RECORDING
UNRULY MEETINGS
QUESTION: Our HOA has some very
contentious members at our meetings.
Recently,
one member rushed another and had to be held back. Our attorney suggested we
start video recording the meetings. Some of the contentious members claim it
violates the law and we must get permission from every one attending the
meeting. Do you have an opinion on this subject?
ANSWER:
I agree with your attorney. Recording and especially
broadcasting your meetings to the membership will expose hotheads and
bullies (both in the audience and on the board), and will go a long way toward establishing civility and decorum.
Because board meetings are
public forums, the board does not need the permission of attendees to
videotape them.
INSURANCE AND
LITIGIOUS
OWNERS
QUESTION: Our association
has been sued several times by one of the members. The legal fees have been
substantial and the board is concerned they may lose their directors insurance.
Do you know if there is a "high risk" insurance pool for homeowner associations?
ANSWER:
Associations that lose their insurance because of repeated litigation from
problem owners can still get insurance through "excess
and surplus lines" carriers. However, coverage will be limited, deductibles
high, and premiums
significant. Carriers who write "hard to place" accounts will likely be non-admitted
carriers. Moreover, they may exclude known problems, such as actions filed by
recognized litigious owners. Your association could anticipate
paying higher premiums for about three years until your loss
history improves. Once you've had no claims for three years, your insurance
broker should be able to move you back to a preferred market carrier.
Stopping Litigious Owners. Litigious owners seem to revel in their dysfunctional
behavior even though it isolates them and drives up everyone's dues. Insurance
companies exacerbate the problem by settling lawsuits filed by problem owners,
i.e., they pay the owner to go away even when the lawsuit has no merit. This
only encourages more litigation from the problem owner. He/she crows about
"winning" the lawsuit and then waits for an opportunity to file another one.
Generally, the only way to stop a litigious owner is to take the owner's
unmeritorious action to trial and beat him/her. Once they are forced to reach
into their own pocket to pay the association's legal fees, they are less likely
to jump into another lawsuit. Unfortunately, this strategy is hard to implement because
(i) convincing an insurance carrier to stay the course is difficult, and (ii)
there is no guarantee the association will win the case (even when it should).
Thank you to Timothy Cline, President
Timothy Cline Insurance Agency and Jack Socher, President Socher
Insurance Agency for their feedback on surplus lines carriers.
LATE CHARGES
ON FINES
QUESTION: Can an association legally
charge late fees on fines that are not paid timely? I am talking about
disciplinary fines that a board levies following appropriate procedures?
ANSWER:
No, late fees cannot be charged against fines. The Davis-Stirling Act allows
associations to levy a late charge of 10%
or ten dollars, whichever is greater (unless the CC&Rs specify a lesser amount),
against delinquent assessments.
Civil Code §1366(e).
SURPLUS
FUNDS
TO RESERVES?
QUESTION: Regarding
your article on surplus budget funds,
if an association rolls the excess into
next year's budget, must they be applied to the operating budget or can they go
into reserve budget?
ANSWER:
Since most associations are underfunded in their reserves, it is usually a good
idea to apply those excess funds to the reserves. There seem to be several
paths to minimize the tax effect of these transfers. Donald Haney, a CPA who
does taxes for homeowners associations, offered these comments:
There are no special
requirements or actions required for those HOAs that file 1120H tax returns.
The just must pay 30% tax on their “Non-Exempt Function Income” (mostly
interest income). If an HOA wants to file federal form 1120 as a technique
to obtain the 15% tax rate on their “Non Exempt Function” taxable income
under $50,000, then the conventional wisdom is that every year it must
comply with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Revenue Ruling (RR) 70-604 and
have their owners vote at the annual meeting to comply with the terms and
conditions contained in the ruling. I have no quarrel with that path and
respect those professionals who advise their clients to do so. However, I
have successfully followed another path without an IRS challenge over the
last 33 years.
Without going into all
the IRS hierarchical rules, the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) trumps IRS
Revenue Rulings. For the last 33 years we have been reporting any “Exempt
Function” excess of income over expenses for an HOA in any year as a
“Section 118 Contribution to Capital.” In other words, a transfer into the
association's Reserve account. By using this technique we have been able to
obtain the desired 15% tax rate result without requiring owners to vote at
the annual election. There are several nuances to this process and it should
not be done without professional advice.
RECOMMENDATION.
Tax rules are constantly changing so boards should consult a qualified CPA on how best to handle
these kinds of issues. -Adrian
BOARD
AUTHORITY FOR
CC&R
RESTATEMENT
QUESTION: Do we as a board have the
authority to update our CC&Rs and increase our budget to cover the
cost? Do we need to take this to the owners for a vote or can we as the board
decide to do so given that our CC&Rs are more than 15 years old?
ANSWER:
Boards have authority on their own to update CC&Rs,
subject to budgetary limitations (5%
special assessment and
20% dues increase). However, amended and restated CC&Rs, once drafted, must be approved by the membership.
FEEDBACK
Ranting
Boards. In our association the BOARD yells at owners and bad mouths them.
Please stop defending boards so much. Some of them are power-mad maniacs. -Trina
M.
RESPONSE:
When I say that ranting, defamation and threats are never okay, it cuts both
ways. It's never okay for owners and it's never okay for board members. -Adrian
Last week's link to "Losing Entire Boards"
was defective. This one should work.