Allegations filed against AZ HOA attorneys in sealed case

Of the 66 General Allegations in the court appointed Receiver suit against the HOA’s former attorney, CAI  and CCAL members  Maxwell and  Morgan, I have prepared a list of  13 allegations that I consider representative of the allegations.   On behalf of the  public and its constitutional right to know, they are listed because the court completely sealed the records in DC Lot Owners v. Maxwell & Morgan, CV 2010-004684, Pinal County Superior Court, AZ, so that an online  public inquiry results in a “not found.” 

I have not been notified by the court of any such order to close the records, nor was I permitted to see a copy of the order to seal the records.  Such failure to provide a notice and reason for closing court records violates the Arizona Supreme Court Rule 123(d): “Upon closing any record the court shall state the reason for the action, including a reference to the statute, case, rule or administrative order relied upon.”

Understand that an allegation is a claim of wrongdoing by a  party to be proven in court.  I am sure many readers will identify with similar activities by other attorneys that have occurred in their HOA.

To understand these allegations, some clarifications are in order:

  •          “Majority Owners” is a group of owners who took control of the HOA.
  •          “Braslawsce” refers to the underlying law suit that resulted in the appointment of the Receiver, who is bringing this suit against the HOA attorneys.

 

Read the selected allegations here.

 

See,  Arizona court protection of CAI member attorneys

HOA member Declaration of US and State citizenship

 I am proposing that the following be  urged as a bill in your state, which requires a mandatory statement of HOA member citizenship. (Revised August 1, 2015).

Declaration of US and State citizenship

With the understanding that the association, as a private entity and not a subdivision of the state, and as a de facto but unrecognized private government, is not subject to the restrictions and prohibitions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the US Constitution that otherwise protects the rights of the people against actions by public government entities;

and that the governing documents in all legal practicality serve as the subdivision’s constitution, taking precedence over state laws and over the state and US Constitutions unless specifically denied by any such laws or legal precedence;

Therefore, the members of the association, having not waived or surrendered their rights, freedoms, privileges and immunities as citizens of the United States under Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment, and as citizens of the state within which they reside, the CC&Rs or Declaration for any planned community, condominium association or homeowners association shall state that, or be amended to comply,

The association hereby waivers and surrenders any rights or claims it may have under law and herewith unconditionally and irrevocably agrees 1) to be bound by the US and State Constitutions, and laws of the State within which it is located, as if it were a subdivision of the state and a local public government entity, and 2) that constitutional law shall prevail as the supreme law of the land including over conflicting laws and legal doctrines of equitable servitudes.

Furthermore, any governing documents of an association not in compliance with the above shall be deemed amended to be in compliance, and notwithstanding the provisions of any law to the contrary, a homeowners’ association shall be deemed to have amended its governing documents to be in compliance.

Legislative protection of HOAs: replacing US organic law with HOA organic law

Organic law is the fundamental basis of a government. The Homes Association Handbook and UCIOA constitute, in my view, the organic law for HOA governed planned communities. In contrast, the U.S. Code defines the organic laws of the United States to include the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, the Northwest Ordinance, and the U.S. Constitution. (US Statutes At Large, 1789 –1875, Vol. 18, Part I, Revised Statutes (43rd Congress, 1st session), p. v and vi). The organic laws of HOA-Land are replacing the organic laws of the US as applied to local government.

 

Arizona protectionism

How many times have homeowners sought justice before the legislature only to be told that they have recourse to remedy any slights by “voting the bums out”? Yet, when the time came to put some teeth into fair elections laws for HOAs, laws that would allow a fundamental function of a democratic government to work properly, the Arizona Legislature answered with a resounding NO! (21 – 9 final Senate vote on HB 2160). Where is the justice?  And justice is the hallmark of a legitimate government.

 The Arizona Legislature, for the fourth or fifth year, obstinately refused to tell HOAs hands off regulating public streets, even with respect to parking cars protected by municipal ordinances. Maricopa County Sheriff Arpaio, who on numerous occasions vehemently stated that he upholds all the laws, rejected policing public streets in HOA-Lands. SB 1113 died, and HB 2030 is sitting in limbo waiting for a floor vote for final acceptance.

 As of this date, only 2 bills of the 19 HOA bills were sent to the Governor, and one was vetoed as “too confusing” for the HOA board to deal with. HB 2484, which was amended by the conference committee to make it more HOA attorney friendly, which means more homeowner unfriendly, is now a “NO” bill.  Of the 5 Arizona HOA bills in this session that provided for penalties against the HOA governments, none were found acceptable: HB 2160, HB 2484/SB 1468, HB 2455, HB 2731, and SB 1240.

 

The HOA can do no wrong

 It is quite evident that HOAs are de facto state-protected “sanctuaries” — de facto independent principalities by the failure of legislatures to pass enforcement bills against HOA board violators. The HOA is treated by the legislature like the sovereigns and kings of long ago – the HOA board can do no wrong, no need for checks and balances, and no need for accountability. It appears that the HOA boards have become Godlike in the eyes of the legislators!

And everywhere the public interest people, the legal-academic aristocrats and current day Philosopher Kings, who clamor for individual and private property rights see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. It appears that, “unaccountable HOA government is better than public government with its protections,” has become their dogmatic principle. The Goldwater Institute promotes local government by means of restrictive covenants. A model law authorizing a transition from government-controlled local zoning and planning regulations to private restrictive covenants.” (See the 2011 report, Model Legislation, Decentralized Land Use Regulation Act).

 

The social contract is disappearing

 It is not too difficult to realize that this country has been on a regressive, slippery slope path to a governmental system very much like the rejected Articles of Confederation of some 225 years ago that loose collection of colonies that our Forefathers rejected as unworkable. And it appears, with the rhetoric abounding here and elsewhere on other constitutional issues, we are rejecting the social contract and returning to a state of nature. The Social Contract (“Man was born free, and he is everywhere in chains”) of Rousseau and John Locke has been slowly falling by the wayside, little by little.

The social contract theory of government maintains that individuals unite into political societies by a process of mutual consent, agreeing to abide by common rules and accept corresponding duties to protect themselves and one another from violence and other kinds of harm. The US Constitution and all state constitutions are examples of the social contract theory, as opposed to the various HOA statutory Acts that are based on the Uniform Common Interest Act (UCIOA). UCIOA has served for state laws in a handful of states, while other states have modified it somewhat and still others used it as a basis for their statutes.

 The initial UCIOA of 1984, revised in 2008 with a questionable separate and detachable model Bill of Rights Act, flowed from The Homes Association Handbook of 1964, that joint effort by FHA, ULI (formerly the National Real Estate Foundation), and NAHB. (The Handbook was prepared with the “collaboration” of such entities as, the Veterans Administration, The Office of Civil Defense, and the Public Health Service).

 

 

How did it happen?

 Milton Mayer best describes what is happening in America when he sought answers as to why the good, average people of Germany let the Nazi Party take control prior to WWII. His words are applicable to today’s HOA-Land.  In 1995, in They Thought They Were Free, he wrote,

 

What happened was the gradual habituation of the people, little by little . . . . This separation of the government from people, this widening of the gap, took place so gradually and insensibly, each step disguised. . . . [Mayer believed that the good people went along] in the usual sincerity that required them only to abandon one principle after another, to throw away, little by little, all that was good.

Welcome to the New America of HOA-Land

 

And you’d better believe it!

No HOA reforms? blame it on the legislature

As of this morning, of the 16 Arizona HOA reform bills that I’ve been following, only 3 bills have a chance of becoming law: HB 2160, elections reform, HB 2170, HOA cannot charge escrow agents for fees, and SB 1239, zoning board prohibitions against mandatory HOAs. The 3 bills carrying penalties against wrongful acts by HOA boards, and holding the boards accountable, are all DEAD!

Except for the possible penalties in regard to elections, there are no deterrents to the intentional abuse and violations by the HOAs regarding fines, failures to provide corporate documents, or to respond to homeowner inquires in order to resolve payment disputes.

The absolute “sanctity of contract” argument by CAI lobbyists continues to be thrown at the legislators, and shamefully accepted by many. This acceptance by these legislators insults homeowners as it carries an implied attitude that homeowners are masochistic, and openly and fervently signed a solid contract to be treated harshly if they dare raise a question — the “a contract is a contract no matter what” excuse to deny your rights. Shameful!

Actually, if they had consulted their legislative council, there are indeed restrictions on the validity of covenants, — not everything goes. (Remember, we must educate the legislators otherwise they will continue to accept the “gospel of HOAs” from CAI, as taught in their “educational” indoctrination classes and seminars).

Covenants that are 1) contrary to public policy, 2) arbitrary and capricious, 3) unreasonable, and 4) unconstitutional are invalid no matter if they were approved by the membership. And that’s the whole point of the issue: HOAs and legislators cannot ignore the laws of the land and do as they please, in spite of what the CAI attorneys like to proclaim. But, some legislators actually believe in “everything and anything goes.”

NOTHING WILL CHANGE UNTIL THE LEGISLATURE STOPS SUPPORTING DE FACTO HOA GOVERNMENTS AND RECOGNIZES HOAs AS DE JURE GOVERNMENTS SUBJECT TO THE LAWS OF THE LAND, AS REQUIRED OF ALL OTHER GOVERNMENT ENTITIES

Under these conditions, do not ask for assistance unless you have the personality and will to fight for your rights all by yourself, and are willing to spend your money to do the state’s job for them, JUST MOVE OUT! The laws and governing documents all favor the HOA against you and the rights that you thought could not be taken away.

The legislature does no wrong when enacting HOA laws, or does it?

Where have you gone, Joe DiMaggio

A nation turns its lonely eyes to you.

What’s that you say, Mrs. Robinson

Joltin’ Joe has left and gone away.

(Hey, hey, hey . . . hey, hey, hey)

 

(from the song, Mrs. Robinson, Simon & Garfunkel, 1967)

Franklin Delano Roosevelt recognized that a country in crisis needs to confront the illusions that led it astray and return to the values that can form a firmer foundation.

(Rediscovering Values On Wall Street, Main Street and Your Street, Jim Wallis, 2010)

 

As many state legislatures are now dealing with HOA reform legislation, I examine the question of unconstitutional bills being made law, and the failure of legislators to understand their acts under the “due process of law” restrictions of the 5th and 14th Amendments.  Essentially, the legislature cannot enact laws that favor one group over another without an explicit, valid justification for such laws. The legislature must cease protecting HOAs at the expense of the rights and freedoms of its citizens who live under these regimes.

Looking at our current condition in every state with HOA “Acts”, we must understand that, conforming to the historical pattern for civilizations and nations, the US is on the downside of its “life-cycle.”   The people, and their elected representatives, have forgotten its reasons-for-being — the values, principles and beliefs that founded this experiment in representative democracy.   We have become a nation under the rule of man, not law, as well demonstrated by  our concern for who gets  to be the next US Supreme Court Justice, the next person to determine and to make law.

As formerly held with respect to kings and emperors of long along, we have returned to the notion that the legislature can do no wrong and is above reproach, as well demonstrated by the legal doctrine that all laws are presumed to be constitutional.  The oversight by the courts is a myth in reality, because a strong burden is placed on the people to prove beyond a doubt that the law violates the Constitution.   And the legislative Rules committees that are obligated to check the constitutionality of a bill is also a myth.  In short, we have returned to “The sovereign can do no wrong.”

Due Process of Law constraints

However, the fundamental due process of law obligations set forth in the Constitution do impose restrictions on legislative free-wheeling law making.  Essentially, “due process of law” requires not only proper procedures be followed, but the law at issue must be valid and legitimate.  To enforce a law solely as to the procedural processes would make a mockery of legitimate government, if the law to be enforced is unconstitutional itself.  This point is made quite clearly and empathetically by Timothy Sandefur (Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, Winter 2012, p. 337),

“One can easily imagine such a legislature enacting a statute vesting lynch mobs . . . to adjudicate and punish perceived wrongs . . . or a statute assigning automatic death penalty for such vague ‘crimes’ as being ‘uppity.’”

For those readers who believe that this statement is wholly unbelievable and unreal, it is quite close to what is occurring with HOA statutes across the country. They easily amount to special laws for special groups without a legitimate government justification and interest.  Justifications that would pass the requisite judicial scrutiny other than just “a reasonable government interest.” (The silence by the legislatures and government officials as to a legitimate government interest for HOA laws only confirms the lack of any valid justification. See Rights of Man, Thomas Paine.)

Legitimate Law Making

What then, does due process of law impose on the legitimacy  of legislature lawmaking?  Sundefur argues that, “The Due Process Clause was written to ensure that government does not act without reasons, nor for insufficient, corrupt or illusory reasons.”  (p. 287); “This obligates the government to act in a lawful manner.” (p. 290).  He defines a lawful act as “a use of the state’s coercive powers in the service of some general rule that realistically serves a public, not a private end” (my emphasis), and is “a prohibition against government acting in an arbitrary way.” 

In other words, where there is no rational purpose or explanation for the law, as we see with many HOA laws, the law is not legitimate.

“Legislation that singles out a particular business . . . for no legitimate reason or uses irrelevant distinctions as an excuse for treating people differently . . . exercises government power in an arbitrary way.” (p.308).

We are well aware that many statutes deny homeowners rights that they would otherwise enjoy if they were living outside the HOA regime.  (I will skip the arguments concerning a valid contract under contract law, the lack of genuine consent, and the superiority of servitudes law over constitutional and contract laws that allows for the surrender of rights and freedoms under these conditions.)  We know that many HOA statutes can be seen as punitive, such as foreclosure rights; fines without proper due process; granting of “open” liens; allowing HOA fines to accumulate while adjudication of a dispute begins or is occurring; and the mandate that assessments be paid regardless of any dispute with the HOA.

 Sandefur argues that statutes of this type that “burden a group for no other reason than that the victims exercise too little political influence to defend themselves . . . are more like  punishments than law,” and maintains that “Legislation of this sort is arbitrary, based on no other principle except the ipse dixit of force.”  That is, Sandefur is saying, by the mere pronouncement or enactment by the legislature without any justification of supporting arguments – an ipse dixit – the legislature is commanding obedience to the law.

 

If angels were to govern men

Allow me to address the question of why. Why is this happening, especially with HOA statutes?  First, we have forgotten that the structuring of government was based on the realities of human nature, and not on some idealized standard of behavior that the people must strive to attain.  (This level of behavior, for example, would be the unrealistic demand that if HOA members would only get involved in HOA government all problems would go away.)

Second, as Madison wrote, “If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.”   The “presumption of constitutionality” doctrine stands in contradiction to the realities of this country and the structuring of government.  It allows the legislators, like HOA boards, to be unaccountable for their acts in passing all sorts of laws without regard to the restrictions of the due process of laws clause.   It is just another example of Sandefur’s argument that ipse dixit laws go unchecked because the people have too little political influence. 

As an aside, as I now write Arizona’s HCR 2104 would require every bill  to state the authority under the Arizona Constitution that would  allow this legislative action.  Sadly though, the bill was not meant to go anywhere as it is a “vehicle” or placeholder bill.  It has been sitting, not even heard, in the Judiciary  Committee, and the session ends in April.

And the worst due process of law offense of all is for the legislatures and courts to stand aside and allow these de facto, authoritarian governments to exist outside the social contract known as the Constitution of the United States of America.