Condo Madness
New Member
I don’t believe that the board did not know of the special assessment. So, in law, you do not have to pay it.
However, you should use a lawyer that is experienced in condo law, not a real estate or family law lawyer. They are hopeless with condo issues. A smart board will laugh at letters that do not come rom experienced condo lawyers. Even then, you want a good condo lawyer. Believe me, they vary in quality.
You do not say how many units in your building so I can’t tell how much they want from you. If it is just a few hundred dollars, maybe best to let it slide. If it is higher, you may want to fight. Yet, if the board minutes are incomplete or have been falsified, you may have trouble getting proof.
Issues
1. Asking to examine records must be done correctly. See:
http://www.condomadness.info/commando_records.html
2. Owners do not have the right to attend board meetings.
3. Not the best but how many owners attend the AGM or even bother to vote?
4. If they were poor managers why would they be good directors?
5. Changing the management company often can mean that the board is constantly looking for a cheap provider. Bad idea.
6. A director getting contracts in the condo is an awful idea. Conflict of interest issues for sure.
7. Is the cleaning company being paid to clean the building or to manage the cleaning? It is not clear. Do you have a building superintendent?
The costs you mention are low but how big is the building?
8. That can happen. Low fees means poor service.
9. Typical for many condos. Keeps the board popular.
10. Perks for the board. Again, this is common.
11. The board is a clique. Again, how many owners are willing to run for the board?
12. You have a tiny management company that has no backup. You get what you pay for. Dump them.
13. I’d bet that your reserves are not as high as you think. Take a look at the last two-three financial statements. One of the owners may have kept them. You got one with your status certificate.
The 5th floor issue, I suspect is originating either from one unit or from a riser. Should not be that hard to repair.
14. The board members do as they please. As you say above, they do not enforce rules unless they want to.
15. Inexperienced board members make mistakes.
16. It is the management company’s job to provide keys.
17. You can’t expect a real estate lawyer to do a proper job of examining the status certificate package. They don’t get paid enough and they do not know what to look for.
18. That too is common.
Like your unit
Sure. That too is very common. That is why owners don’t get involved in the condo’s affairs.
You say your condo is 15 years old. Just wait ten years from now. That is when the headaches will start.
I suggest you read the back part of CondoMadness.info. There is a lot of information there.
However, you should use a lawyer that is experienced in condo law, not a real estate or family law lawyer. They are hopeless with condo issues. A smart board will laugh at letters that do not come rom experienced condo lawyers. Even then, you want a good condo lawyer. Believe me, they vary in quality.
You do not say how many units in your building so I can’t tell how much they want from you. If it is just a few hundred dollars, maybe best to let it slide. If it is higher, you may want to fight. Yet, if the board minutes are incomplete or have been falsified, you may have trouble getting proof.
Issues
1. Asking to examine records must be done correctly. See:
http://www.condomadness.info/commando_records.html
2. Owners do not have the right to attend board meetings.
3. Not the best but how many owners attend the AGM or even bother to vote?
4. If they were poor managers why would they be good directors?
5. Changing the management company often can mean that the board is constantly looking for a cheap provider. Bad idea.
6. A director getting contracts in the condo is an awful idea. Conflict of interest issues for sure.
7. Is the cleaning company being paid to clean the building or to manage the cleaning? It is not clear. Do you have a building superintendent?
The costs you mention are low but how big is the building?
8. That can happen. Low fees means poor service.
9. Typical for many condos. Keeps the board popular.
10. Perks for the board. Again, this is common.
11. The board is a clique. Again, how many owners are willing to run for the board?
12. You have a tiny management company that has no backup. You get what you pay for. Dump them.
13. I’d bet that your reserves are not as high as you think. Take a look at the last two-three financial statements. One of the owners may have kept them. You got one with your status certificate.
The 5th floor issue, I suspect is originating either from one unit or from a riser. Should not be that hard to repair.
14. The board members do as they please. As you say above, they do not enforce rules unless they want to.
15. Inexperienced board members make mistakes.
16. It is the management company’s job to provide keys.
17. You can’t expect a real estate lawyer to do a proper job of examining the status certificate package. They don’t get paid enough and they do not know what to look for.
18. That too is common.
Like your unit
Sure. That too is very common. That is why owners don’t get involved in the condo’s affairs.
You say your condo is 15 years old. Just wait ten years from now. That is when the headaches will start.
I suggest you read the back part of CondoMadness.info. There is a lot of information there.