Posted on 01/25/2004 5:49:41 AM PST by DelaWhere
Edited on 04/12/2004 6:04:31 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
Couple lose their home over $120 debt By Michael Kolber -- Bee Staff Writer Published 2:15 a.m. PST Saturday, January 24, 2004 Get weekday updates of Sacramento Bee headlines and breaking news. Sign up here.
COPPEROPOLIS -- A retired couple's dispute with their homeowners association has spiraled out of control in this Calaveras County community -- and now they have lost their home less than a year after failing to pay $120 in annual dues.
(Excerpt) Read more at sacbee.com ...
I did so for the express purpose of reigning in these weenies. (talk about the fox guarding the henhouse ;-)
Well, I take exception to that. In my area, there are very few places without HOAs. Mine is quite restrictive (it was in the natl news over a flag of the Air Force I think), but I get a lot out of it. Most of the things they disallow I wouldn't do anyway.
However, the asssociation is made up of elected boards (we have one overall, along with one for each 'community' within the larger subdivision). The rules can be changed, but not easily.
Secondly, the relations between HOAs and residents are generally stipulated by state law. The article implies that the HOA was acting on authority given to it by the state law. I don't know the California constitution or how this law was justified under that constitution. However, having entered into this realm, the law shouldn't favor HOAs as strongly as it does. This area isn't the "contracts between individuals" issue that some self-righteous purists try to pretend that it is.
Thirdly, contracts between individuals do not supercede rights guaranteed in the federal and state constitutions. Regarding HOAs specifically, deed restrictions that prevent someone from selling to minorities are no longer allowed. To the real purist, I guess a group of racists should be allowed to buy houses together and prevent one another from ever selling to a minority. I think most of us see this vision of "contracts between individuals" as being over the line. (The third point does not relate to this specific case, but it does help show how silly the purist argument can become.)
You're absolutely right.
I'm going to start inserting a clause in the fine print of the paperwork I have my older patients sign that puts their house at risk in case of non-payment or late payment of my fees. They never read those things and, even if they do read them, they usually pay little attention to the meaning. When a spouse is sick, older couples tend to let the mail pile up.
All I have to do is send a few letters, keep a low profile and then......GOTCHA!!
In one year, I'll be the largest property owner in the County.
Thanks for the suggestion.
This has yet to be proven IMO.
As i stated elsewhere in this thread, i used to belong to an HOA board and what i saw there was not pretty. MY conservative values bid me to oppose tyranny wherever i see it.
I see it here.
Well, it is all tied into how we transfer seisin, or ownership rights over real property, from Person 1 to Person 2, using the system of land laws in place since the time of Henry VIII.
I'm going to oversimplify horribly (my Property Law professor would puke if she read this) but I'll try to explain.
When I sell land to you, I can sell the land in fee simple, giving you all rights, and retaining none. I could, in the alternative, sell you land with a "right of reversion" (I can specify that the land I sell or give you MUST be used for building a church, or you must keep it alcohol-free, or whatever; if you use the land for a purpose other than that I specify when I sell it to you, I can then retake possession of the land and eject you, even though you bought the land from me. Covenants, which are used to form HOAs, are related to this "right of reversion".
Homeowner Nazi Gauleiters derive their power from this kind of land sale. I am the Evil Developer. I buy a farm for a song at an estate sale for pennies on the dollar. Bwhahahaha. I then divide the land up into individual lots and sell them piecemeal after building homes on the lot. But the deed I sell specifies that you MUST buy the land on the condition that you MUST participate in the Homeowner Nazi Buffalo Rape Ceremony every year by throwing money at them. You are also prohibited from doing anything that the Homeowner Nazis prohibit as offensive, like painting your front door bright fuscia, or putting up a treehouse in your back yard, or having a statute of the Virgin in the garden. If you fail to throw the requisite money or otherwise submit to their dictatorial rule, the aforementioned Nazis can, and do, have the right to sue you for the money or seize (a word etymologically related to "seisin") your home and sell it out from under you. As happened here.
Once this condition is put into the deed it is almost impossible to get rid of as you have to get EVERYONE living in the subidivision to agree to get rid of it. ONE holdout can veto.
The First Amendment remember relates only to goverment action by the federal government, states, or agencies of the states (such as state owned universities). But HOAs are NOT "governmental" in nature.
This is also why for many years "no-Jews" or "no-blacks" covenants could not be overridden, and these days even if those covenants cannot be enforced they are still almost impossible to get rid of. Which means any Repubican considering running for office had better check the deed of his home proir to buying because any no-Jews covenants will be used against him by the Press (even though they're not his fault and impossible to get rid of). (Democrats of course need fear nothing of the sort.)
There is a certain beauty and elegance to English land ownership law, which still is operative in the United States. But the downside is that the Nazis and their buffaloes roam in subdivisions and you'd better be prepared to submit to them if they have the authority.
I am reporting on my experience. Experiences are as varied as the people in them. I don't know your particular case of course... but most rules in covenants are rules that, arguably, a majority of the people want. Yes, it may take effort to change rules that some think are a good idea.
I don't think anyone is cheering this result (with the arguable exception of the new homeowner who basically got it for a song). But s*** happens and it wasn't the HOA's fault that the couple didn't pay their bills.
How can a $120 bill grow to nearly $2000 in only a year? What kind of "late" penalty is being applied, and at what interest rate? What did the "collection agency" do to earn their portion of $2000? Send a few letters and leave some mesages on an answering machine?
These are all questions that the couple who lost their home should be asking themselves. They should also be asking themselves how they could have let a $120 bill run unpaid for long enough to wipe out their investment. They should also be asking themselves why in the world they voluntarily signed a contract that imposed such onerous penalties upon themselves.
What kind of legal system imposes a $200,000 fine for a $120 debt? That's right, the home is worth $260,000 and the owner will net $60,000.
It wasn't a "fine," it was the result of poor planning and non-action on the part of the original homeowners. Don't want this to happen to you? Then don't sign stupid contracts.
The foreclosure sales on "the courthouse steps" are a crock. They should be sold through realtors like every other home sale.
Who are you to impose conditions on the way this particular HOA/county/taxing authority conducts business if they're doing so legally? Don't like the rules? Then don't live there.
You need to rethink your "let them eat cake additude". It's not conservative.
Its not "conservative" to advocate treating a legal, binding contract like so much toilet paper.
Thomas and Anita Radcliff's sign in front of their Calaveras County home, which was foreclosed on, explains their legal predicament. |
Would those who tout the rule of law as supreme above all other considerations care to applaud the rule of law being applied here? These people are I-L-L-E-G-A-L-S by definition because they broke a law.
While they have rights to their own property, they also have responsibilities which come with it. Rights always come with responsibilities. It does no good to gripe about the existence of one without the existence of the other. And it doesn't matter what the issue of ownership is, whether it's a property, or citizenship, or one's own body -- our rights to something are predicated upon rules which regulate and encourage responsible ownership.
What those rules are can be open for debate, but not the infringement of rights or the shirking of responsibilities.
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