Posted on 03/16/2009 8:24:56 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd
In a rare move, a South Side homeowners association has filed to foreclose on 84 homes in the Mission Creek community because of unpaid association dues.
Thats 21 percent of the roughly 400 homes in the community, based on data from RexReport.com. The 84 are set to go on the auction block April 7 at the Bexar County Courthouse an event that would devastate the neighborhoods property values, experts say.
Judith Gray, an attorney hired as the auction trustee, said the association is foreclosing because many homeowners have not paid dues for several years, and the multiyear loss of those dues is making it difficult for the association to function and to provide services required by the city.
Weve got a lot of stubborn people who believe they do not have to pay homeowners dues, Gray said. They have on average not paid homeowners dues for two to three years.
Partly at issue is a community park that one of Mission Creeks builders, Sivage Homes, and homeowners say the association has been promising to develop for several years. Currently, the park site comprises grass and trees.
Also fueling anger, homeowners claim, is the lack of response from the association when they call for an update on the project or any other issue in the neighborhood. Letters and phone calls go unanswered.
Neither developer Harry Hausman of HLM Development nor association board members responded to multiple voice messages left by the San Antonio Express-News.
Homeowners such as Cynthia Carrillo say they have deliberately stopped paying their $130 in yearly dues in response to being ignored.
They are maintaining the front area where they sell those homes, but arent doing anything else, Carrillo said. If they are going to get $130 from all these people, they need to return peoples calls and put in more than those flower beds.
The associations attorney says its the nonpayment thats preventing the association from following through on promised projects.
If we dont do this (collect the fees), the homeowners association cannot survive to do what homeowners want and have the park taken care of, have lights on in the park and cut the grass, Gray said.
Most communities have covenants that give a homeowners association the right to sue property owners, assess penalty fees and even foreclose if dues arent paid.
The association usually must issue written notices asking a homeowner to pay and then file a lawsuit before starting foreclosure proceedings.
Cities encourage homeowners associations as a way to maintain housing and community standards to preserve home values the source of property taxes with minimal city involvement.
But if the 84 homes are auctioned, it could severely undermine home values in Mission Creek, one real estate expert said.
That would be a spectacular event, and I cant think of how it would be positive for the community, said Al Kiris, agent and general partner at Bradfield Properties. Thats unusual.
Studies back this up. One conducted by the University of Missouri at St. Louis found that homes within a mile of a foreclosure typically see a hit in value.
For instance, between 2000 and 2008, homes nearest a foreclosed property lost an average 1 percent of their value. Between January 2006 and September 2008, when the market was more sluggish, homes nearest a foreclosure lost up to 5 percent in value.
Some of the homeowners facing foreclosure say their nonpayment is not from protest against the association, but a simple misunderstanding.
Adam Chavarria says his unpaid dues were the result of poor communication from the association as to his payment due date.
Chavarria, who bought his home in July 2004, said the association had sent a bill and coupon book in previous years to help in payments, but not last year.
I didnt have a problem paying, he said.
Chavarria says his next personalized written communication from the association was a formal notice of default telling him to pay $267.58, including $100 in legal fees, or have his home auctioned off between 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. April 7.
That was kind of a shock. For a couple hundred dollars, I thought that was a bit much, Chavarria said.
Still, he said, he paid the fees.
As of Friday, the showdown between Carrillo and the association continued. Carrillo was adamant she wouldnt pay the nearly $700 in fees she was assessed until an association representative speaks with her.
Im willing to come to a compromise, she said. But I should not have to pay fees and penalties and all that. They are not doing anything for the community.
She hopes someone from the association will call her back and give a place where she can go and pay in person, rather than send something in the mail.
And the argument that foreclosing on these homes will drive the values down? Specious.
Ain't no 84 homes gonna be lost for a few hundered bucks in unpaid dues, anyhow. The deadbeat homeowners will cough up the money somehow.
Plus attorneys fees.
HOAs are antithetical to freedom and the US Constitution.
The even funnier part is the remaining owners will have their dues raised to cover the nonpayment from the other people.
Outlaw all HOAs...they do more harm than good. They are nothing but a scam!
I will never, ever buy a house that’s controlled by a HOA..
How? The guarantees of freedom in the Constitution generally only apply to government infringing on your rights. If someone chooses to have their rights infringed upon by a private entity, that is their own choice.
DITTO
Leave the rest of us alone!
I strongly suspect these 84 homeowners are at the Stop-N-Go right now buying lottery tickets.
Hoping for the right Scratch-off ticket so they can win enough money to pay their HOA dues.
Buy a home elsewhere.
It goes against the proclivities of the 1/3 of Colonists who wanted to establish a gov't of the people, by the people and for the people.
People have the freedom not to buy into a development where they contractually obligate themselves to an HOA. There are plenty of neighborhoods without them. Freedom to contract is most definitely constitutional.
It's not a home, it's a commune, comrade.
HOAs are antithetical to freedom and the US Constitution.
Most HOA problems are due to people who do not follow rules they promised to follow.
In Houston, where there are no zoning laws, HOAs and deed restrictions are the way to keep neighborhoods residential. The lack of zoning requires the governance of neighborhoods to become even more local than cities or townships.
And under such government people have a right to choose where they wish to live. If they chose to live in a place with an HOA that is their choice and they must uphold their end of the choice to which they voluntarily agreed.
HOAs are problems that are best solved via the prevention angle. While I personally do not like HOAs, there are many people who do for their own reasons. As long as a choice exists between HOA and non-HOA homes, everyone can be happy.
Rules are always subject to change. Tyranny of the majority.
Deadbeat? I don't pay mine, and Im not a deadbeat. Our HOA is miserable. They don't get a dime from me. My property taxes are high enough..
People shouldn’t be free to join communes?
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