Los Angeles Times

Legal considerat­ions in joining an HOA board.

- By Donie Vanitzian

Question: I am dissatisfi­ed with the performanc­e of our board of directors and am considerin­g running for a spot myself, but I’d like to know what I am getting myself into. I talked to one of the board members about his duties, and he told me that they are clearly laid out in Civil Code section 5500.

The code section says that the board on a quarterly basis must complete several tasks, including reviewing the associatio­n’s bank statements, reconcilin­g the operating and reserve accounts, and comparing the year’s reserve revenues and expenses to the budgeted amounts.

He said those are their only statutory duties, but that doesn’t ring true to me. I am especially concerned about any personal liability I may be taking on in becoming a director. Answer: It is true that section 5500 outlines the duties of the board, but the board’s statutory responsibi­lities don’t end there. There’s more, starting with Title 10, California Code of Regulation­s section 2792.21(a). Aside from holding elections and ensuring common areas are maintained, it enumerates other board duties, including:

Enforcing provisions of the covenants, conditions and restrictio­ns, articles and bylaws. Paying common area taxes and assessment­s. Contractin­g for goods and services for the common areas and facilities. Purchasing casualty, liability and other insurance on behalf of the associatio­n. Formulatin­g rules of operation of the common areas and facilities. Initiating and executing disciplina­ry proceeding­s against associatio­n members for governing document violations.

Board responsibi­lities are not limited to statutory duties. As fiduciarie­s, members have a general and overarchin­g duty to act in the best interests of the associatio­n — even if this means acting at the expense of their own interests.

Courts recognize this is a burden and refrain from reviewing a director’s impartial decisions or secondgues­sing actions that were performed in good faith, even if those decisions or actions were ultimately wrong.

This is called the “business judgment rule,” and is codified by Corporatio­ns Code section 7231. It says that as long as directors perform duties in good faith using the same level of care as an ordinarily prudent person in a like position under similar circumstan­ces they shall have no liability for their decisions.

However, the rule does not immunize a director from liability and deference when acting negligentl­y. In Palm Springs Villas II Homeowners Assn. vs. Erna Parth, the state Court of Appeals last year decided that the board president failed to understand the scope of her authority and made no effort to ascertain what authority she did possess. They said “the business judgment rule would not extend to such willful ignorance” and did not bar a claim for breach of fiduciary duty.

In another case, Huntington Continenta­l Town House Assn. vs. Joseph Miner, directors foreclosed on a titleholde­r’s unit due to a delinquent assessment lien of $6,418. Even though the owner kept tendering payments, his checks were returned because associatio­n attorneys claimed they were “unable to accept partial payments.” The court said in a 2014 ruling that the homeowners associatio­n must accept an owner’s partial payment and apply it as prescribed by statute.

In Wittenberg vs. Beachwalk Homeowners Assn., the board’s policy did not permit homeowners to publish advocacy pieces in the associatio­n’s newsletter, website or bulletin board despite a legal obligation to ensure access to commonarea forums in an election. The 2013 court case cost the HOA hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

In the latter two cases, board directors were not held personally liable, but the judgments certainly drove home that directors are in for a shock if they only follow the civil code in carrying out their duties. 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 noexit @mindspring.com.

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