Normally any HOA ive been around only has the ability to place a lien on the
property, not foreclosure! Are these new laws so dominating that you can't do
anything? Jim WA2MBP
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-----Original Message-----
From: "Paul Christensen" <attorney@immigration-lawyer-us.com>
Sender: towertalk-bounces@contesting.com
Date: Tue, 6 Jul 2010 10:30:37
To: <TOWERTALK@contesting.com>
Reply-To: Paul Christensen <attorney@immigration-lawyer-us.com>
Subject: Re: [TowerTalk] HOA Abuse
> The guy agreed to the HOA rules. They did not respond to
> the bills. You don't pay your bills, you lose what you have.
>
> I am not real sure where the issue is.
Good point, but if you were serving in Iraq and the situation occurred to
you (however unlikely), I am 100% confident you would not sit back and say
"I deserve to have lost my $300,000 home while serving my country because of
my wife's failure to make timely payments." If the NPR story is correct,
two payments went delinquent. That said, even though the covenants operate
under the general principles of contract law between parties, an important
part of general contract law relates to the concept of "unjust enrichment."
Notwithstanding any potential relief under the Servicemembers Civil Relief
Act, he may have a defense in the unjust enrichment that resulted in the
loss of his home, triggered by language in the agreement. Whether or not
the State of Texas understands that concept remains to be seen.
In effect, the circumstances in the captain's case amount to "legalized
theft." Another general principle of contract law is that a breach
resulting in damages is generally limited only to actual damages, regardless
of what's been agreed to in writing. Even an agreement between parties to
liquidated damages or specific remedies in the event of breach must be
reasonable. It's pretty difficult to believe that missing one or two HOA
payments results in damages to an aggrieved HOA that far exceed actual
damages. If that kind of condition operates as a matter of law, then the
constituents of Texas need to apply pressure to their elected officials to
change the law. However, consider that in Texas, Republican State Senator
John Carona owns the largest HOA management company in the country -
Associa, which has more than 100 offices, 6,000 employees and 7,000 HOA
clients in 30 states and Mexico. So, as a tax payer in his legislative
district, do you take your issue to a senator who has a clear
conflict-of-interest in the very law for which he has significant influence?
I hope the present homeowner doesn't get too comfortable in his or her new
surroundings. Frankly, even if the captain later loses his case in court, I
hope his community pulls together to apply substantial pressure on their
state legislature to find an alternate means of dealing with this -- for
example, allowing other personal property to satisfy a debt while leaving
foreclosure of the home as a last resort. Also, property owners may want to
work with their HOAs to place dues/fees in escrow ahead of time they become
due and payable.
Paul, W9AC
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