JohnS43 (Colorado)
Posts: 24
Posts: 24
Posted:
I’m probably just stuck with 1) tricking someone else to buy it, 2) pay massive overages on assessments until death or 3) defaulting on the mortgage and take my lumps, but can anything legal be done to address inequitable bylaws?
My 40-year old HOA has three tiers of ownership/liability at 2%/3%/4% based roughly on unit sizes. Within tiers the sizes/values/rights are very similar, but across tiers the 2% units are denied a few services others and only represent approximately 1.25% of the living space and closer to 1% of value while the 3%/4% units represent nearer their assessed numbers (3% = 3.1% living space). This implies every assessment hits the 2% units 60-100% more than “standard” HOA division methods would suggest.
A recent vote that will assess 2% units nearly their entire value saw nearly 80% approval from 3%/4% units (paying closer to 1/3 their total value) and 0% from the 2%ers. This and the math above speak to some basic inequity that an idealist would hope the law might intend to correct and coupled with some minor denial of otherwise common services might be a case. Is there any legal recourse or was Murphy an optimist?
Thanks,
John
My 40-year old HOA has three tiers of ownership/liability at 2%/3%/4% based roughly on unit sizes. Within tiers the sizes/values/rights are very similar, but across tiers the 2% units are denied a few services others and only represent approximately 1.25% of the living space and closer to 1% of value while the 3%/4% units represent nearer their assessed numbers (3% = 3.1% living space). This implies every assessment hits the 2% units 60-100% more than “standard” HOA division methods would suggest.
A recent vote that will assess 2% units nearly their entire value saw nearly 80% approval from 3%/4% units (paying closer to 1/3 their total value) and 0% from the 2%ers. This and the math above speak to some basic inequity that an idealist would hope the law might intend to correct and coupled with some minor denial of otherwise common services might be a case. Is there any legal recourse or was Murphy an optimist?
Thanks,
John