing the recalled directors.
6) Classes and cumulative voting. I agree with whoever said this, in that these two concepts need to be removed as soon as possible from your governing documents. As soon as the homeowners have control of the association, vote these items off your documents. Cumulative voting makes it almost impossible to recall a director, and no "real" government in California allows this type of voting.
Rob