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JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion) The three remaining board members (two of the five have already resigned) have decided that we need to redo the election. And no surprise, this time there will only be (2) open positions instead of the (5) we had the first time around

I was hoping that the three remaining board members would come to their senses and realize that their actions have ramifications. A new election will easily cost our Association $10k

The ironic part is the 'ex pres' is now back on the board, is one of the 2 that will be up for election, the director holding the other seat up for election has already resigned. I don't think there is a snowball chance in h*ll that the ex pres will get elected so what was the point of all this? These two remaining directors, with two new directors to be elected and a 5th spot to be filled by the board, I would think, after the election.

So what are my options?

Recall election: I have already made up the petitions, and we won't have any problem getting 5% of the homeowners to sign, but if they have already announced a new election, is it too late for a recall election?

Small Claims Court: How do I go about pursuing this in small claims court? I see there are companies that specialize in helping people, is one of these companies worth looking into?

Terri you reading this?

MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Suing your HOA is suing yourself and your neighbors. It is better to work within your rules than outside.

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
I agree with you 100%, that is why I have held of doing anything to date.

But, small claims court should not cost very much money and I would just be seeking to have the original election results restored
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
So your going to sue for what your documents already give power to do? Plus lawsuits are not cheap. The HOA has to hire a lawyer too.

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MelissaP1 on 08/31/2023 6:29 PM
So your going to sue for what your documents already give power to do? Plus lawsuits are not cheap. The HOA has to hire a lawyer too.

Do you have any constructive advice to share?
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Yes. Just sue like you really want. Let us forget the other better intelligent options.

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
I am looking for any option, suing my HOA is the last thing I want to do, but I don't think a small claims action is that big of a deal, is it?
NA1 (Massachusetts)
Posts: 190
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 9:56 PM
I am looking for any option, suing my HOA is the last thing I want to do, but I don't think a small claims action is that big of a deal, is it?

It always amazes me that people think the board won’t consult a lawyer when threatened, or hire one to go to court.

About sharing the legal opinion, unless it was written for publication, its privileged. In my state the lawyer works for the board, so they board is the client, not the condo owners. I don’t know the law in your jurisdiction, and am not a lawyer, but sharing privileged information can pierce attorney-client privilege.

MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Small claims court IS a big deal. First the HOA has to also lawyer up. Whether that be advice or representation EVEN in "Small Claims". Court ONLY makes one "Whole" not a profit. Any court proceedings are reported to the mortgage companies via a PUD form. This form is like an "assessment" of the HOA. If it comes across too risky then less loan options are offered and refinancing rates rise. You risk losing FHA and other government back loans being offered to potential buyers. Less buyers is NOT a good thing.

Again your "small claims" case your seeking what you have the power to do INSIDE your HOA. It just takes actual WORK to do it. Plus it means getting a majority of like thinking people to agree with you. Otherwise the whole thing is a YOU issue NOT an HOA or majority issue.

NA1 touches on an important point. The HOA lawyer is NOT your lawyer. It is the boards. They don't have to release information other than there was a lawsuit. It may extend to higher dues or special assessment due to the expenses of a lawsuit.

Former HOA President
CathyA3 (Ohio)
Posts: 6,299
Posted:
Correction: the HOA attorney is the HOA's attorney, not the board's. The attorney represents the corporation. The board is the agent who is authorized to act on the HOA's behalf, communicate with the lawyer, and issue instructions. If a board member got into a legal dispute with the HOA, the HOA's attorney would definitely not represent that person.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 8:18 PM
Posted By MelissaP1 on 08/31/2023 6:29 PM
So your going to sue for what your documents already give power to do? Plus lawsuits are not cheap. The HOA has to hire a lawyer too.

Do you have any constructive advice to share?
JamesB37, MelissaP1 is believes it's okay for a board to violate the law. She goes down these rabbit holes and disrupts constructive discussion. My standing offer: I will pay you $10 if you ignore all further posts to this thread by Melissa.

What is the scheduled date for the new election (for only two seats)?

Also please repeat what happens to the board make-up if two of your people get elected. Are the other three directors rogue?
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 5:31 PM
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion)
Like others have indicated, and as you have been told before, owners do not have a right to view the legal opinion of the HOA attorney. Boards have a fiduciary duty to not release the HOA attorney's opinion, except possibly under certain circumstances.

If knowing the reasoning behind this "privilege" of the board would help, ask, and I will explain why Boards have the right not to release the HOA attorney's printed or spoken legal advice. For now, in a nutshell, the reason Boards have this right is the same as the reason that you have the legal right to refuse to disclose what any attorney (who has you for a client) tells you.
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
I will pay you 20 if you stop posting quotes of laws since you are not a lawyer ..

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
I will take Ellen for $10

I realize the relationship between the HOA Attorney and Board. However, 'they said' that in the interest of transparency, they were going to share the legal opinion. So I get it - let's move on

Candidate statements are due by the end of this month. They are using some legal opinion that are director terms do not expire they just 'renew' for another 2 years, and that is why ony 2 postitions are open this year. Prior legal opinion agreed with me. Two year terms expire, and since the current board was elected 3 years ago, all the terms have expired and all 5 positions should be open. moving on

5 member board which for the sake of discussion. 3 originally had 2 year terms and the other 2 had one year terms after the election

Director A Current Board member
Director B Current Board member
Director C Resigned

Director D Current Board member (Old President) seat is up for election
Director E Resigned seat is up for election

A B & D are the currently seated board and pulled this stunt with a new legal opinion and now a new election

D and E should result with 2 new board members within about 2 months. I voiced the opinion that the current board should not fill the C position, because of their theory that you can 'move up the list', this close to the election, after the election, let the board fill the vacant spot with who ever was next on the list (3rd highest vote count)

ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 7:22 AM
I will take Ellen for $10

I realize the relationship between the HOA Attorney and Board. However, 'they said' that in the interest of transparency, they were going to share the legal opinion.
Got it. So your point is they are going back on their word.

But yes, I motion to move on.
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 7:22 AM
Candidate statements are due by the end of this month. They are using some legal opinion that are director terms do not expire they just 'renew' for another 2 years, and that is why ony 2 postitions are open this year. Prior legal opinion agreed with me. Two year terms expire, and since the current board was elected 3 years ago, all the terms have expired and all 5 positions should be open. moving on
Yes, move on, because the only options are to either get a court ruling on the above, and that seems messy, or replace the board.
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 7:22 AM

5 member board which for the sake of discussion. 3 originally had 2 year terms and the other 2 had one year terms after the election

Director A Current Board member
Director B Current Board member
Director C Resigned

Director D Current Board member (Old President) seat is up for election
Director E Resigned seat is up for election

A B & D are the currently seated board and pulled this stunt with a new legal opinion and now a new election

D and E should result with 2 new board members within about 2 months. I voiced the opinion that the current board should not fill the C position, because of their theory that you can 'move up the list', this close to the election, after the election, let the board fill the vacant spot with who ever was next on the list (3rd highest vote count)
Let's hope A, B and D do not appoint someone to fill the now vacant C's seat. But given A, B, and D's aggressive actions to date, including a coup d'etat, I am not holding my breath in the hope the "Rogue 3" keep C's seat open until after the election.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
James wrote: "Candidate statements are due by the end of this month." From the very beginning of a director election in Ca until the final day to vote is now about 4+ months in Ca per Civ. 5100 and James' election rules (also required by CA). The fake Board would seem to be proceeding illegally. How about citing your l election rules on this point, James.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 09/01/2023 8:27 AM
James wrote: "Candidate statements are due by the end of this month." From the very beginning of a director election in Ca until the final day to vote is now about 4+ months in Ca per Civ. 5100 and James' election rules (also required by CA). The fake Board would seem to be proceeding illegally. How about citing your l election rules on this point, James.
How about citing exactly what Ca Civil Code says about this alleged four+ months?
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 5:31 PM
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion) The three remaining board members (two of the five have already resigned) have decided that we need to redo the election. And no surprise, this time there will only be (2) open positions instead of the (5) we had the first time around

I was hoping that the three remaining board members would come to their senses and realize that their actions have ramifications. A new election will easily cost our Association $10k

The ironic part is the 'ex pres' is now back on the board, is one of the 2 that will be up for election, the director holding the other seat up for election has already resigned. I don't think there is a snowball chance in h*ll that the ex pres will get elected so what was the point of all this? These two remaining directors, with two new directors to be elected and a 5th spot to be filled by the board, I would think, after the election.

So what are my options?

Recall election: I have already made up the petitions, and we won't have any problem getting 5% of the homeowners to sign, but if they have already announced a new election, is it too late for a recall election?

Small Claims Court: How do I go about pursuing this in small claims court? I see there are companies that specialize in helping people, is one of these companies worth looking into?

Terri you reading this?


Hi James, just seeing this. My first question is: if you are going to redo the election, you need a legal basis for it. The three remaining board members would have to prove the first election should be voided. If they can't prove it, then the election was valid and you 3 can appoint 2 more directors. If it was illegal, you can go to small claims court and ask the court to void the election then start over.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 9:56 PM
I am looking for any option, suing my HOA is the last thing I want to do, but I don't think a small claims action is that big of a deal, is it?

Small claims is very practical and cost effective for your purpose. You can enforce election law in small claims. You are not being hostile to the association, you want the court to confirm election procedures and results.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
James, you don't need one of those companies; you can do it yourself as long as your evidence is very clear.
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Listen to Terri. They sued their HOA twice. Still can not figure out why their HOA treats them badly... Gee you sued ALL your neighbors and can not figure out why no one wants you to the potluck...

There are consequences to you actions. Is it worth hurting others for what you want? If you are trying to help others in your HOA then others will help you. If not, then it is a you problem.

I will be frank and honest. Suing your HOA does not get you hero status amongst your peers. Getting a majority of owners to support your view does. No court needed.

Former HOA President
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Ka-ching! $10.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By TerriS6 on 09/01/2023 9:20 AM
Ka-ching! $10.
En route via paypal.

Thank you for your assistance on this matter. The money I am paying is well worth it.
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
More money to pay their lawyers for their problems. Glad can help out a victim.

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
TerriS6 can you send me an email to this temp address, I was had some questions about small claims court I hope you can help me with

[email protected]
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Small claims court. Limited in scope or amount. You may have to pay your filing fees and both attorneys cost of courts decide.

A $5K expense on your end can equal a $5K expense on the HOA side. Expect to pay both ends...

Suing your HOA is suing yourself and your neighbors. Get it and understand it

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
It's not about money. It's about them not following their own election rules, bylaws and the fact that they invalidated the election
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
And attending a meeting would not address this with others in your HOA not fix this?

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
You think that three people who went behind the backs of a newly elected board, spent thousands of dollars getting a couple of legal opinions (the first agrees with me regarding the length of terms) and were only able to do so because of the relationship of the HOA president and the PMC, (which they recently signed a 2 year contract in violation of our 12 month limit in our bylaws) are actually going to listen to reason? And 2 of the 5 directors have resigned over this
JeanneH3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 158
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MelissaP1 on 08/31/2023 8:53 PM
Yes. Just sue like you really want. Let us forget the other better intelligent options.

Says Melissa who admitted that she sued her HOA.
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
I sure did with 10 of my neighbors. Was not alone in the battle. It was due to a special assessment that was not being done correctly. They did end up doing the vote right without going to court. Just lied to everyone about me and the amount of the assessment.

So it was a group of people whom had same issue. We hired a lawyer to write a letter. I was a board member too. Which helped with them doing the right thing even though we lost the vote. The assessment went through. The vote was collected and counted right.

Former HOA President
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
I sure did with 10 of my neighbors. Was not alone in the battle. It was due to a special assessment that was not being done correctly. They did end up doing the vote right without going to court. Just lied to everyone about me and the amount of the assessment.

So it was a group of people whom had same issue. We hired a lawyer to write a letter. I was a board member too. Which helped with them doing the right thing even though we lost the vote. The assessment went through. The vote was collected and counted right.

Former HOA President
JeanneH3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 158
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 09/01/2023 7:05 AM
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 5:31 PM
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion)
Like others have indicated, and as you have been told before, owners do not have a right to view the legal opinion of the HOA attorney. Boards have a fiduciary duty to not release the HOA attorney's opinion, except possibly under certain circumstances.

If knowing the reasoning behind this "privilege" of the board would help, ask, and I will explain why Boards have the right not to release the HOA attorney's printed or spoken legal advice. For now, in a nutshell, the reason Boards have this right is the same as the reason that you have the legal right to refuse to disclose what any attorney (who has you for a client) tells you.

But doesn't a board vacate their privilege of confidentiality with the attorney if the board president announces to all of the members that the board has sought a legal opinion from the HOA attorney and gives a short summary of that opinion? The case law pertaining to the waiving of confidentiality I've read repetitively upheld the legal concept that a client can waive their right to confidentiality by communication the basics of the client-attorney interaction to a third party.
KerryL1 (California)
Posts: 14,550
Posted:
Sorry, Elle, James can relate this info to you easily from his election rules, or you can find the info in Calif. Civil 5100.
JeanneH3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 158
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By MelissaP1 on 09/01/2023 11:29 AM
I sure did with 10 of my neighbors. Was not alone in the battle. It was due to a special assessment that was not being done correctly. They did end up doing the vote right without going to court. Just lied to everyone about me and the amount of the assessment.

So it was a group of people whom had same issue. We hired a lawyer to write a letter. I was a board member too. Which helped with them doing the right thing even though we lost the vote. The assessment went through. The vote was collected and counted right.

So when you wrote this earlier in the thread: "Suing your HOA is suing yourself and your neighbors. It is better to work within your rules than outside," you were being a raging hypocrite who will try to dissuade other posters from doing the very thing you now claim was successful for you.
MelissaP1 (Alabama)
Posts: 13,836
Posted:
Not one bit. Not being hypocritical at all. Just not in denial or lost in fantasy. The fact is suing your HOA is suing yourself and your neighbors. It is a consequence to your decision like it or not. You have to decide if you accept the consequences.

Me and other neighbors understood the consequences and knew we could face higher dues or additional special assessment. It is what we as a group decided. It was not just me trying to '"educate or rescue" my fellow HOA members from bad board decisions. It was a group whom like minded felt the same way to make a change. Never had to go to court. Just had to get enough people in the HOA whom disagreed with their plan to request a legal letter be sent.

Those of you who are so blind or plain ignorant of the fact there are consequences are the real hypocrites.

Former HOA President
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By KerryL1 on 09/01/2023 11:49 AM
Sorry, Elle, James can relate this info to you easily from his election rules, or you can find the info in Calif. Civil 5100.

Sorry Kerry, I missed that question, but now that I have looked into it....yikes

We have 9 pages of election rules, that were updated in 2020, but they do not mention any time lines. However, the D-S Websited does
https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/H/HOA-Election-Timeline

"Elections can no longer be done in 60 days. Boards of directors and inspectors of election should expect them to take from 105 to 120 days. Previously, everything could be calculated from the annual meeting date. Now, dates are based on the next act in the election sequence".

So playing around with the D-S Timeline calc, it looks like since notices were just now sent out, the actual vote count would be March 1st, about 5 months from now and then we would have another election in Aug
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
Posted By ElleN on 09/01/2023 7:05 AM
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 5:31 PM
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion)
Like others have indicated, and as you have been told before, owners do not have a right to view the legal opinion of the HOA attorney. Boards have a fiduciary duty to not release the HOA attorney's opinion, except possibly under certain circumstances.

If knowing the reasoning behind this "privilege" of the board would help, ask, and I will explain why Boards have the right not to release the HOA attorney's printed or spoken legal advice. For now, in a nutshell, the reason Boards have this right is the same as the reason that you have the legal right to refuse to disclose what any attorney (who has you for a client) tells you.


But doesn't a board vacate their privilege of confidentiality with the attorney if the board president announces to all of the members that the board has sought a legal opinion from the HOA attorney and gives a short summary of that opinion? The case law pertaining to the waiving of confidentiality I've read repetitively upheld the legal concept that a client can waive their right to confidentiality by communication the basics of the client-attorney interaction to a third party.

I believe the content disclosure of the privileged document has to be substantial in order for a waiver to have occurred
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 12:02 PM
Posted By KerryL1 on 09/01/2023 11:49 AM
Sorry, Elle, James can relate this info to you easily from his election rules, or you can find the info in Calif. Civil 5100.


Sorry Kerry, I missed that question, but now that I have looked into it....yikes

We have 9 pages of election rules, that were updated in 2020, but they do not mention any time lines. However, the D-S Websited does
https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/H/HOA-Election-Timeline

"Elections can no longer be done in 60 days. Boards of directors and inspectors of election should expect them to take from 105 to 120 days. Previously, everything could be calculated from the annual meeting date. Now, dates are based on the next act in the election sequence".

So playing around with the D-S Timeline calc, it looks like since notices were just now sent out, the actual vote count would be March 1st, about 5 months from now and then we would have another election in Aug

Election timeline calculator
https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOA-Election-Timeline-Calculator
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 10:24 AM
TerriS6 can you send me an email to this temp address, I was had some questions about small claims court I hope you can help me with

[email protected]

I sent it.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
But doesn't a board vacate their privilege of confidentiality with the attorney if the board president announces to all of the members that the board has sought a legal opinion from the HOA attorney and gives a short summary of that opinion?
If a lawsuit arises, I suppose that any actual written opinion floating around might be discoverable. But as far as HOA records requests are concerned, I think the HOA would be in its rights to decline sharing the full opinion and forcing the owner to take the HOA to court. The owner would claim the record has to be provided because of (invented legal theory).

Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
The case law pertaining to the waiving of confidentiality I've read repetitively upheld the legal concept that a client can waive their right to confidentiality by communication the basics of the client-attorney interaction to a third party.
Please cite the case law.
JohnC46 (South Carolina)
Posts: 14,265
Posted:
James

Recalls are rarely successful as they are to easy to legally challenge. If undertaking one, be sure you have sound legal advice not just some Internet thinking.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 12:02 PM

We have 9 pages of election rules, that were updated in 2020, but they do not mention any time lines. However, the D-S Websited does
https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/H/HOA-Election-Timeline

"Elections can no longer be done in 60 days. Boards of directors and inspectors of election should expect them to take from 105 to 120 days. Previously, everything could be calculated from the annual meeting date. Now, dates are based on the next act in the election sequence".

So playing around with the D-S Timeline calc, it looks like since notices were just now sent out, the actual vote count would be March 1st, about 5 months from now and then we would have another election in Aug
The guidance is 120 days maximum. How do you come up with March 1?

I imagine a recall election would have to be structured similarly, calendar-wise.
JamesB37 (California)
Posts: 351
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 09/01/2023 2:39 PM
Posted By JamesB37 on 09/01/2023 12:02 PM

We have 9 pages of election rules, that were updated in 2020, but they do not mention any time lines. However, the D-S Websited does
https://www.davis-stirling.com/HOME/H/HOA-Election-Timeline

"Elections can no longer be done in 60 days. Boards of directors and inspectors of election should expect them to take from 105 to 120 days. Previously, everything could be calculated from the annual meeting date. Now, dates are based on the next act in the election sequence".

So playing around with the D-S Timeline calc, it looks like since notices were just now sent out, the actual vote count would be March 1st, about 5 months from now and then we would have another election in Aug
The guidance is 120 days maximum. How do you come up with March 1?

I imagine a recall election would have to be structured similarly, calendar-wise.

I screwed up. I went to the D-S website election calculator and was playing around with it to get a start date of 9-1-2023, but when I just did it again, it now shows the election to be on 1-1-24 with a start date of 9-1-2023

see attached
📎 Attachments (1):

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📄191544323171.pdf(94 KB)
JeanneH3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 158
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By ElleN on 09/01/2023 2:24 PM
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
But doesn't a board vacate their privilege of confidentiality with the attorney if the board president announces to all of the members that the board has sought a legal opinion from the HOA attorney and gives a short summary of that opinion?
If a lawsuit arises, I suppose that any actual written opinion floating around might be discoverable. But as far as HOA records requests are concerned, I think the HOA would be in its rights to decline sharing the full opinion and forcing the owner to take the HOA to court. The owner would claim the record has to be provided because of (invented legal theory).

Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
The case law pertaining to the waiving of confidentiality I've read repetitively upheld the legal concept that a client can waive their right to confidentiality by communication the basics of the client-attorney interaction to a third party.
Please cite the case law.

Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick,
FEDERAL EVIDENCE (4th edition, Thomson Reuters 2013)
§ 5:33 Waiver of privilege—Voluntary disclosure or failure to claim

A client who voluntarily discloses the content of communications covered by the attorney-client privilege waives the privilege.
Such waiver by disclosure can occur at any stage of a proceeding,1 including discovery,2 and in settings far removed from court
proceedings.3

Footnotes for Footnote#3:

* Federal Circuit: Wi-LAN, Inc. v. Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, 684
F.3d 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (patent owner's pre-litigation disclosure of opinion
letter to competitor waived attorney-client privilege as to letter).
* Second Circuit: Ratliff v. Davis Polk & Wardwell, 354 F.3d 165, 170 (2d
Cir. 2003) (client sent documents to lawyer to secure legal advice and authorized
him to send them to SEC for audit, thus waived privilege).
* U.S. v. Jacobs, 117 F.3d 82, 87 (2d Cir. 1997) (client gave inaccurate
extrajudicial summary of letters from lawyer and claimed that lawyer approved
scheme when actually he did not; disclosure of content waived privilege)
(Essentially, it seems to be the case here that Jacobs publicly disclosed a "summary" of the two letters from his lawyer — but a summary that inverted the analysis and conclusion. Attorney Swob's letters actually told Jacobs that the scheme was of dubious legality and that he should steer clear of it. The bulk of the letters was a more detailed explication of this general theme. Jacobs, on the other hand, reported that his attorney had approved of his participation. Jacobs accomplished this deception essentially by quoting a sentence of one of the letters out of context. .....The district court held that it would be unfair to allow von Bulow to use privileged information as a sword in public, and then invoke the privilege as a shield in the courtroom. In re Kidder Peabody Sec. Litig., 168 F.R.D. 459, 469 (S.D.N.Y. 1996) (emphasis supplied). In Kidder Peabody, a report was publicly released which paraphrased specific statements made in the course of arguably privileged communications. Id. at 470. The court held that the privilege was waived as to the specific statements, since "[d]isclosure of the substance of a privileged communication is as effective a waiver as a direct quotation since it reveals the `substance' of the statement." https://casetext.com/case/us-v-jacobs-57
* Ninth Circuit: U.S. v. Mendelsohn, 896 F.2d 1183 (9th Cir. 1990)
(defendant waived by telling detective about lawyer's legal advice).
* Tenth Circuit: U.S. v. Bernard, 877 F.2d 1463, 1465 (10th Cir. 1989) (client told third party he verified legality of loans with attorney, thus waived
privilege). https://www.lexisnexis.com/community/casebrief/p/casebrief-united-states-v-bernard

Using these case laws, a board president who communicates to 115 third party members a summary of the HOA board's communication with the HOA attorney regarding a legal matter, using the attorney's legal opinion as a "sword in public", cannot invoke the privilege of confidentiality as a shield.

We tried to obtain four years worth of draft Board meeting minutes only to have the HOA attorney claim they are "confidential". He's not denying they exist, just that the status of being draft documents, not approved minutes, makes them confidential. Apparently the attorney is quite unaware that the board president announced on Facebook that the DRAFT minutes of the Jan. 24 board meeting were now on the owner portal. Still on there as DRAFT minutes 8 months later.
JeanneH3 (North Carolina)
Posts: 158
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By TerriS6 on 09/01/2023 12:03 PM
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 11:46 AM
Posted By ElleN on 09/01/2023 7:05 AM
Posted By JamesB37 on 08/31/2023 5:31 PM
So we finally got a poorly worded letter from our Property Management Company. (so much for them sharing the actual legal opinion)
Like others have indicated, and as you have been told before, owners do not have a right to view the legal opinion of the HOA attorney. Boards have a fiduciary duty to not release the HOA attorney's opinion, except possibly under certain circumstances.

If knowing the reasoning behind this "privilege" of the board would help, ask, and I will explain why Boards have the right not to release the HOA attorney's printed or spoken legal advice. For now, in a nutshell, the reason Boards have this right is the same as the reason that you have the legal right to refuse to disclose what any attorney (who has you for a client) tells you.


But doesn't a board vacate their privilege of confidentiality with the attorney if the board president announces to all of the members that the board has sought a legal opinion from the HOA attorney and gives a short summary of that opinion? The case law pertaining to the waiving of confidentiality I've read repetitively upheld the legal concept that a client can waive their right to confidentiality by communication the basics of the client-attorney interaction to a third party.


I believe the content disclosure of the privileged document has to be substantial in order for a waiver to have occurred

You would be incorrect. See my response to ElleN. Federal case law notes that disclosure that a letter exists from your lawyer can waive the privilege. A "summary" of the contents can waive the privilege. Using a summary of the attorney's legal opinion as a "public sword" waives the privilege.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Re Jeanne, I should have clarified that my comment was based on California law & cases. Your cases still support my statement. If a board says "our attorney says you can't have our legal invoices because they are privileged," that is not a waiver and doesn't give me the right to read his opinion. As you quoted about sword and shield, that demonstrates the disclosure to a third party would have to be substantive enough to use as a weapon, a sword. Again, I'm referring to California as I have an active case on this very issue.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
In California, minutes are never confidential unless from executive session. But even those can be subpoenaed in a lawsuit.
TerriS6 (California)
Posts: 3,284
Posted:
Sorry for extra post...in California, a board must have minutes available within 30 days of a meeting but they can be draft minutes. The attorney might be worried about defamation claims if the draft minutes haven't been combed through but the board is probably still required to turn them over.
ElleN (Idaho)
Posts: 4,420
Posted:
Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 10:57 PM
Christopher B. Mueller & Laird C. Kirkpatrick,
FEDERAL EVIDENCE (4th edition, Thomson Reuters 2013)
§ 5:33 Waiver of privilege—Voluntary disclosure or failure to claim

A client who voluntarily discloses the content of communications covered by the attorney-client privilege waives the privilege.
Such waiver by disclosure can occur at any stage of a proceeding,1 including discovery,2 and in settings far removed from court
proceedings.3

Footnotes for Footnote#3:

* Federal Circuit: Wi-LAN, Inc. v. Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton, 684
F.3d 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (patent owner's pre-litigation disclosure of opinion
letter to competitor waived attorney-client privilege as to letter). * Second Circuit: Ratliff v. Davis Polk & Wardwell, 354 F.3d 165, 170 (2d
Cir. 2003) (client sent documents to lawyer to secure legal advice and authorized
him to send them to SEC for audit, thus waived privilege).
Of course. I hope we all agree privilege does not apply in these cases.

Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 10:57 PM

* U.S. v. Jacobs, 117 F.3d 82, 87 (2d Cir. 1997) (client gave inaccurate
extrajudicial summary of letters from lawyer and claimed that lawyer approved
scheme when actually he did not; disclosure of content waived privilege)
(Essentially, it seems to be the case here that Jacobs publicly disclosed a "summary" of the two letters from his lawyer — but a summary that inverted the analysis and conclusion. Attorney Swob's letters actually told Jacobs that the scheme was of dubious legality and that he should steer clear of it. The bulk of the letters was a more detailed explication of this general theme. Jacobs, on the other hand, reported that his attorney had approved of his participation. Jacobs accomplished this deception essentially by quoting a sentence of one of the letters out of context. .....The district court held that it would be unfair to allow von Bulow to use privileged information as a sword in public, and then invoke the privilege as a shield in the courtroom. In re Kidder Peabody Sec. Litig., 168 F.R.D. 459, 469 (S.D.N.Y. 1996) (emphasis supplied). In Kidder Peabody, a report was publicly released which paraphrased specific statements made in the course of arguably privileged communications. Id. at 470. The court held that the privilege was waived as to the specific statements, since "[d]isclosure of the substance of a privileged communication is as effective a waiver as a direct quotation since it reveals the `substance' of the statement." https://casetext.com/case/us-v-jacobs-57
* Ninth Circuit: U.S. v. Mendelsohn, 896 F.2d 1183 (9th Cir. 1990)
(defendant waived by telling detective about lawyer's legal advice).
* Tenth Circuit: U.S. v. Bernard, 877 F.2d 1463, 1465 (10th Cir. 1989) (client told third party he verified legality of loans with attorney, thus waived
privilege). https://www.lexisnexis.com/community/casebrief/p/casebrief-united-states-v-bernard
These demonstrate instances where certain privileged information can be discoverable, due to revealing xyz from the privileged information to third parties.

Quote:
Posted By JeanneH3 on 09/01/2023 10:57 PM
Using these case laws, a board president who communicates to 115 third party members a summary of the HOA board's communication with the HOA attorney regarding a legal matter, using the attorney's legal opinion as a "sword in public", cannot invoke the privilege of confidentiality as a shield.
... to discovery, during a lawsuit. But for a records request, I expect many boards would not release the records without, at a minimum, a fight. What a court would say about this records request is not known, AFAICT. Getting back to what JamesB37 posted in this first post: For him to go to court to demand the actual, written attorney's opinion is asking a lot. In these circumstances, the opinion would seem to be not relevant.

Still, your point is well taken, at least by me. I think nationwide directors want to think carefully about the language they use when announcing a board decision. Example of what language a board should not use: "Our attorney told the Board that this course of action would be best." Alternative language: "The Board decided to take this course of action." If an owner presses the board on why it chose such-and-such action, make no reference to the HOA attorney.

[snip what looks to me like a digression unrelated to attorney-client privileged information. Though I agree the HOA attorney in this case sounds like an idiot. On the third hand, hasn't one HOA attorney quit your HOA already, and this had something to do with you? I am not saying you are wrong. I am saying that there's theory and then there's real life repercussions to arguing with the HOA attorney.]

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