Quote:
Posted By MelissaP1 on 08/06/2016 3:49 PM
We established a policy of 6 months we liened and 1 year we CONSIDERED foreclosure. This greatly helped in collecting and enforcement. It weeds out those who are ignorant, spiteful, or broke. Ignorance was for those who claimed they did not know about the HOA. Spiteful for those who were "protesting" not getting their way. The broke surprisingly were the most willing to make payment arrangements. Those we would forgo late fees/interest or have them pay 1/2 dues till eventually they caught up. Others got the full lien experience. Which includes back dues, late fees, interest, and filing/collection fee.
Our dues were due monthly. The 6 month behind was basically the breaking point of the expense of filing the lien. That is why we established the 6 months policy. The 1 year lien policy is because it takes about a year for a bank to start their own foreclosure process. So if the owner isn't paying their mortgage in addition to their dues, we weren't doing the work of the bank. The HOA would basically be doing the work of the bank considering the bank is FIRST and FOREMOST to be paid in a foreclosure situation. Although there are "Super liens" in some states that put the HOA/Banks on same footing. The issue is being if there is money available. Which most likely is NOT the case. Your trying to get blood out of a turnip.
Keep in mind a foreclosure is ONLY a stop the bleeding last measure step. There is nothing wrong with keeping a long term lien on a house versus outright foreclosure. The lien will keep accumulating till the house is sold. Foreclosures can't be done for every situation. Those in the ACTIVE military can not be foreclosed on. Houses already in bank foreclosure I would never do a HOA foreclosure on. Plus the HOA would never want the home. That is a whole other bag of worms there.
I do not advocate taking one to court to get a judgement. A lien is much stronger option. A judgement doesn't accumulate. The waiting period for it to go to court your losing money. Collection is EXTREMELY difficult. Considering the HOA has no rights to one's social security number. Trying to garnish wages may not happen without that. It costs money to collect. Plus a judgement expires after about 7 years. The person can simply skip town without ever paying a dime. Good luck in finding them.
Found once you establish a solid collection policy that everyone knows, it helps in collections. People respond better to deadlines. Plus weeding those out with issues help in dealing with each situation individually. Some require lawyers to be involved and others not. A lien may or may not require a lawyer to be filed. That varies each state. Not all collection agency are equal. It's best to ask questions what they can collect on and what they can't.
Mel
We did all that (including liens) but until we introduced the lawyer, foreclosure, credit reporting, etc. we were basically ignored. The process must have some "bite" in it.