Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Picking a fight with my HOA

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Picking a fight with my HOA

    I seem to have an overzealous new HOA President and I am trying to rein him in. I have read my HOA deed restrictions numerous times and nowhere in the restrictions does it ever give them any specific powers. The board has been having closed door meeting since day one and are creating fines, policies, procedures with out input from any of the home owners. It just seem like they decide what is best for the community and it happens. Can they just arbitrarily create rules and punishments at their discretion or does it have be voted on? There is nothing that address it in the Deed Restrictions.

    I found this in the Property Code, it seems to me that it just says what an HOA can do, not what he board can do on their own. Anybody have any advise in dealing with this? I just want to know what a HOA board can do on their own, without us voting.


    Sec. 204.010. POWERS OF PROPERTY OWNERS' ASSOCIATION. (a) Unless otherwise provided by the restrictions or the association's articles of incorporation or bylaws, the property owners' association, acting through its board of directors or trustees, may:

    (1) adopt and amend bylaws;

    (2) adopt and amend budgets for revenues, expenditures, and reserves and collect regular assessments or special assessments for common expenses from property owners;

    (3) hire and terminate managing agents and other employees, agents, and independent contractors;

    (4) institute, defend, intervene in, settle, or compromise litigation or administrative proceedings on matters affecting the subdivision;

    (5) make contracts and incur liabilities relating to the operation of the subdivision and the property owners' association;

    (6) regulate the use, maintenance, repair, replacement, modification, and appearance of the subdivision;

    (7) make additional improvements to be included as a part of the common area;

    (8) grant easements, leases, licenses, and concessions through or over the common area;

    (9) impose and receive payments, fees, or charges for the use, rental, or operation of the common area and for services provided to property owners;

    (10) impose interest, late charges, and, if applicable, returned check charges for late payments of regular assessments or special assessments;

    (11) if notice and an opportunity to be heard are given, collect reimbursement of actual attorney's fees and other reasonable costs incurred by the property owners' association relating to violations of the subdivision's restrictions or the property owners' association's bylaws and rules;

    (12) charge costs to an owner's assessment account and collect the costs in any manner provided in the restrictions for the collection of assessments;

    (13) adopt and amend rules regulating the collection of delinquent assessments and the application of payments;

    (14) impose reasonable charges for preparing, recording, or copying amendments to the restrictions, resale certificates, or statements of unpaid assessments;

    (15) purchase insurance and fidelity bonds, including directors' and officers' liability insurance, that the board considers appropriate or necessary;

    (16) if the restrictions allow for an annual increase in the maximum regular assessment without a vote of the membership, assess the increase annually or accumulate and assess the increase after a number of years;

    (17) subject to the requirements of the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act (Article 1396-1.01 et seq., Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes) and by majority vote of its board of directors, indemnify a director or officer of the property owners' association who was, is, or may be made a named defendant or respondent in a proceeding because the person is or was a director;

    (18) if the restrictions vest the architectural control authority in the property owners' association or if the authority is vested in the property owners' association under Section 204.011:
    (A) implement written architectural control guidelines for its own use or record the guidelines in the real property records of the applicable county; and
    (B) modify the guidelines as the needs of the subdivision change;
    (19) exercise other powers conferred by the restrictions, its articles of incorporation, or its bylaws;
    (20) exercise other powers that may be exercised in this state by a corporation of the same type as the property owners' association; and
    (21) exercise other powers necessary and proper for the governance and operation of the property owners' association.
    (b) Powers enumerated by this section are in addition to any other powers granted to a property owners' association by this chapter or other law.

    #2
    Not sure on where you are, but my MIL used to be a cpa for a community with about 3000 homes. The POA had lots of power in that case. They are elected to the seat on the board of directors, and once there, they basically answer to no one. I think the have elections every 2 years. I could never live in one of those. I only have to answer to the wife on anything I do on our property

    Comment


      #3
      They are bound by some of the same rules as elected officials. They cannot continue to have closed door meetings and when they do they must be announced. I don't know all the specifics any more, but there are things in place to keep boards from arbitrarily making rules. You just have to do the research. You might seek out a lawyer that specializes in this type of stuff.

      Comment


        #4
        I may be wrong about this, but I don't think an hoa has the legal authority to impose fines (I'm sure some do it anyway; doesn't make it right).

        Comment


          #5
          That is my issue. The Deed Restrictions speak nothing of fee or fines. They are just doing as they wish and I think it wrong. They also raised our yearly fee without any explanation.

          Comment


            #6
            Dude.... You're screwed..

            HOA's are little fiefdoms and they can do pretty much what ever they want as to levying fines and raising fees..

            Comment


              #7
              It may not be in the deed restrictions. Look for a declaration or similar document filed when the subdivision was created. It might also be in documents creating the subdivision.

              HOAs are bully pulpits for petty tyrants who have nothing else in life.

              Good luck and be careful what you do. You might find yourself paying the HOA's legal fields.

              LWD

              Comment


                #8
                you need a neighbor whos a lawer....

                Comment


                  #9
                  All I know is I hate me an HOA and I have one.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I'm going to court with mine in a few days.

                    I think that the management company our HOA uses is as much the problem in our case...

                    Comment


                      #11
                      I got into it with my old HOA and they ended up paying my dues for a year and a half. After that I started getting letters about everything. From not edging one side of my driveway to not bringing in my trashcan the same day it was picked up due to severe weather.

                      I have no use for them.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I know most of you seem to hate HOA's...but the idea behind them is one I prefer. When there's an idiot neighbor who wants to paint his house lime green...they can say no...and I would think you would want that...as that will affect your home values. as well as lawn, junk, noise and other disturbances. I'm a fan.

                        Also know, your HOA has more power than you think....they can put a lien on your property if it gets to that level.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I thought HOA's were now regulated by the state laws passed a couple years ago?

                          Comment


                            #14
                            sounds to me like you have a liberal festation.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              i mean infestion...i'm an idiot

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X