Homeowner Learns HOA Has No Authority Over His Emotions, Proceeds Accordingly
A homeowner in a gated community received his third violation notice in as many months. The infraction: grass exceeding the mandated four-inch maximum. He paid the fines. He cut the grass. He received another notice. The cycle continued for eighteen months until he hired a surveyor, who discovered that the HOA's enforcement mechanism relied on a clause written in 1987 that required "reasonable notification of violations." The HOA had been using email. The homeowner's deed of trust predated email by thirty years.
He filed a formal complaint claiming he had received no notification—since the binding document required written correspondence via certified mail, which the HOA had never bothered with. The association scrambled. They sent certified letters for three months. He ignored them. When they took legal action, his attorney produced the original deed language, which specified that violations could only be enforced if the resident "received personal knowledge through means available at time of covenant establishment." The judge paused. Then he asked if 1987 had email.
It did not.
The homeowner won his case and the right to maintain grass at any height he legally desired within municipal code. He now keeps it at exactly four inches and one blade. The HOA president did not respond to requests for comment, presumably because she was updating forty-seven other violation notices to include certified mail and prayers that nobody else owned a copy of their original deed.
Got a story Norma should know about? Submit it at [SUBMISSION_LINK].
Related Topics
Article Ratings
0 ratings submitted

Discussion (0)
Join the Conversation
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!