
|
SPONSOR: |
Sen.
Amick & Sen. Sokola & Rep. Valihura & Rep. D. Short & Rep.
Marshall |
|
Sen. Peterson |
|
144th GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
|
SENATE BILL NO. 273 |
|
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 25 OF THE |
1. Amend Part II, Title 25 of the Delaware Code by amending Chapter 22 as follows:
Amend § 2201 by adding the following sentence at the end of the existing section:
“This chapter shall be subject to the provisions of Part V, Title 25, Chapter 81 of the Delaware Code, which supersedes various provisions hereof.”
Amend § 2202 by adding the following subsections:
“ (17) ‘Repair and replacement reserve’ means a reserve fund maintained by the council solely for the repair and replacement of common elements, and for no other purpose (including operating budget shortfalls or other expenditures appropriate to a contingency reserve).
(18) ‘Reserve study’ means a reasonably current engineering analysis of the remaining useful life and the estimated cost to replace each separate system and component of the common elements, the purpose of which analysis is to inform the council and the unit owners of the amount which should be maintained from year to year in a fully funded repair and replacement reserve to minimize the need for a special assessment."
Amend § 2211 by at the end of existing § 2211(1), replacing the semicolon with a comma, and adding the following clause: “and the maintenance of a repair and replacement reserve as defined in § 2202(17), funded as recommended by a reserve study as defined in § 2202(18);”
2. Amend Title 25 of the Delaware Code by adding
thereto a new Part V, which new part shall read as follows:
"PART
V. COMMON INTERESTS AND OWNERSHIP OF
REAL ESTATE
CHAPTER 81.
SUBCHAPTER 1
GENERAL PROVISIONS
PART 1. DEFINITIONS AND OTHER GENERAL PROVISIONS
§81-1‑101. SHORT TITLE.
This Chapter shall be known and may be cited as
the ”DELAWARE UNIFORM COMMON INTEREST OWNERSHIP ACT” or “DUCIOA”.
Applicability of this Chapter is governed by
Part 2 of this Subchapter 1.
In this Chapter and documents prepared to create a common interest community pursuant to this Chapter, unless specifically provided otherwise herein or therein, terms shall have the meaning attributed to them in this section:
(1) "Affiliate of a declarant" means
any person who controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with a
declarant. A person "controls"
a declarant if the person (i) is a general partner, officer, director, or
employer of the declarant, (ii) directly or indirectly or acting in concert
with one or more other persons, or through one or more subsidiaries, owns,
controls, holds with power to vote, or holds proxies representing, more than 20
percent of the voting interest in the declarant, (iii) controls in any manner
the election of a majority of the directors of the declarant, or (iv) has
contributed more than 20 percent of the capital of the declarant. A person "is controlled by" a
declarant if the declarant (i) is a general partner, officer, director, or
employer of the person, (ii) directly or indirectly or acting in concert with
one or more other persons, or through one or more subsidiaries, owns, controls,
holds with power to vote, or holds proxies representing, more than 20 percent
of the voting interest in the person, (iii) controls in any manner the election
of a majority of the directors of the person, or (iv) has contributed more than
20 percent of the capital of the person.
Control does not exist if the powers described in this paragraph are
held solely as security for an obligation and are not exercised.
(2) "Allocated interests" means the
following interests allocated to each unit: (i) In a condominium, the undivided
interest in the common elements, the common expense liability, and votes in the
association; (ii) in a cooperative, the common expense liability and the
ownership interest and votes in the association; and (iii) in a planned
community, the common expense liability and votes in the association.
(3) " Assessment" or "common expense assessment" means the
sums attributable to each unit and due
to the association as a result of the common expense liability allocated to
each unit in the manner described in Section 81-3-115.
(4) "Association" or "unit
owners' association" means the unit owners' association organized under
Section 81-3‑101.
(5) "Bylaws" mean the recorded
document (and any recorded amendments thereto) that contains the procedures for
conduct of the affairs of the association of a common interest community in
accordance with Section 81-3-106, regardless of the form of the association’s
legal entity or the name by which the document comprising the bylaws is
identified.
(6) "Common elements" means (i) in
the case of (A) a condominium or cooperative, all portions of the common
interest community other than the units; and (B) a planned community, any real
estate within a planned community which is owned or leased by the association,
other than a unit; and (ii) in all common interest communities, any other
interests in real estate for the benefit of unit owners which are subject to
the declaration.
(7) "Common expenses" means
expenditures made by, or financial liabilities of, the association, together
with any allocations to reserves.
(8) "Common expense liability" means
the liability for common expenses allocated to each unit pursuant to Section
81-2‑107.
(9) "Common interest community" means
real estate described in a declaration with respect to which a person, by
virtue of that person's ownership of a unit, is obligated to pay for a share of
real estate taxes, insurance premiums, maintenance, or improvement of or
services or other expenses related to current elements, other units or other
real estate described in that declaration.
Common interest community does not include a campground which is subject
to Chapter 28 of Title 6[4] or those arrangements described in Section
81-2-124. "Ownership of a
unit" does not include holding a leasehold interest in a unit of a stated
term of less than 20 years in a unit, including renewal options.
(10) "Condominium" means a common
interest community in which portions of the real estate are designated for
separate ownership and the remainder of the real estate is designated for
common ownership solely by the owners of those portions. A common interest community is not a
condominium unless the undivided interests in the common elements are vested in
the unit owners.
(11) "Conversion building" means a
building that at any time before creation of the common interest community was
occupied wholly or partially by persons other than purchasers and persons who
occupy with the consent of purchasers.
(10) "Cooperative" means a common
interest community in which the real estate is owned by an association, each of
whose members is entitled by virtue of the member’s ownership interest in the association
to exclusive possession of a unit.
(12) "Dealer" means a person in the
business of selling units for that person’s own account.
(13) "Declarant" means any person or
group of persons acting in concert who (i) as part of a common promotional
plan, offers to dispose of the interest of the person or group of persons in a
unit not previously disposed of or (ii) reserves or succeeds to any special
declarant right .
(14) "Declaration" means the recorded
instruments, however denominated, that create a common interest community,
including any amendments to those instruments.
(15) "Development rights" means any
right or combination of rights reserved by a declarant in the declaration to
(i) add real estate to a common interest community; (ii) create units, common
elements, or limited common elements within a common interest community
including, without limitation, by the conversion of units into common elements
or limited common elements and vice versa; (iii) subdivide units or convert
units into common elements; or (iv) withdraw real estate from a common interest
community; (v) do other things expressly reserved, and identified as such, by
declarant in the declaration.
(16) "Dispose" or
"disposition" means a voluntary transfer to a purchaser of any legal
or equitable interest in a unit, but the term does not include the transfer or
release of a security interest.
(17) "Executive board" means the body,
regardless of name, designated in the declaration to act on behalf of the
association.
(18) "Identifying number" means a symbol
or address that identifies only one unit in a common interest community.
(19) "Lease" means a lease or other
agreement, written or oral, that establishes the terms and conditions for the
use and occupancy of a unit by a tenant.
(20) "Leasehold common interest
community" means a common interest community in which all or a portion of
the real estate is subject to a lease the expiration or termination of which
will terminate the common interest community or reduce its size.
(21) "Limited common element" means a
portion of the common elements allocated by the declaration or by operation of
Section 81-2‑102(b) or (d) for the exclusive use of one or more but fewer
than all of the units.
(22) "Master association" means an
organization described in Section 81-2‑120, whether or not it is also an
association described in Section 81-3‑101.
(23) "Nonresidential common interest
community" means a common interest community in which all units are
restricted exclusively to nonresidential purposes.
(24) "Noticed rules" means rules
delivered to or otherwise made available to a tenant as provided in Section
81-3-120.
(25) "Offering" means any advertisement,
inducement, solicitation, or attempt to encourage any person to acquire any
interest in a unit, other than as security for an obligation. An advertisement in a newspaper or other
periodical of general circulation, or in any broadcast medium to the general
public, of a common interest community not located in this State, is not an
offering if the advertisement states that an offering may be made only in
compliance with the law of the jurisdiction in which the common interest
community is located.
(26) "Person" means an individual,
corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, joint venture,
government, governmental subdivision or agency, limited liability company, or
other legal or commercial entity. In the
case of a land trust established pursuant to any statute providing for the
creation of a land trust, however, "person" means the beneficiary of
the trust rather than the trust or the trustee.
(27) "Planned community" means a common
interest community that is not a condominium or a cooperative. A condominium or cooperative may be part of a
planned community.
(28) "Proprietary lease" means an
agreement with the association pursuant to which a member is entitled to
exclusive possession of a unit in a cooperative.
(29) "Purchaser" means a person, other
than a declarant or a dealer, who by means of a voluntary transfer acquires a
legal or equitable interest in a unit other than (i) a leasehold interest
(including renewal options) of less than 20 years, or (ii) as security for an
obligation.
(30) "Real estate" means any leasehold
or other estate or interest in, over, or under land, including structures,
fixtures, and other improvements and interests that by custom, usage, or law
pass with a conveyance of land though not described in the contract of sale or
instrument of conveyance. "Real
estate" includes parcels with or without upper or lower boundaries, and
spaces that may be filled with air or water.
(31) “Record” means information that is inscribed
on a tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is
retrievable in perceivable format.
(32) "Recorded" means, with respect to the declaration or bylaws of a common interest community and any amendments thereto, to be placed of record at the Office for the Recorder of Deeds in and for each county in which any portion of the common interest community is located.
(30) "Repair and replacement reserve" means a reserve fund maintained by the executive board of a condominium or cooperative solely for the repair and replacement of common elements, and for no other purpose, including operating budget shortfalls or other expenditures appropriated to a contingency reserve.
(31) "Reserve study" means an engineering analysis, performed within the last five years, of the remaining useful life and the estimated cost to replace each separate system and component of the common elements, the purpose of which analysis is to inform the executive board and the association of a condominium or cooperative of the amount which should be maintained from year to year in a fully funded repair and replacement reserve to minimize the need for special assessments.
(32) "Residential purposes" means use
for dwelling and appurtenant recreational purposes, or both.
(33) "Rule" or "rules" means
any rule, procedure or regulation of the association, however denominated, that
does not appear in the declaration or bylaws and that governs either the
management of the association or the common interest community or the conduct
of persons or property within the common interest community and adopted as
provided in Section 81-3-120.
(34) "Security interest" means an
interest in real estate or personal property, created by contract or
conveyance, which secures payment or performance of an obligation. The term includes a lien created by a
mortgage, deed of trust, trust deed, security deed, contract for deed, land
sales contract, lease intended as security, assignment of lease or rents
intended as security, pledge of an ownership interest in an association, and
any other consensual lien or title retention contract intended as security for
an obligation.
(35) "Special assessment" means an
assessment duly adopted from time to time for an unexpected, nonrecurring or
other common expense not included in the annual budget.
(36) "Special declarant rights" means
rights reserved for the benefit of a declarant to (i) complete improvements
indicated on plats and plans filed with the declaration or, in a cooperative,
to complete improvements described in the public offering statement pursuant to
Section 81-4‑103(a)(2); (ii) exercise any development right maintain
sales offices, management offices, signs advertising the common interest
community, and models; (iv) use easements through the common elements for the
purpose of making improvements within the common interest community or within
real estate which may be added to the common interest community; (v) make the
common interest community subject to a master association; (vi) merge or
consolidate a common interest community with another common interest community
of the same form of ownership; (vii) appoint or remove any officer of the
association or any master association or any executive board member during any
period of declarant control; (viii) control any construction or design review
committee or process; (ix) attend meetings of the unit owners and, except
during an executive session, the executive board; (x) have access to the
records of the association to the same extent as a unit owner; or (xi) other
special declarant rights so identified in the declaration.
(37) "Tenant" means a tenant or lessee
of a unit, including any subtenant, sublessee, or licensee.
(38) "Time share" means a right to
occupy a unit or any of several units during five or more separated time
periods over a period of at least five years, including renewal options,
whether or not coupled with an estate or interest in a common interest
community or a specified portion thereof.
(39) "Unit" means a physical portion of
or three-dimensional space in the common interest community designated for
separate ownership or occupancy, the boundaries of which are described pursuant
to Section 81-2‑105(a)(5), and shall include all improvements contained
within the space except those excluded in the declaration. A unit may include 2 or more noncontiguous
spaces. If a unit in a cooperative is
owned by a unit owner or is sold, conveyed, voluntarily or involuntarily
encumbered, or otherwise transferred by a unit owner, the interest in that unit
which is owned, sold, conveyed, encumbered, or otherwise transferred is the
right to possession of that unit under a proprietary lease, coupled with the
allocated interests of that unit, and the association's interest in that unit
is not thereby affected.
(40) "Unit owner" means a declarant or
other person who owns a unit, or a lessee of a unit in a leasehold common
interest community whose lease expires simultaneously with any lease the
expiration or termination of which will remove the unit from the common
interest community, but does not include a person having an interest in a unit
solely as security for an obligation. In
a condominium or planned community, the declarant is the unit owner of any unit
created by the declaration. In a
cooperative, the declarant is treated as the unit owner of any unit to which
allocated interests have been allocated until that unit has been conveyed to
another person.
Except as expressly provided in this Chapter, its provisions may not be varied by agreement, and rights conferred by it may not be waived. Except as provided in Section 81-1‑122, a declarant may not act under a power of attorney, or use any other device, for the purpose of evading the limitations or prohibitions of this Chapter or the declaration.
(a) In a cooperative, unless the declaration
provides that a unit owner's interest in a unit and its allocated interests is
real estate for all purposes, that interest is personal property. That interest is subject to the provisions of
homestead exemptions, even if it is personal property.
(b) In a condominium or planned community:
(1) If there is any unit owner
other than a declarant, each unit that has been created, together with its
interest in the common elements, constitutes for all purposes a separate parcel
of real estate.
(2) If there is any unit owner
other than a declarant, each unit must be separately taxed and assessed, and no
separate tax or assessment may be rendered against any common elements for
which a declarant has reserved no development rights.
(c) Any portion of the common elements for
which the declarant has reserved any development right must be separately taxed
and assessed against the declarant, and the declarant alone is liable for
payment of those taxes.
(d) If there is no unit owner other than a
declarant, the real estate comprising the common interest community may be
taxed and assessed in any manner provided by law.
(a) A building code may not impose any
requirement upon any structure in a common interest community which it would
not impose upon a physically identical development under a different form of
ownership.
(b) In condominiums and cooperatives, no
zoning, subdivision, or other real estate use law, ordinance, or regulation may
prohibit the condominium or cooperative form of ownership or impose any
requirement upon a condominium or cooperative which it would not impose upon a
physically identical development under a different form of ownership.
(c) Except as provided in subsections (a) and
(b), the provisions of this Chapter do not invalidate or modify any provision
of any building code, zoning, subdivision, or other real estate use law,
ordinance, rule, or regulation governing the use of real estate.
(a) If a unit is acquired by eminent domain
or part of a unit is acquired by eminent domain leaving the unit owner with a
remnant that may not practically or lawfully be used for any purpose permitted
by the declaration, the award must include compensation to the unit owner for
that unit and its allocated interests, whether or not any common elements are
acquired. Upon acquisition, unless the
decree otherwise provides, that unit's allocated interests are automatically
reallocated to the remaining units in proportion to the respective allocated
interests of those units before the taking, and the association shall promptly
prepare, execute, and record an amendment to the declaration reflecting the
reallocations. Any remnant of a unit
remaining after part of a unit is taken under this subsection is thereafter a
common element.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (a), if
part of a unit is acquired by eminent domain, the award must compensate the
unit owner for the reduction in value of the unit and its interest in the
common elements, whether or not any common elements are acquired. Upon acquisition, unless the decree otherwise
provides, (i) that unit's allocated interests are reduced in proportion to the
reduction in the size of the unit, or on any other basis specified in the
declaration and (ii) the portion of the allocated interests divested from the
partially acquired unit are automatically reallocated to that unit and to the
remaining units in proportion to the respective allocated interests of those
units before the taking, with the partially-acquired unit participating in the
reallocation on the basis of its reduced allocated interests.
(c) If part of the common elements is
acquired by eminent domain, the portion of the award attributable to the common
elements taken must be paid to the association.
Unless the declaration provides otherwise, any portion of the award
attributable to the acquisition of a limited common element must be equally
divided among the owners of the units to which that limited common element was
allocated at the time of acquisition.
(d) The court decree must be recorded in every county in which any portion of the common interest community is located.
§81-1‑108.
SUPPLEMENTAL GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF LAW APPLICABLE.
The principles of law and equity,
including the law of corporations and any other form of business organization
authorized by law in this State, the law of real property, and the law relative
to capacity to contract, principal and agent, eminent domain, estoppel, fraud,
misrepresentation, duress, coercion, mistake, receivership, substantial
performance, or other validating or invalidating cause supplement the
provisions of this Chapter, except to the extent inconsistent with this
Chapter. Without limiting the foregoing,
the laws of this State that apply to the association’s form of legal entity
apply to the association except to the extent that law is inconsistent with
this Chapter, in which case this Chapter governs.
This Chapter being a general act intended as a unified coverage of its subject matter, no part of it shall be construed to be impliedly repealed by subsequent legislation if that construction can reasonably be avoided.
This Chapter shall be applied and construed so as to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this Chapter among States enacting it.
If any provision of this Chapter or the application thereof to any person or circumstances is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this Chapter which can be given effect without the invalid provisions or applications, and to this end the provisions of this Chapter are severable.
(a) The court, upon finding as a matter of
law that a contract or contract clause was unconscionable at the time the
contract was made, may refuse to enforce the contract, enforce the remainder of
the contract without the unconscionable clause, or limit the application of any
unconscionable clause in order to avoid an unconscionable result.
(b) Whenever it is claimed, or appears to the
court, that a contract or any contract clause is or may be unconscionable, the
parties, in order to aid the court in making the determination, must be
afforded a reasonable opportunity to present evidence as to:
(1) the commercial setting of
the negotiations;
(2) whether a party has
knowingly taken advantage of the inability of the other party reasonably to
protect that party's interests by reason
of physical or mental infirmity, illiteracy, inability to understand the
language of the agreement, or similar factors;
(3) the effect and purpose of
the contract or clause; and
(4) if a sale, any gross
disparity, at the time of contracting, between the amount charged for the
property and the value of that property measured by the price at which similar
property was readily obtainable in similar transactions. A disparity between the contract price and
the value of the property measured by the price at which similar property was
readily obtainable in similar transactions does not, of itself, render the
contract unconscionable.
Every contract or duty governed by this Chapter imposes an obligation of good faith in its performance or enforcement.
(a) The remedies provided by this Chapter
shall be liberally administered to the end that the aggrieved party is put in
as good a position as if the other party had fully performed. However, consequential, special, or punitive
damages may not be awarded except as specifically provided in this Chapter or
by other rule of law.
(b) Any right or obligation declared by this Chapter is enforceable by judicial proceeding.
(a) From time to time the dollar amount
specified in Section 81-1‑118 must change, as provided in subsections (b)
and (c), according to and to the extent of changes in the Consumer Price Index
for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers: U.S. City Average, All Items 1982‑84 = 100,
compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, United States Department of Labor,
(the "Index"). The Index for
December 2007, which was ____ is the Reference Base Index.
(b) The dollar amount specified in Section
81-1‑118 and any amount stated in the declaration pursuant to that
section, must change on July 1 of each year if the percentage of change,
calculated to the nearest whole percentage point, between the Index at the end
of the preceding year and the Reference Base Index is 10 percent or more, but
(1) the portion of the
percentage change in the Index in excess of a multiple of 10 percent must be
disregarded and the dollar amount shall change only in multiples of 10 percent
of the amount appearing in this Chapter on the date of enactment;
(2) the dollar amount must not
change if the amount required by this section is that currently in effect
pursuant to this Chapter as a result of earlier application of this section;
and
(3) in no event may the dollar
amount be reduced below the amount appearing in this Chapter on the date of
enactment.
(c) If the Index is revised after 1982-84,
the percentage of change pursuant to this section must be calculated on the
basis of the revised Index. If the
revision of the Index changes the Reference Base Index, a revised Reference
Base Index must be determined by multiplying the Reference Base Index then
applicable by the rebasing factor furnished by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. If the Index is superseded,
the Index referred to in this section is the one represented by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics as reflecting most accurately changes in the purchasing power
of the dollar for consumers.
PART 2. APPLICABILITY
Except as provided in Part 2 of this
Subchapter, this Chapter applies to all common interest communities created
within this State after ______[DATE], which is the effective date of this
Chapter. The provisions of the Unit Property Act do not apply to common
interest communities created after the effective date of this Chapter. Amendments to this Chapter apply to all
common interest communities created after the effective date of this Chapter or
subjected to this Chapter, regardless of when the amendment is adopted.
If a cooperative contains no more than 12 units and is not subject to any development rights, it is subject only to Sections 81-1‑106 (Applicability of Local Ordinances, Regulations, and Building Codes) and 81-1‑107 (Eminent Domain) of this Chapter unless the declaration provides that the entire Chapter is applicable.
(a) If a planned community that is not
subject to any development right:
(1) contains no more than 12
units; or
(2) provides, in its
declaration, that the annual average common expense liability of all units
restricted to residential purposes, exclusive of optional user fees and any
insurance premiums paid by the association, may not exceed $300 as adjusted
pursuant to Section 81-1‑115 (Adjustment of Dollar Amounts), it is
subject only to Sections 81-1‑105 (Separate Titles and Taxation), 81-1‑106
(Applicability of Local Ordinances, Regulations, and Building Codes), and 81-1‑107
(Eminent Domain) unless the declaration provides that this entire Chapter is
applicable.
(b) The exemption provided in subsection
(a)(2) applies only if:
(1) the declarant reasonably
believes in good faith that the maximum stated assessment will be sufficient to
pay the expenses of the planned community; and
(2) the declaration provides
that the assessment may not be increased during the period of declarant control
without the consent of all unit owners.
§81-1‑119. APPLICABILITY TO
PRE-EXISTING COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES.
Except as provided in Section 81-1‑120 (Exception for Small Pre-Existing Cooperatives and Planned Communities) and Section 81-1-124 and except as limited by Section 81-1-122 hereof, Sections 81-1‑105, 1‑106, 1‑107, 2‑103, 2‑104, 2‑121, 3-101, 3‑102(a)(1) through (6) and (11) through (17), 3-102(f), 3-102 (g), 3-103, 3-107(a), 3-109(a), 3‑111, 3-115, 3‑116, 3‑118, 3-121, 3-122, 3-123, 3-124, 4‑109, and 4‑117, and Section 81-1‑103 to the extent any definitions are necessary in construing any of the foregoing sections to the extent the definitions do not conflict with the declaration, apply to all common interest communities created in this State before the effective date of this Chapter; but those sections apply only with respect to events and circumstances occurring after the effective date of this Chapter and do not invalidate existing provisions of the declaration, bylaws, code of regulations or plats or plans of those common interest communities. This Chapter shall apply to all right, powers and privileges permitted by this Chapter, and all obligations, liabilities and restrictions in this Chapter, that are expressly addressed in the declaration, bylaws or plats establishing a common interest community prior to the effective date of this Chapter but are not expressly addressed in the Unit Property Act; however, as to any such common interest community created prior to the effective date of this Chapter: (i) this Chapter shall not operate to unduly burden an existing association with the requirements of this Chapter except to the extent that this Chapter is adopted by the common interest community; (ii) this Chapter shall not operate to terminate existing contractual obligations; (iii) this Chapter shall not invalidate the declaration, bylaws or plats of such common interest community; (iv) the Unit Property Act, and not this Chapter, shall govern all obligations of a declarant created under the Unit Property Act; (v) unless the declarant or other person with the right to do so elects to conform the requirements of this Chapter in exercising any development right or special declarant rights, this Chapter is not applicable to the procedures for the exercise of any such development rights or special declarant rights; (vi) this Chapter does not require that the pre-existing declaration, code of regulations, bylaws or plats or plans of the pre-existing common interest community be amended to comply with the requirements of this Chapter; and (vii) except for Sections 81-4-109 and 81-4-117, Subchapter 4 of this Chapter is not applicable to any such common interest community.
If a cooperative or planned community created within this State before the effective date of this Chapter contains no more than 12 units and is not subject to any development rights, it is subject only to Sections 81-1‑105 (Separate Titles and Taxation), 81-1‑106 (Applicability of Local Ordinances, Regulations, and Building Codes), and 81-1‑107 (Eminent Domain) unless the declaration is amended in conformity with applicable law and with the procedures and requirements of the declaration to take advantage of the provisions of Section 81-1‑121, in which case all the sections enumerated in Section 81-1‑119 apply to that cooperative or planned community.
(a) The declaration, bylaws, or plats and
plans of any common interest community created before the effective date of
this Chapter may be amended to achieve any result permitted by this Chapter,
regardless of what applicable law provided before this Chapter was adopted.
(b) An amendment to the declaration, bylaws,
or plats and plans authorized by this section must be adopted and recorded in
conformity with any procedures and requirements for amending the instruments
specified by those instruments or, if there are none, in conformity with the
amendment procedures of this Chapter. If
an amendment grants to any person any rights, powers, or privileges permitted
by this Chapter, all correlative obligations, liabilities, and restrictions in
this Chapter also apply to that person.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (e),
this section applies only to nonresidential common interest communities.
(b) A nonresidential common interest
community is not subject to this Chapter unless the declaration otherwise
provides.
(c) The declaration of a nonresidential
common interest community may provide that the entire Chapter applies to the
community or that only certain identified Sections apply.
(d) If the entire Chapter applies to a
nonresidential common interest community, the declaration may also require,
subject to Section 81-1‑112 (Unconscionable Agreement or Term of
Contract), that:
(1) notwithstanding Section
81-3‑105 (Termination of Contracts and Leases of Declarant), any
management contract, employment contract, lease of recreational or parking
areas or facilities, and any other contract or lease between the association
and a declarant or an affiliate of a declarant continues in force after the
declarant turns over control of the association; and
(2) notwithstanding Section
81-1‑104 (Variation by Agreement), purchasers of units must execute
proxies, powers of attorney, or similar devices in favor of the declarant
regarding particular matters enumerated in those instruments.
(e) A common interest community that contains
units restricted exclusively to nonresidential purposes and other units that
may be used for residential purposes is not subject to this Chapter unless the
units that may be used for residential purposes would comprise a common
interest community in the absence of the nonresidential units or the
declaration provides that this Chapter applies as provided in subsection (c) or
(d). Nothing herein shall prevent the
establishment of a common interest community for residential purposes and a
nonresidential common interest community for the same real estate.
This Chapter does not apply to common interest communities or units located outside this State, but the public offering statement provisions in Subchapter 4 of this Chapter apply to all contracts for the disposition thereof signed in this State by any party unless exempt under Section 81-4‑101.
§81-1‑124.
APPLICABILITY TO CONTINUING CARE COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES.
Anything
to the contrary in this Chapter notwithstanding, this Chapter does not apply to
any condominium, cooperative or other common interest community created in this
State before the effective date of this Chapter that is a continuing care facility
governed by the Delaware Life-Care Registration Act (18 Del. C. §4601, et. seq.) as of the
effective date of this Chapter. Such
condominium, cooperative or other common interest community shall continue to
be governed solely by the Unit Property Act or other statutes in effect prior
to the effective date of this Chapter and applicable to such common interest
community.
SUBCHAPTER 2
CREATION, ALTERATION,
AND
TERMINATION OF COMMON
INTEREST COMMUNITIES
(a) A common interest community may be
created pursuant to this Chapter only by recording a declaration executed in
the same manner as a deed and, in a cooperative, by conveying the real estate
subject to that declaration to the association.
The declaration and bylaws must be recorded in every county in which any
portion of the common interest community is located and must be indexed in the
grantee's index in the name of the common interest community and the
association and in the grantor's index in the name of each person executing the
declaration.
(b) In a condominium, a declaration, or an
amendment to a declaration, adding units that are contained in or comprised by
buildings may not be recorded unless the structural components and mechanical
systems of any buildings containing or comprising any units thereby created, if
any, are completed in accordance with the plans, as evidenced by a record
certification of completion executed by an independent registered engineer or
architect, which may be incorporated in the recorded declaration or amendment
or the recorded plat or otherwise.
Except as provided by the declaration:
(a) If walls, floors, or ceilings are
designated as boundaries of a unit, all lath, furring, wallboard, plasterboard,
plaster, paneling, tiles, wallpaper, paint, finished flooring, and any other
materials constituting any part of the finished surfaces thereof are a part of
the unit, and all other portions of the walls, floors, or ceilings are a part
of the common elements.
(b) If any chute, flue, duct, wire, conduit,
bearing wall, bearing column, or any other fixture lies partially within and
partially outside the designated boundaries of a unit, any portion thereof
serving only that unit is a limited common element allocated solely to that
unit, and any portion thereof serving more than one unit or any portion of the
common elements is a part of the common elements.
(c) Subject to subsection (b), all spaces,
interior partitions, and other fixtures and improvements within the boundaries
of a unit are a part of the unit.
(d) Any shutters, awnings, window boxes,
doorsteps, stoops, porches, balconies, patios, and all exterior doors and
windows or other fixtures designed to serve a single unit, but located outside
the unit's boundaries, are limited common elements allocated exclusively to
that unit.
(a) All provisions of the declaration and
bylaws are severable.
(b) The rule against perpetuities does not
apply to defeat any provision of the declaration, bylaws, rules, or regulations
adopted pursuant to Section 81-3‑102(a)(1).
(c) In the event of a conflict between the
provisions of the declaration and the bylaws, the declaration prevails except
to the extent the declaration is inconsistent with this Chapter.
(d) Title to a unit and common elements is
not rendered unmarketable or otherwise affected by reason of an insubstantial
failure of the declaration to comply with this Chapter. Whether a substantial failure impairs
marketability is not affected by this Chapter.
§81-2‑104.
DESCRIPTION OF UNITS.
A description of a unit which sets forth the name of the common interest community, the recording data for the declaration, the county in which the common interest community is located, and the identifying number of the unit, is a legally sufficient description of that unit and all rights, obligations, and interests appurtenant to that unit which were created by the declaration or bylaws.
(a) The declaration must contain:
(1) the names of the common
interest community and the association and a statement that the common interest
community is either a condominium, cooperative, or planned community;
(2) the name of every county in
which any part of the common interest community is situated;
(3) a legally sufficient
description of the real estate included in the common interest community;
(4) a statement of the maximum
number of units that the declarant reserves the right to create;
(5) in a condominium or planned
community, a description of the boundaries of each unit created by the
declaration, including the unit's identifying number; or, in a cooperative, a
description, which may be by plats or plans, of each unit created by the
declaration, including the unit's identifying number, its size or number of
rooms, and its location within a building if it is within a building containing
more than one unit;
(6) a description of any
limited common elements, other than those specified in Section 81-2‑102(b)
and (d), as provided in Section 81-2‑109(b)(10) and, in a planned
community, any real estate that is or must become common elements;
(7) a description of any real
estate, except real estate subject to development rights, that may be allocated
subsequently as limited common elements, other than limited common elements
specified in Section 81-2‑102(b) and (d), together with a statement that
they may be so allocated;
(8) a description of any
development rights (Section 81-1‑103(14)) and other special declarant
rights (Section 81-1‑103(29)) reserved by the declarant, together with a
legally sufficient description of the real estate to which each of those rights
applies, and a time limit within which each of those rights must be exercised;
(9) if any development right
may be exercised with respect to different parcels of real estate at different
times, a statement to that effect together with (i) either a statement fixing
the boundaries of those portions and regulating the order in which those
portions may be subjected to the exercise of each development right or a
statement that no assurances are made in those regards, and (ii) a statement as
to whether, if any development right is exercised in any portion of the real
estate subject to that development right, that development right must be
exercised in all or in any other portion of the remainder of that real estate;
(10) any other conditions or
limitations under which the rights described in paragraph (8) may be exercised
or will lapse;
(11) an allocation to each unit
of the allocated interests in the manner described in Section 81-2‑107;
(12) any restrictions (i) on
alienation of the units, including any restrictions on leasing which exceed the
restrictions on leasing units which executive boards may impose pursuant to
Section 81-3‑102(c)(2), and (ii) on the amount for which a unit may be
sold or on the amount that may be received by a unit owner on sale,
condemnation, or casualty loss to the unit or to the common interest community,
or on termination of the common interest community;
(13) the recording data for
recorded easements and licenses appurtenant to or included in the common
interest community or to which any portion of the common interest community is
or may become subject by virtue of a reservation in the declaration;
(14) in the case of a condominium
or cooperative, provisions that mandate that the association create and
maintain, in addition to any reserve for contingencies, a fully funded
repair and replacement reserve based upon a current reserve study;
(15) any authorization pursuant
to which the association may regulate the display of American flags or
political signs within the common interest community;
(16) any authorization pursuant
to which the association may adopt rules
to establish and enforce construction and design criteria in the manner
provided in Section 81-3-120; and
(17) all matters required by
Sections 81-2‑106, 81-2‑107, 81-2‑108, 81-2‑109, 281-‑115,81-
2‑116, and 81-3‑103.
(b) The declaration may contain any other
matters the declarant considers appropriate, including any restrictions on the
uses of a unit or the number or other qualifications of persons who may occupy
units.
§81-2‑106.
LEASEHOLD COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES.
(a) Any lease the expiration or
termination of which may terminate the common interest community or reduce its
size must be recorded. Every lessor of
those leases in a condominium or planned community shall sign the declaration. The declaration must state:
(1) the recording data for the
lease;
(2) the date on which the lease
is scheduled to expire;
(3) a legally sufficient
description of the real estate subject to the lease;
(4) any right of the unit
owners to redeem the reversion and the manner whereby those rights may be
exercised, or a statement that they do not have those rights;
(5) any right of the unit
owners to remove any improvements within a reasonable time after the expiration
or termination of the lease, or a statement that they do not have those rights;
and
(6) any rights of the unit
owners to renew the lease and the conditions of any renewal, or a statement
that they do not have those rights.
(b) After the declaration for a leasehold
condominium or leasehold planned community is recorded, neither the lessor nor
the lessor's successor in interest may terminate the leasehold interest of a
unit owner who makes timely payment of a unit owner's share of the rent and
otherwise complies with all covenants which, if violated, would entitle the
lessor to terminate the lease. A unit owner's
leasehold interest in a condominium or planned community is not affected by
failure of any other person to pay rent or fulfill any other covenant.
(c) Acquisition of the leasehold interest of
any unit owner by the owner of the reversion or remainder does not merge the
leasehold and fee simple interests unless the leasehold interests of all unit
owners subject to that reversion or remainder are acquired.
(d) If the expiration or termination of a
lease decreases the number of units in a common interest community, the
allocated interests must be reallocated in accordance with Section 81-1‑107(a)
as if those units had been taken by eminent domain. Reallocations must be confirmed by an
amendment to the declaration prepared, executed, and recorded by the association.
§81-2‑107.
ALLOCATION OF ALLOCATED INTERESTS.
(a) The declaration must allocate to each
unit:
(1) in a condominium, a
fraction or percentage of undivided interests in the common elements and a
fraction or percentage of undivided interests in the common expenses of the
association, and a portion of the votes in the association;
(2) in a cooperative, an
ownership interest in the association, a fraction or percentage of the common
expenses of the association, and a portion of the votes in the association; and
(3) in a planned community, a
fraction or percentage of the common expenses of the association, and a portion
of the votes in the association.
(b) The declaration must state the formulas
used to establish allocations of interests and the portions of the votes. Those allocations may not discriminate in
favor of units owned by the declarant or an affiliate of the declarant.
(c) If units may be added to or withdrawn
from the common interest community, the declaration must state the formulas to
be used to reallocate the allocated interests among all units included in the
common interest community after the addition or withdrawal.
(d) The declaration may provide: (i) that
different allocations of votes shall be made to the units on particular matters
specified in the declaration; (ii) for cumulative voting only for the purpose
of electing members of the executive board; and (iii) for class voting on
specified issues affecting the class if necessary to protect valid interests of
the class. A declarant may not utilize
cumulative or class voting for the purpose of evading any limitation imposed on
declarants by this Chapter nor may units constitute a class because they are
owned by a declarant.
(e) Except for minor variations due to
rounding, the sum of the common expense liabilities and, in a condominium, the
sum of the undivided interests in the common elements allocated at any time to
all the units must each equal one if stated as a fraction or 100 percent if
stated as a percentage. In the event of discrepancy
between an allocated interest and the result derived from application of the
pertinent formula, the allocated interest prevails.
(f) In a condominium, the common elements
are not subject to partition, and any purported conveyance, encumbrance, judicial
sale, or other voluntary or involuntary transfer of an undivided interest in
the common elements made without the unit to which that interest is allocated
is void.
(g) In a cooperative, any purported
conveyance, encumbrance, judicial sale, or other voluntary or involuntary
transfer of an ownership interest in the association made without the
possessory interest in the unit to which that interest is related is void.
(a) Except for the limited common elements
described in Section 81-2‑102(b) and (d), the declaration must specify to
which unit or units each limited common element is allocated. An allocation may not be altered without the
consent of the unit owners whose units are affected.
(b) Except as the declaration otherwise
provides, a limited common element may be reallocated by an amendment to the
declaration executed by the unit owners between or among whose units the
reallocation is made. The persons
executing the amendment shall provide a copy thereof to the association, which
shall record it. The amendment must be
recorded in the names of the parties and the common interest community.
(c) A common element not previously allocated
as a limited common element may be so allocated only pursuant to provisions in
the declaration made in accordance with Section 81-2‑105(a)(7). The allocations must be made by amendments to
the declaration.
(a) Plats and plans are a part of the
declaration, and are required for all common interest communities except
cooperatives. Separate plats and plans
are not required by this Chapter if all the information required by this
section is contained in either the plat or plan incorporated in the
Declaration. This Chapter does not
require separate plats and plans if all the information required by this
section is contained in either a plat or plan.
Each plat and plan must be clear and legible and contain a certification
as required by subsection (g) and by declarant that the plat or plan contains
all information required by this section.
(b) Each plat must show or project:
(1) the name and a survey or
general schematic map of the entire common interest community;
(2) the location and dimensions
of all real estate not subject to development rights, or subject only to the
development right to withdraw, and the location and dimensions of all existing
improvements within that real estate;
(3) a legally sufficient
description of any real estate subject to development rights, labeled to
identify the rights applicable to each parcel;
(4) the extent of any
encroachments by or upon any portion of the common interest community;
(5) to the extent feasible, a
legally sufficient description of all easements serving or burdening any
portion of the common interest community;
(6) except as provided in
subsection (h), the approximate location and dimensions of any vertical unit
boundaries not shown or projected on plans recorded pursuant to subsection (d)
and that unit's identifying number;
(7) except as provided in
subsection (h), the approximate location with reference to an established datum
of any horizontal unit boundaries not shown or projected on plans recorded
pursuant to subsection (d) and that unit's identifying number;
(8) a legally sufficient
description of any real estate in which the unit owners will own only an estate
for years, labeled as "leasehold real estate;"
(9) the distance between
non-contiguous parcels of real estate comprising the common interest community;
(10) the approximate location and
dimensions of any porches, decks, balconies, garages, or patios allocated as
limited common elements, and show or contain a narrative description of any
other limited common elements; and
(11) in the case of real estate
not subject to development rights, all other matters customarily shown on land
surveys for comparable properties.
(c) A plat shall show the intended location
and dimensions of any contemplated improvement to be constructed anywhere
within the common interest community.
Any contemplated improvement shown must be labeled either "MUST BE
BUILT" or "NEED NOT BE BUILT."
(d) Except as provided in subsection (h), to
the extent not shown or projected on the plats, plans of the units must show or
project:
(1) the approximate location
and dimensions of the vertical boundaries of each unit, and that unit's
identifying number;
(2) the approximate location of
any horizontal unit boundaries, with reference to an established datum, and
that unit's identifying number; and
(3) the approximate location of
any units in which the declarant has reserved the right to create additional
units or common elements (Section 81-2‑110(c)), identified appropriately.
(e) Unless the declaration provides
otherwise, the horizontal boundaries of part of a unit located outside a
building have the same elevation as the horizontal boundaries of the inside
part and need not be depicted on the plats and plans.
(f) Upon exercising any development right,
the declarant shall record either new plats and plans necessary to conform to
the requirements of subsections (a), (b), and (d), or new certifications of
plats and plans previously recorded if those plats and plans otherwise conform
to the requirements of those subsections.
(g) Any certification of a plat or plan
required by this section or Section 81-2‑101(b) must be made by an
independent architect, independent licensed professional land surveyor or
independent engineer.
(h) Plats and plans need not show the
location and dimensions of the units’ boundaries or their limited common
elements if:
(1) the plat shows the location
and dimensions of all buildings containing or comprising the units; and
(2) the declaration includes
other information that shows or contains a narrative description of the general
layout of the units in those buildings and the limited common elements
allocated to those units.
(a) To exercise any development right reserved under Section 81-2‑105(a)(8), the declarant shall prepare, execute, and record, without joinder of any other person required except as expressly provided in the declaration, an amendment to the declaration and in a condominium or planned community comply with Section 81-2‑109. The declarant is the unit owner of any units thereby created. The amendment to the declaration must assign an identifying number to each new unit created, and, except in the case of subdivision or conversion of units described in subsection (b), reallocate the allocated interests among all units. The amendment must describe any common elements and any limited common elements thereby created and, in the case of limited common elements, designate the unit to which each is allocated to the extent required by Section 81-2‑108.
(b) Development rights may be reserved within
any real estate added to the common interest community if the amendment adding
that real estate includes all matters required by Section 81-2‑105 or 2‑106,
as the case may be, and, in a condominium or planned community, the plats and
plans include all matters required by Section 81-2‑109. This provision does not extend the time limit
on the exercise of development rights imposed by the declaration pursuant to
Section 81-2‑105(a)(8).
(c) Whenever a declarant exercises a
development right to subdivide or convert a unit previously created into
additional units, common elements, or both:
(1) if the declarant converts
the unit entirely to common elements, the amendment to the declaration must
reallocate all the allocated interests of that unit among the other units as if
that unit had been taken by eminent domain; and
(2) if the declarant subdivides
the unit into two or more units, whether or not any part of the unit is
converted into common elements, the amendment to the declaration must
reallocate all the allocated interests of the unit among the units created by
the subdivision in any reasonable manner prescribed by the declarant.
(d) If the declaration provides, pursuant to
Section 81-2‑105(a)(8), that all or a portion of the real estate is
subject to a right of withdrawal:
(1) if all the real estate is
subject to withdrawal, and the declaration does not describe separate portions
of real estate subject to that right, none of the real estate may be withdrawn
after a unit has been conveyed to a purchaser; and
(2) if any portion is subject
to withdrawal, it may not be withdrawn after a unit in that portion has been
conveyed to a purchaser.
(e) If the declaration for a pre-existing
condominium provides for conversion of limited common elements to part of the
unit to which such limited common elements are allocated, the same shall be a
development right exercisable by the declarant by amendment to the declaration
prepared, executed and recorded by the declarant, without the joinder of any
other person required, and complying with Section 81-2-109.
Subject to the provisions of the declaration and other provisions of law, a unit owner:
(a) may, upon written notice to the
association specifying the improvements or alterations planned, make any
improvements or alterations to that unit owner's unit that do not impair the
structural integrity or mechanical systems or lessen the support of any portion
of the common interest community;
(b) may not change the appearance of the
common elements, or the exterior appearance of a unit or any other portion of
the common interest community, without permission of the association;
(c) after acquiring an adjoining unit or an
adjoining part of an adjoining unit, may, upon written notice to the
association specifying the improvements or alteration planned, but without
requiring permission of the association, remove or alter any intervening
partition or create apertures therein, even if the partition in whole or in
part is a common element, if those acts do not impair the structural integrity
or mechanical systems or lessen the support of any portion of the common
interest community. Removal of
partitions or creation of apertures under this paragraph is not an alteration
of boundaries.
(a) Subject to the provisions of the
declaration and other provisions of law, the boundaries between adjoining units
may be relocated by an amendment to the declaration upon application to the
association by the owners of those units.
If the owners of the adjoining units have specified a reallocation
between their units of their allocated interests, the application must state
the proposed reallocations. Unless the
executive board determines, within 30 days, that the reallocations are
unreasonable, the association shall prepare an amendment that identifies the
units involved and states the reallocations.
The amendment must be executed by those unit owners, contain words of
conveyance between them, and, on recordation, be indexed in the name of the
grantor and the grantee, and in the grantee's index in the name of the
association. All costs associated with
the relocation or any attempted relocation which fails or is denied, including
reasonable attorney's and engineer's fees, shall be paid by the owners seeking
the change.
(b) Subject to the provisions of the
declaration and other provisions of law, boundaries between units and common
elements may be relocated to incorporate common elements within a unit by an
amendment to the declaration upon application to the association by the owner
of the unit who proposes to relocate a boundary. Unless the declaration provides otherwise,
the amendment may be approved only if persons entitled to cast at least 67
percent of the votes in the association, including 67 percent of the votes
allocated to units not owned by the declarant, agree to the action. The amendment may describe any fees or
charges payable by the owner of the affected unit in connection with the
boundary relocation. The fees and
charges shall be assets of the association.
The amendment must be executed by the unit owner of the unit whose
boundary is being relocated and by the association, contain words of conveyance
between them, and on recordation be indexed in the name of the unit owner and
the association as grantor or grantee, as appropriate. All costs associated with the relocation or
any attempted relocation which fails or is denied, including reasonable
attorney's and engineer's fees, shall be paid by the owners seeking the change.
(c) The association (i) in a condominium or
planned community shall prepare and record plats or plans necessary to show the
altered boundaries of affected units, and their dimensions and identifying
numbers, and (ii) in a cooperative shall prepare and record amendments to the
declaration, including any plans, necessary to show or describe the altered
boundaries of affected units, and their dimensions and identifying numbers.
(a) If the declaration expressly so permits and approval as noted herein is obtained in writing, a unit may be subdivided into two or more units. Subject to the provisions of the declaration, payment of all expenses by the unit owner and other provisions of law, upon application of a unit owner to subdivide a unit, the association shall prepare, execute, and record an amendment to the declaration, including in a condominium or planned community the plats and plans, subdividing that unit.
(b) The amendment to the declaration must be
executed by the owner of the unit to be subdivided, assign an identifying
number to each unit created, and reallocate the allocated interests formerly
allocated to the subdivided unit to the new units in any reasonable manner
prescribed by the owner of the subdivided unit.
§81-2‑114.
VARIATIONS IN BOUNDARIES.
The
existing physical boundaries of a unit or a common element or the physical
boundaries of a unit or a common element reconstructed in substantial
accordance with the description contained in the original declaration are its
legal boundaries, rather than the boundaries derived from the description
contained in the original declaration, regardless of vertical or lateral
movement of the building or minor variance between those boundaries and the
boundaries derived from the description contained in the original
declaration. This section does not
relieve a unit owner of liability in case of the unit owner's willful
misconduct or relieve a declarant or any other person of liability for failure
to adhere to any plats and plans or, in a cooperative, to any representation in
the public offering statement.
A declarant may maintain sales offices, management offices, and models in units or on common elements in the common interest community only if the declaration so provides and specifies the rights of a declarant with regard to the number, size, location, and relocation thereof. In a cooperative or condominium, any sales office, management office, or model not designated a unit by the declaration is a common element. If a declarant ceases to be a unit owner, the declarant ceases to have any rights with regard thereto unless it is removed promptly from the common interest community in accordance with a right to remove reserved in the declaration. Subject to any limitations in the declaration, a declarant may maintain signs on the common elements advertising the common interest community. This section is subject to the provisions of other state law and to local ordinances.
(a) Subject to the provisions of the
declaration, a declarant has an easement through the common elements as may be
reasonably necessary for the purpose of discharging the declarant's obligations
or exercising special declarant rights, whether arising under this Chapter or
reserved in the declaration.
(b) In a planned community, subject to Sections 3‑102(a)(6) and 3‑112,
the unit owners have an easement (i) in the common elements for purposes of
access to their units and (ii) to use the common elements and all real estate
that must become common elements for all other purposes.
§81-2‑117.
AMENDMENT OF DECLARATION.
(a) Except in cases of amendments that may be
executed by a declarant under Section 81-2‑109(f) or 2‑110, or by
the association under Section 81-1‑107, 2‑106(d), 2‑108(c), 2‑112(a),
or 2‑113, or by certain unit owners under Section 81-2‑108(b), 2‑112(a),
2‑113(b), or 2‑118(b), or by secured lenders pursuant to Section
81-2-119, and except as limited by subsection (d) or as otherwise provided in
this Section 81-2-117, the declaration, including any plats and plans, may be
amended only by vote or agreement of unit owners of units to which at least 67
percent of the votes in the association are allocated, or any larger majority
the declaration specifies. The
declaration may specify a smaller number only if all of the units affected by
the amendment are restricted exclusively to nonresidential use or as permitted
under Section 81-2-119.
(b) No action to challenge the validity of an
amendment adopted by the association pursuant to this section may be brought
more than one year after the amendment is recorded.
(c) Every amendment to the declaration must
be recorded in every county in which any portion of the common interest
community is located and is effective only upon recordation. An amendment, except an amendment pursuant to
Section 81-2‑112(a), must be indexed in the grantee's index in the name
of the common interest community and the association and in the grantor's index
in the name of the parties executing the amendment.
(d) Except to the extent expressly permitted
or required by other provisions of this Chapter, or in a non-residential common
interest community, except as provided in the declaration, no amendment may
create or increase special declarant rights, increase the number of units,
change the boundaries of any unit or the allocated interests of a unit, in the
absence of unanimous consent of the unit owners.
(e) Amendments to the declaration required by
the Chapter to be recorded by the association must be prepared, executed,
recorded, and certified on behalf of the association by any officer of the
association designated for that purpose or, in the absence of designation, by
the president of the association.
(f) By vote or agreement of unit owners of
units to which at least 80 percent of the votes in the association are
allocated, or any larger percentage specified in the declaration, an amendment
to the declaration may prohibit or materially restrict the permitted uses of or
behavior in a unit or the number or other qualifications of persons who may
occupy units. The amendment must provide
reasonable protection for a use or occupancy permitted at the time the
amendment was adopted.
(g) The time limits specified in the
declaration pursuant to Section 81-2‑105(a)(8) within which reserved
development rights must be exercised may be extended, and additional
development rights may be created, if persons entitled to cast at least 80
percent of the votes in the association, including 80 percent of the votes
allocated to units not owned by the declarant, agree to that action. The agreement is effective 30 days after an
amendment to the declaration reflecting the terms of the agreement is recorded
unless all the persons holding the affected special declarant rights, or
security interests in those rights, record a written objection within the 30‑day
period, in which case the amendment is void, or consent in writing at the time
the amendment is recorded, in which case the amendment is effective when
recorded.
(h) Provisions in the declaration creating
special declarant rights which have not expired may not be amended without the
consent of the declarant.
(i) If any provision of this Chapter or of
the declaration of any common interest community subject to this Chapter
requires the consent of a person holding a security interest in a unit as a
condition to the effectiveness of any amendment to the declaration, that
consent shall be deemed granted if no written refusal to consent is received by
the association within 45 days after the association delivers notice of the
proposed amendment to the holder of the interest or mails the notice to the
holder of the interest by certified mail, return receipt requested. The
association may rely on the last recorded security interest of record in
delivering or mailing notice to the holder of that interest.
(j) Unless the declaration or bylaws provide
otherwise and subject to subsections (ii) and (iii) of this Section:
(i) the executive board may
execute and record an amendment to the declaration bylaws, or plat, to correct:
(1) A typographical error or other error in the
percentage interests or number of votes appurtenant to any unit;
(2) A typographical error or other incorrect
reference to another prior recorded document; or
(3) A typographical error or other incorrect
unit designation or assignment of limited common elements if the affected unit
owners and their mortgagees consent in writing to the amendment, and the
consent documents are recorded with the amendment.
(ii) If the executive board
executes and records an amendment under subsection (i) of this section, the
executive board shall also record with the amendment:
(1) During the time that the declarant has an
interest:
(A) The
consent of the declarant; or
(B) An
affidavit by the executive board that any declarant who has an interest in the
condominium has been provided a copy of the amendment and a notice that the
declarant may object in writing to the amendment within 30 days of receipt of
the amendment and notice, that 30 days have passed since delivery of the
amendment and notice, and that the declarant has made no written objection; and
(2) An affidavit by the executive board that at
least 30 days before recordation of the amendment a copy of the amendment was
sent with a notice of the amendment sent to each unit owner as required for
notices pursuant to this Chapter.
(iii)An amendment under this section is entitled to be recorded and is
effective upon recordation if accompanied by the supporting documents required
by this section.
(a) Except in the case of a taking of all the
units by eminent domain or in the case of foreclosure against an entire
cooperative of a security interest that has priority over the declaration, a
common interest community may be terminated only by agreement of unit owners of
units to which at least 80 percent of the votes in the association are
allocated, or any larger percentage the declaration specifies. The declaration may specify a smaller
percentage only if all of the units are restricted exclusively to
nonresidential uses.
(b) An agreement to terminate must be
evidenced by the execution of a termination agreement, or ratifications
thereof, in the same manner as a deed, by the requisite number of unit
owners. The termination agreement must
specify a date after which the agreement will be void unless it is recorded
before that date. A termination
agreement and all ratifications thereof must be recorded in every county in
which a portion of the common interest community is situated and is effective
only upon recordation.
(c) In the case of a condominium or planned
community containing only units having horizontal boundaries described in the
declaration, a termination agreement may provide that all of the common
elements and units of the common interest community must be sold following
termination. If, pursuant to the
agreement, any real estate in the common interest community is to be sold following
termination, the termination agreement must set forth the minimum terms of the
sale.
(d) In the case of a condominium or planned
community containing any units not having horizontal boundaries described in
the declaration, a termination agreement may provide for sale of the common
elements, but it may not require that the units be sold following termination,
unless the declaration as originally recorded provided otherwise or all the
unit owners consent to the sale.
(e) The association, on behalf of the unit
owners, may contract for the sale of real estate in a common interest
community, but the contract is not binding on the unit owners until approved
pursuant to subsections (a) and (b). If
any real estate is to be sold following termination, title to that real estate,
upon termination, vests in the association as trustee for the holders of all
interests in the units. Thereafter, the
association has all powers necessary and appropriate to effect the sale. Until the sale has been concluded and the
proceeds thereof distributed, the association continues in existence with all
powers it had before termination.
Proceeds of the sale must be distributed to unit owners and lien holders
as their interests may appear, in accordance with subsections (h), (i), and
(j). Unless otherwise specified in the
termination agreement, as long as the association holds title to the real
estate, each unit owner and the unit owner's successors in interest have an
exclusive right to occupancy of the portion of the real estate that formerly
constituted the unit. During the period
of that occupancy, each unit owner and the unit owner's successors in interest
remain liable for all assessments and other obligations imposed on unit owners
by this Chapter or the declaration.
(f) In a condominium or planned community,
if the real estate constituting the common interest community is not to be sold
following termination, title to the common elements and, in a common interest
community containing only units having horizontal boundaries described in the
declaration, title to all the real estate in the common interest community,
vests in the unit owners upon termination as tenants in common in proportion to
their respective interests as provided in subsection (j), and liens on the
units shift accordingly. While the
tenancy in common exists, each unit owner and the unit owner's successors in
interest have an exclusive right to occupancy of the portion of the real estate
that formerly constituted the unit.
(g) Following termination of the common
interest community, the proceeds of any sale of real estate, together with the
assets of the association, are held by the association as trustee for unit
owners and holders of liens on the units as their interests may appear.
(h) Following termination of a condominium or
planned community, creditors of the association holding liens on the units,
which were recorded or judgments docketed before termination, may enforce those
liens in the same manner as any lien holder.
All other creditors of the association are to be treated as if they had
perfected liens on the units immediately before termination.
(i) In a cooperative, the declaration may
provide that all creditors of the association have priority over any interests
of unit owners and creditors of unit owners.
In that event, following termination, creditors of the association
holding liens on the cooperative which were recorded or judgments docketed
before termination may enforce their liens in the same manner as any lien
holder, and any other creditor of the association is to be treated as if the
creditor had perfected a lien against the cooperative immediately before
termination. Unless the declaration
provides that all creditors of the association have that priority:
(1) the lien of each creditor
of the association which was perfected against the association before
termination becomes, upon termination, a lien against each unit owner's
interest in the unit as of the date the lien was perfected;
(2) any other creditor of the
association is to be treated upon termination as if the creditor had perfected
a lien against each unit owner's interest immediately before termination;
(3) the amount of the lien of
an association's creditor described in paragraphs (1) and (2) against each of
the unit owners' interest must be proportionate to the ratio which each unit's
common expense liability bears to the common expense liability of all of the
units;
(4) the lien of each creditor
of each unit owner which was perfected before termination continues as a lien
against that unit owner's unit as of the date the lien was perfected; and
(5) the assets of the
association must be distributed to all unit owners and all lien holders as
their interests may appear in the order described above. Creditors of the association are not entitled
to payment from any unit owner in excess of the amount of the creditor's lien
against that unit owner's interest.
(j) The respective interests of unit owners
referred to in subsections (e), (f), (g), (h), and (i) are as follows:
(1) Except as provided in
paragraph (2), the respective interests of unit owners are the fair market
values of their units, allocated interests, and any limited common elements
immediately before the termination, as determined by one or more independent
appraisers selected by the association.
The decision of the independent appraisers must be distributed to the
unit owners and becomes final unless disapproved within 30 days after
distribution by unit owners of units to which 25 percent of the votes in the
association are allocated. The
proportion of any unit owner's interest to that of all unit owners is
determined by dividing the fair market value of that unit owner's unit and its
allocated interests by the total fair market values of all the units and their
allocated interests.
(2) If any unit or any limited
common element is destroyed to the extent that an appraisal of the fair market
value thereof before destruction cannot be made, the interests of all unit
owners are: (i) in a condominium, their respective common element interests
immediately before the termination, (ii) in a cooperative, their respective
ownership interests immediately before the termination, and (iii) in a planned
community, their respective common expense liabilities immediately before the
termination.
(k) In a condominium or planned community,
except as provided in subsection (l), foreclosure or enforcement of a lien or
encumbrance against the entire common interest community does not terminate, of
itself, the common interest community, and foreclosure or enforcement of a lien
or encumbrance against a portion of the common interest community, other than
withdrawable real estate, does not withdraw that portion from the common
interest community. Foreclosure or
enforcement of a lien or encumbrance against withdrawable real estate, or against
common elements that have been subjected to a security interest by the
association under Section 81-3‑112, does not withdraw, of itself, that
real estate from the common interest community, but the person taking title
thereto may require from the association, upon request, an amendment excluding
the real estate from the common interest community.
(l) In a condominium or planned community,
if a lien or encumbrance against a portion of the real estate comprising the
common interest community has priority over the declaration and the lien or
encumbrance has not been partially released, the parties foreclosing the lien
or encumbrance, upon foreclosure, may record an instrument excluding the real
estate subject to that lien or encumbrance from the common interest community.
(a) The declaration may require that all or a
specified number or percentage of the lenders who hold security interests
encumbering the units or who have extended credit to the association approve
specified actions of the unit owners or the association as a condition to the
effectiveness of those actions, but no requirement for approval may operate to
(i) deny or delegate control over the general administrative affairs of the
association by the unit owners or the executive board, or (ii) prevent the
association or the executive board from commencing, intervening in, or settling
any litigation or proceeding, or (iii) prevent any insurance trustee or the
association from receiving and distributing any insurance proceeds except
pursuant to Section 81-3‑113.
(b) A lender who has extended credit to an
association secured by an assignment of income
or an encumbrance on the common elements may enforce its security
agreement in accordance with its terms, subject to the requirements of this
Chapter and other law. Requirements that
the association must deposit its periodic common charges before default with
the lender to which the association's income has been assigned, or increase its
common charges at the lender's direction by amounts reasonably necessary to
amortize the loan in accordance with its terms, do not violate the prohibitions
on lender approval contained in subsection (a).
(a) If the declaration provides that any of
the powers described in Section 81-3‑102 are to be exercised by or may be
delegated to a profit or nonprofit corporation
that exercises those or other powers on behalf of one or more common
interest communities or for the benefit of the unit owners of one or more
common interest communities, all provisions of this Chapter applicable to unit
owners' associations apply to any such corporation, except as modified by this
section.
(b) Unless it is acting in the capacity of an
association described in Section 81-3‑101, a master association may
exercise the powers set forth in Section 81-3‑102(a)(2) only to the
extent expressly permitted in the declarations of common interest communities
which are part of the master association or expressly described in the
delegations of power from those common interest communities to the master
association.
(c) If the declaration of any common interest
community provides that the executive board may delegate certain powers to a
master association, the members of the executive board have no liability for
the acts or omissions of the master association with respect to those powers
following delegation.
(d) The rights and responsibilities of unit
owners with respect to the unit owners' association set forth in Sections 81-3‑103,
81-3‑108, 81-3‑109, 81-3‑110, and 81-3‑112 apply in the
conduct of the affairs of a master association only to persons who elect the
board of a master association, whether or not those persons are otherwise unit
owners within the meaning of this Chapter.
(e) Even if a master association is also an
association described in Section 81-3‑101, the certificate of
incorporation or other instrument creating the master association and the
declaration of each common interest community, the powers of which are assigned
by the declaration or delegated to the master association, may provide that the
executive board of the master association must be elected after the period of
declarant control in any of the following ways:
(1) All unit owners of all
common interest communities subject to the master association may elect all
members of the master association's executive board.
(2) All members of the
executive boards of all common interest communities subject to the master
association may elect all members of the master association's executive board.
(3) All unit owners of each
common interest community subject to the master association may elect specified
members of the master association's executive board.
(4) All members of the
executive board of each common interest community subject to the master
association may elect specified members of the master association's executive
board.
(a) Any two or more common interest
communities of the same form of ownership, by agreement of the unit owners as
provided in subsection (b), may be merged or consolidated into a single common
interest community. In the event of a
merger or consolidation, unless the agreement otherwise provides, the resultant
common interest community is the legal successor, for all purposes, of all of
the pre-existing common interest communities, and the operations and activities
of all associations of the pre-existing common interest communities are merged
or consolidated into a single association that holds all powers, rights,
obligations, assets, and liabilities of all pre-existing associations.
(b) An agreement of two or more common
interest communities to merge or consolidate pursuant to subsection (a) must be
evidenced by an agreement prepared, executed, recorded, and certified by the
president of the association of each of the pre-existing common interest
communities following approval by owners of units to which are allocated the
percentage of votes in each common interest community required to terminate
that common interest community. The
agreement must be recorded in every county in which a portion of the common
interest community is located and is not effective until recorded.
(c) Every merger or consolidation agreement
must provide for the reallocation of the allocated interests in the new
association among the units of the resultant common interest community either
(i) by stating the reallocations or the formulas upon which they are based or
(ii) by stating the percentage of overall allocated interests of the new common
interest community which are allocated to all of the units comprising each of
the pre-existing common interest communities, and providing that the portion of
the percentages allocated to each unit formerly comprising a part of the
pre-existing common interest community must be equal to the percentages of
allocated interests allocated to that unit by the declaration of the
pre-existing common interest community.
In a planned community, if the right
is originally reserved in the declaration, the declarant in addition to any
other development right, may amend the declaration at any time during as many
years as are specified in the declaration for adding additional real estate to the
planned community without describing the location of that real estate in the
original declaration; but, the amount of real estate added to the planned
community pursuant to this section may not exceed 10 percent of the real estate
described in Section 81-2‑105(a)(3) and the declarant may not in any
event increase the number of units in the planned community beyond the number
stated in the original declaration pursuant to Section 81-2‑105(a)(5).
(a) The declaration for a common interest
community may state that it is a master planned community if the declarant has
reserved the development right to create at least 400 units that may be used
for residential purposes, and at the time of the reservation that declarant owns
or controls more than 400 acres on which the units may be built.
(b) If the requirements of subsection (a) are
satisfied, the declaration for the master planned community need not state a
maximum number of units and need not contain any of the information required by
Section 81-2‑105(a)(3) through (14) until the declaration is amended
under subsection (c).
(c) When each unit in a master planned
community is conveyed to a purchaser, the declaration must contain (i) a
sufficient legal description of the unit and all portions of the master planned
community in which any other units have been conveyed to a purchaser; and (ii)
all the information required by Section 81-2‑105(a)(3) through (14) with
respect to that real estate.
(d) The only real estate in a master planned
community which is subject to this Chapter is units that have been declared or
which are being offered for sale and any other real estate described pursuant
to subsection (c). Other real estate
that is or may become part of the master planned community is only subject to
other law and to any other restrictions and limitations that appear of record.
(e) If the public offering statement
conspicuously identifies the fact that the community is a master planned
community, the disclosure requirements contained in Subchapter 4 apply only
with respect to units that have been declared or are being offered for sale in
connection with the public offering statement and to the real estate described
pursuant to subsection (c).
(f) Limitations in this Chapter on the
addition of unspecified real estate do not apply to a master planned community.
(g) The period of declarant control of the
association for a master planned community terminates in accordance with any
conditions specified in the declaration or otherwise at the time the declarant,
in a recorded instrument and after giving written notice to all the unit
owners, voluntarily surrenders all rights to control the activities of the
association.
(a) An agreement between two or more common interest communities to share the costs of real estate taxes, insurance premiums, services, maintenance or improvements of real estate or other activities specified in their agreement or declarations does not create a separate common interest community unless the cost sharing agreement was intended to evade the limitations of this Chapter. If the declarants of those common interest communities are affiliates, the agreement may not unreasonably allocate the costs among those common interest communities.
(b) An agreement between an association for a common interest community and the owner of real estate that is not part of that common interest community to share the costs of real estate taxes, insurance premiums, services, maintenance or improvements of real estate or other activities specified in their agreement does not create a separate common interest community so long as the assessments against the units in the common interest community are included in the periodic budget for the common interest community and are subject to unit owner approval under Section 81-3-124.
(c) An arrangement between two separately owned parcels of real estate for sharing costs associated with a common law party wall, shared driveway or shared well does not create a common interest community.
SUBCHAPTER
3
MANAGEMENT OF THE
COMMON INTEREST
COMMUNITY
A unit owners' association must be organized no later than the date the first unit in the common interest community is conveyed. The association must have an executive board and the membership of the association at all times consists exclusively of all unit owners or, following termination of the common interest community, of all former unit owners entitled to distributions of proceeds under Section 81-2‑118 or their heirs, successors, or assigns. The association may be organized as a profit or nonprofit unincorporated association, corporation, trust, limited liability company or other lawful form of legal entity authorized by the laws of this State.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (b) and other provisions of this Chapter, the association:
(1) must adopt and may amend
recorded bylaws consistent with Section 81-3-106 and may adopt rules consistent
with Section 81-3-120;
(2) must adopt and may amend
budgets pursuant to Section 81-3-124 and collect assessments for common
expenses, including funds for the repair and replacement reserve, from unit owners
and may invest any funds of the association;
(3) may hire and discharge
managing agents and other employees, agents, and independent contractors;
(4) may institute, defend, or
intervene in litigation or administrative proceedings in its own name on behalf
of itself or two or more unit owners on matters affecting the common interest
community subject to, in the case of litigation involving the declarant, the
provisions of Section 81-3-121;
(5) may make contracts and
incur liabilities;
(6) may regulate the use,
maintenance, repair, replacement, and modification of common elements;
(7) may cause additional
improvements to be made as a part of the common elements;
(8) may acquire, hold,
encumber, and convey in its own name any right, title, or interest to real
estate or personal property, but (i) common elements in a condominium or
planned community may be conveyed or subjected to a security interest only
pursuant to Section 81-3‑112 and (ii) part of a cooperative may be
conveyed, or all or part of a cooperative may be subjected to a security
interest, only pursuant to Section 81-3‑112;
(9) may grant easements,
leases, licenses, and concessions through or over the common elements;
(10) may impose and receive any
payments, fees, or charges for the use, rental, or operation of the common
elements, other than limited common elements described in Section 81-2‑102(b)
and (d), and for services provided to unit owners;
(11) may suspend any privileges
of unit owners, other than the right of a unit owner to vote on any matter
submitted to a vote of unit owners, or services provided to unit owners by the
association (other than those necessary for the habitability of the owner’s
unit) for non-payment of assessments; may impose charges for late payment of
assessments; and, after notice and an opportunity to be heard, may levy
reasonable fines for violations of the declaration, bylaws and rules of the
association;
(12) may impose reasonable
charges for the preparation and recordation of amendments to the declaration,
resale certificates required by Section 81-4‑109, or statements of unpaid
assessments;
(13) may provide for the
indemnification of its officers and executive board and maintain directors' and
officers' liability insurance;
(14) may assign its right to
future income, including the right to receive common expense assessments,
except to the extent limited by the declaration;
(15) may exercise any other
powers conferred by the declaration or bylaws;
(16) may exercise all other
powers that may be exercised in this State by legal entities of the same type
as the association;
(17) may exercise any other
powers necessary and proper for the governance and operation of the
association; and
(18) by rule, may require that
disputes between the executive board and unit owners or between two or more
unit owners regarding the common interest community be submitted to nonbinding
alternative dispute resolution in the manner described in the rule as a
prerequisite to commencement of a judicial proceeding.
(b) The declaration may not impose
limitations on the power of the association to:
(1) deal with the declarant
which are more restrictive than the limitations imposed on the power of the
association to deal with other persons; or
(2) commence litigation against
any person, but (A) the association must comply with Section 81-3-121, if
applicable, before commencing any proceeding against any person in connection
with construction defects; and (B) the executive board shall promptly provide
notice to the unit owners of any litigation filed by or against the association
other than a proceeding involving enforcement of rules and claims for
assessments.
(c) If a tenant of a unit owner violates the
declaration, bylaws or rules of the association, in addition to exercising any
of its powers against the unit owner, the association may:
(1) exercise directly against
the tenant the powers described in subsection (a)(11);
(2) after giving notice to the
tenant and the unit owner and an opportunity to be heard, levy reasonable fines
against the tenant for the violation; and
(3) require, as a means of
collecting a fine or past due association fee due from the tenant (and not the
unit owner), that the tenant make payments directly to the association in the
amount of the rent up to the limit of the amount owed the association.
(4) enforce any other rights
against the tenant for the violation which the unit owner as landlord could
lawfully have exercised under the lease or which the association could lawfully
have exercised directly against the unit owner, or both.
(d) The rights granted under subsection
(c)(3) may only be exercised if the tenant or unit owner fails to cure the
violation within 10 days after the association notifies the tenant and unit
owner of that violation.
(e) Unless a lease otherwise provides, this
section does not:
(1) affect rights that the unit
owner has to enforce the lease or that the association has under other law; or
(2) permit the association to
enforce a lease to which it is not a party in the absence of a violation of the
declaration, bylaws or rules.
(f) The executive board shall use its
reasonable judgment to determine whether to exercise the association’s powers
to impose sanctions and pursue legal action for violations of the declaration,
bylaws and rules including, without limitation, whether to compromise any claim
made by or against it, including claims for unpaid assessments. The association shall have no duty to take
enforcement action if the executive board, acting in good faith and without a
conflict of interest, determines that, under the facts and circumstances
presented, (i) the association's legal position does not justify taking any or
further enforcement action; (ii) the covenant, restriction, or rule being
enforced is, or is likely to be construed as, inconsistent with current law;
(iii) although a technical violation may exist or may have occurred, it is not
of such a material nature as to be objectionable to a reasonable person or to
justify expending the association's resources; or (iv) it is not in the
association's best interests, based upon hardship, expense, or other reasonable
criteria, to pursue an enforcement action.
The executive board's decision not to pursue enforcement under one set
of circumstances does not prevent the association from later taking enforcement
action under another set of circumstances, except the executive board may not
be arbitrary or capricious in taking enforcement action. Whether the
association’s course of performance with respect to enforcement of any
provision of the declaration, bylaws and rules constitutes a waiver or
modification of that provision is not affected by this Chapter.
(g) The association may compromise any claim
made by or against it, including claims for unpaid assessments.
(a) The declaration must create an executive
board. Except as provided in the
declaration, the bylaws, subsection (b), or other provisions of this Chapter,
the executive board may act in all instances on behalf of the association. In the performance of their duties, officers
and members of the executive board appointed by the declarant shall exercise the degree of care and loyalty
to the association required of an officer or director of a corporation
organized under
(b) The executive board may not act on behalf
of the association to amend the declaration or the bylaws, to terminate the
common interest community, or to elect members of the executive board or
determine the qualifications, powers and duties, or terms of office of
executive board members, but the executive board may fill vacancies in its
membership for the unexpired portion of any term.
(c) Subject to subsection (d), the
declaration may provide for a period of declarant control of the association,
during which a declarant, or persons designated by the declarant, may appoint
and remove the officers and members of the executive board. Regardless of the period provided in the
declaration, and except as provided in Section 81-2‑123(g), a period of
declarant control terminates no later than the earlier of: (i) except as to a
nonresidential common interest community, 60 days after conveyance of 75
percent of the units that may be created to unit owners other than a declarant;
(ii) as to units for residential purposes, 2 years after all declarants have
ceased to offer units for residential purposes for sale in the ordinary course
of business; (iii) as to units for residential purposes, 2 years after any
right to add new units for residential purposes was last exercised; (iv) as to
a common interest community other than a condominium or cooperative, at such
time as may be required by other applicable laws; or (v) as to nonresidential
units, 7 years after all declarants have ceased to offer nonresidential units
for sale in the ordinary course of business; (vi) as to nonresidential units, 7
years after any right to add new nonresidential units was last exercised; or (vii)
the day the declarant, after giving written notice to unit owners, records an
instrument voluntarily surrendering all rights to control activities of the
association. A declarant may voluntarily
surrender the right to appoint and remove officers and members of the executive
board before termination of that period, but in that event the declarant may
require, for the duration of the period of declarant control, that specified
actions of the association or executive board, as described in a recorded instrument
executed by the declarant, be approved by the declarant before they become
effective.
(d) Not later than 60 days after conveyance
of 25 percent of the units that may be created to unit owners other than a
declarant, at least one member and not less than 25 percent of the members of
the executive board must be elected by unit owners other than the
declarant. Not later than 60 days after
conveyance of 50 percent of the units that may be created to unit owners other
than a declarant, not less than 33‑1/3 percent of the members of the
executive board must be elected by unit owners other than the declarant.
(e) Except as otherwise provided in Sections
81-2‑120(e) and 3-103(f), not later than the termination of any period of
declarant control, the unit owners must elect an executive board of at least
three members, at least a majority of whom must be unit owners. Unless the declaration provides for the
election of officers by the unit owners, the executive board shall appoint the
officers. The executive board members
and officers shall take office upon election or appointment.
(f) The declaration may provide for the
appointment of members of the executive board before or after the period of
declarant control and the method of filling vacancies in appointed memberships,
rather than election of those members by the unit owners. Such appointed members:
(i) shall not be appointed by
the declarant or an affiliate of the declarant;
(ii) shall not comprise more
than 33 of the entire board; and
(iii) have no greater authority
than any other member of the executive board.
(g) Not later than the termination of any
period of declarant control, the declarant shall provide at its sole expense an
audit of all expenditures made with funds collected from unit owners not affiliated
with the declarant together with a list of all items paid for out of
association funds that specifically benefited only the units owned by declarant
and not the units generally. The audit
shall be conducted by a certified public accountant that is not an affiliate of
declarant.
(a) A special declarant right created or reserved under this Chapter may be
transferred only by an instrument evidencing the transfer recorded in every
county in which any portion of the common interest community is located. The instrument is not effective unless
executed by the transferee.
(b) Upon transfer of any special declarant
right, the liability of a transferor declarant is as follows:
(1) A transferor is not relieved
of any obligation or liability arising before the transfer and remains liable
for warranty obligations imposed upon the transferor by this Chapter. Lack of privity does not deprive any unit
owner of standing to maintain an action to enforce any obligation of the
transferor.
(2) If a successor to any
special declarant right is an affiliate of a declarant, the transferor is
jointly and severally liable with the successor for any obligations or
liabilities of the successor relating to the common interest community.
(3) If a transferor retains any
special declarant rights, but transfers other special declarant rights to a
successor who is not an affiliate of the declarant, the transferor is liable
for any obligations or liabilities imposed on a declarant by this Chapter or by
the declaration relating to the retained special declarant rights and arising
after the transfer.
(4) A transferor has no
liability for any act or omission or any breach of a contractual or warranty
obligation arising from the exercise of a special declarant right by a
successor declarant who is not an affiliate of the transferor.
(c) Unless otherwise provided in a mortgage
instrument, deed of trust, or other agreement creating a security interest, in
case of foreclosure of a security interest, sale by a trustee under an
agreement creating a security interest, tax sale, judicial sale, or sale under
Bankruptcy Code or receivership proceedings, of any units owned by a declarant
or real estate in a common interest community subject to development rights, a
person acquiring title to all the property being foreclosed or sold, but only
upon such person's request, succeeds to all special declarant rights related to
that property held by that declarant, or only to any rights reserved in the declaration
pursuant to Section 81-2‑115 and held by that declarant to maintain
models, sales offices, and signs. The
judgment or instrument conveying title must provide for transfer of only the
special declarant rights requested.
(d) Upon foreclosure of a security interest,
sale by a trustee under an agreement creating a security interest, tax sale,
judicial sale, or sale under Bankruptcy Code or receivership proceedings, of
all interests in a common interest community owned by a declarant:
(1) the declarant ceases to
have any special declarant rights, and
(2) the period of declarant
control (Section 81-3‑103(d)) terminates unless the judgment or
instrument conveying title provides for transfer of all special declarant
rights held by that declarant to a successor declarant.
(e) The liabilities and obligations of a
person who succeeds to special declarant rights are as follows:
(1) A successor to any special
declarant right who is an affiliate of a declarant is subject to all
obligations and liabilities imposed on the transferor by this Chapter or by the
declaration.
(2) A successor to any special
declarant right, other than a successor described in paragraph (3) or (4) or a
successor who is an affiliate of a declarant, is subject to the obligations and
liabilities imposed by this Chapter or the declaration:
(i) on a declarant which relate to the
successor's exercise or nonexercise of special declarant rights; or
(ii) on the successor’s transferor, other than:
(A) misrepresentations
by any previous declarant;
(B) warranty obligations on improvements made by any previous
declarant, or made before the common interest community was created;
(C) breach of any fiduciary obligation by any previous declarant or that
declarant's appointees to the executive board; or
(D) any liability
or obligation imposed on the transferor as a result of the transferor's acts or
omissions after the transfer.
(3) A successor to only a right
reserved in the declaration to maintain models, sales offices, and signs, may
not exercise any other special declarant right, and is not subject to any
liability or obligation as a declarant, except the obligation to provide a
public offering statement and any liability arising as a result thereof.
(4) A successor to all special
declarant rights held by a transferor who succeeded to those rights pursuant to
a deed or other instrument of conveyance in lieu of foreclosure or a judgment
or instrument conveying title under subsection (c), may declare in a recorded
instrument the intention to hold those rights solely for transfer to another
person. Thereafter, until transferring
all special declarant rights to any person acquiring title to any unit or real
estate subject to development rights owned by the successor, or until recording
an instrument permitting exercise of all those rights, that successor may not
exercise any of those rights other than any right held by that successor's
transferor to control the executive board in accordance with Section 81-3‑103(d)
for the duration of any period of declarant control, and any attempted exercise
of those rights is void. So long as a
successor declarant may not exercise special declarant rights under this
subsection, the successor declarant is not subject to any liability or
obligation as a declarant other than liability for that successor declarant's
acts and omissions under Section 81-3‑103(d).
(f) Nothing in this section subjects any
successor to a special declarant right to any claims against or other
obligations of a transferor declarant, other than claims and obligations
arising under this Chapter or the declaration.
Except as provided in Section 81-1‑122, if entered into before the executive board elected by the unit owners pursuant to Section 81-3‑103(f) takes office, (i) any management contract, employment contract, or lease of recreational or parking areas or facilities, (ii) any other contract or lease between the association and a declarant or an affiliate of a declarant, or (iii) any contract or lease that is not bona fide or was unconscionable to the unit owners at the time entered into under the circumstances then prevailing, may be terminated without penalty by the association at any time after the executive board elected by the unit owners pursuant to Section 81-3‑103(f) takes office upon not less than 90 days' notice to the other party. This section does not apply to: (i) any lease the termination of which would terminate the common interest community or reduce its size, unless the real estate subject to that lease was included in the common interest community for the purpose of avoiding the right of the association to terminate a lease under this section, or (ii) a proprietary lease.
(a) The bylaws of the
association must provide for:
(1) the number of members of
the executive board and the titles of the officers of the association;
(2) election by the executive
board, or if the declaration so requires by the unit owners, of a president,
treasurer, secretary, and any other officers of the association specified in
the bylaws;
(3) the qualifications, powers
and duties, terms of office, and manner of electing and removing executive
board members and offices and filling vacancies;
(4) which of its powers the
executive board or officers may delegate to other persons or to a managing
agent;
(5) which of its officers may
prepare, execute, certify, and record amendments to the declaration on behalf
of the association;
(6) for an association for a
condominium or cooperative with more than 50 unit owners, an annual independent
audit by a licensed certified public accounting firm of the financial records
of the association, provided that where an association of fewer than 100 unit
owners so decides by duly adopted resolution, the audit requirement may be
satisfied by a review (instead of a full audit) which need not be conducted by
a certified public accounting firm;
(7) a method for amending the
bylaws by the unit owners;
(8) any provisions that may be
necessary to satisfy requirements in this Chapter or the declaration concerning
meetings, voting, quorums and other matters concerning the activities of the
association; and
(9) any other matters required
by the laws of this State to appear in the bylaws of legal entities organized
in the same manner as the association.
(b) Subject to the provisions of the
declaration, the bylaws may provide for any other matters the association deems
necessary and appropriate unless the declaration or this Chapter requires that
those provisions appear in the declaration.
§81-3‑107.
UPKEEP OF COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY.
(a) Except to the extent provided by the
declaration, subsection (b), or Section 81-3‑113(h), the association,
through its executive board, is responsible for maintenance, repair, and replacement
of the common elements, and each unit owner is responsible for maintenance,
repair, and replacement of the unit owner’s unit. Each unit owner shall afford to the
association and the other unit owners, and to their agents or employees, as
designated by the executive board, access through the unit owner’s unit
reasonably necessary for those purposes.
If damage is inflicted on the common elements or on any unit through
which access is taken, the unit owner responsible for the damage, or the association
if it is responsible, is liable for the prompt repair thereof. Each unit owner is likewise responsible for
the costs, as determined by the association, associated with the maintenance,
repair and replacement of limited common elements appurtenant to the unit
owner’s unit or for the prorated expense if the limited common element is
associated with more than one unit. The
executive board shall determine when and to what extent such maintenance,
repair and replacement shall be required.
(b) In addition to the liability that a
declarant as a unit owner has under this Chapter, the declarant alone is liable
for all expenses in connection with real estate subject to development
rights. No other unit owner and no other
portion of the common interest community is subject to a claim for payment of
those expenses. Unless the declaration
provides otherwise, any income or proceeds from real estate subject to
development rights inures to the declarant.
(c) In a planned community, if all
development rights have expired with respect to any real estate, the declarant
remains liable for all expenses of that real estate unless, upon expiration,
the declaration provides that the real estate becomes common elements or units.
A meeting of the association must be held at least once each year. Special meetings of the association may be called by the president, a majority of the executive board, or by unit owners having at least 20 percent, or any lower percentage specified in the bylaws, of the votes in the association. Except in cases of emergency meetings, which may be held without prior notice, not fewer than 10 nor more than 60 days in advance of any regular or special meeting of the unit owners, the secretary or other officer specified in the bylaws shall cause notice of that meeting to be delivered to each unit owner by any means described in Section 81-3-122 or sent prepaid by United States mail to any mailing address designated in writing by the unit owner. The notice of any meeting must state the time and place of the meeting and the items on the agenda, including: (i) a statement of the general nature of any proposed amendment to the declaration or bylaws; (ii) a statement that in the absence of objection from any unit owner present at the meeting, the president may add items to the agenda; (iii) any budget changes; and (iv) any proposal to remove an officer or member of the executive board. Regardless of the agenda, unit owners shall be given a reasonable opportunity at any meeting to offer comments to the executive board regarding any matter affecting the common interest community.
(a) A meeting of the executive board must be held at least quarterly. Special meetings of the executive board may be called by the president or a majority of the executive board. For purposes of this section, "meetings of the executive board" do not include incidental or other informal gatherings of two or more directors for social or other purposes or any meetings where no decisions are made or discussed regarding association business. The executive board and individual directors shall not use incidental or social gatherings of directors or other devices to evade the open meeting requirements of this section.
(b) Except when a schedule of meetings has been distributed to
unit owners that identifies the meeting in question or in cases of emergency
meetings that may be held without prior notice, the secretary or other officer
specified in the bylaws shall cause notice of any regular or special executive board meeting
to be delivered to each unit owner by any means described in Section 81-3‑122
not fewer than 10 nor more than 60 days in advance of the meeting (but not
later than the time notice of the meeting is sent to members of the executive
board). The notice must state the time
and place of the meeting and the items on the agenda, including an opportunity
for unit owners to offer comments to the executive board regarding any matter
affecting the common interest community.
(c) After the period of declarant control ends, all meetings of
the executive board shall be open to the unit owners except for executive
sessions held for purposes of (i) consulting with the association’s lawyer
regarding, or board discussion of, litigation, mediation, arbitration or
administrative proceedings or any contract matters; (ii) labor or personnel
matters; (iii) discuss matters relating to contract negotiations, including the
review of bids or proposals, if premature general knowledge of those matters
would place the association at a disadvantage; or (iv) discussion of any
complaint from or alleged violation by a unit owner, when the executive board
determines that public knowledge would violate the privacy of the unit owner.
(d) If any materials are distributed to the executive board before
the meeting, the association shall at the same time make copies of those
materials reasonably available to unit owners, except that the association need
not distribute copies of unapproved minutes or materials that are to be
considered in executive session.
(e) Unless the declaration or bylaws otherwise provide, the
executive board may meet in a telephonic or video conference call or
interactive electronic communication process provided that:
(1) the meeting notice must indicate that the
meeting is to be a telephonic, video or other conference and, if not a meeting
in executive session, provide information as to how unit owners may participate
in the conference directly or by meeting at a central location or conference
connection; and
(2) the process must provide all unit owners
the opportunity to hear the discussion and offer comments as provided in
subsection (b). After termination of the period of declarant control, unit
owners may amend the bylaws to vary the procedures for conference calls
described in this subsection.
(f) After termination of the period of declarant control, in lieu
of
a meeting, the executive board may act by unanimous consent as documented in a
record signed by all its members, but the executive board may not act by
unanimous consent to: (i) adopt a rule, budget or special assessment, (ii)
impose a fine or take action to enforce the declaration, bylaws or rules, (iii) buy or sell real property, (iv) borrow
money, or (v) contract for any sum greater
than one percent 1% of the association ’s annual budget . The secretary shall promptly notify all unit
owners of any action taken by unanimous consent.
(g) A unit owner may maintain a civil action for injunctive or other appropriate relief if the executive board
fails to comply with this section. Actions taken at an executive board meeting in violation of this
section are voidable but a contract entered into with a third party who had no
knowledge of that failure is not invalid solely because of the board’s failure
to give notice of the meeting at which the contract was approved.
(a) Unless the bylaws provide otherwise, a
quorum is present throughout any meeting of the association if:
(1) persons entitled to cast at
least 20 percent of the votes in the association are present in person, by
proxy or by ballot at the beginning of the meeting, provided that at least 25
percent of the unit owners not related to the declarant are present; or
(2) ballots solicited in
accordance with Section 81-3-110(f) are delivered to the secretary in a timely
manner by persons who, together with those persons present in person or by
proxy or ballot at the beginning of the meeting, would comprise a quorum for
that meeting.
(b) Unless the bylaws provide otherwise, a
quorum is present throughout any meeting of the executive board if persons
entitled to cast a majority of the votes on that board are present throughout
the meeting.
(a) If only one of several owners of a unit
is present at a meeting of the association, that owner is entitled to cast all
the votes allocated to that unit. If
more than one of the owners are present, the votes allocated to that unit may
be cast only in accordance with the agreement of a majority in interest of the
owners, unless the declaration expressly provides otherwise. There is majority agreement if any one of the
owners casts the votes allocated to that unit without protest being made
promptly to the person presiding over the meeting by any of the other owners of
the unit.
(b) Votes allocated to a unit may be cast
pursuant to a proxy duly executed by a unit owner. If a unit is owned by more than one person,
each owner of the unit may vote or register protest to the casting of votes by
the other owners of the unit through a duly executed proxy. A unit owner may revoke a proxy given
pursuant to this section only by actual notice of revocation to the person
presiding over a meeting of the association.
A proxy is void if it is not dated or purports to be revocable without
notice. A proxy terminates one year
after its date, unless it specifies a shorter term.
(c) If the declaration requires that votes on
specified matters affecting the common interest community be cast by lessees
rather than unit owners of leased units: (i) the provisions of subsections (a)
and (b) apply to lessees as if they were unit owners; (ii) unit owners who have
leased their units to other persons may not cast votes on those specified
matters; and (iii) lessees are entitled to notice of meetings, access to
records, and other rights respecting those matters as if they were unit
owners. Unit owners must also be given
notice, in the manner provided in Section 81-3‑108, of all meetings at
which lessees are entitled to vote.
(d) Votes allocated to a unit owned by the
association may not be cast and shall not be calculated either in a quorum or
in any percentage of unit votes needed for any action by the unit owners.
(e) Except in cases where a greater percentage
of unit votes in the association is required by this Chapter or the
declaration, a majority of the votes cast in person, by proxy or by ballot at a
meeting of unit owners where a quorum is present shall determine the outcome of
any action of the association where a vote is taken so long as the number of
votes cast in favor comprise at least a majority of the number of votes
required for a quorum for that meeting.
(f) Action may be taken by ballot without a
meeting as follows:
(1) Unless prohibited or limited
by the declaration or bylaws, any action that the association may take at any
meeting of members may be taken without a meeting if the association delivers a
written or electronic ballot to every member entitled to vote on the matter. A ballot shall set forth each proposed action
and provide an opportunity to vote for or against each proposed action.
(2) All solicitations for votes
by ballot must: (A) indicate the number
of responses needed to meet the quorum requirements; (B) state the percentage
of approvals necessary to approve each matter other than election of directors;
(C) specify the time by which a ballot must be delivered to the association in
order to be counted, which time shall not be less than 3 days after the date
that the association delivers the ballot; and (D) describe procedures
(including time and size and manner) by when unit owners wishing to deliver
information to all unit owners regarding the subject of the vote may do so.
(3) Approval by the ballot
pursuant to this section is valid only if: (A) the number of votes cast by
ballot equals or exceeds the quorum required to be present at a meeting
authorizing the action; and (B) the number of approvals equals or exceeds the
number of votes that would be required to approve the matter at a meeting at
which the total number of votes cast was the same as the number of votes by
ballot.
(4) Except as otherwise
provided in the declaration or bylaws, a ballot shall not be revoked after
delivery to the association by death, disability or revocation by the person
who cast that vote.
(a) A unit owner is not liable, solely by
reason of being a unit owner, for an injury or damage arising out of the
condition or use of the common elements.
Neither the association nor any unit owner except the declarant is
liable for that declarant's torts in connection with any part of the common
interest community which that declarant has the responsibility to maintain.
(b) An action alleging a wrong done by the
association, including an action arising out of the condition or use of the
common elements, may be maintained only against the association and not against
any unit owner. If the wrong occurred
during any period of declarant control and the association gives the declarant
reasonable notice of and an opportunity to defend against the action, the
declarant who then controlled the association is liable to the association or
to any unit owner for (i) all tort losses not covered by insurance suffered by
the association or that unit owner, and (ii) all costs that the association
would not have incurred but for a breach of contract or other wrongful act or
omission. Whenever the declarant is
liable to the association under this section, the declarant is also liable for
all expenses of litigation, including reasonable attorney's fees, incurred by
the association.
(c) Except as provided in Section 81-4‑116(d)
with respect to warranty claims, any statute of limitation affecting the
association's right of action against a declarant under this Chapter is tolled
until the period of declarant control terminates. A unit owner is not precluded from
maintaining an action contemplated by this section because that person is a
unit owner or a member or officer of the association. Liens resulting from judgments against the
association are governed by Section 81-3‑117.
(a) In a condominium or planned community,
portions of the common elements may be conveyed or subjected to a security
interest by the association if persons entitled to cast at least 80 percent of
the votes in the association, including 80 percent of the votes allocated to
units not owned by a declarant, or any larger percentage the declaration
specifies, agree to that action; but all owners of units to which any limited
common element is allocated must agree in order to convey that limited common
element or subject it to a security interest.
The declaration may specify a smaller percentage only if all of the
units are restricted exclusively to non-residential uses. Proceeds of the sale are an asset of the
association, but the proceeds of the sale of limited common elements must be
distributed equitably among the owners of units to which the limited common
elements were allocated.
(b) Part of a cooperative may be conveyed and
all or part of a cooperative may be subjected to a security interest by the
association if persons entitled to cast at least 80 percent of the votes in the
association, including 80 percent of the votes allocated to units not owned by
a declarant, or any larger percentage the declaration specifies, agree to that
action; but, if fewer than all of the units or limited common elements are to
be conveyed or subjected to a security interest, then all unit owners of those
units, or the units to which those limited common elements are allocated, must
agree in order to convey those units or limited common elements or subject them
to a security interest. The declaration
may specify a smaller percentage only if all of the units are restricted
exclusively to nonresidential uses.
Proceeds of the sale are an asset of the association. Any purported conveyance or other voluntary
transfer of an entire cooperative, unless made pursuant to Section 81-2‑118,
is void.
(c) An agreement to convey common elements in
a condominium or planned community, or to subject them to a security interest,
or in a cooperative, an agreement to convey any part of a cooperative or
subject it to a security interest, must be evidenced by the execution of an
agreement, or ratifications thereof, in the same manner as a deed, by the
requisite number of unit owners. The
agreement must specify a date after which the agreement will be void unless
recorded before that date. The agreement
and all ratifications thereof must be recorded in every county in which a
portion of the common interest community is situated, and is effective only
upon recordation.
(d) The association, on behalf of the unit
owners, may contract to convey an interest in a common interest community
pursuant to subsection (a), but the contract is not enforceable against the
association until approved pursuant to subsections (a), (b), and (c). Thereafter, the association has all powers
necessary and appropriate to effect the conveyance or encumbrance, including
the power to execute deeds or other instruments.
(e) Unless made pursuant to this section, any
purported conveyance, encumbrance, judicial sale, or other voluntary transfer
of common elements or of any other part of a cooperative is void.
(f) A conveyance or encumbrance of common
elements or of a cooperative pursuant to this section does not deprive any unit
of its rights of access and support.
(g) Unless the declaration otherwise provides,
if the holders of first security interests on 80 percent of the units that are
subject to security interests on the day the unit owners' agreement under
subsection (c) is recorded consent in writing:
(1) a conveyance of common
elements pursuant to this section terminates both the undivided interests in
those common elements allocated to the units and the security interests in
those undivided interests held by all persons holding security interests in the
units; and
(2) an encumbrance of common
elements pursuant to this section has priority over all preexisting
encumbrances on the undivided interests in those common elements held by all
persons holding security interests in the units.
(h) The consents by holders of first security
interests on units described in subsection (g), or a certificate of the
secretary affirming that those consents have been received by the association,
may be recorded at any time before the date on which the agreement under
subsection (c) becomes void. Consents or
certificates so recorded are valid from the date they are recorded for purposes
of calculating the percentage of consenting first security interest holders,
regardless of later sales or encumbrances on those units. Even if the required percentage of first
security interest holders so consent, a conveyance or encumbrance of common
elements does not affect interests having priority over the declaration, or
created by the association after the declaration was recorded.
(i) In a cooperative, the association may
acquire, hold, encumber, or convey a proprietary lease without complying with
this section.
(a) Commencing not later than the time of the
first conveyance of a unit to a person other than a declarant, the association
shall maintain, to the extent reasonably available:
(1) property insurance on the
common elements and, in a planned community, also on property that must become
common elements, insuring against all risks of direct physical loss commonly
insured against or, in the case of a conversion building, against fire and
extended coverage perils. The total
amount of insurance after application of any deductibles must be not less than
80 percent of the actual cash value of the insured property at the time the
insurance is purchased and at each renewal date, exclusive of land,
excavations, foundations, and other items normally excluded from property
policies; and
(2) liability insurance,
including medical payments insurance, in an amount determined by the executive
board but not less than any amount specified in the declaration, covering all
occurrences commonly insured against for death, bodily injury, and property
damage arising out of or in connection with the use, ownership, or maintenance
of the common elements and, in cooperatives, also of all units.
(b) In the case of a building that contains
more than one unit having horizontal boundaries or vertical boundaries that
comprise common walls or other boundaries between units, the insurance
maintained under subsection (a)(1), to the extent reasonably available, must
include the units, but need not include improvements and betterments installed
by unit owners.
(c) If the insurance described in subsections
(a) and (b) is not reasonably available, the association promptly shall cause
notice of that fact to be hand-delivered or sent prepaid by
(d) Insurance policies carried pursuant to
subsections (a) and (b) must provide that:
(1) each unit owner is an
insured person under the policy with respect to liability arising out of such
unit owner's interest in the common elements or membership in the association;
(2) the insurer waives its
right to subrogation under the policy against any unit owner or member of the
unit owner's household;
(3) no act or omission by any
unit owner, unless acting within the scope of the unit owner's authority on
behalf of the association, will void the policy or be a condition to recovery
under the policy; and
(4) if, at the time of a loss
under the policy, there is other insurance in the name of a unit owner covering
the same risk covered by the policy, the association's policy provides primary
insurance.
(e) Any loss covered by the property policy
under subsections (a)(1) and (b) must be adjusted with the association, but the
insurance proceeds for that loss are payable to any insurance trustee
designated for that purpose, or otherwise to the association, and not to any
holder of a security interest. The
insurance trustee or the association shall hold any insurance proceeds in trust
for the association, unit owners, and lien holders as their interests may
appear. Subject to the provisions of
subsection (h), the proceeds must be disbursed first for the repair or
restoration of the damaged property, and the association, unit owners, and lien
holders are not entitled to receive payment of any portion of the proceeds
unless there is a surplus of proceeds after the property has been completely
repaired or restored, or the common interest community is terminated.
(f) An insurance policy issued to the
association does not prevent a unit owner from obtaining insurance for the unit
owner's own benefit.
(g) An insurer that has issued an insurance
policy under this section shall issue certificates or memoranda of insurance to
the association and, upon written request, to any unit owner or holder of a
security interest. The insurer issuing
the policy may not cancel or refuse to renew it until 30 days after notice of
the proposed cancellation or non-renewal has been mailed to the association,
each unit owner and each holder of a security interest to whom a certificate or
memorandum of insurance has been issued at their respective last known
addresses.
(h) Any portion of the common interest
community for which insurance is required under this section which is damaged
or destroyed must be repaired or replaced promptly by the association unless
(i) the common interest community is terminated, in which case Section 81-2‑118
applies (ii) repair or replacement would be illegal under any state or local
statute or ordinance governing health or safety, or (iii) 80 percent of the
unit owners, including every owner of a unit or assigned limited common element
that will not be rebuilt, vote not to rebuild.
The cost of repair or replacement in excess of insurance proceeds and
reserves is a common expense. If the entire
common interest community is not repaired or replaced, (i) the insurance
proceeds attributable to the damaged common elements must be used to restore
the damaged area to a condition compatible with the remainder of the common
interest community, and (ii) except to the extent that other persons will be
distributees, (A) the insurance proceeds attributable to units and limited
common elements that are not rebuilt must be distributed to the owners of those
units and the owners of the units to which those limited common elements were
allocated, or to lien holders, as their interests may appear, and (B) the
remainder of the proceeds must be distributed to all the unit owners or lien
holders, as their interests may appear, as follows: (1) in a condominium, in
proportion to the common element interests of all the units and (2) in a
cooperative or planned community, in proportion to the common expense
liabilities of all the units. If the
unit owners vote not to rebuild any unit, that unit's allocated interests are
automatically reallocated upon the vote as if the unit had been condemned under
Section 81-1‑107(a), and the association promptly shall prepare, execute,
and record an amendment to the declaration reflecting the reallocations.
(i) The provisions of this section may be
varied or waived in the case of a common interest community all of whose units
are restricted to non-residential use.
§81-3‑114.
SURPLUS FUNDS.
Unless otherwise provided in the declaration, any surplus funds of the association remaining after payment of or provision for common expenses and any prepayment of reserves must be paid annually to the unit owners in proportion to their common expense liabilities or credited to them to reduce their future common expense assessments.
(a) Until the association is validly
established pursuant to the Act and makes a common expense assessment, the
declarant shall pay all common expenses together, in the case of a
condominium or cooperative, with all sums necessary to fully fund the repair
and replacement reserve until the association makes its first assessment. After an
assessment has been made by the association, assessments must be made at least
annually, based on a budget adopted at least annually by the association. In the case of a condominium or cooperative,
the budget shall include as a line item a payment into the repair and
replacement reserve sufficient to maintain said reserve at the level of funding
required by the declaration, but in no event shall the budget line item funding
the repair and replacement reserve be less than 15% of the total budget.
(b) Except for assessments under subsections
(c), (d), and (e), all common expenses must be assessed against all the units
in accordance with the allocations set forth in the declaration pursuant to
Section 81-2‑107(a) and (b). Any
past due common expense assessment or installment thereof bears interest at the
rate established by the association not exceeding the lawful rate of interest.
(c) To the extent required by the
declaration:
(1) any common expense
associated with the maintenance, repair, or replacement of a limited common
element must be assessed against the units to which that limited common element
is assigned, equally, or in any other proportion the declaration provides;
(2) any common expense or
portion thereof included as part of the common expense budget, but benefiting
fewer than all of the units, including fees for services provided by the
association to occupants of individual units, must be assessed exclusively
against the units benefited based on their use and consumption of services; and
(3) the costs of insurance must
be assessed in proportion to risk and the costs of utilities must be assessed
in proportion to usage.
(d) Assessments to pay a judgment against the
association may be made only against the units in the common interest community
at the time the judgment was entered, in proportion to their common expense
liabilities.
(e) If any common expense is caused by the
misconduct of any unit owner or a unit owner's guests or invitees, the
association may assess that expense exclusively against the unit of that unit
owner.
(f) If common expense liabilities are
reallocated, common expense assessments and any installment thereof not yet due
must be recalculated in accordance with the reallocated common expense
liabilities.
(a) The association has a statutory lien on a
unit for any assessment levied against that unit or fines imposed against its
unit owner. Unless the declaration
otherwise provides, fees, charges, late charges, fines, and interest charged
pursuant to Section 81-3‑102(a)(10), (11), and (12), and any other sums
due the association under the declaration, this Chapter or as a result of an
administrative or judicial decision, together with court costs and reasonable
attorney’s fees incurred in attempting collection of the same, are enforceable
in the same manner as unpaid assessments under this section. If an assessment is payable in installments,
the lien is for the full amount of the assessment from the time the first
installment thereof becomes due. Unless the declaration provides for a
different rate of interest, interest on unpaid assessments shall accrue at the
rate of the lesser of 18% per annum or the highest rate permitted by law.
(b) Except as otherwise provided in the
declaration, a lien under this section is prior to all other liens and
encumbrances on a unit except (i) liens and encumbrances recorded before the
recordation of the declaration and, in a cooperative, liens and encumbrances
which the association creates, assumes, or takes subject to, (ii) a first or
second security interest on the unit recorded before the date on which the
assessment sought to be enforced became delinquent, or, in a cooperative, the
first or second security interest encumbering only the unit owner's interest
and perfected before the date on which the assessment sought to be enforced
became delinquent, and (iii) liens for real estate taxes and other governmental
assessments or charges against the unit or cooperative. The lien is also prior to all security
interests described in clause (ii) above to the extent of the common expense
assessments based on the periodic budget adopted by the association pursuant to
Section 81-3-115(a) which would have become due in the absence of acceleration
during the six months immediately preceding institution of an action to enforce
the lien. This subsection does not
affect the priority of mechanics' or materialmen's liens, or the priority of
liens for other assessments made by the association. The lien under this section is not subject to
the provisions of homestead or other exemptions.
(c) Unless the declaration otherwise
provides, if two or more associations have liens for assessments created at any
time on the same property, those liens have equal priority.
(d) Recording of the declaration constitutes
record notice and perfection of the lien.
No further recordation of any claim of lien for assessment under this
section is required.
(e) A lien for unpaid assessments is
extinguished unless proceedings to enforce the lien are instituted within 3
years after the full amount of the assessments becomes due; provided, that if
an owner of a unit subject to a lien under this section files a petition for
relief under the United States Bankruptcy Code, the period of time for
instituting proceedings to enforce the association’s lien shall be tolled until
30 days after the automatic stay of proceedings under Section 362 of the Bankruptcy
Code is lifted.
(f) This section does not prohibit actions
against unit owners to recover sums for which subsection (a) creates a lien or
prohibit an association from taking a deed in lieu of foreclosure.
(g) A judgment or decree in any action
brought under this section must include costs and reasonable attorney's fees
for the prevailing party.
(h) The association upon written request
shall furnish to a unit owner a statement setting forth the amount of unpaid
assessments against the unit. If the
unit owner's interest is real estate, the statement must be in recordable
form. The statement must be furnished
within 10 business days after receipt of the request and is binding on the
association, the executive board, and every unit owner.
(i) In a cooperative, upon nonpayment of an
assessment on a unit, the unit owner may be evicted in the same manner as
provided by law in the case of an unlawful holdover by a commercial tenant, and
the lien may be foreclosed as provided by this section.
(j) The association's lien may be foreclosed
or executed upon as provided in this subsection and subsection (m):
(1) In a condominium or planned
community, the association's lien must be foreclosed in like manner as a
mortgage on real estate by equitable foreclosure or executed upon by other
lawful procedures provided for in the declaration[23];
(2) In a cooperative whose unit
owners' interests in the units are real estate, the association's lien must be
foreclosed in like manner as a mortgage on real estate; or
(3) In a cooperative whose unit
owners' interests in the units are personal property, the association's lien
must be foreclosed in like manner as a security interest under Article 9 of the
Uniform Commercial Code.
(4) In the case of foreclosure,
the association shall give reasonable notice of its action to all lien holders
of the unit whose interest would be affected and to all other persons as would
be required under applicable law for the foreclosure of a mortgage on real
estate.
(k) In a cooperative, if the unit owner's
interest in a unit is real estate:
(1) The association, upon
non-payment of assessments and compliance with this subsection, may sell that
unit at a public sale or by private negotiation, and at any time and
place. Every aspect of the sale,
including the method, advertising, time, place, and terms must be
reasonable. The association shall give
to the unit owner and any lessees of the unit owner reasonable written notice
of the time and place of any public sale or, if a private sale is intended, or
the intention of entering into a contract to sell and of the time after which a
private disposition may be made. The
same notice must also be sent to any other person who has a recorded interest
in the unit which would be cut off by the sale, but only if the recorded
interest was on record seven weeks before the date specified in the notice as
the date of any public sale or seven weeks before the date specified in the
notice as the date after which a private sale may be made. The notices required by this subsection may
be sent to any address reasonable in the circumstances.
(2) Unless otherwise agreed,
the unit owner is liable for any deficiency in a foreclosure sale.
(3) The proceeds of a
foreclosure sale must be applied in the following order:
(i) the
reasonable expenses of sale;
(ii) the
reasonable expenses of securing possession before sale; holding, maintaining,
and preparing the unit for sale, including payment of taxes and other
governmental charges, premiums on hazard and liability insurance, and, to the
extent provided for by agreement between the association and the unit owner,
reasonable attorney's fees and other legal expenses incurred by the
association;
(iii) satisfaction
of the association's lien;
(iv) satisfaction
in the order of priority of any subordinate claim of record; and
(v) remittance
of any excess to the unit owner.
(4) A good faith purchaser for
value acquires the unit free of the association's debt that gave rise to the
lien under which the foreclosure sale occurred and any subordinate interest,
even though the association or other person conducting the sale failed to
comply with this section. The person
conducting the sale shall execute a conveyance to the purchaser sufficient to
convey the unit and stating that it is executed by the person after a
foreclosure of the association's lien by power of sale and that the person was
empowered to make the sale. Signature
and title or authority of the person signing the conveyance as grantor and a
recital of the facts of non-payment of the assessment and of the giving of the
notices required by this subsection are sufficient proof of the facts recited
and of the authority to sign. Further
proof of authority is not required even though the association is named as
grantee in the conveyance.
(5) At any time before the
association has disposed of a unit in a cooperative or entered into a contract
for its disposition under the power of sale, the unit owners or the holder of
any subordinate security interest may cure the unit owner's default and prevent
sale or other disposition by tendering the performance due under the security
agreement, including any amounts due because of exercise of a right to
accelerate, plus the reasonable expenses of proceeding to foreclosure incurred
to the time of tender, including reasonable attorney's fees of the creditor.
(l) In an action by an association to
collect assessments or to foreclose a lien on a unit under this section, the
court may appoint a receiver to collect all sums alleged to be due and owing to
a unit owner before commencement or during pendency of the action. The court may order the receiver to pay any
sums held by the receiver to the association during pendency of the action to
the extent of the association's common expense assessments based on a periodic
budget adopted by the association pursuant to Section 81-3‑115.
(m) The following restrictions apply to any
action by the association to foreclose its lien under this section:
(1) no foreclosure action may
be commenced unless (A) the unit owner, at the time the action is commenced,
owes a sum equal to at least 3 months of common expense assessments based on
the periodic budget last adopted by the association pursuant to Section
8-3-115(a); and (B) the executive board expressly votes to commence a
foreclosure action against that specific unit.
(2) The association shall apply
any sums paid by unit owners who are delinquent in paying assessments as
follows: (i) first, to unpaid assessments; (ii) then to late charges; (iii)
then to attorneys fees and other reasonable collection charges and costs; and
(iv) finally, to all other unpaid fees, charges, penalties, interest and late
charges.
(3) If the only sums due with
respect to a unit consist of fines and related sums levied against that unit, a
foreclosure action may not be commenced against that unit unless the
association has first secured a judgment against the unit owner with respect to
those fines and has perfected a judgment lien against the unit under State law.
(a) In a condominium or planned community:
(1) Except as provided in
paragraph (2), a judgment for money against the association if recorded or
docketed, is not a lien on the common elements, but is a lien in favor of the
judgment lien holder against (i) all of the real property of the association and
(ii) all of the units in the common interest community at the time the judgment
was entered. No other property of a unit
owner is subject to the claims of creditors of the association.
(2) If the association has
granted a security interest in the common elements to a creditor of the
association pursuant to Section 81-3‑112, the holder of that security
interest shall exercise its right against the common elements before its
judgment lien on any unit may be enforced.
(3) Whether perfected before or
after the creation of the common interest community, if a lien, other than a
deed of trust or mortgage (including a judgment lien or lien attributable to
work performed or materials supplied before creation of the common interest
community), becomes effective against two or more units, the unit owner of an
affected unit may pay to the lien holder the amount of the lien attributable to
the unit owner's unit, and the lien holder, upon receipt of payment, promptly
shall deliver a release of the lien covering that unit. The amount of the payment must be
proportionate to the ratio which that unit owner's common expense liability
bears to the common expense liabilities of all unit owners whose units are
subject to the lien. After payment, the
association may not assess or have a lien against that unit owner's unit for
any portion of the common expenses incurred in connection with that lien.
(4) A judgment against the
association must be indexed in the name of the common interest community and
the association and, when so indexed, is notice of the lien against the units.
(b) In a cooperative:
(1) If the association receives
notice of an impending foreclosure on all or any portion of the association's
real estate, the association shall promptly transmit a copy of that notice to
each unit owner of a unit located within the real estate to be foreclosed. Failure of the association to transmit the
notice does not affect the validity of the foreclosure.
(2) Whether or not a unit
owner's unit is subject to the claims of the association's creditors, no other
property of a unit owner is subject to those claims.
(a) The association shall maintain the following records in written form or in
another form capable of conversion into written form within a reasonable time:
(1) Detailed records of receipts and expenditures affecting the
operation and administration of the association and other appropriate
accounting records, including those for the repair and replacement
reserve. All financial records shall be
kept in accordance with generally accepted accounting practices.
(2) Minutes of all meetings of its members and
executive board, a record of all actions taken by the members or executive
board without a meeting, and a record of all actions taken by a committee of
the executive board in place of the board or directors on behalf of the
association.
(3) A record of its members in a form that
permits preparation of a list of the names and addresses of all members, in
alphabetical order by class, showing the number of votes each member is
entitled to cast and the members’ class of membership, if any; and
(4) In addition, the association shall keep a
copy of the following records at its principal office: (1) Its original or
restated certificate of incorporation and bylaws and all amendments to them
currently in effect; (2) the minutes of all members’ meetings and records of
all action taken by members without a meeting for the past three years; (3) any
financial statements and tax returns of the association prepared for the past
three years, together with the report of the auditors of the financial records;
(4) a list of the names and business addresses of its current directors and
officers; (5) its most recent annual report
delivered to the Secretary of the State; (6) in the case of a condominium or
cooperative, the association's most recent reserve study; and (7) financial and
other records sufficiently detailed to enable the association to comply with
Section 81-4-109.
(b) Subject to the provisions of subsection (c),
all records kept by the association, including the association’s
membership list and address, and aggregate salary information of employees of
the association, shall be available for examination and copying by a unit owner
or the unit owner's authorized agent so long as the request is made in good
faith and for a proper purpose related to the owner’s membership in the association. This right of
examination may be exercised (i) only during reasonable business hours or at a
mutually convenient time and location, and (ii) upon 5 days’ written notice
reasonably identifying the purpose for the request and the specific records of
the association requested.
(c) Records kept by an association may be withheld from inspection and
copying to the extent that they concern:
(1) Personnel matters relating to specific
persons or a person’s medical records;
(2) Contracts, leases, and other commercial
transactions to purchase or provide goods or services, currently in or under
negotiation;
(3) Pending or threatened litigation;
(4) Matters involving state or local
administrative or other formal proceedings before a government tribunal for
enforcement of the declaration, bylaws or rules;
(5) Communications with legal counsel which are
otherwise protected by the attorney‑client privilege or the attorney work
product doctrine;
(6) Disclosure of information in violation of
law;
(7) Meeting minutes or other confidential
records of an executive session of the executive board; or
(8) Individual unit owner files other than
those of the requesting owner.
(d) An attorney’s files and records relating to the association
are not records of the association and are not subject to inspection by owners
or production in a legal proceeding for examination by owners.
(e) The association may charge a fee for providing copies of any records under
this section but that fee may not exceed the actual cost of the materials
and labor incurred by the association.
(f) The right to copy records under this section includes the right to receive copies by xerographic or other means, including copies through an electronic transmission if available and so requested by the unit owner.
With respect to a
third person dealing with the association in the association's capacity as a
trustee, the existence of trust powers and their proper exercise by the
association may be assumed without inquiry.
A third person is not bound to inquire whether the association has power
to act as trustee or is properly exercising trust powers. A third person, without actual knowledge that
the association is exceeding or improperly exercising its powers, is fully
protected in dealing with the association as if it possessed and properly
exercised the powers it purports to exercise. A third person is not bound to assure the
proper application of trust assets paid or delivered to the association in its
capacity as trustee.
(a) Before adopting or substantially amending
any rule, the executive board must notify all unit owners of (i) its intention
to adopt the proposed rule and (ii) a date on which the executive board will
convene a meeting to receive comments on them from the unit owners.
(b) If the right is reserved in the
declaration pursuant to Section 81-3-102(a)(16), the association may adopt
rules to establish and enforce construction and design criteria and aesthetic
standards. If it does so, the
association must also adopt procedures for enforcement of those standards and
for approval of applications, including a reasonable time within which the
association must act after an application is submitted. The association's power under this section is
subject to any reserved special declarant right to control any construction or
design review process during the period of declarant control.
(c) A rule regulating display of the flag of the United States must be consistent with federal law, but the rule may not prohibit the right of a unit owner to display the flag of the United States, measuring up to 3 feet by 5 feet, on a pole attached to the exterior wall of that unit owner's unit or the limited common elements appurtenant to that unit. Unless the declaration otherwise provides, no rule may prohibit the display on a unit or on a limited common element adjoining a unit of a flag of this state, or signs regarding candidates for public office or ballot questions, but the association may adopt rules governing the time, place, size, number or manner of those displays. Unless the declaration provides otherwise during the first 2 years of the period of declarant control, no rule may prohibit the right of a unit owner to display a "For Sale" sign, measuring up to 12 inches by 18 inches (12" X 18"), on the exterior wall of the unit owner's unit or the limited common elements appurtenant to that unit. Unless the declaration provides otherwise, the "For Sale" sign shall be entitled "For Sale" and may contain such information as accurately describes the unit and any applicable names, addresses and phone numbers of the person or persons who are offering the unit for sale.
(d) Unless otherwise permitted by the declaration or this Chapter, an association may only adopt rules that affect the use of or behavior in units that may be used for residential purposes to:
(1) prevent any use of a unit which violates the declaration;
(2) regulate any behavior in or occupancy of a unit which violates the declaration or adversely affects the use and enjoyment of other units or the common elements by other unit owners; or
(3) restrict the leasing of residential units to the extent those rules are reasonably designed to meet underwriting requirements of institutional lenders who regularly lend money secured by first mortgages on units in common interest communities or regularly purchase those mortgages.
(e) All rules adopted by the association must be reasonable.
(f) The executive board must maintain on a current basis for reference by unit owners’ tenants a complete statement of all rules.
(g) The unit owner shall obtain from the executive board and deliver to or otherwise make available to each tenant of the unit owner's unit, at the time the lease is executed or, in the absence of a written lease when the tenancy begins, a current copy of the rules for the common interest community as furnished by the executive board and shall deliver to or otherwise make available to the tenant a copy of any additions or revisions to the rules as such additions or revisions are adopted and noticed to the unit owners by the executive board.
(h) A tenant shall be bound to comply with the noticed rules, and the unit owner leasing to the tenant shall take all lawful action against a tenant who materially violates the noticed rules.
(i) By entering into a lease for a unit, the unit owner of that unit irrevocably appoints the executive board as attorney-in-fact coupled with an interest to enforce the noticed rules against the tenant of that lease in the event that the unit owner shall fail, within a reasonable time after written demand by the executive board, to take what the executive board reasonably regards as adequate enforcement action against the tenant in material violation of noticed rules. In the event of enforcement action (including any summary action for possession at law or a petition for injunctive relief in equity) under this subsection, the tenant shall have no resort to any defense based upon lack of contractual privity with the executive board.
(a) An association’s authority under Section 81-3‑102 (a)(3) to commence and pursue litigation involving the common interest community is subject to the following rules:
(1) Before the association commences litigation, arbitration or any administrative proceedings against a declarant or any person employed by or under contract with a declarant involving any alleged construction defect with respect to the common interest community, the association shall provide written notice of its claims to the declarant and those persons whom the association seeks to hold responsible for the claimed defects (the "allegedly responsible persons"). The text of the notice may be in any form reasonably calculated to put the allegedly responsible persons on notice of the general nature of the association’s claims including, without limitation, a list of the claimed defects. The notice may be delivered by any method of service and may be addressed to any person provided that the method of service and the person who is actually served either:(i) provides actual notice to the allegedly responsible persons named in the claim; or (ii) the method of service used would be sufficient under local law to confer personal jurisdiction over the person in connection with commencement of a lawsuit by the association against that person.
(2) The association may not commence litigation, arbitration or any administrative proceedings against a responsible person for a period of 90 days after the association sends notice of its claim to that responsible person.
(3) During the 90 day period, the declarant and any other responsible person may present to the association a plan to repair or otherwise remedy the construction defects described in the notice. If the association does not receive a timely remediation plan from each responsible person to whom it directed notice, the association shall be entitled to commence any proceedings against that responsible person as the board determines to be appropriate.
(4) If the association does receive one or more timely plans to repair or otherwise remedy the construction defects described in the notice, then the Association board shall promptly consider those plans and then notify the responsible persons of whether or not each such plan is acceptable as presented, acceptable with stated conditions, or not accepted.
(5) If the association accepts a repair plan from a responsible person, or if a responsible person agrees to stated conditions to an otherwise acceptable plan, then the parties shall agree on a timeframe for implementation of that plan, and the association shall not commence litigation, arbitration or any administrative proceedings against that allegedly responsible person during the time that the plan is being diligently implemented.
(6) If an allegedly responsible person submits notice submits a timely repair plan but the association and the allegedly responsible party have not agreed in writing to the terms of the plan or its implementation, then the association is entitled to commence litigation, arbitration or any administrative proceedings against that person.
(7) Except as provided in Section 81-4‑116(d) with respect to warranty claims, any statute of limitation affecting the association’s right of action against a declarant or other allegedly responsible person under this Chapter is tolled during the 90 day period described in subsection (a)(2) above and during any extension of that time because the allegedly responsible person has commenced and is diligently pursuing the remediation plan.
(8) After the time described in subsection (a)(3) expires, whether or not the association agrees to any repair plan, nothing in this section bars to the commencement of litigation by:
(i) the
association against an allegedly responsible person who fails to submit a
timely repair plan or whose plan is not acceptable or who fails to diligently
pursue implementation of that plan; or
(ii) a unit owner
with respect to that owner’s unit and any limited common elements assigned to
that unit, regardless of any actions of the association.
(9) Nothing in this section precludes the association from making emergency repairs to correct any defect that poses a significant and immediate health or safety risk.
(10) Subject to the other provisions of this section and the declaration, the determination of whether and when the association may commence any proceedings may be made by the executive board and nothing in this section requires a vote by any number or percentage of unit owners a pre‑condition to litigation.
§ 81-3-122 NOTICE.
(a) Unless otherwise required or permitted by the declaration or bylaws, the following methods of giving notice suffice when notice is required: (i) hand‑delivered to each unit owner; (ii) sent prepaid by United States mail to the mailing address of each unit, unless the owner has designated in writing a different mailing address in which case it shall be sent to the designated address; or (iii) sent by electronic means in the manner described in subsection (b).
(b) An association provides effective notice by electronic means if the unit owner gives the association prior written authorization to provide that notice, together with an electronic address.
(c) The ineffectiveness of a good faith effort to deliver notice by any authorized means does not invalidate action taken at a meeting or in lieu of a meeting.
§ 81-3-123 REMOVAL OF MEMBERS OF EXECUTIVE BOARD.
Notwithstanding any provision of the declaration or bylaws to the contrary, the unit owners, by a two‑thirds vote of all persons present, in person, by proxy or by ballot, and entitled to vote at any meeting of the unit owners at which a quorum is present, may remove any member of the executive board with or without cause, except that: (i) a member appointed by the declarant may not be removed by a unit owner vote during the period of declarant control, and (ii) a person appointed under Section 81-3-(103)(h) may only be removed by the person that appointed that member;
(a) The unit owners may consider the question of whether to remove a member of the executive board either (1) at any duly called meeting of the unit owners at which a quorum is present if that subject was listed in the notice of the meeting, or (2) at a special meeting called for the purpose of removing a member of the executive board, whether or not a quorum is present, so long as the voting at the special meeting is conducted in the manner described in sub-section (c).
(b) At any meeting at which a vote to remove a member of the executive board is to be taken, the executive board shall provide a reasonable opportunity to speak before the vote to all persons favoring and opposing removal of that member, including without limitation the member being considered for removal.
(c) If a special meeting is called for the purpose of removing a member of the executive board, then the following rules apply, whether or not a quorum is present at that meeting in person or by proxy:
(1) After all persons present at the meeting have been given a reasonable opportunity to speak, the meeting shall be recessed for a period calculated in the manner described in sub-section 2 below.
(2) Promptly following the recess, the association shall notify all unit owners of the recessed meeting and inform the unit owners of their opportunity to cast votes either in favor or against removal during the 30 day period following the day that the notice is sent.
(3) The notice sent to unit owners shall specifically inform them of their right to cast votes either in a secret written ballot, on a form provided to the unit owners or by electronic means according to instructions contained in that notice.
(d) Whether a vote under subsection (c) is taken before or after a recess, and whether or not taken by electronic means, a member of the executive board may be removed only if the number of votes cast in favor of removal (i) exceeds the number of votes cast in opposition to removal and (ii) is greater than one-third of the total votes of the association.
§ 81-3-124 ADOPTION OF BUDGET.
(a) The executive board shall, at least annually, prepare a proposed budget for the common interest community for consideration by the unit owners. The proposed budget shall include a line item for any required funding of a repair and replacement reserve. Within 30 days after adoption of any proposed budget, the executive board shall provide to all unit owners a summary of the budget, including any reserves and a statement of the basis on which any reserves are calculated and funded. Simultaneously, the executive board shall set a date for a meeting of the unit owners to consider ratification of the budget not less than 14 nor more than 60 days after providing the summary. Unless at that meeting a majority of all unit owners or any larger vote specified in the declaration reject the budget, the budget is ratified, whether or not a quorum is present. If a proposed periodic budget is rejected, the periodic budget last ratified by the unit owners must be continued until such time as the unit owners ratify a subsequent budget proposed by the executive board.
(b) In addition to adoption of its regular periodic budget, the executive board may at any time propose a budget which would require a special assessment against all the units. Except as provided in subsection (c), the special assessment is effective only if the executive board follows the procedures for ratification of a budget described in subsection (a) and the unit owners do not reject that proposed special assessment.
(c) If the executive board determines by unanimous vote that the special assessment is necessary in order to respond to an emergency, then: (i) the special assessment shall become effective immediately in accordance with the terms of the vote; (ii) notice of the emergency assessment shall be promptly provided to all unit owners; and (iii) the executive board shall spend the funds paid on account of the emergency assessment solely for the purposes described in the vote.
§81-3‑125 SERVICE ON ASSOCIATIONS AND EXECUTIVE BOARD.
A person may bring suit against the association or the executive board as a whole in any cause by service in accordance with the otherwise applicable rules authorizing service on the form of legal entity of the association.
SUBCHAPTER 4
PROTECTION
OF PURCHASERS
§81-4‑101. APPLICABILITY; WAIVER.
(a) This Subchapter applies
to all units subject to this Chapter, except as provided in subsection (b) or
as modified or waived by agreement of purchasers of units in a nonresidential
common interest community or as to units that are restricted to nonresidential
use.
(b) Neither a public offering statement nor a
resale certificate need be prepared or delivered in the case of:
(1) a gratuitous disposition of a unit;
(2) a disposition pursuant to court order;
(3) a disposition by a government or governmental agency;
(4) a disposition by foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure;
(5) a disposition to a dealer;
(6) a disposition that may be canceled at any time and for any reason by the purchase without penalty;
(7) a disposition by operation of law upon the death of the unit owner; or
(8) a disposition of a unit restricted to nonresidential purposes.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), a
declarant, before offering any interest in a unit to the public, shall prepare
a public offering statement conforming to the requirements of Sections 81-4‑103,
81-4‑104, 81-4‑105, and 81-4‑106.
(b) A declarant may transfer responsibility
for preparation of all or a part of the public offering statement to a
successor declarant or to a dealer who intends to offer units in the common
interest community. In the event of any
such transfer, the transferor shall provide the transferee with any information
necessary to enable the transferee to fulfill the requirements of subsection
(a).
(c) Any declarant or dealer who offers a unit
to a purchaser shall deliver a public offering statement in the manner
prescribed in Section 81-4‑108(a).
The person who prepared all or a part of the public offering statement
is liable under Sections 81-4‑108
and 81-4‑117 for any false or
misleading statement set forth therein or for any omission of a material fact
therefrom with respect to that portion of the public offering statement which
the person prepared. If a declarant did
not prepare any part of a public offering statement that the declarant delivers,
the declarant is not liable for any false or misleading statement set forth
therein or for any omission of a material fact therefrom unless the declarant
had actual knowledge of the statement or omission or, in the exercise of
reasonable care, should have known of the statement or omission.
(d) If a unit is part of a common interest
community and is part of any other real estate regime in connection with the
sale of which the delivery of a public offering statement is required under the
laws of this State, a single public offering statement conforming to the
requirements of Sections 81-4‑103, 81-4‑104, 81-4‑105, and
81-4‑106 as those requirements relate to each regime in which the unit is
located, and to any other requirements imposed under the laws of this State,
may be prepared and delivered in lieu of providing two or more public offering
statements.
§81-4‑103.
PUBLIC OFFERING STATEMENT; GENERAL PROVISIONS.
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), a
public offering statement must contain or fully and accurately disclose:
(1) the name and principal address of the declarant and of the common interest community, and a statement that the common interest community is either a condominium, cooperative, or planned community;
(2) a general description of the common interest community, including to the extent possible, the types, number, and declarant's schedule of commencement and completion of construction of buildings, and amenities that the declarant anticipates including in the common interest community;
(3) the number of units in the common interest community;
(4) copies and a brief narrative description of the significant features of the declaration, other than any plats and plans, and any other recorded covenants, conditions, restrictions, and reservations affecting the common interest community; the bylaws, and any rules or regulations of the association; copies of any contracts and leases to be signed by purchasers at closing, and a brief narrative description of any contracts or leases that will or may be subject to cancellation by the association under Section 81-3‑105;
(5) any current balance sheet and a projected
budget for the association, either within or as an exhibit to the public
offering statement, for one year after the date of the first conveyance to a
purchaser, and thereafter the current budget of the association, a statement of
who prepared the budget, and a statement of the budget's assumptions concerning
occupancy and inflation factors. The budget must include, without limitation:
(i) a
statement of the amount, or a statement that there is no amount, included in
the budget as a reserve for repairs and replacement;
(ii) a
statement of any other reserves;
(iii) the
projected common expense assessment by category of expenditures for the association;
and
(iv) the
projected monthly common expense assessment for each type of unit;
(6) any services not reflected in the budget that the declarant provides, or expenses that the declarant pays and which the declarant expects may become at any subsequent time a common expense of the association and the projected common expense assessment attributable to each of those services or expenses for the association and for each type of unit;
(7) any initial or special fee due from the seller or the purchaser at the time of sale, together with a description of the purpose and method of calculating the fee;
(8) a description of any liens, defects, or encumbrances on or affecting the title to the common interest community and a statement as to which liens, defects or encumbrances will remain after transfer of the unit;
(9) a description of any financing offered or arranged by the declarant;
(10) the terms and significant limitations of any warranties provided by the
declarant, including statutory warranties and limitations on the enforcement
thereof or on damages;
(11) a statement that:
(i) within
15 days after receipt of a public offering statement a purchaser, before
conveyance, may cancel any contract for purchase of a unit from a declarant,
(ii) if
a declarant fails to provide a public offering statement to a purchaser before
conveying a unit, that purchaser may recover from the declarant 10 percent of
the sales price of the unit plus 10 percent of the share, proportionate to the
purchaser’s common expense liability, of any indebtedness of the association
secured by security interests encumbering the common interest community, and
(iii) if
a purchaser receives the public offering statement more than 15 days before
signing a contract, the purchaser may not cancel the contract;
(12) a statement of any unsatisfied judgments or pending suits against the association, and the status of any pending suits material to the common interest community of which a declarant has actual knowledge;
(13) a statement that any deposit made in connection with the purchase of a unit will be held in an escrow account until closing and will be returned to the purchaser if the purchaser cancels the contract pursuant to Section 81-4‑108, together with the name and address of the escrow agent;
(14) any restraints on alienation of any portion
of the common interest community and any restrictions: (i) on use, occupancy,
and alienation of the units, and (ii) on the amount for which a unit may be
sold or on the amount that may be received by a unit owner on sale, condemnation, or casualty loss to the unit or to the
common interest community, or on termination of the common interest community;
(15) a description of the insurance coverage provided for the benefit of unit owners;
(16) any current or expected fees or charges to be paid by unit owners for the use of the common elements and other facilities related to the common interest community;
(17) the extent to which financial arrangements have been provided for completion of all improvements that the declarant is obligated to build pursuant to Section 81-4‑119; and
(19) in a
cooperative, a statement whether the unit owners will be entitled, for federal,
state, and local income tax purposes, to a pass-through of deductions for payments made by the
association for real estate taxes and interest paid the holder of a security
interest encumbering the cooperative, and a statement as to the effect on every
unit owner if the association fails to pay real estate taxes or payments due
the holder of a security interest encumbering the cooperative.
(b) If a common interest community composed
of not more than 12 units is not subject to any development rights and no power
is reserved to a declarant to make the common interest community part of a
larger common interest community, group of common interest communities, or
other real estate, a public offering statement may but need not include the
information otherwise required by paragraphs (9), (10), (15), (16) and (17) of
subsection (a) and the narrative descriptions of documents required by
subsection (a)(4).
(c) A declarant promptly shall amend the
public offering statement to report any material change in the information
required by this section.
If the declaration provides that a common interest community is subject to any development rights, the public offering statement must disclose, in addition to the information required by Section 81-4‑103:
(a) the maximum number of units, and the maximum
number of units per acre, that may be created;
(b) a statement of how many or what
percentage of the units that may be created will be restricted exclusively to
residential use, or a statement that no representations are made regarding use
restrictions;
(c) if any of the units that may be built
within real estate subject to development rights are not to be restricted
exclusively to residential use, a statement, with respect to each portion of
that real estate, of the maximum percentage of the real estate areas, and the
maximum percentage of the floor areas of all units that may be created therein,
that are not restricted exclusively to residential use;
(d) a brief narrative description of any
development rights reserved by a declarant and of any conditions relating to or
limitations upon the exercise of development rights;
(e) a statement of the maximum extent to
which each unit's allocated interests may be changed by the exercise of any
development right described in subsection (c);
(f) a statement of the extent to which any
buildings or other improvements that may be erected pursuant to any development
right in any part of the common interest community will be compatible with
existing buildings and improvements in the common interest community in terms
of architectural style, quality of construction, and size, or a statement that
no assurances are made in those regards;
(g) general descriptions of all other
improvements that may be made and limited common elements that may be created
within any part of the common interest community pursuant to any development
right reserved by the declarant, or a statement that no assurances are made in
that regard;
(h) a statement of any limitations as to the
locations of any building or other improvement that may be made within any part
of the common interest community pursuant to any development right reserved by
the declarant, or a statement that no assurances are made in that regard;
(i) a statement that any limited common
elements created pursuant to any development right reserved by the declarant
will be of the same general types and sizes as the limited common elements
within other parts of the common interest community, or a statement of the
types and sizes planned, or a statement that no assurances are made in that
regard;
(j) a statement that the proportion of
limited common elements to units created pursuant to any development right
reserved by the declarant will be approximately equal to the proportion
existing within other parts of the common interest community, or a statement of
any other assurances in that regard, or a statement that no assurances are made
in that regard;
(k) a statement that all restrictions in the
declaration affecting use, occupancy, and alienation of units will apply to any
units created pursuant to any development right reserved by the declarant, or a
statement of any differentiations that may be made as to those units, or a
statement that no assurances are made in that regard; and
(l) a statement of the extent to which any
assurances made pursuant to this section apply or do not apply in the event
that any development right is not exercised by the declarant.
§81-4‑105.
TIME SHARES.
If the declaration provides that ownership or occupancy of any units, is or may be in time shares, the public offering statement shall disclose, in addition to the information required by Section 81-4‑103:
(a) the number and identity of units in which
time shares may be created;
(b) the total number of time shares that may
be created;
(c) the minimum duration of any time shares
that may be created; and
(d) the extent to which the creation of time
shares will or may affect the enforceability of the association's lien for
assessments provided in Section 81-3‑116.
(a) The public offering statement of a common
interest community containing any conversion building must contain, in addition
to the information required by Section 81-4‑103:
(1) a statement by the declarant, based on a report prepared by an independent registered architect or engineer, describing the present condition of all structural components and mechanical and electrical installations material to the use and enjoyment of the building;
(2) a statement by the declarant of the expected useful life of each item reported on in
paragraph (1) or a statement that no representations are made in that regard;
and
(3) a list of any outstanding notices of uncured violations of building code
or other municipal regulations, together with the estimated cost of curing
those violations.
(b) This section applies only to buildings
containing units that may be occupied for residential use.
If an interest in a common interest community is currently
registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission of the
(a) A person required to deliver a public
offering statement pursuant to Section 81-4‑102(c) shall provide a
purchaser with a copy of the public offering statement and all amendments
thereto before conveyance of the unit, and not later than the date of any
contract of sale. Unless a purchaser is
given the public offering statement more than 15 days before execution of a
contract for the purchase of a unit, the purchaser, before conveyance, may
cancel the contract within 15 days after first receiving the public offering
statement.
(b) If a purchaser elects to cancel a contract
pursuant to subsection (a), the purchaser may do so by hand delivering notice
thereof to the offeror or by mailing notice thereof by prepaid
(c) If a person required to deliver a public
offering statement pursuant to Section 81-4‑102(c) fails to provide a
purchaser to whom a unit is conveyed with that public offering statement and
all amendments thereto as required by subsection (a), the purchaser, in
addition to any rights to damages or other relief, is entitled to receive from
that person an amount equal to 10 percent of the sale price of the unit, plus
10 percent of the share, proportionate to the purchaser’s common expense
liability, of any indebtedness of the association secured by security interests
encumbering the common interest community.
(a) Except in the case of a sale in which
delivery of a public offering statement is required, or unless exempt under
Section 81-4‑101(b), a unit owner shall furnish to a purchaser not later
than the time of the signing of the contract to purchase, a copy of the
declaration (other than any plats and plans), all amendments to the
declaration, the bylaws, and the rules of the association (including all
amendments to the rules), and a certificate containing or attaching:
(1) a statement disclosing the effect on the proposed disposition of any right of first refusal or other restraint on the free alienability of the unit held by the association;
(2) a statement setting forth the amount of the periodic common expense assessment and any unpaid common expense or special assessment currently due and payable from the selling unit owner;
(3) a statement of any other fees payable by the owner of the unit being sold;
(4) in a condominium or cooperative, a statement of the current number of unit owners delinquent in the payment of common expense assessments and the aggregate amount of such delinquency;
(5) in a condominium or cooperative, a statement of the current balance in the repair and replacement reserve;
(6) a statement of any capital expenditures approved by the association for the current and succeeding fiscal years, including a statement of the amount of such capital expenditures to be taken from the repair and replacement reserve;
(7) in a condominium or cooperative, a copy of the most recent reserve study;
(8) the most recent regularly prepared balance sheet and income and expense statement, if any, of the association;
(9) the most recent report of auditors (if required by Section 81-3-106(a)(6)) on the association balance sheet and income and expense statement or any accountant's report on any unaudited association balance sheet and income and expense statement;
(10) the current operating budget of the association;
(11) a statement of any unsatisfied judgments against the association and the status of any pending suits in which the association is a defendant;
(12) a statement describing any insurance coverage provided for the benefit of unit owners;
(13) in a condominium or
cooperative, a statement as to whether the executive board has given or
received written notice that any existing uses, occupancies, alterations, or
improvements in or to the unit or to the limited common elements assigned
thereto violate any provision of the declaration;
(14) in a condominium or
cooperative, a statement as to whether the executive board has received written
notice from a governmental agency of any violation of environmental, health, or building codes with respect to the
unit, the limited common elements assigned thereto, or any other portion of the
common interest community which has not been cured;
(15) in a condominium or
cooperative, a statement of the remaining term of any leasehold estate
affecting the common interest community and the provisions governing any extension or renewal thereof;
(16) in a cooperative, an accountant's statement, if any was prepared, as to the deductibility for federal income tax purposes by the unit owner of real estate taxes and interest paid by the association;
(17) a statement describing any pending sale or encumbrance of common elements;
(18) in a
condominium or cooperative, a statement of the number of units that are not
owner-occupied; and
(19) copies of the minutes for the executive board meeting for the preceding six months.
(b) The association, within 10 days after a
request by a unit owner, shall furnish a certificate containing the information
necessary to enable the unit owner to comply with this section. A unit owner providing a certificate pursuant
to subsection (a) is not liable to the purchaser for any erroneous information
provided by the association and included in the certificate and is not liable
to the purchaser under this Section if the owner had, after reasonable
investigation, reasonable grounds to believe, and did believe, at the time the
information was provided to the purchaser, that the statements were true and
there was no omission to state a material fact necessary to make the statements
made not misleading, in light of the circumstances under which the statements
were made.
(c) A unit owner is not liable to a purchaser
for the failure or delay of the association to provide the certificate in a
timely manner, but a purchaser of a unit in a condominium or cooperative shall
have a period of 10 days from receipt of the declaration, bylaws, rules and the
certificate described in this Section to cancel the contract to purchase
without penalty and receive the full refund of all deposit payments made on
account of the contract to purchase.
(d) A purchaser is not liable for any unpaid
assessment or fee greater than the amount set forth in the certificate prepared
by the association.
Any deposit made in connection with the purchase or reservation of a unit from a person required to deliver a public offering statement pursuant to Section 81-4‑102(c) must be placed in escrow and held either in this State or in an account designated solely for that purpose by an attorney or a licensed real estate broker or an institution whose accounts are insured by a governmental agency or instrumentality until (i) delivered to the declarant at closing; (ii) delivered to the declarant because of the purchaser's default under a contract to purchase the unit; or (iii) refunded to the purchaser. An escrow agent acting in good faith and in accordance with the terms of the escrow shall have no liability for the disposition of the fund.
(a) In the case of a sale of a unit where
delivery of a public offering statement is required pursuant to Section 81-4‑102(c),
a seller
(1) before conveying a unit, shall record or furnish to the
purchaser releases of all liens, except liens on real estate that a declarant
has the right to withdraw from the common interest community, that the
purchaser does not expressly agree to take subject to or assume and that
encumber:
(i) in
a condominium, that unit and its common element interest, and
(ii) in
a cooperative or planned community, that unit and any limited common elements
assigned thereto, or
(2) shall provide a surety bond
or substitute collateral for or insurance against the lien as provided for
liens on real estate.
(b) Before conveying real estate to the
association, the declarant shall have that real estate released from: (1) all
liens the foreclosure of which would deprive unit owners of any right of access
to or easement of support of their units, and (2) all other liens on that real
estate unless the public offering statement describes certain real estate that
may be conveyed subject to liens in specified amounts.
(a) A declarant of a common interest
community containing conversion buildings, and any dealer who intends to offer
units in such a common interest community, shall give each of the residential
tenants and any residential subtenant in possession of a portion of a
conversion building notice of the conversion and provide those persons with the
public offering statement no later than 120 days before the tenants and any
subtenant in possession are required to vacate.
The notice must set forth generally the rights of tenants and subtenants
under this section and must be hand delivered to the unit or mailed by prepaid
(b) For 60 days after delivery or mailing of
the notice described in subsection (a), the person required to give the notice
shall offer to convey each unit or proposed unit occupied for residential use
to the tenant who leases that unit. If a
tenant fails to purchase the unit during that 60 day period, the offeror may
not offer to dispose of an interest in that unit during the following 180 days
at a price or on terms more favorable to the offeree than the price or terms
offered to the tenant. This subsection
does not apply to any unit in a conversion building if that unit will be
restricted exclusively to non-residential use or the boundaries of the
converted unit do not substantially conform to the dimensions of the
residential unit before conversion.
(c) If a seller, in violation of subsection
(b), conveys a unit to a purchaser for value who has no knowledge of the
violation, the recordation of the deed conveying the unit or, in a cooperative,
the conveyance of the unit, extinguishes any right a tenant may have under
subsection (b) to purchase that unit if the deed states that the seller has
complied with subsection (b), but the conveyance does not affect the right of a
tenant to recover damages from the seller for a violation of subsection (b).
(d) If a notice of conversion specifies a
date by which a unit or proposed unit must be vacated and otherwise complies
with the provisions of Delaware Law, the notice also constitutes a notice to
vacate specified by that statute.
(e) Nothing in this section permits termination of a lease by a declarant in violation of its terms.
(f) Conversion of a residential conversion building must also comply with all other laws applicable to a conversion.
(a) Express warranties made by a declarant to
a purchaser of a unit, if relied upon by the purchaser, are created as follows:
(1) any affirmation of fact or promise in writing which relates to the unit, its use, or rights appurtenant thereto, area improvements to the common interest community that would directly benefit the unit, or the right to use or have the benefit of facilities not located in the common interest community, creates an express warranty that the unit and related rights and uses will substantially conform to the affirmation or promise in all material respects;
(2) any model or description of the physical
characteristics of the common interest community, including plans and
specifications of or for improvements,
creates an express warranty that the common interest community will
substantially conform to the model or description in all material respects
unless the model or description discloses that it is only proposed or is
subject to change;
(3) any description of the quantity or extent of the real estate comprising the common interest community, including plats or surveys, creates an express warranty that the common interest community will substantially conform to the description in all material respects, subject to customary tolerances; and
(4) a provision that a purchaser may put a unit
only to a specified use is an express warranty that the specified use is lawful
in all material respects.
(b) Neither formal words, such as
"warranty" or "guarantee," nor a specific intention to make
a warranty, are necessary to create an express warranty of quality, but a statement
purporting to be merely an opinion or commendation of the real estate or its
value does not create a warranty.
(c) Any conveyance of a unit transfers to the
purchaser all express warranties of quality made by the declarant.
(d) The warranties set out in this section
are intended to supplement, not supercede or replace, any other statutory
construction warranty requirements. To
the extent that there is a conflict between such other statutory construction
warranty requirements and this section, the provision most favorable to the
purchaser shall prevail
(a) A declarant and any dealer warrants that
a unit, other than a unit not yet constructed or under construction at the time
of contracting, will be in at least as good condition at the earlier of the
time of the conveyance or delivery of possession as it was at the time of
contracting, reasonable wear and tear excepted.
(b) A declarant and any dealer impliedly
warrants that a unit and the common elements in the common interest community
are suitable for the ordinary uses of real estate of its type and that any
improvements made or contracted for by the declarant or dealer, or made by any
person before the creation of the common interest community, will be:
(1) free from defective materials; and
(2) constructed in accordance with applicable law, according to sound engineering and
construction standards, and in a workmanlike manner.
(c) A declarant and any dealer warrants to a
purchaser of a unit that may be used for residential use that an existing use,
continuation of which is contemplated by the parties, does not violate
applicable law at the earlier of the time of conveyance or delivery of
possession.
(d) Warranties imposed by this section may be
excluded or modified as specified in Section 81-4‑115.
(e) For purposes of this section,
improvements made or contracted for by an affiliate of a declarant are made or
contracted for by the declarant.
(f) Any conveyance of a unit transfers to
the purchaser all of the declarant's implied warranties of quality.
(g) The warranties set out in this
section are intended to supplement, not supercede or replace, any other
statutory construction warranty requirements.
To the extent that there is a conflict between such other statutory
construction warranty requirements and this section, the provision most
favorable to the purchaser shall prevail.
(a) Except as limited by subsection (b) with
respect to a purchaser of a unit that may be used for residential use, implied
warranties of quality:
(1) may be excluded or modified by agreement of the parties; and
(2) are excluded by expression of disclaimer,
such as "as is," "with all faults," or other language that
in common understanding calls the purchaser's
attention to the exclusion of warranties.
(b) With respect to a purchaser of a unit
that may be occupied for residential use, no general disclaimer of implied
warranties of quality is effective, but a declarant and any dealer may disclaim
liability in an instrument signed by the purchaser for a specified defect or
specified failure to comply with applicable law, if the defect or failure
entered into and became a part of the basis of the bargain.
(c) The warranty provided in Section
81-4-114(b) on a unit for residential use commences with the earlier of the
time of the conveyance or the delivery of possession and extends for a period
of 1 year.
(a) Unless a period of limitation is tolled
under Section 81-3‑111 or affected by subsection (d), a judicial
proceeding for breach of any obligation arising under Section 81-4‑113 or
81-4‑114 must be commenced within the applicable periods of any
applicable statute of limitations or statute of repose but in all events within
six years after the cause of action accrues.
(b) Subject to subsection (c), a cause of
action for breach of warranty of quality, regardless of the purchaser's lack of
knowledge of the breach, accrues:
(1) as to a unit, at the time the purchaser to whom the warranty is first made enters into possession if a possessory interest was conveyed or at the time of acceptance of the instrument of conveyance if a nonpossessory interest was conveyed; and
(2) as to each common element, at the time the common element is completed or, if later, as to
(i) a common element that is added to the common interest community by exercise
of development rights, at the time the first unit which was added to the
condominium by the same exercise of development rights is conveyed to a bona
fide purchaser, or (ii) a common element within any other portion of the common
interest community, at the time the first unit is conveyed to a bona fide
purchaser.
(c) If a warranty of quality explicitly
extends to future performance or duration of any improvement or component of
the common interest community, the cause of action accrues at the time the
breach is discovered or at the end of the period for which the warranty
explicitly extends, whichever is earlier.
(d) During the period of declarant control,
the association may authorize an independent committee of the executive board
to evaluate and enforce by any lawful means warranty claims involving the
common elements, and to compromise those claims. Only members of the executive board elected
by unit owners other than the declarant and other persons appointed by those
independent members may serve on the committee, and the committee's decision
must be free of any control by the declarant or any member of the executive
board or officer appointed by the declarant.
All costs reasonably incurred by the committee, including attorney's
fees, are common expenses, and must be added to the budget annually adopted by the
association under Section 81-3‑115. If the committee is so created, the period of
limitation for claims for these warranties begins to run from the date of the
first meeting of the committee, regardless of when the period of declarant
control terminates.
(a) If a declarant or any other person
subject to this Chapter fails to comply with any of its provisions or any
provision of the declaration or bylaws, any person or class of persons
adversely affected by the failure to comply has a claim for appropriate
relief. The court, in an appropriate
case, may award court costs and reasonable attorney's fees.
(b) Parties to a dispute arising under this
Chapter, the declaration, or the bylaws may agree to resolve the dispute by any
form of binding or nonbinding alternative dispute resolution, but:
(1) a declarant may agree with the association to do so only after the period of declarant control has expired unless the agreement is made with an independent committee of the executive board elected pursuant to Section 81-4‑116(d); and
(2) an agreement to submit to any form of binding alternative dispute resolution must be in a writing signed by the parties.
No promotional
material may be displayed or delivered to prospective purchasers which
describes or portrays an improvement that is not in existence unless the
description or portrayal of the improvement in the promotional material is
conspicuously labeled or identified either as "MUST BE BUILT" or as
"NEED NOT BE BUILT".
(a) Except for improvements labeled
"NEED NOT BE BUILT," the declarant shall complete all improvements
depicted on any site plan or other graphic representation, including any plats
or plans prepared pursuant to Section 81-2‑109, whether or not that site
plan or other graphic representation is contained in the public offering
statement or in any promotional material distributed by or for the declarant.
(b) The declarant is subject to liability for
the prompt repair and restoration, to a condition compatible with the remainder
of the common interest community, of any portion of the common interest
community affected by the exercise of rights reserved pursuant to or created by
Sections 81-2‑110, 81-2‑111, 2‑112, 81-2‑113, 81-2‑115,
or 81-2‑116.
In the case of a sale of a unit for which delivery of a public offering statement is required, a contract of sale may be executed, but no interest in that unit may be conveyed, until the declaration is recorded and the unit is substantially completed, as evidenced by a recorded certificate of substantial completion executed by an independent registered architect or engineer, or by issuance of a certificate of occupancy authorized by law.
Following execution of a contract of sale by a purchaser, the declarant may not amend any required public offering statement without the approval of such purchaser if the amendment would materially affect the rights of such purchaser. Approval by such purchaser is not required if the amendment is required by any governmental authority or public utility, or if the amendment is made as a result of actions beyond the control of the declarant or in the ordinary course of affairs of the executive board.
SYNOPSIS
|
The
proposed bill is a revised version of the bill that was introduced in the
last session and has been modified based on comments received at a workshop,
public hearings and drafts circulated to the Counties and other parties. The bill establishes a The
impetus behind revising the current law governing condominiums, time shares,
cooperatives and planned communities derives from issues not addressed by current
Delaware Law. These types of property
ownership fit into a category referred to as a "common interest
community." Existing law makes it
relatively easy for a property owner or developer with little or no oversight
to establish a common interest community, but fails to provide a framework
with the flexibility for finding equitable solutions to the issues which
arise when the uninitiated are thrust together in an unfamiliar social
setting created by a common real estate investment. The
bill incorporates, where feasible, the ongoing operations of existing common
interest communities, but excludes any requirement that they change existing
documents or impact fundamental rights under those documents. An existing community may elect, subject to
the requirements of its existing documents, to amend those documents to
comply with any requirements of this bill.
However, in addition to complying with the requirements imposed by
existing documents, any amendments to the existing documents must comply with
the new requirements as to threshold issues such as notice and
recording. And many of the procedures
for better governance of communities apply to all pre-existing communities. Examples
of items not addressed in the existing body of law, which are addressed in
the DUCIOA, include: (i) the situation which often occurs when the developer
of a planned community encounters unexpected financial conditions and seeks
to change the nature of the community to the detriment of existing unit
owners; (ii) the need for the developer to fully reveal all aspects of the
planned community, including rights “hidden” in the documents which permit
the developer, his assigns or an entity foreclosing on the property to change
the community by adding or subtracting additional units or changing the
character of the community; (iii) protection for the community when a
developer or unit owner fails to pay their proper share of the community
common expenses; (iv) a procedure by which the community may address changing
circumstances which require it to acquire additional property, dispose of
property or negotiate with a developer who is unable to meet its obligations;
(v) a solution to the problem of how purchasers in a common interest
community may protect themselves when a developer fails to meet its
obligations and has incurred financial reverses unrelated to the community
which take preference to the obligation to the community; (vi) the
requirement that formal promises made by a developer regarding the common
elements or amenities of the community rise to the same legal status as
formal commitments made in conjunction with the purchase of real property;
(vii) the impact of sweetheart agreements put in place by the developer which
extend beyond the developer’s control of the community; and (viii) the
problem when the community has not made any provision for reserves for the
repair and replacement of systems or buildings. It
is not intended that the DUCIOA will supplant the requirements of any County
as to its planning and development function.
However, it does extend to all State residents uniform protection to
all participants in the planned community process. As a function of the drafting process of
the earlier version of this bill by the Bar association, copies of various
drafts were sent to all County attorneys and members of their legal
departments dealing with land use. As
indicated above, the UCIOA on which the DUCIOA is based was adopted at the
1982 Annual Meeting of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform
State Laws. It combines, in a single
comprehensive law, prior uniform laws in this area: the Uniform Condominium
Act (1980), the Uniform Planned Community Act (1980), and the Model Real
Estate Cooperative Act (1981). The
UCIOA, one of its components or substantially similar laws exist in some 20
states. In addition, the UCIOA has
influenced the laws and courts regarding common interest communities in all
states. The
bill does not track optional Section 5 of the UCIOA regarding registration
and its concomitant bureaucracy.
However, the bill does require any entity seeking to sell units in a
common interest community to prepare a public offering statement which will
bind the author. Early on, there was
some minor concern regarding this requirement, but it was included for three
reasons. First, the tenor of the times
dictates more parity based on information between the buyer and seller of
real property and the requirement is comparable in concept to the
requirements of the Buyer Property Protection Act (6 Del. C. § 2572 et. seq.
). Second, most of the required
information would be provided by any responsible realtor or developer in the
normal course of business. Third,
there is a significant advantage to the implementation and interpretation of
the statute if it is as "uniform" as feasible based on the
circumstances in |
Author:
Senator Amick
TABLE OF CONTENTS
§81-1‑101 SHORT TITLE.................................................................................................................... 2
§81-1‑102 APPLICABILITY................................................................................................................ 2
§81-1‑103 DEFINITIONS.................................................................................................................... 2
§81-1‑104 VARIATION BY AGREEMENT.......................................................................................... 8
§81-1‑105 SEPARATE TITLES AND TAXATION................................................................................ 8
§81-1‑106 APPLICABILITY OF LOCAL ORDINANCES,
REGULATIONS, AND BUILDING CODES 8
§81-1‑107 EMINENT DOMAIN.......................................................................................................... 9
§81-1‑108 SUPPLEMENTAL GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF LAW
APPLICABLE................................. 9
§81-1‑109 CONSTRUCTION AGAINST IMPLICIT REPEAL........................................................... 10
§81-1‑110 UNIFORMITY OF APPLICATION AND
CONSTRUCTION............................................. 10
§81-1‑111 SEVERABILITY............................................................................................................... 10
§81-1‑112 UNCONSCIONABLE AGREEMENT OR TERM OF
CONTRACT................................... 10
§81-1‑113 OBLIGATION OF GOOD FAITH...................................................................................... 11
§81-1‑114 REMEDIES TO BE LIBERALLY ADMINISTERED.......................................................... 11
§81-1‑115 ADJUSTMENT OF DOLLAR AMOUNTS........................................................................ 11
§81-1‑116 APPLICABILITY TO NEW COMMON INTEREST
COMMUNITIES............................... 12
§81-1‑117 EXCEPTION FOR SMALL COOPERATIVES................................................................... 12
§81-1‑118 EXCEPTION FOR SMALL AND LIMITED EXPENSE
LIABILITY PLANNED COMMUNITIES 12
§81-1‑119 APPLICABILITY TO PRE-EXISTING COMMON
INTEREST COMMUNITIES.............. 13
§81-1‑120 EXCEPTION FOR SMALL PRE-EXISTING
COOPERATIVES AND PLANNED COMMUNITIES 13
§81-1‑121 AMENDMENTS TO GOVERNING INSTRUMENTS....................................................... 14
§81-1‑122 APPLICABILITY TO NONRESIDENTIAL AND
MIXED-USE COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES 14
§81-1‑123 APPLICABILITY TO OUT-OF-STATE COMMON
INTEREST COMMUNITIES.............. 15
§81-1‑124 APPLICABILITY TO CONTINUING CARE COMMON
INTEREST COMMUNITIES.... 15
§81-2‑101 CREATION OF COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES................................................. 15
§81-2‑102 UNIT BOUNDARIES....................................................................................................... 16
§81-2‑103 CONSTRUCTION AND VALIDITY OF DECLARATION
AND BYLAWS....................... 16
§81-2‑104 DESCRIPTION OF UNITS................................................................................................ 17
§81-2‑105 CONTENTS OF DECLARATION..................................................................................... 17
§81-2‑106 LEASEHOLD COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES.................................................... 19
§81-2‑107 ALLOCATION OF ALLOCATED INTERESTS................................................................. 20
§81-2‑108 LIMITED COMMON ELEMENTS.................................................................................... 21
§81-2‑109 PLATS AND PLANS......................................................................................................... 21
§81-2‑110 EXERCISE OF DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS....................................................................... 23
§81-2‑111 ALTERATIONS OF UNITS............................................................................................... 24
§81-2‑112 RELOCATION OF UNIT BOUNDARIES......................................................................... 24
§81-2‑113 SUBDIVISION OF UNITS................................................................................................ 25
§81-2‑114 VARIATIONS IN BOUNDARIES..................................................................................... 26
§81-2‑115 USE FOR SALES PURPOSES........................................................................................... 26
§81-2‑116 EASEMENT RIGHTS....................................................................................................... 26
§81-2‑117 AMENDMENT OF DECLARATION................................................................................ 27
§81-2‑118 TERMINATION OF COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY............................................. 28
§81-2‑119 RIGHTS OF SECURED LENDERS................................................................................... 32
§81-2‑120 MASTER ASSOCIATIONS............................................................................................... 33
§81-2‑121 MERGER OR CONSOLIDATION OF COMMON INTEREST
COMMUNITIES............... 34
§81-2‑122 ADDITION OF UNSPECIFIED REAL ESTATE................................................................ 34
§81-2‑123 MASTER PLANNED COMMUNITIES............................................................................. 35
§81-2-124 OTHER EXEMPT REAL ESTATE ARRANGEMENTS..................................................... 36
§81-3‑101 ORGANIZATION OF UNIT OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION................................................... 36
§81-3‑102 POWERS OF UNIT OWNERS’ ASSOCIATION................................................................ 36
§81-3‑103 EXECUTIVE BOARD MEMBERS AND OFFICERS........................................................ 39
§81-3‑104 TRANSFER OF SPECIAL DECLARANT RIGHTS........................................................... 41
§81-3‑105 TERMINATION OF CONTRACTS AND LEASES OF
DECLARANT.............................. 43
§81-3‑106 BYLAWS.......................................................................................................................... 44
§81-3‑107 UPKEEP OF COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY......................................................... 45
§81-3‑108 UNIT OWNER MEETINGS.............................................................................................. 45
§81-3‑108A EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING..................................................................................... 46
§81-3‑109 QUORUMS....................................................................................................................... 47
§81-3‑110 VOTING; PROXIES.......................................................................................................... 48
§81-3‑111 TORT AND CONTRACT LIABILITY; TOLLING OF
LIMITATION PERIOD.................. 49
§81-3‑112 CONVEYANCE OR ENCUMBRANCE OF COMMON
ELEMENTS................................ 50
§81-3-113 INSURANCE.................................................................................................................... 51
§81-3‑114 SURPLUS FUNDS............................................................................................................ 54
§81-3‑115 ASSESSMENTS FOR COMMON EXPENSES.................................................................. 54
§81-3‑116 LIEN FOR ASSESSMENTS............................................................................................... 55
§81-3‑117 OTHER LIENS.................................................................................................................. 59
§81-3‑118 ASSOCIATION RECORDS............................................................................................... 60
§81-3‑119 ASSOCIATION AS TRUSTEE.......................................................................................... 61
§ 81-3-120 RULES.............................................................................................................................. 61
§ 81-3-121 LITIGATION INVOLVING DECLARANT....................................................................... 63
§ 81-3-122 NOTICE............................................................................................................................ 65
§ 81-3-123 REMOVAL OF MEMBERS OF EXECUTIVE BOARD..................................................... 65
§ 81-3-124 ADOPTION OF BUDGET................................................................................................ 66
§ 81-3-125 SERVICE ON ASSOCIATIONS AND EXECUTIVE
BOARD........................................... 67
§81-4‑101 APPLICABILITY; WAIVER.............................................................................................. 67
§81-4‑102 LIABILITY FOR PUBLIC OFFERING STATEMENT
REQUIREMENTS.......................... 67
§81-4‑103 PUBLIC OFFERING STATEMENT; GENERAL
PROVISIONS......................................... 68
§81-4‑104 COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES SUBJECT TO
DEVELOPMENT RIGHTS......... 71
§81-4‑105 TIME SHARES................................................................................................................. 72
§81-4‑106 COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITIES CONTAINING
CONVERSION BUILDINGS.... 72
§81-4‑107 COMMON INTEREST COMMUNITY SECURITIES........................................................ 73
§81-4‑108 PURCHASER’S RIGHT TO CANCEL.............................................................................. 73
§81-4‑109 RESALES OF UNITS........................................................................................................ 73
§81-4‑110 ESCROW OF DEPOSITS.................................................................................................. 75
§81-4‑111 RELEASE OF LIENS........................................................................................................ 76
§81-4‑112 CONVERSION BUILDINGS............................................................................................ 76
§81-4‑113 EXPRESS WARRANTIES OF QUALITY......................................................................... 77
§81-4‑114 IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF QUALITY.......................................................................... 78
§81-4‑115 EXCLUSION OR MODIFICATION OF IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF QUALITY............ 79
§81-4‑116 STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS FOR WARRANTIES........................................................... 79
§81-4‑117 EFFECT OF VIOLATIONS ON RIGHTS OF ACTION;
ATTORNEY’S FEES................... 80
§81-4‑118 LABELING OF PROMOTIONAL MATERIAL................................................................. 81
§81-4‑119 DECLARANT’S OBLIGATION TO COMPLETE AND
RESTORE................................... 81
§81-4‑120 SUBSTANTIAL COMPLETION OF UNITS...................................................................... 81
§81-4‑121 AMENDMENT TO PUBLIC OFFERING STATEMENT.................................................... 81