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You think your landlord is a piece of $#!*?
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/htm...ervist06m.html
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Not really a landlord, but assholes like this are why I never considered condominium living. Just another level of government you don't need.
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Developer
The Developer still owns the HOA and as he states in the article he still owns property (unsold lots) in the development and until it's sold out "he is the HOA".
The guy wants to sell all of his lots and get them developed. Hard to do that when a buyer turns into the development and sees a yard in poor condition. The owner had 7 +/- months to get his yard in shape. You're looking at 47 total lots. I wonder how many are sold? On the other hand, as the developer, he could have worked with the owner and done most of the work with his crews, got a little positiive propaganda in the local paper, wrote off most of the expensie in taxes and maybe sold out a little faster. The owner is at fault but the developer handled it all wrong. |
The LT should have read the fine print. I doubt he has a leg to stand on. This is just one example of why I will never live in a development (or anyplace else) with a HOA again. Having had personal experience with unscrupulous developers, they can all GTH.
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It sounds like the homeowner tried to meet the terms of the HOA but the guy he hired bailed without finishing the work, presumably after the homeowner deployed. The thing about renting the property is a little shady also. I'm not sure that a HOA can prevent you from renting your property.
Something else that just occured to me is that it says he deployed five months ago or so but that probably doesn't include any of the predeployment stuff that the homeowner may have had to do. That might very well mean even less time that he had. SFC W |
7+/- months
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That's where I got the 7 +/- months for him to get his landscaping done. Sounds like the owner was dragging his feet and then got called up. It don't take that long to lay sod, plant some bushes and put an irrigation system in. Owner occupied homes do not like renters in the subdivision. In well kept neighborhoods you can spot them, generally, by the lack of yard care. |
By nature, I instinctively tend to side against HOAs (I have little love for organizations that tell me what to do with my own property... the actual government does that enough already, thank you), but the more I think about this situation, the more it sounds like both are at fault. The developer is obnoxious and not someone I would ever care to meet, but the soldier is at just as much, if not more, fault. He chose to buy a property that falls under the covenants of the HOA, and so explicitly endorsed those covenants; he then ignored them, shirking his freely-chosen obligation. Not much love for those who obligate themselves and then complain about how hard it is.
There's a lesson here. Read the fine print, always. It's kind of like how you should always read the stickies. :D |
Doesn't read like the soldier ignored the terms. The HOA term is landscaping be completed within one year after an occupancy permit is issued for a home. The soldier hired a landscaper who, while the soldier is deployed and no one is living on the property, failed to complete the work. His wife is living with family in the East during her pregnancy. Seems likely the soldier was unaware the work wasn't being done until he received notice from the HOA.
Also the soldiers lawyer states the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act protection against civil legal action during overseas deployment. The lawyer also states that the soldier can't be stopped from renting the property. I don't see where the soldier or his family complained or commented at all. Seems his co-workers, neighbor and local citizens have stepped in though. Quote:
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You point is well taken, thank God we still have patriotic neighbors that have taken up his situation......:D GB TFS :munchin |
Sounds like the head of the HOA was the kid that never got picked in the neighborhood games. I agree with him that if the contract says something, then said person should be expected to comply...but this is unique and, personally, i think the guy is just got an attitude and wants it his way.
I also have to say, that if one of my fellow Guard Soldiers is deploying and resides relatively close and i see a pregnant wife, elderly parent, etc... left behind and limited on what they can get done, then it is time to get a group of folks from the Guard in the rear and make it happen, much like the neigbors did. |
Definitely. I think we can all agree that of all the parties involved, it's the community that is truly doing the right thing.
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