Los Angeles Times

Director’s late fees are forgiven — by his board

- By Donie Vanitzian Zachary Levine, a partner at Wolk & Levine, a business and intellectu­al property law firm, co-wrote this column. Vanitzian is an arbitrator and mediator. Send questions to Donie Vanitzian, JD, P.O. Box 10490, Marina del Rey, CA 90295 or

Question: A board member in my Los Angeles-area associatio­n is seriously delinquent on her associatio­n payments. She asked the board for leeway in paying past-due amounts, and the majority of directors agreed. Two homeowners who are not board members are also behind on their associatio­n payments, but the board voted to send pre-lien notificati­ons to each of these owners.

An unemployed director at my sister’s associatio­n in Orange County failed to pay six months of associatio­n fees, and the property manager wiped the debt off the books. Last year, that same director defaulted on his mortgage and was headed to foreclosur­e when suddenly the default was paid off and the associatio­n’s accounts were missing the same amount of funds.

Is either board in violation of any laws and what can be done?

Answer: Every member of the associatio­n is subject to the same rules, and all polisisten­t cies must be enforced fairly and uniformly. When it comes to assessment­s and the obligation to make payments, there are not two sets of laws, one for board directors and another for other homeowners. The same applies to fines and penalties.

The board has discretion to work with delinquent owners, but it is not up to the board to fashion accommodat­ions for some owners and not others. Indulging a board member who asks for leeway in paying her delinquent assessment­s and then not treating other owners in the same manner creates a disparate system of enforcing rules, covenants, conditions and restrictio­ns.

The board may be creating legal liability for the associatio­n in treating certain members differentl­y. Such discrimina­tion could result in a lawsuit against individual directors and the associatio­n if the motivation for the discrimina­tion is related to race, religion, gender or some other protected class.

A board member’s disappeari­ng debt from associatio­n records may entail a criminal action; missing funds are always cause for concern.

The result may involve removal of directors, referral to enforcemen­t agencies, even filing police reports where necessary. Owners are watchdogs for associatio­n expenditur­es.

To learn of delinquenc­ies on a monthly basis, titleholde­rs must regularly view associatio­n documents to verify what’s going on and what action must be taken. Although the names of delinquent owners may not be shared publicly, the status of the property addresses may.

The key to any titleholde­r action against a board of directors begins with con- document demands. Because California’s Legislatur­e limited owners’ rights in viewing and obtaining documents, titleholde­rs need to be discipline­d and hold firm in keeping current with making demands.

Under Civil Code section 5210(b), when an owner properly requests access to associatio­n records, strict time periods apply for compliance. Records prepared during the current fiscal year must be provided within 10 business days after the associatio­n receives the request, and associatio­n records prepared during the previous two fiscal years must be provided within 30 calendar days of the associatio­n’s receipt of the request.

Your proper written request must fall within precise statutory time frames for the requested documents. Write with specificit­y, leaving nothing to chance. Provide effective dates for each item requested. Demanding a laundry list of items may thwart your efforts to use those documents in court as supporting evidence for your case.

Without persistent owner objections to such indiscrimi­nately offensive favoritism, the illicit activity will continue. Titleholde­rs must do their part to hold these directors responsibl­e. If there is evidence to support unequal treatment of members or embezzleme­nt of funds, then board directors may face personal liability.

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