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THE IMPACT OF H.B. 135 ON ASSOCIATION
OPERATIONS
Over recent years, it has become clear
that Ohio’s condominium statute is outdated and in need of substantial
revision. The current statute, enacted in 1963 and amended in 1978,
basically states what developers can and cannot do. This statute was
fine when condominiums in Ohio were predominately in the development
stage. Unfortunately, the current statute fails to address a wide
variety of issues facing boards of condominium associations. The
revisions to the statute, as passed and effective on July 20, 2004,
expands upon a board’s authority and clarifies numerous association
operation issues.
The following summary outlines many of the changes.
5311.01 Adds numerous definitions to the statute that are currently
missing. Switches common and limited common areas to common and
limited common elements.
5311.031 Simplifies the procedure for combining two units by letting
the board approve the application and provides detail as to
information to be recorded reflecting the combination. The change
clarifies that a vote of the ownership is no longer necessary.
5311.032 Permits the altering of limited common element boundaries
among owners.
5311.04(G) Authorizes the board to permit unenclosed, open-air patios
and decks on limited common areas and mandates that the construction
of an addition to or an expansion of a unit into limited common
elements or common elements may not be authorized without the consent
of all unit owners.
5311.04(H) Permits the association to purchase property with the
approval of seventy-five percent (75%) of the voting power instead of
the current unanimous consent. As an example, if the association
desires to purchase land for parking or for a playground, seventy-five
percent (75) approval is all that is needed.
5311.041(B-1) Permits the association to implement a two-tiered annual
assessment with some costs split evenly so long as approved by ninety
percent (90%) of the voting power. Costs that may be split evenly
include expenses that arise out of the administration, operation,
maintenance, repair, and replacement of security, telecommunications,
rubbish removal, roads, entrances, recreation facilities, landscaping,
grounds care, legal, accounting, and management expenses.
5311.05(B-9) Requires the developer to disclose any membership that
the owners must pay for other than membership in the association.
Memberships that provide recreational facilities, education or social
services to owners must be disclosed.
5311.05(E-1) Permits the board, without the vote of the owners, to
amend the declaration to meet requirements of lending institutions
such as FHA, FNMA, VA or insurance underwriters. This section also
permits the board to amend without a vote of the owners “to bring the
declaration into compliance with this chapter.” Caution: many of the
new provisions indicate “unless otherwise provided by the
Declaration,” therefore, current language is in compliance. The board
may also amend to correct typographical or obvious factual errors.
5311.08(A-1) Permits the spouse of a unit owner to serve on the board.
5311.08(3) Stipulates that unless otherwise provided in the
declaration or bylaws, the owners present in person or by proxy at a
meeting shall constitute a quorum.
5311.08(5-A) Indicates that a meeting of the board of directors may be
held by any method of communication, including electronic or
telephonic communication provided that each member of the board can
hear, participate, and respond to every other member of the board.
5311.081(1) Specifies that the board must 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
(10%) 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.
5311.081(2-B1) Details an extensive list of powers and authority
bestowed upon the board, including the power to make rules and to
impose late charges and enforcement assessments.
5311.081(C-1) Establishes the procedure for the board to levy
enforcement assessments and the right of an owner to request a hearing
to dispute the enforcement assessment.
5311.09(2) Mandates that within thirty (30) days of ownership, the
owner must notify the association of the home address, home and
business mailing addresses, and the home and business telephone
numbers of the unit owner and all occupants of the unit and the name,
business address, and business telephone number of any person who
manages the owner’s unit as an agent of that owner.
5311.09(B) Specifies exactly what documents the developer must give
the association at turnover.
5311.09(B-C) Requires the developer to provide information about the
location of underground utilities for new construction.
5311.091(A) Permits the owners to examine certain association records,
but gives the association the ability to specify the time and cost of
such inspection.
5311.091(B) Identifies the records that owners are NOT permitted to
inspect including:
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Information that
pertains to condominium property-related personnel matters; and
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Communications with
legal counsel or attorney work product pertaining to pending
litigation or other condominium property- related matters; and
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Information that
pertains to contracts or transactions currently under negotiation,
or information that is contained in a contract or other agreement
containing confidentiality requirements and that is subject to those
requirements; and
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Information that
relates to the enforcement of the declaration, bylaws, or rules of
the unit owners association against unit owners.
5311.18(A-1-a) Permits a condominium
lien to be filed not only for past due maintenance fees and
assessments but also for outstanding interest, late fees, enforcement
assessments, collections costs, and attorney fees.
5311.18(A-2) Indicates that the association shall credit payments made
by a unit owner in the following order of priority:
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First, to interest
owed to the association.
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Second, to
administrative late fees owed to the association.
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Third, to collection
costs, attorney’s fees, and paralegal fees incurred by the
association.
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Fourth, to the
principal amounts the unit owner owes to the association for the
common expenses or penalty assessments chargeable against the unit.
5311.18(B-2) Permits the association,
not just the plaintiff in a foreclosure, to seek the appointment of a
receiver during a foreclosure. In addition, each rental payment a
receiver collects during the pendency of the foreclosure action shall
be applied first to the payment of the portion of the common expenses
chargeable to the unit during the foreclosure action.
5311.18(B-6) Stipulates that in any foreclosure action, it is not a
defense, set off, counterclaim, or crossclaim that the unit owners
association has failed to provide the unit owner with any service,
goods, work, or material, or failed in any other duty.
5311.19(A) Permits an award of legal fees for violation of the
governing documents or restrictions.
5311.19(B-1) Authorizes the association to evict tenants who are in
violation of the governing documents or restrictions, so long as the
unit owner is provided with at least ten days (10) written notice of
the intended eviction action. The costs of eviction, including
reasonable attorney fees, shall be chargeable to the unit owner and
shall constitute a special assessment against the unit owner.
5311.21 Permits the association to retain common profits at year end
and apply them toward reserves.
5311.25(D) Stipulates that after the developer turns over control, the
association may not be bound for more than ninety (90) days to a
management contract or more than one year for other contracts, except
necessary utilities.
5311.25(F) Mandates that the developer must pay maintenance fees for a
unit from the date it is declared regardless of the status of
construction of the unit.
While no legislation is perfect, H.B. 135 certainly fulfills the
objective of addressing a wide variety of issues facing condominium
boards and clarifies numerous association operation issues.
2000 Terminal Tower, 50 Public Square,
Cleveland, OH 44113 |
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Phone: (216) 696-0650 Toll-free:
(888) 800-1042 Fax: (216) 771-8478 |
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