. We served our board president recall ballots for around 60% of the memner votes. Three business days later the President called a meeting that was not duley noticed. We had 5 hours notice if you checked your email when you woke up. One board member was not contacted. We were given no reason for the special meeting. We were recalling 4 of 9 board members but one resigned. At the meeting a recalled member made a motion to take it to arbitration. The three board members and their two cronies voted for it. There was no approval of spending the funds to do this. They also said they were hiring an attorney. (Our 3rd law firm). There was no mention of the actual ballots and they declared they had five more business days after there meeting. I don't see why the members should get stuck with another attorney fee for these 3 and add to that no spending was authorized. I also don't see where this 5 extra days comes from. I have read Fl.720.303(10). What is the end game? The three that are recalled should not use members money without approval.
James,
Starting with the end of your post above...
The costs associated with a recall will be borne by the membership unless/until a judgement is found in the HOAs favor. The some costs can be recovered from the loosing party.
It is the HOAs responsibility to resolve legal matters with due dilligence and vigor.
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Are you condo, HOA, trailer park, co-op? I'll assume HOA...
You said the meeting notice was sent via email. Have you given your consent to be notified in this way? (You still should have had 48hrs. regardless of notification method.)
Typical recall in a Florida HOA:
Do you not have an accounting firm for your dues or an HOA attorney on retainer, or property manager, etc.?
After you got 60% of the membership to fill out the state reccomended recall ballots correctly they should have been served (Hand delivery or CERTIFIED MAIL to one of them OR some other REGISTERED AGENT of the corporation. If you have none then to the Secretary in the same manner. If delivered by hand, have the party being served INITIAL and DATE the ballot submission cover letter.
NOW the clock is ticking as there has been documented proof the recal was 'served' and when.
Next, the HOA Lawyer should have been sent and reviewed the ballots to determine if the recall effort is valid.(check the number of ballots, the manner in which they were filled out, if any items are missing, etc.) This would STOP the whole recall process if there were ballot issues. ( details, details

)
If the lawyer believes the recall is valid, the BoD has 5 business days to call a meeting. (w/48hrs. notice)
There they will (should) compare the completed ballots to property records for proof of ownership, examine addresses, signatures, and any other thing to try and disqualify ballots.
If they [BoD] feel they can disqualify enough ballots to stop the recall they have Failed to CERTIFY the recall and MUST FILE for MANDATORY ARBITRATION. Then a mutually agreed upon 3rd party will examine the ballots, may ask for additional 'evidence' and will render a binding final order. The prevailing party is entitled to seek compensation for the proceedings.
If they certify the recall then it is DONE as the ballots have requested.
If they fail to call the meeting in 5 days then the recall is DONE by action of the law.
ALL details must be met with 100% precision or the effort stops there, regardless of what happened afterwards that was or may also be incorrect.
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Finally...
Trying to sue individuals for their actions as a group is VERY, VERY, difficult in a Florida HOA.
Don't even discuss it or make such threats as has been suggested.
You have to PROVE they KNEW they were WRONG.
BoDs are volunteer lay-people and will make mistakes.