AndyC1 (Texas)
Posts: 21
Posts: 21
Posted:
Facts:
State - texas
community has CC&R
CC&R state that all owners are members in the association
The association was incorporated 20 years ago, but has no bylaws/articles of incorporation
Association has never operated
Declarant status has been passed to me
Declarant has 10 votes for each lot
total number of lots is 59
Trying to buy two more lots to get to 30 votes out of 89 (?) or would it be 30 votes out of 59? or would it be 30 votes out of 86(?)
Declarant appoints arch committee
arch committee has final say on all improvements
it takes 3/4 of owners of all lots to dissolve CC&R
declarant can amend declaration so long as declarant has a majority of votes (how many votes is that?)
CC&R goes to 2050 and renews every 10 years unless 75% of owners vote to no renew.
I believe that Texas law says if CC&R dont state how many votes to dissolve, then 75% can dissolve CC&R.
CC&R say that CC&R are in force and shall not terminate while declarant owns any property.
I would like to either reinstate the HOA and evenly enforce the CC&R or dissolve the CC&R
Not sure how to bootstrap the HOA
Do a one time 2K initial assessment to fund legal fees and manager to look for violations
Establish a yearly 200-300 assessment to pay for ongoing enforcement
Would like to send out a letter which will either let owners vote for the above plan (or abstain) or vote to dissolve the CC&R. People that dont vote to dissolve CC&R are effectively voting to activate HOA. Go house to house to talk to owners about it and explain the choice.
My thought is either path is acceptable, but the status quo of risk of lawsuits between owners and unevenly enforced CC&R is not good. I would on balance like to dissolve CC%R
What are the constraints or things to think about?
I am currently looking for an HOA specific lawyer, but wanted to ask here first to get an idea of what to ask them to establish their capability.
Im hesitant to email CC&R because this is high stakes and want to ensure anonymity, but can post snippets to answer direct questions.
State - texas
community has CC&R
CC&R state that all owners are members in the association
The association was incorporated 20 years ago, but has no bylaws/articles of incorporation
Association has never operated
Declarant status has been passed to me
Declarant has 10 votes for each lot
total number of lots is 59
Trying to buy two more lots to get to 30 votes out of 89 (?) or would it be 30 votes out of 59? or would it be 30 votes out of 86(?)
Declarant appoints arch committee
arch committee has final say on all improvements
it takes 3/4 of owners of all lots to dissolve CC&R
declarant can amend declaration so long as declarant has a majority of votes (how many votes is that?)
CC&R goes to 2050 and renews every 10 years unless 75% of owners vote to no renew.
I believe that Texas law says if CC&R dont state how many votes to dissolve, then 75% can dissolve CC&R.
CC&R say that CC&R are in force and shall not terminate while declarant owns any property.
I would like to either reinstate the HOA and evenly enforce the CC&R or dissolve the CC&R
Not sure how to bootstrap the HOA
Do a one time 2K initial assessment to fund legal fees and manager to look for violations
Establish a yearly 200-300 assessment to pay for ongoing enforcement
Would like to send out a letter which will either let owners vote for the above plan (or abstain) or vote to dissolve the CC&R. People that dont vote to dissolve CC&R are effectively voting to activate HOA. Go house to house to talk to owners about it and explain the choice.
My thought is either path is acceptable, but the status quo of risk of lawsuits between owners and unevenly enforced CC&R is not good. I would on balance like to dissolve CC%R
What are the constraints or things to think about?
I am currently looking for an HOA specific lawyer, but wanted to ask here first to get an idea of what to ask them to establish their capability.
Im hesitant to email CC&R because this is high stakes and want to ensure anonymity, but can post snippets to answer direct questions.