AudraL (Delaware)
Posts: 12
Posts: 12
Posted:
Our situation is this...we are a community with 210 homes in central Delaware. We have specific guidelines for fences (must be a post & rail design and constructed of wood) and storage sheds (must be A-frame, no larger than 120sq ft, have vinyl siding, a single entry doorway and two windows). The builder has not transferred the HOA management to the homeowners yet; all requests go to builder/declarant and/or ARC/Board of Directors.
Over the years they have approved many white vinyl fences (instead of wood, as the guidelines state) and over a dozen storage sheds that do not fall within our HOA guidelines. Some sheds have two doors, or no windows, or barn style, or no vinyl siding and even one that is 60 sq ft too big (they claim that approval was a mistake, but also said they were not going to pursue correcting their mistake).
Now here's the thing, we homeowners don't really care. As we understand it, law is interpreted by precedent, and when all these things were approved, whatever their logic behind it, they inadvertently set a precedent of a new standard in our neighborhood. The "written law" is supposed to remain aligned with "expressed law", right? I mean, in order to prevent discrepancies and potential lawsuits from one angle or the other, anyway.
Basically, we just want the Declarant/Board of Directors to amend the written guidelines to match what they approved, so other homeowners can be allowed the same standards as their neighbors.
Our Declarations state that the Declarant can do this anytime ("The Declarant, so long as it is the owner of at least one Lot in the Community, shall have the absolute right to amend this Declaration from time to time, without the joinder of any other owners, by executing and recording an amendment in the Record’s Office") or the Board of Directors can as well
("If any amendment to this declaration of the Bylaws is necessary in the judgement of the Board of Directors to change, correct or supplement anything appearing or failing to appear therein which is ambiguous, incorrect, defective or inconsistent with anything in either the Declaration of the Bylaws, the Board of Directors may, at any time and from time to time effect an appropriate corrective amendment without the approval of the Lot Owners upon receipt by the Board of Directors of an opinion from independent counsel to the effect that is the proposed amendment is permitted by the terms of this paragraph").
The Declarant stated they do not want to do it, but said we can, whenever we take over the HOA. But meanwhile, any new fence or storage sheds get denied (or approved, who knows, it varies) when/if they look at the written guidelines, even though, again, they have approved many outside the guidelines already.
We don't feel it fair that homeowners must wait to take over the HOA before they can have a fence or a shed their neighbors have, so we thought to send the Declarant/Builder/Board of Directors a "unified request", in way of a petition, just respectfully requesting they amend the written guidelines to match what they have approved over the past several years, as they are authorized to do. Kind of a "calling them on their HOA management duties", as it seems blatantly negligent that they are inconsistent, aware of such inconsistencies and yet don't want to remedy it by just filing an amendment at the Recorder's Office.
I've spoken to many other HOA Board members about this, and they agree it easiest/best to have Declarant just amend, rather than transfer the headache to homeowners with no experience in this sort of thing. I'm curious what are thoughts of those here regarding our specific tactic...? thanks in advance.
Over the years they have approved many white vinyl fences (instead of wood, as the guidelines state) and over a dozen storage sheds that do not fall within our HOA guidelines. Some sheds have two doors, or no windows, or barn style, or no vinyl siding and even one that is 60 sq ft too big (they claim that approval was a mistake, but also said they were not going to pursue correcting their mistake).
Now here's the thing, we homeowners don't really care. As we understand it, law is interpreted by precedent, and when all these things were approved, whatever their logic behind it, they inadvertently set a precedent of a new standard in our neighborhood. The "written law" is supposed to remain aligned with "expressed law", right? I mean, in order to prevent discrepancies and potential lawsuits from one angle or the other, anyway.
Basically, we just want the Declarant/Board of Directors to amend the written guidelines to match what they approved, so other homeowners can be allowed the same standards as their neighbors.
Our Declarations state that the Declarant can do this anytime ("The Declarant, so long as it is the owner of at least one Lot in the Community, shall have the absolute right to amend this Declaration from time to time, without the joinder of any other owners, by executing and recording an amendment in the Record’s Office") or the Board of Directors can as well
("If any amendment to this declaration of the Bylaws is necessary in the judgement of the Board of Directors to change, correct or supplement anything appearing or failing to appear therein which is ambiguous, incorrect, defective or inconsistent with anything in either the Declaration of the Bylaws, the Board of Directors may, at any time and from time to time effect an appropriate corrective amendment without the approval of the Lot Owners upon receipt by the Board of Directors of an opinion from independent counsel to the effect that is the proposed amendment is permitted by the terms of this paragraph").
The Declarant stated they do not want to do it, but said we can, whenever we take over the HOA. But meanwhile, any new fence or storage sheds get denied (or approved, who knows, it varies) when/if they look at the written guidelines, even though, again, they have approved many outside the guidelines already.
We don't feel it fair that homeowners must wait to take over the HOA before they can have a fence or a shed their neighbors have, so we thought to send the Declarant/Builder/Board of Directors a "unified request", in way of a petition, just respectfully requesting they amend the written guidelines to match what they have approved over the past several years, as they are authorized to do. Kind of a "calling them on their HOA management duties", as it seems blatantly negligent that they are inconsistent, aware of such inconsistencies and yet don't want to remedy it by just filing an amendment at the Recorder's Office.
I've spoken to many other HOA Board members about this, and they agree it easiest/best to have Declarant just amend, rather than transfer the headache to homeowners with no experience in this sort of thing. I'm curious what are thoughts of those here regarding our specific tactic...? thanks in advance.