IS YOUR HOA

MAKING YOUR LIFE A LIVING HELL?

FLORIDA’S #1 FIRM FOR HOMEOWNER REPRESENTATION IN HOA DISPUTES

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TYPES OF DISPUTES

If you believe that your HOA has violated your rights or is otherwise violating the CC&Rs, then the top rated HOA attorneys in Florida at MBK Chapman can help. If you live in a community governed by a homeowners’ association or condominium association, then you’re already aware of how important a role your HOA plays in maintaining the value of your property and helping you enjoy your home. A good HOA can help keep your property value high; a bad HOA can force your property value to drop and turn your life upside down. A good HOA is invaluable; a bad HOA is typically a nightmare for its members. And don’t worry. In most circumstances, if you’re successful, the HOA will have to reimburse you for your attorneys’ fees and costs.

Led by Rian Davis, the attorneys at MBK Chapman’s Florida office represent homeowners throughout the State of Florida in all manner of disputes involving their HOAs (and neighbors), including:

FAILURE TO REPAIR / FAILURE TO MAINTAIN

In almost all cases, community associations are required by their Covenants (sometimes referred to as the CC&Rs) to inspect, maintain, and preserve the association’s common areas (e.g., Fla. Stat. § 718.113.) Those are, in fact, among an HOA’s most fundamental duties.

If an HOA neglects those duties by, say, refusing to make necessary repairs to a community amenity, not only can a member of the HOA force the association to make the repairs, but that same member can hold the HOA liable for any damages the owner suffers as a result of the HOA’s unreasonable delay or refusal to make the necessary repairs.

In short, your HOA might be liable to you if it:

  • ignores structural damage to a common area building that threatens to cause even greater damage down the road;
  • neglects to make repairs to your community’s pool and spa, thus robbing you and the other members of its use during the hot summer months; or
  • fails to slurry your association’s roads, resulting in potholes that damage your car.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

VIOLATIONS OF THE ASSOCIATION'S COVENANTS

Your community association’s governing documents are made up of not only the Declaration of Covenants, but also your community’s articles of incorporation, bylaws, and rules. (Fla. Stat. § 720.301(8).) The Covenants, however, are the most important. An HOA’s Covenants constitute the rulebook for you and your HOA, spelling out the rights and obligations that you owe to the association, and vice versa. Your Covenants are, therefore, treated by law as a binding contract that addresses many very important issues, including: (i) the power and authority of the board of directors; (ii) what homeowners may do and not do with their properties; (iii) the association’s and homeowners’ mutual maintenance obligations; (iv) regular and special assessments; (v) lien rights and limitations; and (vi) the day-to-day management of the association. (Fla. Stat. §§ 720.303; 718.111; 718.112; 720.308; 720.305.)

Even though your HOA’s board of directors enjoy many of the same powers and responsibilities as any corporation’s board, your HOA’s board is made up of volunteers who often have no experience running a business. Problems arise when board members either fail to do their jobs, or they act negligently, arbitrarily, or dishonestly. Typical Covenant violations by community associations include things like:

  • failing to preserve, maintain, or repair the association’s common areas;
  • failing to address another owner’s nuisance behavior;
  • failing to enforce the HOA’s governing documents, especially when such failure is negatively affecting the rights of another HOA member;
  • failing to properly manage or account for the HOA’s finances;
  • failing to follow the election or meeting requirements; and
  • harassing certain members or treating some HOA members differently than others.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

DISCRIMINATION AND HARASSMENT

Whether governed by the Florida Homeowners’ Association Act, the Condominium Act, or the Cooperative Act, all community associations in Florida must abide by the same antidiscrimination and antiharassment laws/regulations that other businesses do. This means that HOAs are not permitted to violate the state and federal laws established to protect people from harassment and discrimination (e.g., Florida’s Fair Housing Act, the Americans with Disability Act, the Florida Civil Rights Act of 1992, etc.). In fact, on September 4, 2020, Senate Bill No. 374 went into effect by creating a new law (Fla. Stat. § 712.065) that automatically voided any provision of an HOA’s Covenants that contained “discriminatory restrictions.” These laws not only prohibit discrimination and harassment on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, disability, etc., but they also require HOAs to make reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities.

Many older HOAs had overtly discriminatory racial quotas in their CC&Rs. And while most of those CC&Rs have since been updated to remove such language, that does not mean that HOAs don’t regularly violate antidiscrimination laws. Many HOAs still engage in conduct that violate rights of its members and residents by, for example:

  • refusing to permit a resident from having a service or comfort animal (violates reasonable accommodation requirements; also violates other statutes, such as Fla. Stat. § 413.08; see Bhogaita v. Altamonte Heights Condominium Assn., 765 F.3d 1277 (11th Cir., 2014));
  • refusing to permit a disabled resident from building a ramp (violates reasonable accommodation regulations);
  • prohibiting a resident from displaying a United States Flag (or, for that matter, a flagpole, Florida State flag, a military branch flag, or a POW-MIA flag) on the resident’s property (Fla. Stat. §§ 720.304; 720.3075(3)); and
  • attempting to fine a resident more than the statutory maximum (Fla. Stat. § 720.305).

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156>

DISPUTES BETWEEN NEIGHBORS

For the vast majority of people who live in communities governed by an HOA, they live in close proximity to other people. In short, most people have neighbors. “Neighbor disputes” do, therefore, form the basis of many disputes between homeowners. Some of the more common claims that give rise to liability against a neighbor occur when your neighbor is guilty of:

  • parking on your property, or otherwise blocking your access to your property by parking in front of your driveway or garage;
  • allowing noxious odors to make their way onto your property (Merrill v. Bosser, No. 05-4239 COCE 53 (Fla. 17th Cir. Ct., 2005);
  • trespassing;
  • participating in illegal activities (e.g., drug dealing, non-permitted activities, etc.); or
  • causing excessive noise—or for that matter, engaging in any other activities that interfere with your reasonable use and quiet enjoyment of your property.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute by Calling: (561) 320-6156

COMMON AREA DISPUTES

Simply put, your HOA’s common areas refer to areas that are owned by the HOA (rather than by any particular member(s) of the HOA). (Fla. Stat. §§ 720.301(2); 718.103(8).) While many associations have in common certain typical kinds of common areas, such as greenbelts/landscaping, sidewalks/walkways, swimming pools, and tennis courts, the other types of common areas you’re likely to see in an HOA have more to do with the type of association you joined. For example, in typical stacked structure communities (e.g., condominiums and townhomes), where the HOAs typically own everything but the air space in the individual units, the common areas you tend to find include things like roofs, hallways and staircases, parking lots/carports, HVAC systems, buildings, and plumbing/electrical. In communities consisting of single-family homes, on the other hand, you’ll often find streets, private gates, clubhouses, golf courses, equestrian facilities, and perimeter walls.

Regardless, because an association’s common areas are considered amenities by the members, and because they are often very expensive to construct and maintain, frequent common area-related disputes between homeowners and their HOAs arise regarding things like an HOAs:

  • failing to make necessary repairs to the common areas;
  • failing to reasonably maintain the common areas;
  • neglecting a member’s damage to or destruction of the common areas;
  • neglecting to take action against a member who has taken exclusive control over a portion of a common area;
  • facilitating the transfer of some portion of the common area to a member without membership approval; or
  • allowing the destruction of a portion of the common area.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

SELECTIVE ENFORCEMENT / UNEQUAL TREATMENT

Unfortunately, human nature being what it is, homeowners frequently find that the board members of their HOAs “serve” because they enjoy the power that being on the board gives them, or they like to tell people what to do. These people are the ones who treat their HOAs like their own personal fiefdoms, often granting themselves and their friends privileges that they deny to other members, or acting arbitrarily and capriciously. Such selective enforcement is illegal. (Prisco v. Forest Villas Condominium Apartments, Inc., 847 So 2d 1012 (Fla.App. Dist.4, 2003); White Egret Condo., Inc. v. Franklin, 379 So.2d 346 (Fla. 1979).)

You may have a claim against your HOA for selective enforcement if your HOA:

  • allows a board member to enjoy a perk or privilege denied to other similarly situated members;
  • denies your application for an improvement to your home after having already approved applications from other similarly situated members;
  • strictly enforces certain rules against you while ignoring similar violations of other members; or
  • arbitrarily enforces certain rules while ignoring others.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

NEGLIGENCE (BY YOUR HOA OR NEIGHBOR)

In simple terms, negligence is the failure to act reasonably in a given situation. If your HOA and/or neighbor cause damage to you or your property as a result of unreasonable conduct on their part(s), you may file a claim for negligence.

For example, you may have a strong negligence claim against your HOA/neighbor in any of the following types of situations:

  • your neighbor changes the grading on his or her property (with or without permission from the HOA) causing water to flow onto your property that in turn causes leaking and property damage;
  • your HOA fails to reasonably maintain the common areas, resulting in expensive replacements and repairs; or
  • your HOA’s board ignores its accountant’s advice and fails to dedicate sufficient funds to hold in reserve to fix certain assets owned by the association.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

COMMON INTEREST DEVELOPMENT LAWS IN FLORIDA

If you live in a planned housing development, condominium, or a stock cooperative, then you live in a common interest development, and you’re likely part of an HOA that is governed by the Florida Homeowners’ Association Act, the Florida Condominium Act, or the Florida Cooperative Act.

Unfortunately, despite the fact that HOAs in Florida are required to abide by one of the three statutes mentioned above, many HOAs do not do so. Sometimes, it’s because the members of an HOA’s board are ignorant of all the laws that control associations, and sometimes it’s because the board members don’t care.

For example, a lot of HOAs violate Florida law by:

  • ignoring election requirements;
  • refusing to maintain proper reserve accounts for future maintenance, replacement, and repairs of the common areas;
  • failing to properly account for the HOA’s funds;
  • violating a member’s due-process rights, such as the right to a hearing before being fined for a transgression;
  • refusing to allow members to own a pet; or
  • disregarding “sunshine” or open meeting requirements.

Contact Us to Discuss Your HOA Dispute By Calling: (561) 320-6156

WOULD YOU LIKE A FREE FL HOA DISPUTES GUIDE?

THIS GUIDE CONTAINS VALUABLE INFORMATION ABOUT:
– WHAT AN HOA IS
– YOUR RIGHTS
– THE ANSWERS TO FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

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Led by two pioneering and highly experienced litigation and business attorneys, MBK Chapman is staffed by some of the most impressive legal minds in the business. Leveraging decades of actual courtroom and transactional experience, clients who retain MBK Chapman quickly discover why the firm has earned such a stellar reputation for its innovation, staunch advocacy, and winning record. Whether aimed at negotiating and resolving highly complex business and real estate disputes, drafting all manner of complex business and real estate contracts, or going to court to litigate business and real estate cases, the battle-hardened lawyers at MBK Chapman are truly the best in the business.

Clients who retain MBK Chapman come to quickly understand why its two leaders are so well respected among the scores of judges, attorneys, and celebrities who have hired them over the last several decades. But MBK Chapman’s laudable contribution to the legal community does not end with its superstar team of lawyers and support staff. Rather, Michael B. Kushner, one of MBK Chapman’s founding shareholders, pioneered and developed two truly paradigm shifting and disruptive technologies that will, among other things, change the way lawyers interact with their clients.

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TELL US ABOUT YOUR DISPUTE

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