CA SB323 a model on fair elections for all states

California’s SB 323 seeks to introduce fair elections procedures for HOAs, addressing one of my 6 substantive defects in the HOA legal scheme.[i]  Deborah Goonan’s excellent discussion of this bill[ii] brought to my attention a second defect in the HOA legal scheme, the lack of enforcement of the law[iii].

The bill modifies California’s Civil Code, Section 5145(a), inter alia, mandating a court to void any election found to violate the law. The court no longer has discretion, as many have been found to favor the HOA over the member, and insures that justice be served. “A member of an association may bring a civil action for declaratory or equitable relief for a violation of this article by the association.”

Section (b) is modified to read, “A member who prevails in a civil action to enforce the member’s rights . . . the court may impose a civil penalty of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for each violation.”

In all fairness, the bill requires the violation to be intentional and material to the outcome to avoid frivolous suits.  With CAI “experts” in HOA law involved in many of these cases, it’s hard to view the violation as accidental.  There is an instance in Arizona at this time where this bill is sorely needed.[iv]

Without fair elections, all this pro-HOA clamor by CAI and other staunch HOA backers that HOAs are the epitome of democracy where members can vote, and should get elected and involved in the affairs of their HOA becomes meaningless tripe!

California’s SB 323 must be made law not only in California, but in all the states as well!

References

[i] See HOA Common Sense: rejecting private governmentDemocratic elections, No. 5.

[ii] See “California HOA elections bill update (March 2019)”, Independent American Communities.

[iii] Supra, n. i, HOA Boards can do no wrong, No. 7.

[iv] For example, see “Non-conforming HOA voting procedure”,  HOA Constitutional Government.

California’s SB 323 seeks to introduce fair elections procedures for HOAs, addressing one of my 6 substantive defects in the HOA legal scheme.[i]  Deborah Goonan’s excellent discussion of this bill[ii] brought to my attention a second defect in the HOA legal scheme, the lack of enforcement of the law[iii].

The bill modifies California’s Civil Code, Section 5145(a), inter alia, mandating a court to void any election found to violate the law. The court no longer has discretion, as many have been found to favor the HOA over the member, and insures that justice be served. “A member of an association may bring a civil action for declaratory or equitable relief for a violation of this article by the association.”

Section (b) is modified to read, “A member who prevails in a civil action to enforce the member’s rights . . . the court may impose a civil penalty of up to five hundred dollars ($500) for each violation.”

In all fairness, the bill requires the violation to be intentional and material to the outcome to avoid frivolous suits.  With CAI “experts” in HOA law involved in many of these cases, it’s hard to view the violation as accidental.  There is an instance in Arizona at this time where this bill is sorely needed.[iv]

Without fair elections, all this pro-HOA clamor by CAI and other staunch HOA backers that HOAs are the epitome of democracy where members can vote, and should get elected and involved in the affairs of their HOA becomes meaningless tripe!

California’s SB 323 must be made law not only in California, but in all the states as well!

References

[i] See HOA Common Sense: rejecting private government, Democratic elections, No. 5.

[ii] See “California HOA elections bill update (March 2019)”, Independent American Communities.

[iii] Supra, n. i, HOA Boards can do no wrong, No. 7.

[iv] For example, see “Non-conforming HOA voting procedure,  HOA Constitutional Government.

New poll: should HOAs be subject to Constitution

Please see the poll in the left margin, below my picture.

Question:  As de facto community governments, should HOAs be subject to the Constitution as are all other local governments?

the importance of footnotes

Those of you who have been following me for some time know I make extensive use of footnotes/references. I use this approach so as not to distract from the body of the commentary/editorial, yet provide additional important information helpful for a better understanding of the my message.

Please check them out.

ACLU on HOA free speech rights & Facebook

ACLU raised the following question:

“One of the core purposes of the First Amendment is to allow people, regardless of their views, to hold the government accountable through expression. So, if your elected representative has an official Facebook page where she invites comments, can she block you from commenting because you criticize her work?[I]”

By extension, this same question can be asked of de facto private government HOAs and their elected officials.

In Davison v. Randall,[ii] Defendant Randall is a municipal representative who maintained a Facebook page related to her government activities, which was open to comments.  Plaintiff Davison’s critical comments were blocked by Randall, and so he brought this first amendment suit.  ACLU wrote:

“On Monday, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the interactive portion of a public official’s Face book page is a “public forum,” so an official cannot block people from it because of the opinions they hold.

“Indeed, the right to criticize the government is at the heart of the First Amendment. The court specifically recognized blocking as infringing on that right, noting that blocking someone in order to silence criticism of government work is itself evidence of government action.”

(ACLU, n. i).

By extension, this decision by the circuit court can be applied to the de facto private government HOAs and their elected officials.   Very importantly and on point, the NJ Supreme Court in Mazdabrook v. Khan[iii] held in favor of HOA  homeowner free speech rights regarding signs.[iv]

“Moreover, [the Plaintiff] did not waive his constitutional right to free speech. To be valid, waivers must be knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, and a waiver of constitutional rights in any context must, at the very least, be clear. Khan was not asked to waive his free speech rights; he was asked — by different rules in three documents — to waive the right to post signs before getting Board approval, without any idea about what standards would govern the approval process. That cannot constitute a knowing, intelligent, voluntary waiver of constitutional rights. . . . . Instead, the exercise of those rights can be subject to reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions. Finally, covenants that unreasonably restrict speech may be declared unenforceable as a matter of public policy.  (P. 5).

“The proliferation of residential communities with standard agreements that restrict free speech would violate the fundamental free speech values espoused in our Constitution.”

As is quite prominent, this violation is ripe in all those rogue HOA boards of directors because state legislatures have given HOAs a carte blanche, hands off right to function outside constitutional protections. In short, HOAs function as independent principalities within America![v]

 

References

[i] Court Rules Public Officials Can’t Block Critics on Facebook, Vera Eidelman, ACLU (2019). Reference to Davison v. Randall. See infra, n. ii. ACLU filed an amicus brief.

[ii] Davison v. Randall, Nos. 17-2002 & 17-2003 (4th Cir. 2019, VA).

[iii] Mazdabrook v. Khan, 46 A.3d 507 (2012).  Note that the NJ ACLU had filed an amicus brief by Frank Askin.

[iv] See “CC&Rs and waivers of constitutional rights in HOA-Land.”

[v] See Establishing the New America of Independent HOA Principalities, Amazon, ISBN-13: 978-0974448831, ISBN-10: 0974448834. (2008).

 

HOA Vortex

Based on my HOA Common Sense, here’s a graphic of the 6 substantive HOA defects as I see them. Please feel free to use provided proper credentials are included.

HOA vortex CS
HOA Vortex shows substantive defects in the HOA legal scheme and structure. See HOA Common Sense for discussion.