English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

We are a 4 unit building that runs on a very tight budget. The owner that doesn't pay her quarterly dues (or pays weeks late if we nag her by phone) is an absentee owner who rents the unit out. What legal recourse do we have to get her to pay her dues on time as the rest of us do. We don't have a lot of cash in the bank and her lack of payment or very late payment puts a strain on the association's finances. Any suggestions?

2007-11-13 05:51:58 · 3 answers · asked by lear 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

3 answers

The only suggestion is the one you don't want to hear. Talk to a lawyer. Its the only real option you have.

2007-11-13 05:55:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Add interest and fines to the amounts owed. Filing a lien is easy. But you have to pay a filing fee, and it will not get you the money any faster.
The lien just means the property cannot be sold until the debt is paid.

2007-11-13 05:55:54 · answer #2 · answered by regerugged 7 · 0 0

definite, he can do it. Welcome to the community. through fact the present house proprietor, you have the spectacular to request get right of entry to to the HOA's financial information concerning your belongings, inclusive of the information relating dues money. I truly does no longer pay it except i replaced into satisfied that it replaced into, certainly, owed. it truly is no longer uncommon for human beings to withhold their money to HOAs, the two through fact they do no longer comprehend the affiliation's legal powers, or have some dispute. while that house proprietor sells, accountability for the late quantities falls to the recent proprietor. All of this ought to have been lined with you previously you get carry of the valuables, and quantities owed ought to have been printed by using the vendor and his agent. have you ever examine your HOA's rules and regulations? there's a narrow possibility which you're able to desire to pass after the previous proprietor to re-coup the quantity owed.

2016-10-02 06:57:41 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers