New legal tactic helps associations gain control of abandoned condos

DANIEL VASQUEZ, Sun Sentinel

After winning a lawsuit against Wells Fargo that claimed the bank purposely delayed foreclosure proceedings on a condominium unit for more than a year, a Pompano Beach condo association has been awarded title to the unit without owing a dime on the original $184,400 mortgage.

The case, brought by the Palm Aire Gardens Condominium Association, is being seen as a precedent that could pave the way for other condo associations facing similar foreclosure delays.

“Banks are delaying foreclosures and abusing the process and our association is struggling financially because of it, that’s why we filed our lawsuit.” said Palm Aire Gardens President Oscar Garcia. “Now we own the property free and clear of the mortgage, which gives us options to sell it or rent it.”

Wells Fargo did not respond to requests for comment.

Palm Aire’s legal strategy is being dubbed “The Mortgage Terminator” by the Association Law Group, the South Florida firm that represents the condo complex and hundreds of others across the state.

“Many of our association clients are already starting to use it,” said attorney Ben Solomon, of Association Law Group. “The only criteria is that the association has title to the unit through its own foreclosure process and the mortgage holder has not initiated foreclosure yet.”

As a result of the Broward County Court judgment in its favor, Palm Aire legally owns the two-bedroom, two-bath unit at the center of the case and is free sell it, recover about $14,000 in the past maintenance and pocket any profit after paying attorneys’ fees and property taxes.

Read more here: http://www.tcpalm.com/news/2010/oct/06/new-legal-tactic-helps-associations-gain-control-a/

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Florida HOAs Can Now Demand Rent Checks Of Deadbeat Owners Directly From Renter

Tolusa Olorunnipa, Miami Herald

A new law offers a stark choice for South Florida condo renters living in units owned by people who are behind on their maintenance fees: Fork over the rent money to the association, or face eviction.

The “Distressed Condominium Relief Act,” signed by Gov. Charlie Crist on June 1 and active as of Thursday, gives condo associations the right to demand renters in delinquent units to pay rent directly to the association rather than to unit owners. While the law offers protections for renters who comply, those who don’t could face eviction.

It’s the latest development in an ongoing saga between cash-starved condo associations, and investor-owners who have stopped paying condo maintenance fees since the market crashed.

Omar Ibrahem, who moved out of a rental last year because its owner went into foreclosure, said he hadn’t received any notices about the new law at the unit he rents on Miami’s Brickell Avenue.

“I haven’t heard or haven’t received any notices that they are pursuing delinquencies,” he said. But after his experience last year, he plans to monitor the situation carefully.

After years of penny pinching and legal maneuvering to collect maintenance fees from sometimes-recalcitrant condominium owners, condo associations are looking to the new law to help increase cash flow.

Renters, who have flocked to condos by the thousands in areas like downtown Miami and South Beach since the crash, are suddenly in the spotlight. Many have been living in modern buildings with a slew of amenities, often unaware that condo owners had stopped paying the fees that fund them.

Beginning this month, some renters will receive letters asking them to fork over rent money directly to condo association boards. Unit owners will not be allowed to take any action against renters who pay a portion or all of their rent to the association.

“It gives the tenants more peace of mind,” said Jon Mann, owner of Five Star International Realty in Miami. “They can pay the association a portion of their rent and they know they won’t be kicked out.”

But lawyers and homeowner association members say the law’s wording isn’t completely clear. The most hotly debated point is whether or not associations can collect payment for past due fees that have accrued over time, or only for monthly assessments due after July 1.

“My recommendation to my clients is to act conservatively, because this law is brand new,” said Lisa Magill an attorney at Hollywood-based Becker & Poliakoff, a large condo association law firm.

But many condo boards, severely strapped for cash, are taking the more aggressive position, said Bill Worrall, corporate vice president of property management company The Continental Group.

“Practically, the association will collect 100 percent of the rent until the account is brought current,” said Worrall.

For example, a renter paying $1,000 a month for a condo unit that is $5,000 behind on monthly fees might be asked to turn over his entire rent check to the condo association for five months, and then hand over a portion of his rent to cover fees for the remainder of the lease.

Delinquency rates have surged in recent years as the economy has tanked along with home values, leaving some investors acting in bad faith and the newly unemployed unable to pay maintenance fees.

The investors, who have opted to “strategically default,” or intentionally abandon a mortgage along with associated fees, often do so in bulk, leaving a trail of foreclosures and a gaping hole in many condo association budgets.

Read more: http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/06/30/1709704/with-new-law-condos-get-new-tool.html#ixzz0sQvsBpxo

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HOA Members That Foreclosed On Texas Soldier Is Now Getting Death Threats

David Schecter, WFAA-Dallas

An Army officer on active duty lost his house when his homeowners’ association foreclosed for back dues.

It’s a story first reported by News 8, and it outraged people around the world.

Read more here: http://www.wfaa.com/news/local/HOA-that-Foreclosed-on-Active-Duty-Officer-Getting-Death-Threats-96842614.html

Now the HOA is breaking its silence, saying the board is getting death threats — even though it did nothing wrong.

The Heritage Lakes Homeowners’ Association declined to comment for our original report in May. News 8 wanted to know why it foreclosed on Capt. Michael Clauer’s home while he was on active duty and headed for Iraq.

The HOA has now hired public relations specialist David Margulies as its spokesman. He says the HOA is getting negative attention it does not deserve.

“The death threats have been reported to the Addison police, and they’re being investigated,” Margulies said.

And now, other residents of Heritage Lakes, like Tim Rogers, are coming forward, too. They say they are embarrassed to live in a community that could foreclose on an officer’s home while he is defending his country.

“They need to reconsider whether they want to do this in the future,” Rogers said. “I don’t want to be a member of an association that can do this.”

The Clauers owned their $300,000 home free and clear; it was a gift from family members.

Capt. Clauer says when he got called up, his wife May became depressed. She missed two HOA payments totaling about $800. He said she did not open letters from the HOA alerting her to foreclosure proceedings.

“If she would’ve understood what was happening, of course, it wouldn’t have happened,” Clauer said.

But now, the HOA has come forward with documentation showing the Clauers were behind on their dues months before Capt. Clauer was called to active duty. “The fact of the matter is, they were warned about the potential for foreclosure months before he went on active duty,” Margulies said.

The Clauers are suing the HOA, and are allowed to stay in their home until the issue is decided.

In their suit, the Clauers claim they are protected by a federal law that prohibits a service member from foreclosure while on active duty.

The HOA has now produced a document showing it did check on his status, and were told by the Department of the Army, that Clauer was not on active duty at the time.

“While it’s very unfortunate, it’s not the homeowners’ association’s fault,” Margulies said.

The HOA holds its regular meeting Tuesday night. Clauer said he’s going to attend.

Tim Rogers said he’ll be there, too, to share his frustration.

“Something is wrong here. The HOA is not behaving properly,” Rogers said.

But if anything positive has come out of this high-profile foreclosure it is this: Select Management Company — which runs the Heritage Lakes HOA and many more in North Texas — says it is adding procedures that will keep this from happening to another family in the future.

The company says it will attempt to call families facing foreclosure to check on their situation, instead of relying only on certified mail, which, in the Clauers’ case, was never opened.

“It appears that it might be better to take a couple of more steps just to avoid this kind of problem,” Margulies said.

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Florida condo associations get power in dealing with foreclosures

Tom Bayles, Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Gov. Charlie Crist signed into law a measure Tuesday that will allow Florida’s beleaguered condominium associations to go after up to twice the amount of delinquent dues owed them.

Condo associations had previously been limited to six months’ worth in most cases.

When the law takes effect on July 1, associations also will be able to deny owners who owe money access to pools or other common-ground amenities.

Other provisions of the “Distressed Condominium Relief Act” let an association either delay or discard some previously required — and very costly — upgrades to a building’s fire alarms, sprinklers system and elevators.

The new law is another government effort to help Florida’s condo associations recover from a years-long slide in revenue from dues, plummeting unit values and declining occupancy rates as foreclosures ran rampant in the wake of the real estate downturn.

“It has been such a worst-case scenario for the people who live in those buildings, so this is a very good thing,” said Ryan Carson, a sales agent with Re/Max Premier Services on condo-laden Siesta Key. “This will be a good shot in the arm.”

During the housing boom there was no hotter commodity. At the height of frenzied buying, people stood in long lines just for a chance to put a deposit down and secure a unit. Often the unit was immediately resold, or flipped, several times for a profit. Hundreds of traditional apartment buildings across the state were converted to condos.

The deflation of the market also was felt most strongly in the condo market, which has been hit by waves of defaults. Investors walked away from units bought at inflated prices and stopped paying dues.

Read more here: http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20100602/ARTICLE/6021027?p=all&tc=pgall

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