RobertF11 (Florida)
Posts: 41
Posts: 41
Posted:
To aid those in need of help with their hoa, the best suggestion I can give is to advise the person to thoroughly read over their covenants. Once you have done that, find the loopos in the covenants. The reason being is that if you don't read between the lines so to speak you will miss important and vital parts of the covenants that will aid you in approaching the hoa in not only a member of the hoa but also will help you in legally approaching the hoa. It is my experience that when dealing with an hoa, one must know what they are talking about. For instance, in my hoa covenants, it states that no vehicles are allowed to park on the street overnight, common areas are supposed to be kept clean, no signs posted, no structures such as playhouses are to be built, and the list is endless. So, as a result of my hoa not taking my concerns of neighbors defacing my property serious at all, just blowing them off, I took my cam corder and went around the neighborhood during the daytime and night time hours.
I was able to find violations of fellow neighbors that violated the hoa covenants. I then filed an affidavit with the county courts and had a sheriff deliver a summons to the hoa president, the same said board member that ignored me and just didn't do her job at all according to what the hoa cc&r's stated she must.
A week after she received her summons the hoa had disbanded. I found that very strange because within the affidavit I had stated that I wanted to look at all of the books and records of the hoa as one of the criteria among others.
My point is that if a person's hoa is going to hold liens on someone's home for violations of the hoa cc&r's that the member commits, forcing the member to follow the rules and accept the fact that they committed violations, then the hoa should also be held with the same kind of standards. If they committ violations, then they too must be penalized and be forced to accept their faults just the same.
Hoa members must always remember to stand up for their rights because no one else will. Per my city, they will only put liens on a person's property only, only when they have high grass or something else of that nature. It will only be until after many communications such as letters and notes on the door will the city put a lien on the person's house. How I see it is if the hoa fails to do their jobs, and as such a failure, the neighborhood looks bad, then why should a person have to pay the hoa dues and thus the neighborhood would be better off without the hoa.
From my experiences with hoa's I have learned that being a board member of an hoa seems to me to mean that it is only a power trip, not a position to take serious.
For those of you whom want to know what my affidavit states and whom I am suing, which I am not suing for money, only changes within the hoa, then goto http://www.oscn.net/applications/oscn/GetCaseInformation.asp?submitted=true&viewtype=caseGeneral&casemasterID=292819&db=Canadian
I was able to find violations of fellow neighbors that violated the hoa covenants. I then filed an affidavit with the county courts and had a sheriff deliver a summons to the hoa president, the same said board member that ignored me and just didn't do her job at all according to what the hoa cc&r's stated she must.
A week after she received her summons the hoa had disbanded. I found that very strange because within the affidavit I had stated that I wanted to look at all of the books and records of the hoa as one of the criteria among others.
My point is that if a person's hoa is going to hold liens on someone's home for violations of the hoa cc&r's that the member commits, forcing the member to follow the rules and accept the fact that they committed violations, then the hoa should also be held with the same kind of standards. If they committ violations, then they too must be penalized and be forced to accept their faults just the same.
Hoa members must always remember to stand up for their rights because no one else will. Per my city, they will only put liens on a person's property only, only when they have high grass or something else of that nature. It will only be until after many communications such as letters and notes on the door will the city put a lien on the person's house. How I see it is if the hoa fails to do their jobs, and as such a failure, the neighborhood looks bad, then why should a person have to pay the hoa dues and thus the neighborhood would be better off without the hoa.
From my experiences with hoa's I have learned that being a board member of an hoa seems to me to mean that it is only a power trip, not a position to take serious.
For those of you whom want to know what my affidavit states and whom I am suing, which I am not suing for money, only changes within the hoa, then goto http://www.oscn.net/applications/oscn/GetCaseInformation.asp?submitted=true&viewtype=caseGeneral&casemasterID=292819&db=Canadian