Draft letter submitted to Cherrywood HOA Board on Dec. 11 to request opinion from the HOA's counsel
Dear
XXXXXXX,
In
the course of discussions within the Cherrywood Homeowners Association Board
regarding the proposed Declaration Amendment package submitted to the
Cherrywood membership in September 2018, a difficult question has arisen.
Section
4(a) of Article IV presents a number of restrictions on leasing, and one member
of the Board, David Fishback (a retired attorney who was not on the Board when
the amendments were first presented last year) believes that the restrictions
on leases under six months would preclude an owner who be away for less than
six months from having a house watcher stay at their house. If true, this would
create hardships on individual members that no one on the Board would want to
impose. I do not believe this is
the case, but if it is true, I would consider it a critical flaw in the new
declaration. In fact, if the new
declaration precludes a house watcher staying for less than six months, I would
recommend ending the vote on the Declarations.
David’s
thinking on this matter is as follows:
Section 4(a) requires that an “Owner
shall not lease his Lot for an initial term of less
than six (6) months.” The impact of this on older HOA members could
be very negative. If, for
example, a retiree chooses to be a “snowbird” living in Florida for several winter months, they might
understandably wish to arrange for someone
to live in their house (with or without “consideration”) to watch the place. But Section 4(a) would bar
such an arrangement, since anyone other than a member
of the owner’s household would be considered a “tenant.” Moreover, is noteworthy that many homeowner insurance
policies are voided if a house is vacant
for more than 90 days – and that is a risk no homeowner should have to bear.
So our first question is whether
David is correct in concluding that the amended Declaration would preclude the “house
watcher” situation described above. If David’s assumption is not true please explain
why.
My
response to David’s concern is that if this situation arose, we would ask you
for an opinion on how we would be able to resolve the matter under the rules
that would exist if the declaration were approved. Please let us know what your recommendation
would be for this question.
David’s
reply is if the Declaration precludes the ‘housewatcher” situation, one
possible remedy would be if the Board had the authority to grant a waiver or
modify the amended Leasing Requirements to allow such a situation. David believes that the proposed amended
Declaration package, as written, would not give the Board those options because
(1) nothing in the governing documents permits the Board to grant waivers to
clear provisions of the Declaration and (2) the “right to promulgate and adopt additional
Rules and Regulations affecting Leasing” only extends to rules and
regulations that are consistent with the Declaration itself. In David’s
reading, the language of Section 4(g) is unambiguous: the Board would
only have the right to adopt “additional” rules and regulations – i.e.,
rules and regulations that would add to, not cut back on, the rules and
regulations mandated in the amended Declaration. So, in David’s view, the Board
could add restrictions (since the Declaration would be silent on any further
restrictions) but could not loosen restrictions that the Declaration had specifically
mandated.
If
David is correct in that (1) we have a problem with the ‘housewatcher”
situation, and (2) there is no solution short of new Declarations, Lee would
recommend ending the vote.
Therefore, our second question is
if there is a problem with the ‘house watcher” situation, is there a solution? This could solution
could be:
1.
If under the amended Declaration, the Board would have the authority to grant
waivers or change the Leasing Requirements to loosen the mandates. (David has stated above why he does not
believe this would be allowed), or
2. Some other solution that you propose.
Another possible case is that the
option is that regulators (possibly the
CCOC) or courts will only take a case if there is an injured party. If you propose a solution that does not
injure anyone, and if no one had standing to oppose it, maybe David’s analysis
does not matter. David’s view, however,
is that the standing issue would be controlled by the language in the proposed
Article VI, Section 1(a), which provides that “failure to comply with the
Association’s Government Documents” can result in legal action brought by the
Association or any other Owner.” David believes that this language provides
standing to any member of the Association to seek enforcement of the Governing
Documents.
So our third and last question is
would individual Owners have standing to oppose any resolution developed by the
Board and another Owner who had sought a waiver or an alteration in the Leasing
Requirements.
Sincerely,
Lee
Kidd, President
Board
of Directors, Cherrywood Homeowners Association
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