The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
OWNERS CAN’T BE TOLD TO REMOVE SHUTTERS
Q: We purchased our condo 15 years ago with hurricane shutters already installed. The new property manager is saying that there is no Architectural Approval form for the shutters in our file and we may be compelled to take them down. Since nothing was told to us about the shutters for 15 years, I believe that the shutters were approved but the Architectural Approval form must have been lost between different boards and different management companies. Any advice for us? — David
A: Good news — your shutters can remain. Due to the importance of hurricane preparedness, the law states that while the board can adopt specific guidelines for shutters, it cannot prevent their installation or replacement. Your association cannot make you remove your shutters at this point, as long as they are maintained and in working order. When the shutters were installed, your association could have required that they meet the community’s guidelines. But now that so much time has gone by, your board cannot retroactively make you fix any missed issues. Basically, if the association had a legal claim, such as the shutters being installed without approval, it would have needed to act within a reasonable time. By not doing so, it lost its right to act now. While the law is often portrayed as a set of stringent guidelines full of tricks and loopholes, there is a large part of our legal system that is based on ideals of fairness, or as lawyers like to call it: equity. Simply put, it would be unfair to mess with your shutters after 15 years, so the law will protect you from that happening.