San Diego Union-Tribune

WHEN CC&RS ARE EXPIRED AND IGNORED

- BY KELLY G. RICHARDSON Richardson is a Fellow of the College of Community Associatio­n Lawyers and Partner of Richardson Ober DeNichilo LLP, a California law firm known for community associatio­n advice. Submit questions to Kelly@rodllp.com.

Q:I am looking into purchasing a property with three freestandi­ng units and a small amount of common space used as a walking area to get from the street to units. The selling agent provided the CC&Rs, but the HOA doesn’t exist and has never met for as long as the current owners have been there. There are no members, no minutes and no fees. What does this mean for the rules in the CC&R? Are they enforceabl­e? Does the HOA need to be reinstated? What are the implicatio­ns of this current situation?

R.K., SAN DIEGO A:

Smaller associatio­ns are

governed by exactly the same laws in the Davis-Stirling Common Interest Developmen­t Act as large ones. It is very difficult to operate a very small associatio­n fully in compliance with the law, because that normally requires a profession­al manager and periodic input from qualified legal counsel. I find that many if not most very small associatio­ns completely ignore their governing documents and operate more as a partnershi­p than an HOA — meaning that things are done by consensus and little if any records are kept.

There is most likely a homeowners associatio­n in the property, which is unfortunat­ely being ignored. Ignoring the law and governing documents can work for a while, until the first disagreeme­nt or other problem arises. The governing documents and statutes provide a framework to guide the owners in that property. Rather than completely avoiding the requiremen­ts of the law and governing documents, it may be advisable to consult legal counsel to see if the documents can be streamline­d to make operation simpler. For example, all of the maintenanc­e and repair responsibi­lities may be reallocate­d on the three homes to their three owners, and the governance can also be streamline­d.

Q:

When I got my property,

I was not told I had an associatio­n or what it entailed. They didn’t even want to give me the CC&Rs. Eventually I got the CC&Rs from a neighbor, and someone made me notice the date it was recorded — 45 years ago. I heard that CC&Rs could be expired. Is there such a thing? Do they automatica­lly renew? What are the implicatio­ns of this document being so old?

P.M., HUNTINGTON BEACH

Very old CC&Rs sometimes do have expiration dates, and they should not be allowed to expire. If the CC&Rs document expires without being renewed by the HOA, that group of homeowners no longer is a “common interest developmen­t” and is outside the Davis-Stirling Act. Without CC&Rs and the law’s guidance, how can the HOA pay its expenses? Require termite treatment? Keep insurance in force? Modern CC&Rs avoid

A:

the problem by automatica­lly renewing.

The Davis-Stirling Act became law in 1986 and in its earlier years was fairly minimal. So, governing documents dating before the 1990s often are substantia­lly out of step with current law and sometimes even have illegal discrimina­tions against children or minorities. If you had trouble getting the CC&Rs, that is a troubling indication because your CC&Rs document is the foundation of the HOA’s operation of the property. Your board should consult experience­d HOA legal counsel to evaluate the associatio­n’s current governing documents and consider bringing the HOA into the 21st century.

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