BUDGETS, RESERVES AND THE OHIO REQUIREMENT FOR AN ANNUAL OWNERSHIP VOTE IF RESERVE FUNDING IS TO BE WAIVED
THE SPECIAL ASSESSMENT PROBLEM
The history of Ohio condominiums has been plagued by “special
assessments.
In the past, condominiums typically included in their budgets the
association’s day-to-day operating and maintenance costs. Pressure on boards
to keep maintenance fees low too often resulted in bare bones budgets with
only basic necessities being paid. Many associations failed to build up
savings, known as “reserves,” for large future expenses such as roof, siding
or roadway replacement. Because the costs of long-term replacement projects
were not included in association budgets, condominiums across Ohio
experienced devastating budget shortfalls. Boards have been left with no
choice but to levy special assessments, often fully payable within a month
or two, in amounts from the thousands to tens of thousands of dollars. In
many instances, the amount of the special assessment has exceeded twenty
percent (20%) of the unit’s value. Recently, there has even been an instance
where the amount of the special assessment approximated the total value of
the units. Ohio condominium owners faced large special assessment bills with
little or no time to pay. Needless to say, condominium owners across the
State could ill-afford these special assessments often resulting in
foreclosures and always resulting in ownership dissatisfaction.
Another serious issue arose when condominium owners sold their units to
new purchasers without disclosing the potential for special assessments.
This game of “condominium roulette” proved to be financially devastating
to new owners who faced huge special assessments shortly after their
purchase with no warning that special assessments were forthcoming.
Purchasers would put virtually one-hundred percent (100%) of their
savings into the down-payment and/or fixing up their new condominium
only to be “hit” by the surprise special assessment. As an example, a
purchaser of a $170,000 condominium unit in March of 2004 was “hit” by a
roofing special assessment of $27,000 in August of 2004 with the special
assessment being fully due by December 15, 2004. “Condominium roulette”
has resulted in the filing of innumerable lawsuits against sellers, real
estate agents, and associations alleging failures to disclose. Results
were mixed, but litigation is costly and demoralizing for all sides.
More importantly, the innocent losers at “condominium roulette” voiced
high dissatisfaction with ownership of their new home.
OHIO’S NEW LAW
Recognizing the terrible consequences from associations having to levy
special assessments, and perhaps also mindful of the increasing
popularity of condominium ownership in Ohio, the Legislature acted in
2004, passing House Bill 135.
When Governor Taft signed House Bill 135 into law in July of 2004, major
changes were made to Ohio’s condominium statute. One of the most
significant changes to the law is the requirement that the board include
“reserve” funding in the budget so as to avoid special assessments.
Generally, the new law requires that condominium boards either: 1)
provide for “reserve” funds in the association’s budget so as to avoid
special assessments, or 2) obtain a majority vote annually of the
ownership to waive the reserves.
Specifically, Ohio Revised Code Section 5311.081(A)(1) states:
(A) Unless otherwise provided in the declaration or bylaws, the unit owners association, through the board of directors, shall. .
(1) Adopt and amend budgets for revenues, expenditures, and reserves in an amount adequate to repair and replace major capital items in the normal course of operations without the necessity of special assessments, provided that the amount set aside annually for reserves shall not be less than ten percent of the budget for that year unless the reserve requirement is waived annually by the unit owners exercising not less than a majority of the voting power of the unit owners association;
(emphasis added)
As the language of the law
indicates, the intent of the legislature in enacting House Bill 135
was to require condominium boards to include reserve funding within
their regular budgets. The new language expressly states that the
reserves “shall” be adequate to cover replacement costs “without the
necessity of special assessments.” The law in Ohio now intends to
lessen, if not alleviate altogether, the practice of boards’ levying
special, and often unexpected, assessments on owners.
Where special assessments are levied in the future, they will no
longer be unexpected. The law requires boards to adopt and amend
budgets for reserves unless the unit owners vote to waive the
requirement. Special assessments will not be a surprise to unit
owners who have voted each year to operate with “under-funded”
reserve accounts. A MAJORITY OF THE OWNERSHIP’S VOTING POWER IS
NECESSARY TO WAIVE THE FULLY FUNDED RESERVE REQUIREMENT, AND THE
VOTE FOR WAIVER MUST BE TAKEN EACH YEAR.
“Under-funded” reserves exist when the budgeted amount for reserves
is not enough to accumulate enough money over time to cover the cost
to repair or replace an item without the necessity of a special
assessment. In this circumstance, owner votes waiving the reserve
requirement must be taken. Again, if the unit owners are voting each
year to “under-fund” the reserves, a special assessment will be no
surprise. While no one should be surprised by a special assessment
when reserve requirements are waived, prudent boards should keep the
written ballots used to obtain the waiver as part of their records.
Those ballots should remain in the association’s records forever.
BOARDS STILL HAVE A CHOICE
As noted above, the new condominium statute in Ohio mandates that
boards either fund reserves or obtain a vote of the unit owners to
waive the requirement. The statute states that funding of reserves
is necessary unless it “is waived annually by the unit owners
exercising not less than a majority of the voting power of the unit
owners association.” Notably, the law requires a majority vote to
waive the requirement, measured according to each individual
association’s voting scheme. This language is important, as in some
associations each unit owner is entitled to one vote, with each vote
weighted equally. In other associations, percentages of voting
rights are assigned, not necessarily equally, to each unit. In the
latter arrangement, larger or more valuable units may have a larger
percentage than some other units. The most common example of a
weighted scheme is often found in high-rise condominium buildings,
in which top floor “penthouses” may have twice the value of
lower-level units. Under the new condominium law in Ohio, the
required vote to waive reserves must be passed not by a majority of
those voting, but a majority of the voting power of the entire
association.
Also notable is the new law’s requirement that boards obtain a vote
to waive the reserve requirements annually. As discussed above,
absent a vote to waive the reserve requirements, Ohio law requires
boards to include reserves in their budgets. Accordingly, a vote in
2005 by the “ABC Condominium Association” to waive reserves for the
association’s 2006 budget has no effect on budgets beyond 2006. If
the ABC Condominium Association were to fail to obtain an
affirmative vote (such as by taking no vote at all) to waive the
requirement for 2007 and nevertheless failed to budget reserves, the
board would be in direct violation of Ohio law. In this respect, the
Ohio legislature has retained the ability of boards to choose
whether to fund reserves, but because inaction will result in the
necessity to budget such funds, lawmakers in Ohio have made clear
that, when feasible, fully-funding reserves is preferred.
A final consideration of the new reserve requirement is the
language: “provided that the amount set aside annually for reserves
shall not be less than ten percent of the budget for that year.”
THIS LANGUAGE DOES NOT STATE THAT A BOARD WILL BE IN COMPLIANCE WITH
THE LAW IF IT BUDGETS TEN PERCENT (10%) OF ITS TOTAL BUDGET FOR
RESERVES. Rather, the law sets the minimum reserve as “an amount
adequate to repair and replace major capital items in the normal
course of operations without the necessity of special assessments.”
The ten percent (10%) language applies only when the “adequate”
amount is less than ten percent (10%) of the association’s total
budget. As an example, if a developer is still in control of a
two-year old development and the association’s annual budget is
$50,000 with only $4,000 being put into reserves, an ownership vote
will still be necessary. Clearly, Ohio’s new law is also aimed at
requiring developers to initiate adequate reserve funding from the
very beginning of the condominium’s existence.
RESERVE STUDIES
How does a board know how much money is enough to repair or replace
a major item? How does it know whether its reserves are adequately
funded? How are owners notified how much in reserves they are being
asked to waive? To ascertain these numbers, a board should seriously
consider hiring an outside firm to perform a “reserve study.” While
Ohio law does not specifically require a reserve study, it is
virtually impossible to have the owners intelligently vote on
waiving reserves if the owners are not told how much they are
waiving. A reserve study will contain a listing of each of the
component parts of the association property. (e.g. the siding, roof,
driveways, boilers, hallway carpeting and wallpaper) Next, the study
will predict the useful life of each component part and the
replacement cost of each. The replacement cost of each component
part will be divided by the useful life. The result is the amount of
money that should be allocated to the reserve account annually. Once
this amount is determined for each of the component parts, they all
should be added together and the total amount added to the budget or
disclosed to the owners as a part of the reserve waiver ballot. If
the total amount is added to the budget, the reserves are “fully
funded.” Once the reserves are fully funded, special assessments
will not be necessary and the board has complied with the new law.
Compliance with the law means avoiding liability. The easiest way
for the board to avoid liability is to obtain a professional reserve
study; immediately share the results of the reserve study with all
owners and either: 1) adopt a budget that is in accordance with the
reserve study recommendations or 2) obtain a majority vote of the
ownership waiving the reserves requirement for that particular year.
SELLER’S DISCLOSURE
As indicated above, consumer protection appears to be a clear goal
of the new condominium statute. Ohio also modified its “Residential
Real Property Disclosure Form” to include a specific question that
sellers must now answer about special assessments.
Purchasers and their real estate agents will clearly want to know if
an association is funding reserves or if the association is voting
annually to waive or “under-fund” reserves. Many believe that paying
a slightly higher fee monthly and fully funding reserves will make a
unit much more marketable.
Unlike the past, where the board alone enacted a budget, Ohio’s new
condominium statute requires the entire ownership be involved on a
vote to waive reserves. If the board does not enact a budget fully
funding reserves and the majority of the voting power of an
association votes to waive reserve funding, seller disclosure issues
clearly arise. You can bet that the odds will now change in favor of
the purchaser when playing “condominium roulette” if the seller
fails to disclose to the purchaser the lack of reserve funding.
Real estate agents representing purchasers are, as a precondition of
sale, now reportedly not only asking sellers for the Declaration,
Bylaws and handbook of rules, but are also asking for a copy of the
association���s reserve study. As a result, boards are well advised to
provide a copy of the reserve study to all current owners.
NEW LAW HELPS OWNERS
With the enactment of House Bill 135 last summer, the Ohio
legislature has attempted to greatly reduce the need for
associations to levy special assessments by necessitating the
funding of reserves absent a vote to waive the requirement. The new
Section 5311.081(A)(1), therefore operates in pursuit of fairness.
It will cut down on situations in which owners are “hit” with
special assessments unexpectedly and without knowledge, but it also
includes a method for associations either unwilling or unable to
fund reserves to waive the requirement. As a result, all boards are
required to make a choice: either 1) adopt a budget that provides
sufficient reserves to avoid special assessments (pay a little more
now), or 2) obtain a majority vote of the ownership waiving the
reserves required for that particular year (and pay a lot more
later).
Sample Reserve Letter to Unit
Owners
