Homeowners Discover HOA Bylaws Allow Enforcement of Rules That Don't Exist Yet
In a development west of Tampa, the homeowners association discovered a loophole so elegant it deserves its own legal textbook chapter. The HOA bylaws, drafted in 1997, included a provision allowing the board to levy fines for violations of "any rule adopted in the future by majority vote." No rule needed to exist at the time of the fine. The violation simply had to be retroactively compliant with a law passed afterward.
Three residents received citations last month. One had painted her mailbox teal. Another had installed a flagpole. The third had planted a butterfly garden. None of these items appeared in the current rulebook. When asked which regulation they'd violated, the HOA board president replied that the new "Color Consistency Initiative" would be voted on in next month's meeting, and retroactive enforcement would commence immediately upon passage.
A property attorney in the state reviewed the bylaws and confirmed they were technically unenforceable—not because they were absurd, but because you cannot violate a rule that didn't exist when you acted. The HOA disagreed and proceeded to fine all three residents anyway. One resident hired a lawyer. The HOA then voted to create a new rule prohibiting the hiring of outside counsel to dispute fines, effective immediately, applied retroactively to her already-filed lawsuit.
The case is currently in mediation. The mediator has requested a transfer to literally any other assignment.
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